Sunday, 26 February 2012

Megrahi: the secret evidence

[This is the headline over an article (behind the paywall) in today’s edition of The Sunday Times.  It reads in part:]

Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi, who is dying of prostate cancer, will claim in a new book that crucial documents were withheld from his defence team to ensure he remained the chief suspect for the 1988 atrocity which killed 270 people.
In Megrahi — You Are My Jury: The Lockerbie Evidence, published tomorrow, the Libyan will disclose details of witness statements that were not heard at his trial in 1999.
Megrahi, who was allowed to return to Libya in 2009 after he was diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer, hopes his book will provide compelling evidence that he is not guilty of Britain’s worst terrorist attack.
It argues that, far from being an unrepentant terrorist, the Libyan was the “innocent victim of dirty politics, a flawed investigation and judicial folly”.
Much of it draws on the findings of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC), which recommended that his case be returned to the Appeal Court in 2007.
Their report has not been released publicly but was made available to the Libyan’s defence team. Megrahi is expected to reveal that statements made by Tony Gauci, the prosecution’s key witness, were never disclosed to his lawyers.
Gauci owned a shop in Malta where Megrahi allegedly purchased clothes that were wrapped around the Lockerbie bomb. Gauci’s testimony about the date when the clothing was purchased — December 7, 1988 — was crucial as that was the only day that Megrahi was known to be on the island.
Among the missing statements discovered by the SCCRC was one in which Gauci claimed his brother Paul was in the shop when the clothes were bought and helped the buyer carry the parcels to his car. It is claimed that, had Megrahi’s defence been aware of this, Paul Gauci would have been questioned and could have confirmed that Megrahi was not the buyer.
In another statement to Scottish police, Gauci said he “clearly” remembered an argument with his girlfriend on the day the clothes were purchased. Megrahi claims a failure to share this information denied his defence team a chance to interview the woman and corroborate the date.
The book also suggests false intelligence was passed by the Scottish authorities to German counterparts who were initially sceptical about Libya’s role in the atrocity.
A source close to the project said: “It’s a vast book and a lot of it is in forensic detail. If the case in the book is accepted, then the questions it raises about Scottish justice are very deep and very serious.”
The Crown Office, which maintains that Megrahi did not act alone in carrying out the terrorist attack, is preparing to send investigators to Libya in the hope of gathering fresh evidence to support his conviction and identify his accomplices.
Frank Mulholland QC, the lord advocate, met British relatives in London last week and revealed that the Crown Office had received “favourable” responses from Libya to a request for access to files held in Tripoli.
Also present at the meeting in Whitehall was Patrick Shearer, the chief constable of Dumfries and Galloway police, and two agents from the FBI.
Last night, Pamela Dix, who lost her brother Peter in the Lockerbie bombing, said: “The tragedy is still very distressing. I would far rather that new evidence was heard in a courtroom. The problem is none of it can be legally refuted and it will be his side of the story.”
John Ashton, a British journalist who wrote Megrahi’s book, said: “Abdelbaset and I are acutely aware of the anguish that the book might cause the victims’ relatives who believe him to be guilty. We simply wish them and the wider public to know all the important evidence that was available to us, most of which has been concealed from the relatives and was not aired at his trial.”
Jim Swire, whose daughter Flora died in the Lockerbie bombing and believes Megrahi was wrongfully convicted, said: “I very much hope the book will have influence on Scottish public opinion and persuade ministers to hold an independent inquiry into Megrahi’s guilty verdict.”
The Crown Office said: “The only appropriate forum for the determination of guilt or innocence is the court.”


[A brief article in the Sunday Mail headed “Lockerbie bomber Megrahi 'forgives' witness who secured his conviction” can be read here.]

Megrahi book reveals new Lockerbie evidence

[This is the headline over an article in today's edition of the Sunday Herald.  It reads as follows:]

Exclusive extracts of the authorised biography of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi will be published on heraldscotland.com from 10am on Monday.

The Herald's chief reporter, Lucy Adams, who has covered the Lockerbie story comprehensively and interviewed Megrahi in his family home after he returned to Tripoli, has seen an advance copy of the book.

She'll be revealing its key contents and analysing their significance for a case which has divided legal and public opinion across Scotland - and indeed the world.

