| LAWLORDS | Name by which the Lords of Appeal in Ordinary were also known (3,5) |
| SCARMAN | Leslie ?, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary from 1977-86; chairman of inquiries into the Grunwick dispute and Brixton riots |
| EARLHAIG | Lord of Appeal? (4,4) |
| FROM | "And the rib, which the LORD God had taken ___ man" (Ge 2: |
| LOVE | "The lesson which the Lord us taught": Spenser |
| JEHOVAHS | In 1941 the Australian government banned the ... Witnesses because the group was considered a threat to morale; oddly they were also targeted by the Nazi regime (7'1) |
| OUTREACH | Widening of appeal in a court, he resolved (8) |
| MCDONALD | One of the largest Scottish Highland clans, historically known as Lords of the Isles (8) |
| VAULTERS | The Warsaw gymnasts were also seen in the field events (4,8) |
| ANGEVINS | The Plantagenet kings of England, especially those who were also counts of Anjou |
| STARK | Word for desolate, harsh, naked or severe that is used as the name of the House of the Lords of Winterfell in A Song of Ice and Fire books (5) |
| EUMENIDES | Name by which the Furies in Greek mythology were also known (9) |
| SOTHEBYS | Place with lots of appeal occupied by The Times |
| RODDAM | Franc, director of the films The Lords of Discipline and Quadrophenia (6) |
| INNERHOUSE | Scottish equivalent of the Court of Appeal in England |
| UGLINESS | Lack of appeal of wild guess, holding nothing back |
| INTERACT | Lay to rest start of appeal by court and work together? (8) |
| TASS | It's estimated that, during the Cold War, about two-thirds of the foreign staff of this Soviet news agency were also members of the KBG |
| MASTEROFTHEROLLS | A judge who presides over the Court of Appeal in England and Wales |
| ASPHODEL | Plant is strangely shaped with no end of appeal (8) |