A firm with a strong commitment and an unwavering will to defend the Human Rights
Jason McCue, Senior Partner, and Matthew Jury, Managing Partner.
With more than a decade of experience, McCue Jury & Partners stands out as specialised firm working in Human Rights defence, prosecution, and litigation. Internationally recognised for their contribution, the team at McCue Jury & Partners are known for their expertise in human rights and public interest litigation, as well as international humanitarian law. They are also highly regarded for their work in dispute resolution, transitional justice and cross-border asset recovery.
McCue Jury & Partners has worked as a trusted and valued adviser to both the public and the private sectors. McCue Jury & Partners' clients, past and present, have included victims of terrorism globally, such as cases against ISIS, the IRA, HAMAS and Al-Aqsa Martyrs. They have also represented: victims of rogue regimes, including Iran, Syria/Assad, and Libya/Muammar al-Gaddafi; British Army veterans who served in Northern Ireland, families of British soldiers killed in Iraq, victims of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and victims of the Rohingya genocide in Myanmar.
Founded in 2011 by Jason McCue, Senior Partner; and Matthew Jury, Managing Partner; McCue Jury & Partners has grown, and is now supported by a full team of experts, who work tirelessly protecting the application of human rights worldwide. They attribute their success to their determination, explaining: “We fear no opposition nor acting for any client. We are determined to enable justice and see our cases through to a successful outcome for every client”. With an interdisciplinary team of lawyers, and specialists building an extensive legal consultancy network, McCue Jury & Partners can provide support to their clients through every step of the legal process, providing expertise and experience to every case they take on.
Some of their most high-profile cases currently include, the action being taken against British Airways and the UK Government on behalf of hostages of the Iraqi Armed Forces at the outbreak of the First Gulf War; representation of British Army veterans irradiated during nuclear testing in the Pacific; and representing four of Andrew Tate’s alleged victims bringing claims in the High Court for personal injury and psychiatric harm resulting from a number of alleged violent and sexual physical assaults, alongside a pattern of coercive and controlling behaviour against women.