Schroedinger’s Evidence 180


You be the judge.

At my appeal last week against imprisonment for journalism, judges opined that my sworn evidence at my trial had been “so self-evidently untrue as not to require cross-examination”, and even that my evidence had never been accepted by the court as existing. They also stated that contempt of court being “summary proceedings”, there was no need to hear my evidence before sending me to jail.

Yet, as I swore on oath, I quite assure you every single word is true. Here it is, as censored by the Crown Office to protect the identities of those who made false accusations against Alex Salmond.

No contrary evidence was produced by the Crown at trial from anybody to refute my evidence. I ask you to answer two questions:

1) Do you think this is “so self-evidently untrue as not to require cross-examination?
2) Why do you think the legal Establishment are so anxious that this evidence does not exist at all?

AFFIDAVIT
of
CRAIG MURRAY, redaction Edinburgh, EH10 redaction

At Edinburgh on the TWENTY FIFTH day of AUGUST 2020, in the presence of David James Finlay Halliday, solicitor and notary public, Halliday Campbell WS, solicitors, redaction, Edinburgh, EH16 redaction, COMPEARED CRAIG MURRAY, redaction, Edinburgh, EH10 redaction who being solemnly sworn hereby DEPONES as follows:-

1. My name is Craig Murray, I reside at redaction, Edinburgh, EH10 redaction. I am 61 years old, a retired diplomat, now a historian and journalist.

2. I was Rector of the University of Dundee (2007-2010) and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Lancaster School of Law (2005-9). I am the author of books including Sikunder Burnes, Master of the Great Game (2017), The Catholic Orangemen of Togo (2010) and Murder in Samarkand (2007). The website academia.edu lists over 130 academic peer reviewed articles referencing my work.

3. I was British Ambassador to Uzbekistan 2002-4. Other roles included Deputy High Commissioner to Ghana (1999 – 2002), Deputy Head (Equatorial), Africa Department FCO (1997-9), First Secretary, British Embassy, Warsaw (1993 – 1937), Head of Maritime Section, FCO (1991-3) and Head of Cyprus Section, FCO (1989 -91).

4. Special responsibilities included Head of FCO Section, Embargo Surveillance Centre (1990-1), Alternate Head of UK Delegation to UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (1991-3) and Head of UK Delegation to the Sierra Leone Peace Talks (1998-2000).

5. I have been awarded the Sam Adams Award for Integrity (USA) 2005 and the Primo Alto Qualita Della Citta di Bologna (Italy) 2006 and am an Officer of the Order of Mono (Togo). I have turned down three honours from the British state, OBE, LVO and CVO on grounds of Scottish nationalism, the last two being in the personal gift of Her Majesty the Queen.

6. As a journalist in new media, my output has been focused on my own website, which is nowadays my primary source of income. My articles have however been published in newspapers including the Guardian, Independent, Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday, and very many others both nationally and internationally.

7. I have been shown paragraph 11 of the Lord Advocate’s written submissions, which suggest that I published material not in the public domain because the stated purpose of my blog is to use insider knowledge of government to interpret contemporary events.  What I said is not a reference to acquiring material from inside the Scottish Government and publishing it.  It is a reference to using my experience at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office to provide authoritative commentary on, and interpretation of, contemporary events, whether in Scotland, the United Kingdom or the wider world.

8. In August of 2018 I read the salacious account published by the Daily Record of an alleged sexual assault by Alex Salmond on a civil servant in Bute House. Aspects of the story appeared to me highly unlikely, in particular the willingness of the civil servant to simply obey his instruction of going to the bedroom and lying on the bed. On August 26 2018, I therefore published an article on my blog expressing this opinion.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2018/08/a-short-article-not-mentioning-alex-salmond/

9. I made no attempt to discover the identity of the civil servant involved, but I did make strenuous efforts to discover who had leaked the story to the media, calling and meeting a wide range of contacts in Edinburgh and Glasgow. To my surprise, I discovered with a high degree of certainty that the leaker was Liz Lloyd, Chief of Staff to Nicola Sturgeon. I also discovered that she had a personal history with the journalist concerned and did not link it in my mind to anything wider than that.

10. In January 2019, I published an article following Mr Salmond’s resounding victory in his judicial review case against the Scottish government. My article focused on the abuses of civil service procedure in the pursuit of Alex Salmond by Leslie Evans and Judith Mackinnon, and called for them both to be sacked.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/01/the-salmond-stitch-up-the-incredible-facts-and-why-mackinnon-and-evans-must-be-sacked/
11. The article concluded that if Nicola Sturgeon failed to act against them, it might indicate that she was herself involved in the campaign of false allegation against Alex Salmond.

12. As a result of this article, Alex Salmond, with whom I had only very slight prior acquaintance, invited me to meet him in the George Hotel in Edinburgh. Here, for the first time, he told me that Nicola Sturgeon had been behind the process designed to generate false accusations against him. He said as well as Mackinnon and Evans, Liz Lloyd was responsible for the actual orchestration.

13. Mr Salmond further said that the Scottish Government had made every effort to withhold vital evidence from Lord Pentland, who had ordered a process of commission and evidence on the available documentation. It was on the day that witnesses from Nicola Sturgeon’s private office were due to give evidence as to her own knowledge and involvement, that the Scottish Government suddenly conceded the case rather than have this evidence heard.

14. Mr Salmond further told me that there was a massive police operation underway to try to get accusers to come forward against him. This was going to ludicrous lengths. He showed me an email from one woman to him, in which she stated that she had been called in and interviewed by the police because many years ago Alex Salmond had been said by another person to have been seen kissing her on the cheeks in a theatre foyer. The woman stated she had told them it was a perfectly normal greeting. She wished to warn Alex of the police fishing expedition against him. He understood that over 400 people had been interviewed by the police.

15. He said those interviewed by the police had included all the personal protection officers he had as First Minister. They had all said they had seen him do nothing wrong, and they were watching him very closely, as was their job. At least one of these policemen, now retired, had been given a rundown of the evidence by the policeman sent to interview him. The retired officer challenged the interviewer as to how he could be involved in such a corrupt stitch up. He stated that the fact it was a stitch-up was evidenced by the fact all the accusations emanated from the same small coterie, there was not a single accusation from an outside or independent source.

