Oliver Plunkett (judge)
Oliver Plunkett (1884 – after 1945) was a British judge in Palestine and Egypt.
Oliver Plunkett was born in 1884 in Dublin, Ireland. He studied law, and in 1909 became a member of the Irish bar. In World War I he served in the British Army, in the frontiers of France and Flanders, and was wounded twice. After the war he joined the Colonial Service, and became the Governor-General of Saint Lucia.
In 1928, he became a judge in Palestine, and was president of the Tel Aviv District Court. He was one of the judges in the Assassination of Haim Arlosoroff trial.
During World War II, two of his sons were killed while serving in the British Army: Oliver Peter Plunkett, a pilot in the RAF killed in 1941, and lieutenant Gw Plunkett, of the light Anti-Aircraft Royal Artillery, killed in 1943.[1]
On April 1945, Plunkett was appointed president of the Mixed Courts of Egypt.
References
- ^ "The War Graves Photographic Project". Twgpp.org. 1943-04-10. Retrieved 2011-08-05.