I want to write a letter "without prejudice". Is there such a concept here? Or if not, what can I put on the letter so that it cannot be used against me? I need to send an explanation of an event to someone and in doing so I need to set out what my thoughts are on why it happened. You might call it a sort of whistle-blowing letter. However, I don't want to end up in court for describing what I think happened.
Sounds like you should be very careful if you don't really know what you're doing......cold be an expensive way of paying for 1 hour of a lawyers advice
Are you trying to explain a situation and retain your right to deny your involvement in it or is it you've witnessed something and are worried about the other party bringing action against you if you make an accusation about them?
A 'Without Prejudice" letter is now what you seem to think it is. So no. And I'd suggest you seek proper legal advice before you do anything, because playing around with legal concepts such as this is not for amateurs.
Don't without prejudice letters have to be from some sort of negotiation/concession standpoint rather than simply a "this is what happened and I didn't like it/think it was wrong " etc (a friend of mine used one in the early stages of her divorce I think).
OP +1 for getting proper legal advice on this. Good luck.