16. That observation stayed with me as I followed and investigated the case over the next year and it remains a key fact. I was strongly inclined to believe Alex Salmond. I am of much the same generation of the Scottish political class and it is a small country. We tend to know each other or of each other. I had never in forty years heard a hint of gossip surrounding Alex Salmond and sexual behaviour, with the single exception of a rumoured redacted attachment with redacted. But that had not involved any rumour of unwanted advances by Mr Salmond, quite the opposite ; it was rather widely believed in nationalist circles that she had set her cap at him. The common joke was that redacted was a booby prize.

17. It had been impossible to follow the judicial review case without concluding that a very unfair process had been undertaken against Alex Salmond, and that it was impossible this could have happened without the knowledge and approval of Nicola Sturgeon. That was a shocking realisation to an Independence supporter like myself. But what Alex Salmond was now telling me went further, which was that Nicola Sturgeon was involved in the orchestration of fake complaints against him. This was fairly astonishing on first hearing.

18. I asked what the motive could be. Alex replied that he did not know ; perhaps it lay in King Lear. He said that he had genuinely intended to quit politics and had lined up a position as Chairman of Johnstone Press, which had fallen because of these allegations. But he had retired from the party leadership before, and then come back, and perhaps Nicola had concluded he needed a stake through the heart. He had made plain to her that he was not happy with her lack of progress towards an Independence referendum following the Brexit vote.

19. Alex Salmond was plainly very unhappy. He said that he believed that Nicola was banking on his loyalty to the SNP and to the Independence movement, thinking that he would not split the party by revealing what or who was behind the allegations against him. At this crucial time, a Salmond/Sturgeon split could derail the chance for Independence and have a truly historic effect. I asked him directly whether this meant he did not want me to publish this information at the moment. He confirmed I should not publish. This conversation was in confidence but, as my blog was highly influential within the Independence movement, he thought it vital that I know the truth as matters develop.

20. I told him that Sturgeon’s hostility towards him seemed to be longstanding. I recounted a story I had been told by Robin McAlpine, of an occasion shortly after his resignation when Alex Salmond had arrived at the Scottish Parliament for a function and the First Minister’s Office had refused to sign him in. Alex replied that this was true ; it was particularly embarrassing as the occasion had been to hand over a large cheque for funds raised for charity following a campaign he had initiated as First Minister. They had been forced to do the photoshoot in the rain outside instead.

21. I advised Alex Salmond that he should continue to fight any allegations vigorously and should not worry in the least about any consequential damage to the SNP or the Yes movement, which were both very robust. If the SNP leadership were behind the attacks on him, it was much better that people know.

22. I also told him I knew exactly how he felt, having been myself subject to false accusation when as British Ambassador I blew the whistle on UK Government collusion with torture in the War on Terror. To be subject to a fit-up, particularly by those you knew and considered friends, was extremely disorienting. I was probably one of the few people in the UK who knew precisely how he felt.

23. The meeting concluded with Alex making the observation that he blamed himself for having established far too centralised a system of power in Scottish Government and the SNP, and not taking account of how far that was open to abuse by a person of ill-will.

24. In June 2019 (I do know the precise date, time and venue but to give it might aid identification of my source with deleterious consequences for them) I met with a person well known in the Independence movement who informed me that they had been present at a meeting with Nicola Sturgeon and key members of her inner circle, including ministers, which had gamed the possible outcome of the Salmond affair. My source was trusted as a Sturgeon loyalist,

25. The view of the meeting was that if Alex Salmond could be convicted on just a single count, he would be destroyed politically forever, which was explicitly the objective. He would be on the register of sex offenders and branded a rapist in the public mind, even if the actual offence convicted was knee touching. I was also told that the Law Officers were confident of a conviction for something, which is why the multiplicity of charges. They apparently advised that, faced with a whole raft of charges, juries tended to compromise in the jury room to reach agreement and convict on a lower charge.

26. What struck me, both at the time and still, was that it was impossible to understand the account as given without it involving of necessity corrupt collusion between Nicola Sturgeon’s ministers and aides and the Crown Office over the handling of the Salmond case and the charges being brought.

27. I directly asked my source why they had been regarded as so trustworthy as to be included in such a meeting. They replied that they were generally highly supportive of « Nicola » and her leadership and had been on the fringes of her inner circle for a while. But they were not happy with the « fitting-up » of Alex Salmond, which they described as « unnecessary ».

28. I was aware that in telling me this my source was playing a double game. I was a British diplomat for over twenty years and a member of the Senior Management Structure of the FCO for over six. Obtaining confidential information from inside government circles, and assessing the credibility of the source and the information, is a core skill set for a diplomat, and I was a highly successful diplomat, becoming the UK’s youngest Ambassador.

29. I considered, using the FCO learnt criteria, the access and motivation of my source and my background knowledge of them, all of which I researched further. My conclusion was that this was a highly credible source with good access. This also squared with my impression ; they had seemed straightforward and no inconsistencies had appeared under question. I had known them for some years. I believed their account, and I still do.

30. At a later date, but substantially in advance of his trial, I informed Alex Salmond in broad terms of this conversation.

31. Equally crucially, this proved not just entirely consistent with all the further information I received, but a good explanation of it. In March 2020 I had explained and briefly shown to me by a source with good access the content of evidence related to the Salmond trial, much of which was to be excluded from the trial itself by the judge as collateral.

32. This material included the message from Peter Murrell, Chief Executive Officer of the SNP, to Sue Ruddick, Chief Operating Officer, to the effect that it was now the right time to put pressure on Police Scotland to move forward against Alex Salmond. It included the message from Ms Ruddick (I do not recall the recipient) to the effect that the problem was with Police Scotland refusing to detail precisely what evidence they required. If they would specify, then she could get that evidence for them. It included the message from Leslie Evans, Permanent Secretary to the Scottish Government, after the Scottish Government had abandoned its judicial review case, to the effect that they had lost a battle but won the war.

