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The Old Bailey
Central Criminal Court with public galleries for observing trials. Historic site of justice in London.
About
The Central Criminal Court dispenses British justice beneath Lady Justice's bronze gaze—uniquely not blindfolded, suggesting justice here sees clearly. Since medieval times, this site has hosted trials from Dr. Crippen to the Krays. The baroque 1907 building replaced notorious Newgate Prison, where public executions drew crowds until 1868.
Courtroom Drama
Eighteen courts handle murder, terrorism, major fraud. Court One's wood-paneled dignity witnessed Oscar Wilde's downfall and Yorkshire Ripper's conviction. Open justice means public galleries welcome observers—witness democracy's foundation where barristers in horsehair wigs perform legal theater.
The adversarial system reveals law's human dimension: victims seeking closure, defendants facing consequences, families experiencing tragedy. Watching trials provides civic education unavailable elsewhere—justice's messy reality unfolds on hard benches.
Visitor Reality
No cameras, phones, or bags allowed. Popular trials draw early morning queues. Public galleries offer restricted views—this is working court, not tourist attraction. Security screening takes time. Most trials open to public except sensitive cases.
Weekday mornings best for access. Check court listings online. The cells below maintain Victorian grimness. Whether studying law or seeking true crime reality, observe society's fundamental process where guilt meets innocence under justice's sword.