The book, Megrahi: You are my Jury, The Lockerbie Evidence, has been written by John Ashton, a writer, researcher and TV producer who has studied the Lockerbie case for 18 years and was a researcher with Megrahi's legal team from 2006-9.  

Edinburgh-based publisher Birlinn is using this quote from Megrahi to promote the book: "You know me as the Lockerbie bomber. I know that I'm innocent. Here, for the first time, is my true story: how I came to be blamed for Britain's worst mass murder, my nightmare decade in prison and the truth about my controversial release. Please read it and decide for yourself. You are now my jury."

The publisher adds: "This long-awaited book argues that, far from being an unrepentant terrorist, Abdelbaset al-Megrahi was the innocent victim of dirty politics, a flawed investigation and judicial folly. It destroys the prosecution case and puts the Scottish criminal justice system in the dock... (and) makes a compelling argument that the murderers of the 270 Lockerbie victims were acting on behalf of an entirely different government, rather than Colonel Gaddafi and Libya."

The contents will be made public at a press conference in Edinburgh on Monday morning, which is also due to be attended by Megrahi campaigners Dr Jim Swire, the Rev John Mosey, and Iain McKie.

But for the first preview and analysis, come to 
heraldscotland.com from 10am on Monday.

Saturday, 25 February 2012

Publication of Megrahi: You are my Jury

To coincide with the publication on Tuesday 28 February 2012 of John Ashton's book Megrahi: You are my Jury, various media broadcasts have been scheduled on Monday 27th.  BBC Radio Scotland has a feature at 1.15 pm GMT; BBC One Scotland has a half-hour television programme at 7.30 pm entitled Lockerbie - The Lost Evidence; and Aljazeera English at 8 pm has a one-hour programme entitled Lockerbie: Case Closed.

Friday, 24 February 2012

Megrahi, anger, and me

[This is the headline over an article by Kenneth Roy, editor of the Scottish Review, published yesterday on the Newsnet Scotland website.  It reads in part:]

Hey, I'm not a joiner. (…) Why, then, have I just accepted an invitation to join JFM – the Justice for Megrahi Committee? The one obvious route to refusal was that membership of this committee might compromise my independence as a six hours a week journalist, filling this space; it's often a useful get-out clause from any commitment to altruism or, for that matter, anything else.
In this case, however, it's hardly likely. I have been banging on about Megrahi for years. My views are not going to change in a hurry, if ever. That report of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission needs to be published, it needs to be published in full, it needs to be published pronto. Then and only then will the people of Scotland be able to judge for themselves the credibility of the prosecution case and the conduct of our justice system.
We paid for this report. It's a public document, one of the most important ever produced in Scotland, concerning the worst atrocity inflicted on these shores in peacetime and the deaths of 270 blameless people. But although we’re big enough to have paid for the report, it seems we are not big enough to be trusted with its contents. Important vested interests continue to obstruct its appearance.
Non-joining being bred in the bone, I still wouldn't have joined the Justice for Megrahi Committee. Two things tipped me over the edge. The first was driven by anger, the emotion that my adviser Seneca counsels me against. I can't help it, Seneca, I'm not like you; for the time being I have to live in this world.
Last Thursday, when we published a detailed positional paper from JFM with an accompanying editorial, all of 14 minutes elapsed before an iphone response from a Labour MSP pouring scorn on the Scottish Review's campaign for transparency in the Lockerbie case. Fourteen minutes, huh? Fourteen minutes in which to read and assimilate a complex document, and prepare a negative six-liner on your iphone – it's impressive. It could even tell us quite a lot about why the Labour Party hasn't been in power in Scotland for the last five years. They've all been too busy taking lessons in speed reading.
The second thing was more personal. One of the people on the Justice for Megrahi Committee is Dr Jim Swire, who lost his daughter Flora on flight 103 and has been fighting for the truth ever since. I have discovered from years of interviewing them that, with few exceptiions, that is what victims yearn for and work towards: not revenge, not blood, but the truth. At the age of 76 Dr Swire goes on fighting for it, risking his life to enter the chaos that is Libya. Why wouldn't I join a committee with that noble man and do what little I can to help him?
So I've broken the habit of a lifetime and joined something. Fourteen minutes from now – maybe less – someone with an iphone will tell me I'm wrong. This time, I won't be counting.
[The Scottish Review has also published an article by Megrahi biographer John Ashton entitled The Crown case against Megrahi is about to sink without trace and another by Gerard Sinclair, the chief executive of the Scottish Criminal Cases review Commission.]

