Former Lord Advocate, Colin Boyd QC,
has been accused of misleading the Court during the trial of Abdelbaset
al-Megrahi.
The claim, contained in the book Megrahi – You are my Jury, relates to the QC’s intervention in a matter involving secret CIA cables that contained details of discussions between the US agency and a Libyan ‘supergrass’ named Majid Giaka.
The claim, contained in the book Megrahi – You are my Jury, relates to the QC’s intervention in a matter involving secret CIA cables that contained details of discussions between the US agency and a Libyan ‘supergrass’ named Majid Giaka.
Giaka was a former work colleague of Mr Megrahi who had
contacted the CIA claiming to have evidence linking the Libyan and his
co-accused Al Amin Khalifa Fhima to the Lockerbie bombing.
Giaka was scheduled to give evidence to the Court in August
2000, but was delayed due to legal wrangling over the telex cables.
Demands by the Libyan’s defence team to see the cables in
full led to the intervention by then Lord Advocate Colin Boyd, an episode
described by book author John Ashton as “one of the most disgraceful episodes
in the Crown Office’s recent history”.
Mr Megrahi’s defence team had requested full disclosure of
the secret cables which had been heavily redacted for apparent security
reasons.
Lawyers acting on behalf of the two Libyan’s were informed
that the twenty five cables were all that existed and that the redacted areas
covered general areas not relevant to the Lockerbie incident.
According to the book, Procurator Fiscal Norman McFadyen
claimed that no-one from the Crown had seen the unedited cables and that the
redacted material was irrelevant.
However it subsequently emerged that weeks earlier on 1st
June 2000, members of the Crown Office had indeed seen the unedited cables, one
of whom was Norman McFadyen and the other Alan Turnbull QC.
On 22 August on learning of this, Mr Megrahi’s legal team
raised the issue with the Court, describing it as “a matter of some
considerable importance”.
According to Ashton’s book, Bill Taylor QC argued that
without access to the full cables, the defendants would be denied a fair trial,
and said: “I emphatically do not accept that what lies behind the blanked out
sections is of no interest to a cross examiner … Further, I challenge the right
of the Crown to determine for the defence what is or is not of relevance to the
defence case.”
Mr Taylor urged the Court to ask the Crown to obtain the
complete copies of the cables from the CIA.
In a move, described as unusual by author John Ashcroft,
Lord Advocate Colin Boyd then attended the Court in person and admitted that
McFadyen and Turnbull had indeed seen the cables but repeated the Crown’s
earlier assertions that the redacted areas had no bearing on the cables
themselves or the case.
“While they may have been of significance to the Central
Intelligence Agency, they had no significance whatsoever to the case” he said.
Mr Boyd explained that according to Crown QC Alan Turnbull:
“that there was nothing within the cables which bore on the defence case,
either by undermining the Crown case or by advancing a positive case which was
being made or may be made, having regard to the special case.”
Mr Boyd also explained that he had no control over the
documents that they resided in the USA under the control of US authorities.
Boyd ended by stating categorically: “there is nothing
within these documents which relates to Lockerbie or the bombing of Pan Am 103
which could in any way impinge on the credibility of Mr Majid [Giaka] on these
matters.”
Mr Ashton’s book though now reveals that the reason the Lord
Advocate had no control over the documents was that Norman McFadyen had signed
a non-disclosure agreement before viewing them.
According to Mr Ashton, the Crown had “secretly, ceded to
the CIA the right to determine what information should, or should not, be
disclosed in a Scottish Court”.
Also, further revelations contained in Mr Ashton’s book show
that far from being of no significance to the case, the redacted sections of
the cables were in fact highly significant.
The defence team eventually forced the Crown to hand over
less redacted versions of the cables that contained, contrary to Boyd’s claims,
crucial information about Giaka – including doubts about the value of his
intelligence information.
Further sections detailed meetings with Giaka not included
in the original documents.
Acting for the defence, Richard Keen QC, questioned claims
by the Crown that the redacted sections were of no consequence
Pointing to their clear significance, he told the Court: “I
frankly find it inconceivable that it could have been thought otherwise … Some
of the material which is now disclosed goes to the very heart of material
aspects of this case, not just to issues of credibility and reliability, but
beyond”
According to author John Ashton, Lord Advocate Colin Boyd –
now Lord Boyd – had “seriously misled the Court”.
[My own 2007 account in The Scotsman of this shameful and
discreditable episode can be read here. What is surprising and deeply regrettable
is that the trial judges in their judgement made no mention of this disgraceful
Crown conduct. Had it been a defence
advocate who had been detected misleading the court in this way, the matter would
certainly not have been overlooked and the consequences for the advocate in
question would have been dire.]
MISSION LOCKERBIE, 2012, doc.nr.7110.rtf. (google translation, german/english):
ReplyDeleteThe SCCRC-report is "highly significant" the Crown Office had withheld crucial evidence about the operational covert activities, for example with Swiss "BUPO" security, in connection with the Scottish "Officials"-- solid starting with the important meeting from 24/25 May 1989 at Bern/Switzerland.
These covert activities Starts of beginning of 1989 to September 1990, was not supported by the official legal assistance from Lord Advocate in Scotland. The official legal aid for Scotland started first on 1st October 1990.
In the SCCRC report can be found on this affair only "White Paper"...
by Edwin Bollier, MEBO Ltd Telecommunication Switzerland. URL: www.lockerbie.ch