Forensic Toxicologist
Our chambers prepares forensic toxicologist expert witness reports for criminal, civil, and family proceedings, analysing drug and alcohol concentrations in biological samples to determine impairment, exposure, or causation in legal cases.
Forensic Toxicology Expert Evidence
Our chambers prepares forensic toxicologist expert witness reports for criminal prosecutions, civil compensation claims, and family proceedings where drug or alcohol exposure is contested. Members of our chambers analyse biological samples—blood, urine, hair—to determine substance concentrations, metabolic profiles, and impairment thresholds relevant to legal tests under CPR Part 35 and CrimPR 19.
We accept instructions in drink spiking cases, drug facilitated sexual assault (DFSA) claims, and workplace exposure disputes. Our reports include a signed declaration confirming our duty to the court under CPR 35.3, ensuring impartiality and compliance with Civil Justice Council 2014 Guidance on expert evidence.
Key Toxicological Analyses
Specific substances and scenarios our experts assess in medico-legal reports.
How Our Reports Are Prepared
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01
Instruction & Sample Receipt
Our chambers accepts instructions via solicitor letter of instruction, specifying the legal question, sample type, and required turnaround. Biological samples are received in tamper-evident packaging with chain-of-custody documentation, ensuring compliance with UKAS ISO 17025 standards.
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02
Laboratory Analysis
Members of our chambers conduct quantitative analysis using LC-MS/MS or GC-MS, detecting substances at nanogram-per-millilitre thresholds. Hair strand testing follows Society of Hair Testing guidelines, segmenting samples to establish historical exposure patterns.
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03
Report Drafting
Our reports address the legal test—impairment, causation, or exposure—using peer-reviewed pharmacokinetic data and forensic toxicology references. Each report includes a CPR 35.3 declaration, confirming our duty to the court over the instructing party.
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04
Clarification & Joint Meetings
We respond to Part 35 questions from all parties within 14 days, as required by CPR 35.6. Joint expert meetings are arranged under CPR 35.12, with agendas agreed in advance to address disputed toxicological interpretations.
Instructions Accepted by Our Chambers
Criminal Prosecutions
Our chambers prepares forensic toxicologist expert witness reports for drink-driving cases, drug-related offences, and homicide investigations where substance impairment is contested under the Road Traffic Act 1988 or Sentencing Act 2020.
Drug Facilitated Sexual Assault (DFSA)
We accept instructions in DFSA claims, analysing blood and urine samples for benzodiazepines, GHB, and other central nervous system depressants. Reports address detection windows and pharmacodynamic effects relevant to consent under the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
Personal Injury Claims
Our experts assess workplace exposure to solvents, heavy metals, or pharmaceuticals, linking toxicological findings to clinical symptoms in claims under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 or common law negligence.
Family Proceedings
Members of our chambers provide toxicology reports for care proceedings under the Children Act 1989, assessing parental substance misuse via hair strand testing and interpreting results in line with Practice Direction 25B.
Coronial Inquests
We prepare reports for HM Coroner, determining whether toxicological findings contributed to cause of death in line with the Coroners and Justice Act 2009 and Chief Coroner’s Guidance No. 29.
Employment Tribunals
Our chambers accepts instructions in unfair dismissal claims involving workplace drug testing, assessing whether testing protocols comply with the Equality Act 2010 and ACAS guidance on substance misuse.
FAQs
Do your experts accept instructions in drink spiking cases?
Yes. Our chambers prepares forensic toxicologist expert witness reports for drink spiking allegations, analysing blood and urine samples for benzodiazepines, GHB, and other sedative-hypnotics. Reports address detection limits, metabolic pathways, and pharmacodynamic effects relevant to consent under the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
Can your experts analyse hair samples for historical drug use?
Yes. Members of our chambers conduct hair strand testing in line with Society of Hair Testing guidelines, segmenting samples to establish monthly exposure patterns. This is particularly relevant in family proceedings under Practice Direction 25B or criminal cases involving long-term substance misuse.
Are your reports compliant with CPR Part 35?
Yes. Our reports include a signed declaration confirming our duty to the court under CPR 35.3, ensuring impartiality and adherence to Civil Justice Council 2014 Guidance. We also comply with Practice Direction 35, addressing the legal test and avoiding advocacy for the instructing party.
Do you accept instructions from both prosecution and defence?
Yes. Our chambers accepts instructions from all parties in criminal, civil, and family proceedings. Our duty under CPR 35.3 and CrimPR 19 is to the court, not the instructing solicitor, ensuring impartiality regardless of the instructing party.
What is the turnaround time for a forensic toxicology report?
10–15 working days. Standard turnaround is 10 working days from receipt of samples and instruction. Expedited reports are available within 5 working days for urgent criminal cases, subject to laboratory capacity and CPR 35.7 court directions.
Can your experts attend joint expert meetings?
Yes. We participate in joint expert meetings under CPR 35.12, with agendas agreed in advance to address disputed toxicological interpretations. Meetings are chaired by the experts, and a joint statement is prepared for the court.
Do you provide expert evidence in coronial inquests?
Yes. Our chambers prepares reports for HM Coroner, determining whether toxicological findings contributed to cause of death in line with the Coroners and Justice Act 2009. We also provide oral evidence where required by the coroner.
What qualifications do your forensic toxicologists hold?
UKAS-accredited. Members of our chambers are registered with the United Kingdom Accreditation Service (UKAS) under ISO 17025, ensuring compliance with forensic science standards. Many hold additional qualifications from the Royal Society of Chemistry or the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences.
Need an expert for your
forensic toxicology case?
Contact our chambers to instruct a forensic toxicologist expert witness for criminal, civil, or family proceedings.