Thursday, 23 February 2012

Lockerbie relatives meet Lord Advocate and police

[The following is an excerpt from a short report in today’s edition of The Herald:]


Scotland’s Lord Advocate met relatives of the UK victims of the Lockerbie bombing as the Crown Office said a request had been sent to the Libyan Government requesting access for police and prosecutors in the case.


Frank Mulholland QC, and the Chief Constable of Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary, Pat Shearer, met families in London.
The Libyan National Transitional Council agreed to allow Scottish police officers to travel to Libya.
[On the topic of Scottish police travelling to Libya, a longer report appears in the Belfast Telegraph.  It reads in part:]
A formal request has been sent to the Libyan Government requesting access to the country for police and prosecutors involved in the Lockerbie bombing investigation, the Crown Office said.

The investigators hope to examine information and documents relating to lines of inquiry.
The Libyan National Transitional Council has previously confirmed to the UK Government that it will assist the ongoing criminal investigation, and agreed to allow officers from Dumfries and Galloway Police to travel to Libya. (…)
Scotland's top law officer the Lord Advocate, Frank Mulholland QC, and the Chief Constable of Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary, Pat Shearer, met UK families of the Lockerbie victims in London to update them on the development.
Scottish prosecutors and Scottish and US law enforcement representatives also attended the meeting.
The Crown Office said that as it remains a joint investigation, both Scottish and US investigators were "heavily involved" in preparing the request.
A further meeting with other UK families is scheduled to take place in the near future in Glasgow. 

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Justice Committee hears Kenny MacAskill on SCCRC Megrahi disclosure Bill

[The following is an excerpt from the report on the BBC Democracy Live website of yesterday’s appearance before the Scottish Parliament Justice Committee of Cabinet Secretary for Justice Kenny MacAskill:]

Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill said the Criminal Cases Bill "confirms our commitment to be as open and transparent as possible" about the Lockerbie bomber's case.

Mr MacAskill was giving evidence to the Justice Committee on 21 February 2012.

The Scottish government's Criminal Cases [(Punishment and Review) (Scotland)] Bill could permit publication of information about the case of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, who abandoned his second appeal days before he was sent home to Libya on compassionate grounds.

It would let the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC) decide whether information it gathered and referred to the Appeal Court should be published.

At the Justice Committee on 7 February 2012, the Justice for Megrahi group said the Criminal Cases Bill "could create as many difficulties as it could solve".

The justice secretary told MSPs he disagreed with campaigners who believed it was possible for Scottish ministers to deal with the issue of publication of information relating to Megrahi's appeal through subordinate legislation.

He inisted the bill was "the most appropriate vehicle" to allow the SCCRC to release the information or not as it saw fit.

Mr MacAskill confirmed that UK Justice Secretary Ken Clarke was in discussions with the SCCRC about the case.

[A report in today’s edition of The Sun can be read here.]

Daily Mail article and John Ashton's response

Yesterday's edition of the Daily Mail carried an article headlined Lockerbie bomber accused of profiting from deathbed memoirs that "will protest his innocence". The subheadings give a flavour of the piece:
  Profits from book sales will go to charity that campaigns for his innocence
  Terminally-ill Lockerbie bomber still alive after being given just three months to live two-and-a-half years ago
  Released from prison on 'compassionate grounds'
  Could prove embarrassing for Labour and the Scottish government

Abdelbaset Megrahi's biographer John Ashton has responded to the Daily Mail article on the Megrahi: You are my Jury website.

Sunday, 19 February 2012

Proceeds of Megrahi book to go to charity

[The following are excerpts from an article by Ben Borland in today’s edition of the Sunday Express:]

The publishers of Libyan bomber Abdelbaset al-Megrahi’s book are to donate all profits to charity, starting with victim support groups on both sides of the Atlantic.

Mrs [Susan] Cohen, who refused £3.1million compensation from the Gaddafi regime, calling it “blood money”, said: “If a charity accepts money it implies they are accepting the verdict of the book and it’s a kind of validation on Megrahi’s actions, so that would be deplorable.”