33. It included the message from redacted to another complainer to the effect that she had a plan that would enable them to have a strongly detrimental effect on Alex Salmond but have anonymity. It included the message from redacted to the effect that she did not want to attend any further meetings regarding a possible complaint if redacted were going to be present as redacted made her feel pressured rather than supported. It included the message from Ian McCann to the effect that he would sit on redacted‘s complaint until it became necessary to deploy it. It included a number of messages from redacted which gave the impression she was playing a central role in orchestrating and organising complainers, but I do not recall any specific details of those particular individual messages.

34. Even more crucially, this account was consistent with what actually happened at the trial. In common with many observers, I was unimpressed by the performance of Alex Prentice for the prosecution and the truly pathetic and hopeless nature of a number of allegations. The inclusion of daft allegations like the « hair pinging » incident or the easily disproved hand on the knee in the car, are universally agreed to have weakened rather than strengthened the prosecution’s case when there were much more serious incidents admitted to have some basis in truth. Nor did these minor incidents contribute to « Moorov », being of a much lesser order than the main charges. The only way I could make sense of the Crown’s approach was in the light of what had been explained to me months earlier, the idea that the jury might settle on a lesser charge as a form of compromise. So here again, as in other ways, subsequent events are entirely consistent with what I was told in June 2019, and I am confirmed in my belief of corrupt collusion between the Crown Office and Nicola Sturgeon’s office.

35. I should state that I did not take notes at any stage in this investigation, in any meetings, and I am speaking entirely from memory here. That is why I am not giving verbatim messages but my memory of them. I have no doubt my memory is correct in essence. All of these messages are in the Crown’s possession and I trust will be produced to support this statement.

36. Again, my not taking notes reflects FCO training not to write down sensitive information outside of a fully secure environment but rather to remember. In a case involving sexual abuse, I was particularly concerned not to take notes that, if lost or overseen, might identify individuals.

37. In August of 2019, I learnt that my friend the veteran investigative journalist Laurie Flynn had been digging into the events which led to the Court of Session judicial review, and had an article written. I offered to host it on my blog. It was extremely interesting and highlighted the role of redacted, a name that was coming up again and again.

38. I therefore published Laurie’s article on 23 August 2019, and added further comments particularly on the role of redacted, whom I was beginning to consider a rather sinister figure. At this time I had no idea redacted. Indeed, it is very strange indeed, and quite out of order, that redacted was such an active member of the Scottish Government judicial review committee which had decided to contest the civil case, at great expense, and was to decide to concede it, at great expense.

39. In November 2019, I was told by a senior contact within the SNP whom I have known for many years (not the same source from June) that a deal had been struck between Peter Murrell, redacted and redacted whereby redacted would make an allegation of attempted rape against Alex Salmond, and Murrell would redacted return to front line politics redacted. The cold-bloodedness of this infuriated me. By around this time I had learnt the identities of, I believe, all of the complainers, not from a single source but by asking around my contacts. It was not difficult.

40. I realised that something extraordinary and morally disgusting was happening. If the public knew the identities of those being put up to make allegations, and just how close to Nicola Sturgeon they were, they would immediately understand what was happening. But the convention protecting the identities of those making allegations of sexual assault, made such allegations the perfect vehicle for a positive campaign to frame on false charges, while the perpetrators of this conspiracy to pervert the course of justice had the protection of the courts against exposure.

41. That accusers included :

redacted Nicola Sturgeon. First Minister of Scotland Leader of the SNP ;
redacted Ian Blackford, UK Parliamentary Leader for the SNP ;
redacted Angus Robertson, Former UK Parliamentary Leader of the SNP ;
redacted

It would cause a massive political storm were it known to the public, and raise major and in fact fully justified suspicions about motive. The combination of the anonymity of these accusers, and the exclusion from the trial on the grounds of « collateral evidence » – and continued intention of the Crown Office to suppress – of the messages implicating Peter Murrell and Sue Ruddick in the conspiracy, has resulted in the denial to the Scottish public of information which there is the strongest possible public interest in knowing, in order for them to judge the actions of those in power over them.

42. The weight of all this knowledge, and of not being allowed to tell it, was a heavy burden upon me. In general, I strongly support the principle of anonymity for people alleging they are victims of sexual assault. But this was an absolutely unique case. Where the « victims » are actually those wielding very considerable power in the state, and conspiring to frame an innocent man, is the principle of protection for sexual abuse victims of greater public interest than the public interest in being able to form an informed opinion on the massive abuse of state power which was in train ?

43. It was at this stage that I formed the opinion that there were questions here that urgently needed to be addressed, but it was not for me to decide. I therefore formed the view that, after the trial of Alex Salmond was concluded, this question would have to be put before a court, and, when the time came, I acted upon that conviction.

44. There was a period of several months when I was fully aware of the names of the accusers, and also fully aware that there was no general law or court order in place preventing me simply from publishing. That, however, would not have been responsible journalism and I determined to wait until I could put the matter before the court. The fact I did not publish the names when I could, over months, makes ludicrous the accusation of the Lord Advocate that I intentionally leaked out little bits of information as jigsaw identification.

45. I should explain that I was not enjoying this investigation at all. In fact, I hated it and was becoming quite seriously depressed by the shock of what I was uncovering. I had moved back to Scotland in 2014 specifically in order to campaign for Scottish Independence. I have been a member of the Scottish National Party since 2011. It was horribly disillusioning to discover the corruption at the heart of the Scottish Government.

46. I was also in a deep dilemma as to what to do about it ; the same dilemma Alex Salmond was, and is, in. To expose that it was Nicola Sturgeon who masterminded the conspiracy against him would be a real blow to the Independence movement. But to watch a plot to imprison an innocent man potentially for the rest of his life unfold before my eyes was also horrifying. Particularly as the most cynical part of the plot, to use the court anonymity granted to accusers of sexual abuse, to disguise who was actually behind the allegations, appeared to be working.

47. I should add that in May 2019 I met Alex Salmond in London to record a 50 minute interview for his TV company about my life and career, and that I met him again in approximately November 2019 in London for dinner with my good friend, the journalist Peter Oborne. On neither occasion was there substantive discussion of the charges against him.

