Hong Kong national security judges

In Hong Kong, designated national security law judges are incumbent magistrates or judges who are further appointed by the chief executive to handle national security offence cases at various levels of the court system. Judges without the designation as given by the chief executive are not allowed to handle these cases.

Designated National Security Law Judges
Chinese國安法指定法官
Literal meaningnational security law designated judges
Transcriptions
Yue: Cantonese
Yale Romanizationgwok ōn faat jí dihng faat gūn
Jyutpinggwok3 on1 faat3 zi2 ding6 faat3 gun1

Designation

The Standing Committee of the National People's Congress of China enacted the Hong Kong national security law on 30 June 2020. Paragraph 3 of Article 44 of the law requires national security offence cases to be handle by "designated judges".

According to the law, the chief executive should designate judges from incumbent magistrates and judges from each level of the court system to handle national security offence cases. Prior to granting the designation, the chief executive may consult the chief justice and the Committee for Safeguarding National Security. The tenure of office as a designated judge is one year.

Moreover, the chief executive is required by the law to not grant the designation to those who have "made any statement or behaved in any manner endangering national security". And the designation can be withdrawn if a designated judge makes any statement or acts in any way that is considered endangering national security.

List of known judges

The complete list of designated judges is not made available to the public as the government believes such revelation poses security threats to the designated judges. However when individual national security cases go through various legal proceedings in open court, the press and the public find out who the presiding designated judges are. Yet, those judges who have been designated but have not yet presided in open court on any national security case are not known to the public. The exact dates of the start and the end of the designation are also unknown to the public.

Here is a table of publicly known current and former designated judges and magistrates:

No. Judges Corresponding Courts Notes
1 Andrew Cheung Court of Final Appeal Chief Justice
2 Roberto Ribeiro Court of Final Appeal
3 Joseph Fok Court of Final Appeal
4 Patrick Chan Court of Final Appeal Non-permanent Judge
5 Frank Stock Court of Final Appeal Non-permanent Judge
6 Johnson Lam Court of Appeal; Court of Final Appeal
7 Jeremy Poon Court of Appeal Chief Judge
8 Susan Kwan Shuk-hing Court of Appeal Vice President
9 Carlye Chu Fun-ling Court of Appeal Vice President
10 Derek Pang Court of Appeal
11 Anderson Chow Ka-ming Court of First Instance; Court of Appeal
12 Esther Toh Lye-ping Court of First Instance
13 Wilson Chan Ka-shun Court of First Instance
14 Susana Maria D'Almada Remedios Court of First Instance
15 Alex Lee Wan-tang Court of First Instance
16 Andrew Chan Hing-wai Court of First Instance
17 Johnny Chan Jong-herng Court of First Instance
18 Anna Lai Yuen-kee Court of First Instance
19 Stanley Chan Kwong-chi District Court
20 Amanda Jane Woodcock District Court
21 Kwok Wai-kin District Court
22 Adriana Noelle Tse Ching District Court
23 Ernest Lin Kam-hung District Court
24 Amy Chan Wai-mun District Court
25 Ada Yim Shun-yee District Court
26 Victor So Wai-tak Magistrates' Court Chief Magistrate
27 Don So Man-lung Magistrates' Court Principal Magistrate (Eastern)
28 Ivy Chui Yee-mei Magistrates' Court Principal Magistrate (West Kowloon)
29 Veronica Heung Shuk-han Magistrates' Court
30 Andy Cheng Lim-chi Magistrates' Court

Retired judges

Judges Corresponding Courts Retired Notes
Geoffrey Ma Court of Final Appeal January 2021 Chief Justice
Wally Yeung Court of Appeal August 2021 Vice-President
Joseph To Ho-shing Magistrates' Court April 2022
Peter Law Tak-chuen Magistrates' Court October 2023
Anthea Pang Po-kam Court of First Instance; Court of Appeal November 2025

Calls for sanctions

In May 2023, the CECC called on the US government to sanction 29 Hong Kong national security judges known to be involved in cases. Hong Kong Bar Association chairman Victor Dawes said that any US sanctions against local judges could pose a "real threat" to the ability of the city to hire top-talent judges to combat a manpower shortage.

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