The book, Megrahi – You Are My Jury: The Lockerbie Evidence, promises to present “conclusive new evidence” to prove Megrahi was “an innocent victim of dirty politics and judicial folly”. He has been working on it with British author John Ashton after release back to Libya from a Scottish jail on compassionate grounds just eight years into a 27-year sentence.

Suffering from prostate cancer, he had been given three months to live. Two-and-a-half years on, the 59-year-old has promised to reveal “the truth” about the atrocity.

Mrs Cohen, at home in New Jersey, said the book “is just another part of the campaign to pretend Megrahi didn’t do it. Why should we believe anything that he says? If he is so damn sick how is he able to help with writing a book?”

Hugh Andrew, managing director of the publishers, Birlinn, said: “I understand some charities may not wish to receive money. It is entirely their call. A great deal more information has come to light since the trial.”

[Another article in the same newspaper contains the following:]

Abdelbaset Ali Mohmed al-Megrahi has been working on the autobiographical book with English author John Ashton ever since his controversial release from prison in August 2009. Edinburgh-based publisher Birlinn is to unveil Megrahi – You Are My Jury: The Lockerbie Evidence on February 28 and is planning to donate all the profits to charity.

But last night Susan Cohen, whose daughter Theodora was among the 270 victims of the 1988 PanAm bombing, urged charities to turn down any offer of cash from Megrahi.

“I don’t think that anyone should accept money from that man,” she said. “I don’t think any charity should take a dime, they should not be encouraging this kind of thing.

“I think it would be despicable and an insult to the people who died if a charity took money from this.”

Birlinn’s managing director Hugh Andrew confirmed that no charities had been approached so far, although victim support organisations in Britain and the United States may be given first refusal.

Mrs Cohen, who sent back £3.1million in compensation from the Gaddafi regime, describing it as “blood money”, said the plan was an attempt to “validate Megrahi’s actions”.

Speaking from her home in New Jersey, she said: “It is a whitewash. If a charity accepts money then it implies they are accepting the verdict of the book and it puts a kind of validation on Megrahi’s actions, so that would be deplorable.

“I don’t want to come out against publishers and people have a right to decide what they want to read. But if any charity is offered money from this I would urge them to turn it down.”

The new book promises to present “conclusive new evidence” to prove Megrahi was “an innocent victim of dirty politics, a flawed investigation and judicial folly”.

In it, Megrahi will claim to reveal for the first time “how I came to be blamed for Britain’s worst mass murder, my nightmare decade in prison and the truth about my controversial release”.

However, Mrs Cohen dismissed the claims as “self-serving” and also criticised Mr Ashton, who worked for Megrahi’s defence team and has written extensively about the Libyan’s innocence.

She said: “I don’t think he can be in any way an objective person, given his very close ties to the former Libyan regime. It is just another part of the campaign to pretend that Megrahi didn’t do it.

“Why should we believe anything that Megrahi says? If he had anything to reveal, he should have revealed it at the trial.

“It won’t bring my daughter back but it would help if there were no more of these things which are self-serving and only cause confusion. And also, if he is so damn sick how is he able to help write a book?”

Megrahi was reckoned to be just three months away from dying of  prostate cancer when he was freed by Justice Secretary Kenny Mac-Askill 30 months ago. At the time, eight years into a 27-year sentence, he was part-way through an appeal granted after the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission ruled that his conviction may have been unsafe.

Hugh Andrew, Birlinn’s managing director, yesterday defended his decision to publish the 59-year-old father of five’s memoirs.

He said: “We will make the offer to various charities and I understand perfectly well that some may not wish to receive money, it is entirely their call.

“It would be inappropriate for us to make any profit out of this book and we are not seeking to make any. Megrahi himself will receive no money at all.

“I absolutely defend our right to publish this book. It is not a statement on his innocence or guilt but he has the right to have his case in the public domain.

“A great deal more information has come to light since the trial.”


[John Ashton's response to the Sunday Express articles has now been posted on the Megrahi: You are my Jury website. It can be read here. What follows is one brief extract:]

“Why should we believe anything that Megrahi says? If he had anything to reveal, he should have revealed it at the trial.”

It’s a fair point: on the advice of his lawyers, Abdelbaset opted not to give evidence at trial (a decision he regretted, although it’s debatable that the outcome would have been any different if he had decided differently). The book presents the account that he would have given at trial and leaves it to the readers to judge. Moreover, it presents a great deal of evidence that the court never heard, much of which was concealed from the defence by the Crown.