48. On 21 November 2019, the Crown released substantial details of the charges against Alex Salmond. On 22 November, I looked through the newspapers and every Scottish newspaper had massive front page coverage of the accusations against him, in detail. The front page headline of the Herald read « 10 women ; 14 sexual offences ; Alex Salmond accused ». The details of all charges were printed on the front page, which had no other content. There were two other full pages on it inside.

49. The front page of the Scottish Daily Mail had the headline « Salmond in the dock » and the sub-heading « Former SNP Chief appears at High Court to deny 14 sex offences, including attempted rape, while First Minister ». There was no other story on the front page. There were eight full pages of further coverage inside.

The Daily Record front page had « Salmond on Trial the Charges : 1 attempted rape, 1 intent to rape, 2 indecent assaults, 10 sexual assaults, In the Dock ; 10 women accuse former First Minister of attacks. » There were two further full pages inside.

The Scottish Sun had « Salmond Rape Bid at Bute House  Ex-First Minister sex rap ; 10 women, 14 charges ; « pinned a victim down » and no other story on the front page.

The Daily Express had « Salmond Made Naked Rape Bid – Full details of 14 sex charges revealed ; Claims involve 10 women over 6 years ; I am innocent says ex-First Minister » and no other story on the front page, with four more pages inside.

The Scotsman had « Salmond, the charges ; Former First Minister accused of lying naked on top of woman and trying to rape her in Bute House » and no other story on the front page.

50. Broadcast media took the same tone. I was deeply concerned by the entire tenor of the press coverage, which appeared to be highly hostile to Salmond and present matters in a way that would be bound to influence potential jurors against him. I was also surprised by the sheer detail in the charges which the Crown Office had presented to the media.

51. This worried me because it creates a huge imbalance in media coverage and thus in public opinion. The Crown can release salacious detail about attempted rape while lying naked on top of somebody in bed, and the media can echo this to the heavens. But from that moment, nobody can publish anything to contradict the Crown without being in contempt of court. It seemed to me that, in these circumstances, the Crown ought to have been a great deal more restrained in the amount of salacious detail it was making available. Certainly, there was nothing in what was happening which would contradict the information I had been given of the Crown Office being party to a political plot to destroy Salmond.

52. In mid January 2020 I took part in an AUOB march through Glasgow which took place in a major storm. It was followed by a press conference at which I spoke and then by a joint strategy meeting with Plaid Cymru, all in soaked clothes. I have heart and lung conditions of longstanding and the over-exertion and hypothermia resulted in an ambulance being called later that evening. I refused hospitalisation because I was too busy.

53. However, the scare led me to write my « Yes Minister Fan Fiction » article of 18 January 2020 because, as the article plainly states, there were things I would not wish to die without having told.

54. It was, however ,a challenge to work out how to tell them without being in contempt of court given the charges against Alex Salmond. I therefore very carefully used a number of strategies not to be in contempt of court. Not to evade contempt of court charges ; actually not to be in contempt of court.

55. Perhaps the most vital strategy was what I would call post-dated cheque information. By which I meant, to leave information that people would not understand the ramifications of now, but would after the trial or once further evidence emerged. This applies most clearly to the redacted deal of redacted.

56. In January 2020, it was not widely known at all that redacted. Therefore, when I wrote : « I was thinking more of his wife, Permanent Secretary. redacted » my readership had no idea what I was talking about.

57. As with other information recounted above, it is remarkable how precisely events as they have unfolded have proven my sources were right. It is now notorious in Scottish political circles that the National Executive of the SNP last week adopted measures which effectively redacted, and did so in order to redacted. Many articles have appeared in the media to that effect. I regret that, redacted identity still being protected, I am not able to republish my article to show that I knew in advance and show what lies behind it. Nobody reads old articles on the blog ; very few people read articles below the first two on the homepage, and it is rare for articles to be read at all once they fall off the homepage (about two weeks). This is particularly true as Google de-ranks alternative or independent news sites.

58. At the time I wrote this article there was no order in force against publication of names. I nevertheless decided not to do that. I did not name redacted, instead using the alias « marmalade ». This was a private joke to myself referencing redacted. I was not in fact particularly thinking of redacted, or I would have called him « Keiller ».

59. I also did not give the names of either Sturgeon, Evans redacted Ms Sturgeon’s private secretary was, of course, male.

60. I further wrote the article as a satirical piece to disguise the nuggets of truth, in the manner of a Yes Minister script. As Jack Point put it :
« Oh winnow of my folly and you’ll find
A grain or two of truth among the chaff »
Satire has been for centuries a licensed vehicle for literary, social and political commentators, from Martial through Chaucer, Pope and Swift to Peter Cook. I find it hard to believe the Lord Advocate is seeking to prosecute satire – or I would have found it hard to believe, had I not been on this extraordinary journey of revelation of the corruption of the Scottish state.

61. I was particularly keen to satirise the Moorov doctrine. A lot of mince is still just mince – it does not turn into sirloin steak just because you have a lot of it. But, in doing so, I was also referencing the account I had been given in June 2019 of the tactics being employed by the prosecution, and seeking to make it plain to the Sturgeon circle that I knew precisely how their scheme was supposed to operate. That would have been entirely obscure to the general reader.

62. I was engaged in booking acts for the Doune the Rabbit Hole music festival, of which I am a director. I came up with the pseudonym « Orpheus » for Alex Salmond because I had just finished booking the Morriston Orpheus Male Voice Choir. I came up with the pseudonym Barclay simply because I was making bank payments.

63. The notion that this cryptic, satirical article, described as fiction, on a personal blog, would influence a jury is fanciful. When compared to the absolute torrent of hostile mainstream media material fed by the Crown Office, as detailed above, and vicious social media comment, aimed at Alex Salmond, the fact that the Crown Office are prosecuting only an extremely rare news source sympathetic to Salmond is, in my view, deeply sinister in the light of everything I have stated so far about the Crown Office – and more is to come.

64. On 21 January 2019, I received an email from the Crown Office requesting me to take down my Yes Minister Fan Fiction article as they considered it to be in contempt of court. I did not consider it to be in contempt of court- I had written it carefully not to be – so I did not take it down.

