Scotland's top law officer not considering position over Murrell memo

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Angus CochraneSenior political journalist, BBC Scotland

Lord advocate says Murrell memo conveyed 'no political advantage'

Scotland's top law officer says she is not considering her position after facing criticism from MSPs over an email she sent to the first minister about criminal accusations against former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell.

Dorothy Bain told John Swinney in January that Murrell had been accused of embezzling almost £460,000 from the party, weeks before those details became public.

Murrell, 61, is yet to make a plea, with a preliminary hearing scheduled for 25 May.

Rejecting accusations of corruption, Bain told parliament she had sent the memo to protect the judicial process rather than influence it.

The lord advocate - who has a dual role as the government's principal legal advisor, which she performs as a cabinet minister, and the country's chief prosecutor - faced questions from MSPs after her email to Swinney was first reported in the Scottish Sun.

Getty Images Peter Murrell looking off to his right while sitting in a room. He is wearing a black suit, white shirt and dark coloured tie.Getty Images

Peter Murrell is accused of embezzling £459,000 from the SNP between 2010 and 2023

In an urgent question, Labour's Michael Marra asked why details about the charge had been included in the memo, which was shared with senior civil servants and special advisers.

He said the information "conferred clear political advantage" to Swinney and said it suggest "political interference" in the case.

Marra claimed the positions of both the first minister and Bain had been "compromised".

Scottish Conservative leader Russell Findlay said the move "smacks of corruption".

He claimed it had given the SNP a "clear" advantage ahead of May's Holyrood election and "endangered the lord advocate's position of neutrality".

Asked by Findlay if she was thinking about stepping down, Bain replied: "I am not considering my position."

She told MSPs: "I have had no involvement in this case and any suggestion that I am corrupt or my position is compromised I roundly reject."

The lord advocate said the memo had not been requested by the government and insisted ministers had not been granted "preferential access".

She also denied the email gave the government any "political advantage".

The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service (COPFS) has repeatedly said Bain is not involved in the Murrell case because it involves politicians.

The law officer told MSPs the purpose of the memo was to confirm the indictment and the nature of the charge, to reiterate that she was not involved in the prosecution and to remind ministers to avoid "speculation and inappropriate commentary".

She said it was "normal practice" to share this information with the first minister, and that decisions to do so were made on a case-by-case basis.

Pressed by MSPs to give examples where this had happened in the past, Bain said she would get back to them in writing.

She said that the memo had been sent in the knowledge that the indictment would be made public, which it was almost a month later, on 13 February.

Tory MSP Douglas Ross noted that after Swinney's office had received the email the COPFS was telling journalists only the date of the preliminary hearing could be reported.

Lib Dem MSP Jamie Greene rejected suggestions the lord advocate was "politically corrupt", while Scottish Green co-leader Ross Greer described such allegations as "deeply irresponsible".

Earlier, Swinney said he would not comment on a live criminal case.

He added: "Parliament has got to be very clear about the importance of respecting the independence of the criminal process within our country, and within our courts, and I intend to respect that."

Murrell, the estranged husband of former first minister Nicola Sturgeon, stepped down as SNP chief executive in 2023 after more than two decades in the role.

He was arrested that year as part of Operation Branchform, a police investigation into SNP finances.

Murrell was charged with embezzlement in April 2024.

He is accused of embezzling £459,000 from the party between August 2010 and January 2023.

Details of a charge against him - including the illicit purchase of luxury goods, two cars and a motorhome, using party funds - were first reported in the media last week.

Murrell had been expected to appear at the High Court in Glasgow for the preliminary hearing on Friday, but it has been postponed to 25 May at the High Court in Edinburgh.

It will now take place after the Holyrood election on 7 May.

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