Friday, 17 February 2012

Iran and Lockerbie

[What follows is a paragraph from an article by Con Coughlin in today’s edition of The Telegraph:]

As is their custom, the Iranians have denied any involvement in this week’s spate of attacks, which has seen Israeli diplomats targeted in Georgia, India and, most recently, Thailand. The Iranians are, of course, past masters at covering their tracks. Despite the enormous amount of intelligence-based evidence that pointed to Iran’s complicity for the 1988 Lockerbie bombing, there was never sufficient material to build a convincing prosecution case.

Thursday, 16 February 2012

Lockerbie, Megrahi and the Scottish Review

[In today’s edition of the Scottish Review two articles on Lockerbie and the Megrahi case are published.  The first is from the pen of the journal’s editor, Kenneth Roy.  It reads in part:]

Here is a case of tragic loss. I mean – a real one.

A young woman, Flora Swire, is looking forward to spending Christmas 1988 with her boyfriend in the United States. She boards Pan Am flight 103 and very soon she is dead. Her father Jim has to make a fuss before he is allowed to see her body. He then, over a period of many years, pursues his own investigations, goes to Libya, prevails upon the colonel to do the decent thing and hand over any suspects.

Two men appear before a panel of Scottish judges at Camp Zeist. At the start of the trial, Dr Swire is convinced of Megrahi's guilt. By the end of it he is equally convinced of his innocence. When the verdict is declared, he faints. To the tragic loss has been added tragic irony.

Just before Christmas, Dr Swire returned to Libya. I had a long chat with him about his visit. He was able to see Megrahi, whom he considers a friend. What passed between them he will not disclose. When he left Megrahi's house Dr Swire was visibly upset. He does not expect to see his friend again.

Tragic loss; tragic irony – and now absolute farce. 

The truth about the Lockerbie prosecution is contained within a long report of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, whose own painstaking inquiries after the trial pointed to the possibility, putting it no higher, of a miscarriage of justice and the desirability of a further appeal against conviction. This report has never been published. 

The Scottish Government, in the face of sustained pressure to have it published, introduced an enabling bill. A year ago, this magazine warned that the bill was useless; that it would not achieve the desired purpose. This was not a piece of journalistic fancy on our part. It was based on a remarkably frank assessment given to the Scottish Review by no less an authority than the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission itself. The commission informed us that the bill would not remove one of the major obstacles to publication: the pre-condition that all the parties concerned must consent to its release.

As a public service, we gave heavy prominence to the commission's statement. The Scottish press evinced not the slightest interest in it. Nor, so far as we know, did anyone else in a position to do anything about it. The disastrous bill went ahead.

It would be relatively simple to make an order removing the consent requirement. Instead the Scottish Government has perversely chosen a legislative strategy which will result in the continued non-publication of the Lockerbie report. 

Why?

What does Scotland owe Tony Gauci that we are prepared to go on protecting this man? What does it owe any of the parties?

What do we have to fear from the publication of this report? 

What is the real agenda?

We do ourselves no favours with this obstruction of justice. We are fooling no-one – except possibly ourselves.

Let an order be placed before the Scottish Parliament removing the consent requirement. Let the order be placed and let the report be published. The reputation of Scotland demands no less. 

[The second article The Megrahi case: Smoke and Mirrors is by the secretary of the Justice for Megrahi campaign group, Robert Forrester.  It reads in part:]

At 10am on Tuesday the 7th of February 2012, the Justice for Megrahi (JFM) Committee delegation met before the justice committee of the Scottish Parliament to answer questions regarding their perspective on Part 2 of the Criminal Cases (Punishment and Review) (Scotland) Bill currently under consideration at Holyrood. (...)

it is no secret that the Scottish Government claimed that part 2 of the bill was principally framed with a view to freeing up the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission's (SCCRC) statement of reasons for his second appeal for publication.

In 2009, the Scottish Government made a statutory instrument regulating the circumstances in which the material on which the commission reached its conclusions could be published. The wording of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (Permitted Disclosure of Information) Order 2009, was such that it rendered any chance of the statement of reasons and the material on which it was based ever reaching the public domain impossible without the express consent of those bodies and/or individuals who had provided evidence, either directly or indirectly, to the commission when putting together the document.