65. I was concerned about the constitutional implications of the Crown’s letter, and I still am. The Crown gave no indication of why they believed the article to be in contempt of court. When , many weeks later, I received the Lord Advocate’s Petition and Complaint, it appeared to indicate that they considered it was in contempt for jigsaw identification – but that made no sense, as when the Crown wrote to me on 21 January 2019 there was no order in place to protect the identities. The Petition gives no indication that the Crown was alleging that article might prejudice the jury. That argument only arrives months later again, in the Lord Advocate’s written submission.

66. I considered the matter very carefully. The rule of law is not arbitrary. If the Crown, without the intervention of a judge, has the power to censor publication, we are putting liberty in Scotland back several hundred years. The Crown Office cannot just order censorship on entirely spurious grounds thought up several months later.

67. I made a very conscious decision to content myself with the idea that, if they really thought I was in contempt of court, they would bring it to court and a judge could decide whether I was right or they were right. If they genuinely thought my article might influence a jury, given they were well aware of the article and wrote to me about it, the Crown Office had an obvious public duty to act before a trial to prevent that evil. I would have happily turned up in court and argued my case. To wait until long after the trial, after it is far too late to avert the evil they purport to be concerned about, and then make that allegation against me, is plainly pointless and vindictive and, again, sinister.

68. I visited the High Court before the trial to find out how to attend and report. I attempted to register as a journalist, but was given the absolute runaround between the Scottish Courts and Tribunal Service and Judicial Communications. I suspect this is simply because their systems are geared to the outdated days of traditional media. I was unable to obtain accreditation, and thus could not be present for the prosecution evidence.

69. I therefore wrote up my commentary on Day 1 of the court case in an article entitled « The Alex Salmond Trial : Your Man Excluded from the Gallery » with some wider commentary about the context of the trial and the laws of evidence in Scotland, but with reporting of events in the trial itself entirely based upon what was published by other journalists inside the court. I was particularly following James Doleman, Philip Sim and Radio Forth and also the Grouse Beater blog which itself was purely drawing on published sources. I stated this explicitly in the article « If you look through the twitter lines, you will see that journalists between them have missed at least three quarters of what is said in court. Because I am not there I am dependent on their selection of material. » I published nothing of the evidence – literally nothing – that had not been published by other journalists.

70. I had clearly at the forefront of my mind the desire to avoid identification of redacted, even though there was at that time no order in place to protect her identity. I am satisfied that I succeeded in this.

71. By my next report on 12 March, I was a little more organised and had sources inside the court giving me additional information. I thus knew fairly well in real time of the order protecting identities, and was still more careful. It was necessary, for the public to have an understanding of the basics of the case, to explain that several of the accusers held senior positions in SNP structures, but I was very careful to ensure I gave no details of actual positions or who worked in Edinburgh, who worked in London etc. This continued throughout the trial.

72. On 18 and 19 March, when I finally gained access to the court, I continued this policy of taking great care. In writing up that evening, I google searched on two particular pieces of evidence to check I was not giving away identities. For example, I searched many combinations of terms for Salmond, Alexander Anderson, helicopter, Stirling Castle and Gleneagles to ensure that my article could not lead to identification of redacted. I was satisfied it could not, and published my account with good conscience.

73. On the other hand, I found that google searches around the meeting of Geoff Aberdein with Nicola Sturgeon on 29 March very readily brought up the fact that redacted. I therefore amended my draft to delete reference to her presence at that meeting, even though that meeting is, from a political point of view, perhaps the most significant fact to have emerged from the trial, as it shows Nicola Sturgeon to have misled Parliament about when she first knew of allegations.

74. By contrast, the entire mainstream media published details of that meeting including redacted. Stuart Campbell has been pursuing this fact in correspondence with the Crown office. Kirsty Wark repeated this very simple jigsaw identification of redacted in the recent BBC documentary The Trial of Alex Salmond.

75. There is a very good list of articles which included this jigsaw information which I rigorously excluded to be found in the letter from the Crown Office to the Reverend Stuart Campbell of 19 August which you can see here :
https://wingsoverscotland.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/copfs19aug2020-1.jpg

76. I was much more careful to avoid jigsaw identification here than the mainstream media. After I was astonished to be charged with contempt by the Crown Office, I sought objective proof of this by commissioning an opinion poll from Panelbase.

77. This poll, conducted according to industry leading survey techniques, cannot establish whether anybody is correct in their presumed identification of witnesses. But it shows that, of those who believe they have identified witnesses, 66% believe they learnt the identities from TV or newspapers. One person named my blog as a source – in among many more names of mainstream media journalists. The individual who was most named as giving away identities, most named by a margin, was journalist Dani Garavelli. It is of course possible that the individual who named my blog was referring to the re-publication for comment of one of Garavelli’s articles on my blog.

78. I am not a lawyer. But, to a layman, it is remarkable to me that the Crown Office is prosecuting me citing my commentary on Garavelli’s article as contempt of court, whereas Garavelli’s article itself has not led to Garavelli being prosecuted, even though opinion poll evidence shows she was named far more than I as a source of identification. Given that Garavelli’s work is vehemently anti-Salmond while the Crown Office is prosecuting the most prominent pro-Salmond journalist, I would say this is, in the context of all else I have testified, sinister.

79. In publishing all of my accounts of the trial, I was extremely mindful of both the law of contempt of court and of my desire not to identify witnesses. The constraints were not just at the back of my mind, but right at the front of my mind, to the extent that there is highly considered discussion of these issues included in my articles throughout my reporting of the case.

80. But I was also strongly aware of a public duty to inform the public of the defence evidence. As already noted, the Crown had given the media, and the media had extravagantly published, salacious detail of the prosecution’s charges from long before the trial. When the prosecution evidence was led, there was again for the first few days an absolute frenzy of front page, news bulletin leading reporting, again focused exclusively on the most salacious and sensational extracts from what the accusers said in court.

81. Then, when the defence witnesses stood up one after another, without the benefit of anonymity, and gave their evidence under oath, there was virtually nothing. I witnessed the ranks of media in front of the public gallery literally shut their notebooks. Virtually no media reporting appeared of the fact that redacted could not have had her alleged morning exchange with Tasmina Ahmed Sheikh because the latter’s father had died that morning. Nor of the two separate eye witnesses, feet away, who testified that redacted was not groped at the Stirling Castle photocall. No account was given of Janet Watt, line manager, denying she had been told of incidents as claimed. Nor of Alex Bell, who detests Alex Salmond, nevertheless testifying that he did not see the claimed scene by the Jack Vettriano painting. I could go on and on with all the defence evidence which the media did not mention.

