The Crown Office owes the country an explanation for its handling of the Lockerbie bombing, former MP Tam Dalyell has claimed.
Mr Dalyell, who believes that
Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al Megrahi is innocent of the atrocity, said the Crown
had "misbehaved" during the prosecution and that the trial judges
"seemingly were deceived".
The veteran politician and former
Father of the House of Commons has been a prominent figure in attempts to
uncover the truth about the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 in which 270 people
were killed.
Mr Dalyell, taking part in the
Glasgow's Aye Write! literary festival, said during several of his 16
adjournment debates in the House of Commons, he raised the questions contained
in a report by the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) and
revealed in The Herald last week.
He said: "The Crown Office have
been really culpable in my opinion in that they misbehaved, and misbehaved in
relation to the judges.
"I realise that the judges find
it difficult to go back on previous cases but in these exceptional
circumstances, I really wonder what Lord Coulsfield [one of the trial judges],
is thinking because the judges seemingly were deceived."
Mr Dalyell, who has previously said
that he was "mystified" at how the judges could have arrived at a
verdict other than not guilty or not proven, added: "I am quite prepared
to concede that the judges didn't know all the evidence at the time, but the
Crown Office did. And the Crown office really do owe the rest of the country an
explanation."
He said that after John Major left
Downing Street, the former Prime Minister told him he had spent an hour after
an adjournment debate questioning officials on whether "Tam Dalyell could
be right" in his concerns about the Lockerbie trial.
At the Aye Write! festival Mr Dalyell
was asked about Holyrood's handling of the return to Libya of Megrahi and he
said he believed the dying, convicted bomber was released because the Scottish
Government "knew he was innocent".
Mr Dalyell's latest book, The Importance of Being Awkward, an autobiography, includes details of his
hard-fought Lockerbie campaign.
Meanwhile, it has been reported that
the former FBI officer who oversaw the Lockerbie investigation has claimed that
the SCCRC did not consult anyone from the Bureau when it was compiling its
report.
[If the SCCRC consulted the lead
investigators – the Scottish police – and had access to the records of the
investigation, why should it be expected to consult all the other national police forces
working in the lead investigators’ team? Are Messrs Revell and Marquise
suggesting that the FBI had incriminating material that it did not share with
the rest of the team?]
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