Having blocked publication of the statement of reasons for the entire duration of its first term in office and this first part of its second right up to the present day with this provision, the Scottish Government announced in the run-up to last May's general election in Scotland that it would remedy the situation by placing primary legislation before parliament to finally facilitate publication of the SCCRC document. Primary legislation? Why opt for primary legislation when all that is required is to utilise the simple, relatively cheap, quick and effective expedient of an amending statutory instrument to remove the consent requirement in the 2009 statutory instrument?

Following the government's confirmation of its intention to resort to the cumbersome, time-consuming and expensive process of primary legislation, on 4 August 2011, JFM wrote to the Scottish cabinet secretary for justice, Kenny MacAskill, and put the above question directly to him. The content of his reply was, to put it mildly, less than illuminating. He ended his response by saying:

'... primary legislation is needed to provide the flexibility required to ensure that an appropriate legislative framework is put in place. The proposed legislation will facilitate the release of a statement of reasons in circumstances where an appeal has been abandoned'. (Kenny MacAskill, 24 August 2011). Throughout his letter, however, he signally and studiously failed to address at any stage the question that was put to him.

Quite apart from the legislative process being employed by the government, in the view of JFM and many others, Part 2 of this new bill will be very hard pushed to do what the government claims it has been designed to achieve. The bill under consideration here is so circumscribed by caveats and provisos that it will simply maintain the status quo whereby, under certain circumstances, providers of evidence to the SCCRC will still be in a position to block the publication of the document whilst it contains information which such persons have supplied to the SCCRC.

Indeed, the [Scottish Government] justice directorate confirms this. (...)

In response to repeated questions from the members of the justice committee on 7 February, the JFM delegation referred its questioners to this statement. It is common in legal practice to talk in terms of 'finding the law'. Here it would appear that JFM has indeed found the law. Whether or not sufficient heed is being paid to the legislative references that JFM has made is open to question since we have yet to hear from any MSP, cabinet minister or, for that matter, any respondents to the bill, any specific and cogent argument which establishes that JFM's interpretation of the law is in error. All that seems to be being said is that there is a perceived issue with data protection; however, this perception is not being supported by reference to any contrary interpretation of the law. Under such circumstances, therefore, it is not unreasonable to assume that JFM is right to say that such a conflict is a 'red herring'.

This, of course, would not be the first time that JFM has demonstrated that its understanding of the law is accurate in contrast to its detractors within and without government. The public may recall that following months of claims by the Scottish Government that it did not have the power or remit to open an inquiry into Lockerbie/Zeist, the government had, finally and reluctantly, to accept that its interpretation of the 2005 Inquiries Act was in error and that JFM was correct.

Taking the above into account, it is the position of JFM that there would be no significant obstacle to the publication of the SCCRC's statement of reasons for Mr al-Megrahi's second appeal if the government simply employed secondary legislation to modify the 2009 order in such a manner that the consent requirements were disposed of and part 2 of the Criminal Cases (Punishment and Review) (Scotland) Bill were dropped altogether. Surely, both the precious parliamentary time and taxpayers’ money could be far better utilised by directing them towards the health service, education policy, transport infrastructure and other pressing matters of state rather than wasting them on what is quite patently a bill which is both unnecessary and unlikely to achieve what the government claims it is setting out to do.

None of this is the fault of the justice committee, whose task it is to gather material from respondents, make assessments and present recommendations to government. Nor can parliament as a whole be held responsible. It is even questionable whether one can lay the blame entirely at the feet of the government. The problem here, more likely than not, lies in the unduly powerful influence that the Crown Office, the lord advocate and the civil service have over policy and decision making as it affects this case and other aspects of the law in Scotland today. It is time for both our executive and our legislature to listen much more closely to the advice and opinions of the wider legal profession in our country rather than the narrow self-interest of vested interests closer to hand.

Megrahi data protection "myth" over SCCRC disclosure rebutted

This is the headline over a news item published today on the website of Scottish lawyers’ magazine The Firm.  It deals with (and gives the full text of) the recent supplementary submission by Justice for Megrahi to the Scottish Parliament’s Justice Committee on data protection issues alleged to arise in the context of disclosure of the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission’s Statement of Reasons in the Megrahi case.