82. The general media situation is perfectly exampled in the subsequent BBC documentary, « The Trial of Alex Salmond », broadcast by the BBC on 17 and 18 October and fronted by Kirsty Wark. While purporting to be a day to day account of the trial and adopting a « Day 1 », « Day 2 » etc format, incredibly the documentary simply skipped from Day 7 to Day 10 and missed out the defence witnesses. That is just what the overwhelming majority of the media did – quite deliberately, of course. There can be no serious argument against the proposition that the Scottish mainstream media is overwhelmingly hostile to Alex Salmond.

83. It is a simple statement of fact that the only reason any measurable section of the Scottish population has the slightest idea of what the defence evidence was, is that it was published on my blog. Otherwise they would only have the false mainstream media presentation of highly selective quotes from Gordon Jackson to the effect that Salmond could have been a better man, but inappropriate does not mean criminal, and the deliberately created false impression that the jury was faced with only « he said, she said » decisions. The third party eye witnesses who challenged key aspects of accusers’ evidence went mostly unreported, except by me.

84. In a case with such massive political ramifications, in giving a fair account of the defence evidence I fulfilled a democratic duty I felt a strong obligation to fulfil. I am very proud of my role. And I did it while all the time keeping a very careful eye indeed on the line of jigsaw identification and contempt of court. That I was up to the line I readily admit ; a fast bowler does not deliver from behind the stumps lest he overshoot the crease and bowl a no ball. But I was very careful indeed not to cross the line.

85. It was put to me during the trial (I believe by the court reporter James Doleman, who I know from our both covering the Julian Assange hearing) that the law of contempt of court dictates in sexual abuse cases that the prosecution case can be widely reported but the defence case cannot be reported. The reason is jigsaw identification. He told me as a warning to be very careful.

86. His reasoning went like this. The Crown at the time of charge releases to the media details of all the charges. So they have released, for example, that a hypothetical woman X was assaulted in Bute House on 1 January. So when woman X gives evidence, you can publish it in detail because the Crown had already released it. However, if, in recounting the defence evidence, it were a relevant fact that she had a blue car, you could not mention it, because of jigsaw identification. The fact that her being in Bute House on 1 January would quite literally be a million times more identifying than possession of a blue car was irrelevant. So you could report the accusation but not the defence.

87. I considered this very carefully with regard to my reporting of the case, and it relates directly to the charges against me. It is highly identifying to say that a woman was with Alex Salmond in an official capacity on a visit to China, close enough to him to travel in his car and be with him in the lift. That is all extremely identifying ; everybody reported it because it was part of the prosecution case. Yet there is only one person that can be. But for me to report as part of the defence that she had curly hair – as do over 15% of the population – is jigsaw identification. I considered the argument the Lord Advocate now puts forward, before I published the piece, and considered it patently absurd.

88. I also considered that, if that were truly a statement of Scots Law, then the effect is obviously perverse. That only the prosecution case may be published and not the defence, would mean that even an innocent man found innocent, would forever be damaged in the eyes of the public who would know the detailed accusations against him but not why he was found innocent. That cannot be the intention of the law.

89. Nor can it be the intention of the law, as in the Alex Salmond verdict, that the accusers should even after the not guilty and not proven verdicts, continue a massive media campaign from behind the veil of anonymity against the acquitted man. This appears to me a massive abuse of the court order granting anonymity and I cannot believe that this was the intention of Lady Dorrian when she granted the order. I shall return to this subject shortly.

90. On the morning of 20 March, I was as usual waiting with my ticket to enter the public gallery, when Alex Prentice emerged from a door to the left of a court room entrance, paused and appeared to stare at me before continuing on into the courtroom. The supposed start time for the court came and went with the queue still outside, and then I was approached by two police officers, in front of everyone, and marched from the court. This was very humiliating, particularly as some pleasure was evident among the queue of mainstream media journalists who had come to demonise Alex Salmond.

91. The police were very pleasant but, in reply to my direct question, stated that they had no idea why I was being removed. The court staff at the front door stated the same. I therefore went home.

92. I now know that the court had heard a motion for my exclusion from the prosecution on the grounds of alleged contempt of court. I believe strongly that it was contrary to natural justice that the judge and prosecution should have been discussing me while I stood directly outside the court door, and I was not given any hearing or even accorded the common decency and respect of being informed what was happening. This is in stark contrast to events on the morning of the 10th March when an accredited member of the media, said to have tweeted out an identity – much more than I had done – was permitted to be present while the matter was discussed in closed court and was asked if he had anything to say.

93. My only complaint of the court refers to my own treatment, and, while I believe my treatment was wrong, I accept that the judge had infinitely weightier matters to deal with and was perhaps irritated by this minor distraction. As I stated directly in my article, my impression of both judge and jury in the two days I was permitted in to the Salmond trial is that they were doing their jobs in a highly impressive manner. On 18 March I published :

94. « The Court itself was impressive ; Lady Dorrian presided with exemplary fairness, dealing quickly and sensibly with points that arose on admissibility of evidence. The jury of 15 citizens looked engaged and earnest throughout. The impression of my first day is that it is a process that deserves respect and trust, something I never felt at an Assange hearing ».

95. On 19 March I published :
« There I will bow to the judge – who I continue to find very fair ».

96. After exclusion from the court on 20 March, I wrote an article complaining about the arbitrary manner of my treatment. I also phoned the court for more information, and was eventually called back by the clerk of the court, who could not tell me exactly why I had been excluded, but did tell me that the exclusion was for the duration of the trial, not just for the day. Neither he nor the other court staff of whom I had inquired as to what was happening told me that an order had been made banning the publication of the fact I had been excluded from the court. That seems a quite extraordinarily arbitrary proceeding – not only to ban a journalist from a public trial without allowing him any representations, but to also make it illegal to state he was banned. It sounds like something from a dictatorship, not from Scotland.

