High Court Lawton was appointed to the
High Court of Justice in 1961, assigned to the
Queen's Bench Division, and received the customary knighthood. In 1967, he oversaw the jury trial of the gangster Charlie Richardson (around whom the
Richardson Gang was based). He sentenced him to 25 years' imprisonment. In 1969 he oversaw the trial of the rival gang the
Kray Twins, who were convicted of two murders. For a third murder they were acquitted. On the civil side, in 1964 Lawton presided over the high-profile libel case bought by Polish-born
Dr Wladislaw Dering against the American novelist
Leon Uris. As the case concerned certain events during
the Holocaust some expressed doubt about Lawton's suitability for the case, given his former fascism. In the event, his adjudication prompted no adverse publicity. In 1970, he adjudged
Broome v Cassell & Co Ltd, another high-profile libel trial as to certain events in World War II. When adjudicating criminal matters, Lawton was regarded as efficient and fair, though prone to pass severe sentences in serious cases.
Court of Appeal Lawton was appointed a
Lord Justice of Appeal in 1972, and was sworn of the
Privy Council. For a time Lawton often sat with
Lord Denning and
Lord Diplock on civil appeals: as the two frequently disagreed Lawton was often tasked with to deliver leading judgments in matters where he had little experience. In 1973, he criticised the
Director of Public Prosecutions for offering
Bertie Smalls, the first so-called "
supergrass", immunity in exchange for his testimony. The law lords referred to the transaction as an "unholy deal", but allowed it to stand. Lawton was influential in advocating
sentencing guidelines and the expanded use of
non-custodial sentences. He was a member of the
Criminal Law Revision Committee from 1959 to 1985, and its chairman from 1977. On his appointment as chair, the barrister
Louis Blom-Cooper described him as "the most knowledgeable and robust exponent of the criminal justice system as an effective instrument of social control". Lawton retired in 1986. == Stance and remarks ==