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Data protection and SCCRC disclosure

At the Scottish Parliament Justice Committee’s 7 February hearing on Part 2 of the Criminal Cases(Punishment and Review)(Scotland) Bill, concerns were expressed by some committee members and a number of witnesses regarding data protection issues that might be involved in releasing the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission’s Statement of Reasons in the Megrahi case.  The stance of the Justice for Megrahi campaign group was that a Statutory Instrument made under section 194K(4) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 as amended (rather than primary legislation) would override common law and statutory obligations of secrecy, including data protection concerns.  Justice for Megrahi has now submitted to the Justice Committee a short written submission outlining its reasoning.  It can be read here.

... a prosecution which should never have been brought ...


[What follows is the text of a letter from Rev Dr John Cameron published in today’s edition of The Herald:]
We should be grateful that Joe Beltrami, the legendary Scottish criminal lawyer, took the time to comment on the direction in which Scots law is heading.
I was appalled by the Lockerbie trial and remember how Richard Keen, now Dean of the Faculty of Advocates, shredded a prosecution which should never have been brought. That farrago was not as disturbing as the trend being followed in rape trials where the mere word of the complainant is rapidly becoming sufficient for conviction.

Monday, 13 February 2012

The dog that can’t bark

This is the headline over an article by Megrahi biographer John Ashton posted today on the Megrahi: You are my Jury website.  It deals with the claims that have been made by various representatives of the Libyan NTC government about the supposed personal involvement of Colonel Gaddafi in the Lockerbie bombing, and the role allegedly played by Abdelbaset Megrahi. Evidence, of course, came there none.

Sunday, 12 February 2012

McLetchie makes it political and insults the Lockerbie dead

[This is the headline over an item posted today on Jim Swire and Peter Biddulph’s blog Lockerbie Truth. It reads as follows:]

Scottish Conservatives justice spokesman David McLetchie MSP has become the front-man for those who wish to conceal the truth about the Lockerbie trial. In doing so the Scottish Conservatives have politicised the Lockerbie disaster.

Is Mr McLetchie really aware that he is defending the following? -

1. Secret offers of huge rewards to the prosecution's main witnesses Maltese shopkeeper Tony Gauci and CIA double agent Majid Giaka were made throughout the two year police investigation. The records of these offers were concealed from the defence and judges by the combined actions of senior policemen, Crown officials, and members of the FBI.

2. Many of these policemen and FBI officers are named in the SCCRC report. 

3. The importance of keeping these offers secret was made clear in a memo dated 15th May 2007 written by DI Dalgliesh (Dalgliesh now, apparently, heads the Lockerbie police team).  In the memo Dalgliesh tells his colleagues of the danger of the information becoming public: "[there is] a real danger that if [the] SCCRC’s statement of reasons is leaked to the media, Anthony Gauci could be portrayed as having given flawed evidence for financial reward…”


4.  Flawed evidence for financial reward is exactly what Gauci did give.  

5.  At the height of the Lockerbie police enquiries, a new witness appeared.  David Wright gave a statement to the Dumfries and Galloway police suggesting that Gauci had been totally confused about the date of purchase of clothes, remnants of which had been found at Lockerbie. If Wright was correct, then Al-Megrahi could not have been the purchaser, since he was not in Malta when Wright had witnessed the actual purchase. 

6. If [Megrahi] was not the purchaser, then the main plank of the prosecution case would evaporate.  Al-Megrahi would most probably have walked free from the court. 

7.  The police quietly filed Wright's statement, and his existence was concealed from the Lockerbie trial. Both the investigating detectives and Crown lawyers knew of his existence but kept the information from the trial judges and defence.

8.  Wright and his statement were discovered only during a three-year inquiry by officers of the SCCRC.  He swore an affidavit reaffirming his original claims.  His evidence forms part of the so-far unpublished SCCRC report. 

9.  The existence of Wright and his statement and affidavit are another reason that the Scottish police, Crown office, and certain members of the FBI are afraid of publication of the SCCRC's report. 

10.  There were other important matters concealed from the judges and the defence, and we will comment on these at an appropriate time. 

This latest merging of attempts at concealment by the police and Crown office with the Scottish Conservative party is an insult to the dead of Lockerbie.