97. I have a strong basis in knowledge of human rights from my diplomatic career and have a sound knowledge of the Council of Europe (to whose Parliamentary Assembly I have indeed given evidence on human rights, as I have to the Westminster Parliament Joint Committee on Human Rights and to the European Parliament Committee on Human Rights). I had no doubt that the entire circumstance surrounding my arbitrary banning from court without representation and the banning of any mention of that fact raises serious concerns.

98. I note the Crown Office claim to have written to me at this stage. I received nothing from them, either by email or post. Their letter of 21 January I had received both by email and by post, and had to sign for the postal letter. I do not know what happened about their subsequent purported communication, if anything.

99. Following the verdict, Alex Salmond stood on the steps of the High Court, referred to the evidence he had not been permitted to lead, and stated that a day of reckoning would come when the full truth would be set out, but explained that this would have to be deferred until after the Covid crisis has passed.

100. This came as a massive disappointment to me. Having known all about the conspiracy that lay behind his trial, I had hugely been looking forward to the day when it would be possible to publish the truth about the conspiracy behind these charges. I had assumed that Alex Salmond would himself immediately point the finger at Nicola Sturgeon, Peter Murrell, Sue Ruddick and the other conspirators who could be named because they did not have the court granted anonymity of redacted and others. But I deferred to Alex Salmond’s wishes in not publishing the full truth. As I published in my article of 30 March 2020, « I have, absolutely against my own instincts, deferred to Alex Salmond’s noble but in my view over-generous wish to wait until the Covid-19 virus has passed before giving all the names of those involved and presenting the supporting documents ».

101. The documents to which I referred were those mentioned above ; they proved the culpability of people including Murrell, Ruddick and McCann, whose anonymity is not protected. I was not aware when I wrote that the effort to suppress these documents – which frankly will be key documents in the course of Scottish history – was going to extend beyond the trial, that they would be kept even from the Holyrood inquiry, and that the Crown would seek to deny their use for my own trial.

102. I had been struck by the facts surrounding the exclusion of juror RR. He had been loud in asserting that he believed Salmond to be innocent. I found the circumstances surrounding juror RR’s reporting to the police very suspicious, just as I find the circumstances surrounding the taping of Gordon Jackson on the train very suspicious. If a juror said too much in conversation, a minority of people might know enough to tell him he really should not be talking that way. To walk away and clipe him up to the police seems to me an extreme and entirely unnatural reaction. It seems to me a great deal more likely that juror RR was set up ; particularly as the lady who engaged him in the conversation worked for a Scottish Government agency.

103. I actually drafted all that, but then did not publish it as it would have been in contempt of court. I decided instead to give no details at all. I am genuinely puzzled as to what the Lord Advocate thinks is actionable on that.

104. Unfortunately, Alex Salmond’s declaration of a « covid truce » on proceedings was not matched by the conspirators. They immediately began a concerted campaign to undermine the verdict in public opinion and to attack the reputation of the court and the jury. The campaign was fronted by Rape Crisis Scotland, an almost entirely Scottish Government funded organisation whose funding is under the control of officials whose management line redacted whose story of a knee grab on the very short ride from Pizza Express Holyrood to Waverley Station had been comprehensively debunked at trial.

105. The nine complainers in the case signed a joint letter maintaining their accusations against Alex Salmond, which was carried at saturation levels by the entire Scottish media, and was curious given that the complainers were purported by the Crown to be unconnected to one another. In a whole series of interviews across all Scottish media, Rape Crisis Scotland argued, in effect, that the verdict had been perverse, an example of the justice system failing abused women, and even was used by Rape Crisis Scotland to argue directly for the abolition of jury trials in sexual assault cases.

106. The campaign culminated at that time in an article written by Dani Garavelli for Tortoise Media and repeated in Scotland on Sunday, the Sunday edition of the Scotsman, which it is impossible to read other than as a sustained attack upon the court and the verdict. It was a particularly tendentious piece of work because it again repeated all the major accusations, with sympathetic personal interviews with five of the complainers, while omitting to mention a single one of the defence witnesses or any of the defence evidence that had shown them to be wrong and, in several cases, actually lying.

107. What is more, the Garavelli article again made very plain the identity of redacted by jigsaw identification and potentially of others, including redacted who redacted. It is of definite significance that, in the opinion poll I commissioned to get objective evidence of jigsaw identification, Dani Garavelli was by a significant margin the most named source by the public for complainer identification. The decision by the Lord Advocate to prosecute me, a very rare Salmond supporter with an audience, and not prosecute Garavelli, the media cheerleader for the anti-Salmond cause, appears not just selective prosecution, it is political persecution.

108. The great irony of this is that I am the one upholding the dignity of the court and explaining to the public why a diligent jury reached the sound verdict it did, while Garavelli is attacking the verdict of the court and doing so by omitting the crucial defence evidence that the jury heard. She also characterises individual jury members in her article. Yet it is I, the supporter of the court, who is allegedly in contempt, while the attackers of the court are not. The truth is, of course, that the failed prosecutors are favouring those who support the prosecution ; that these failed prosecutors get to decide who is tried for contempt is an abuse of process.

109. I decided that the best way to deal with the Garavelli article and with the entire avalanche of anti-court propaganda was to write my article « I have a plan so we can remain anonymous but have maximum effect » in which I reproduced Garavelli’s article in its entirety, with paragraphs of my commentary under her paragraphs where appropriate. The Crown production of this article in the bundle given to me has not printed out the contrasting colours, so the court will find it extremely difficult to follow what is me and what is Garavelli. This however is Garavelli :

« When the time came, the foreman stood up and said Not Guilty to 12 of the 13 charges. The verdict of the charge involving woman F – sexual assault with intent to rape – was found Not Proven, which is also an acquittal. None of the verdicts were unanimous. The foreman seemed content with decisions he was conveying, but others were not. One young-ish juror with glasses sat with his head bowed »

Followed by me commenting on Garavelli

« Garavelli has no idea how that youngish juror voted. Here again is a blatant attempt to convey that this was a perverse verdict… Garavelli is incidentally in very grave contempt of court in clearly identifying an individual juror and how she thinks he voted. Garavelli will of course be protected by the Establishment from any consequences of this ».

110. I was absolutely correct on all counts. It is a further example of the extreme consciousness of the law of contempt of court with which I wrote throughout. I had a great deal more respect for the rules of contempt than the Lord Advocate, who plainly only applies them to opponents of his prosecution of Alex Salmond.

111. As the accusers continued their public campaign against the verdict of the court, and continued their conspiracy after the verdict to destroy Alex Salmond politically from behind the screen of court enforced anonymity, I decided the time had now come to put before a court the question of whether that anonymity should be upheld even in these extreme and unique circumstances. The public interest in knowing that it was those in positions of great power in the Scottish Government who had colluded against Alex Salmond might well outweigh the general public interest in anonymity for complainers of sexual abuse.

112. On 31 March 2020, I therefore contacted my solicitor to find a QC to draw up a petition to court for the court to decide. We received a draft application from Craig Sandison QC on 15 April 2020, funded at my own expense. I was considering how to proceed, particularly in the light of Covid lockdown, when I was astonished to find myself charged with contempt of court a week or so later.

113. On 23 April 2020, two policemen came to my door and left on the doorstep a letter which, when I opened it a day later (early Covid precaution!), was from the Crown Office telling me I was charged with contempt of court.

114. Remarkably, within minutes of the police arriving, I received an email from Kieran Andrews of the Times newspaper, stating that

« The Crown Office has confirmed that it has started contempt of court proceedings against you in relation to the Alex Salmond trial. Would you like to comment? « 

We are not children. This is plainly a polite lie. Mr Andrews had not telephoned the Crown office that day and asked « I say, did you happen to charge Craig Murray with anything today ? ». What had happened was that the Crown Office, in keeping with its highly politicised and corrupt behaviour through all of the events which I have here recounted, had phoned a reliably anti-Salmond journalist and tipped him off about the charges against me. I believe that the Crown Office is deeply corrupt.

115. In reading the Lord Advocate’s petition and learning of the charge of jigsaw identification, it seemed to me that his charge was entirely subjective. The Lord Advocate appeared to appreciate the need for some kind of proof, as he prayed in aid a number of tweets as evidence that people had identified. But his understanding of Twitter appeared extremely naive. With a single exception, not one of these tweets showed they had correctly identified anyone (and that single one did not prove I was the reason). On the contrary, many of them were from bad faith actors or Twitter « trolls » with fake identities – « Tamara Patel » is a good example of a long term troll on my account with multiple other identities, including « Harry Johnson » and « James », whose claim to identify from my posts the Lord Advocate foolishly takes at face value. Others show in their Twitter handles that they are dedicated political opponents, i.e. some show union flags and one profile describes a « unionist » and « Rangers supporter ».

116. Nevertheless, in quoting these evidentially valueless tweets the Lord Advocate did seem to be acknowledging the desirability of some objective measure of likelihood to identify, so I set myself to think about whether I could help supply the Lord Advocate’s deficit of reason.

117. I came up the idea that whether or not I had been likely to identify would be objectively demonstrable by obtaining a sufficiently large sample of the population, and that the way to do this was through a professional survey company. I therefore commissioned an opinion poll from Panelbase, the results of which I append and which I believe will assist the court.

118. The survey could not check whether people really know the identities of failed complainers, but it does show that a remarkable 8% of the population believe that they do – that equates to about 350,000 adults in Scotland who think they know one or more identities. The number will have risen since, particularly after the Kirsty Wark BBC documentary which pretty plainly identified redacted.

119. Asked how they know identities, 66% said they knew from newspaper, TV or radio reporting. Given a free field to identify individual sources, seventeen different news sources were named, several multiple times, with a single mention of my website. Eight different journalists were named, some multiple times, and not including me. The most mentioned source as Scotland on Sunday/The Scotsman, where Dani Garavelli’s article appeared, and the most mentioned journalist was Dani Garavelli, who is the prosecution’s biggest cheerleader, and is not being charged.

All of which is the truth as the deponent shall answer to God.

Signed

Affidavit 2

SUPPLEMENTARY AFFIDAVIT
of
CRAIG MURRAY, redacted, Edinburgh, EH10 redacted

At Edinburgh on the TWENTY FIFTH day of JANUARY 2021, in the presence of David James Finlay Halliday, solicitor and notary public, Halliday Campbell WS, solicitors, redacted, Edinburgh, EH16 redacted, COMPEARED CRAIG MURRAY, redacted, Edinburgh, EH10 redacted who being solemnly sworn hereby DEPONES as follows:-

1. My name is Craig Murray, I reside at redacted, Edinburgh, EH10 redacted. I give this affidavit in supplement to the one I have previously given in connection with the contempt of court proceedings brought against me. My intention in doing so is to provide more information for the Court on the context in which I published my articles and tweets, and my reasons for doing so.

2. I was Rector of the University of Dundee (2007-2010) and an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Lancaster School of Law (2005-9). I am the author of books including Sikunder Burnes, Master of the Great Game (2017), The Catholic Orangemen of Togo (2010) and Murder in Samarkand (2007). The website academia.edu lists over 140 academic peer reviewed articles referencing my work.

3. I was British Ambassador to Uzbekistan 2002-4. Other roles included Deputy High Commissioner to Ghana (1999 – 2002), Deputy Head (Equatorial), Africa Department FCO (1997-9), First Secretary, British Embassy, Warsaw (1993 – 1997), Head of Maritime Section, FCO (1991-3) and Head of Cyprus Section, FCO (1989 -91).

4. Special responsibilities included Head of FCO Section, Embargo Surveillance Centre (1990-1), Alternate Head of UK Delegation to UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (1991-3) and Head of UK Delegation to the Sierra Leone Peace Talks (1998-2000).

5. I have been awarded the Sam Adams Award for Integrity (USA) 2005 and the Primo Alto Qualita Della Citta di Bologna (Italy) 2006 and am an Officier of the Order of Mono (Togo). I have turned down three honours from the British state, OBE, LVO and CVO on grounds of Scottish nationalism, the last two being in the personal gift of Her Majesty the Queen.

6. As a journalist in new media, my output has been focused on my own website, which is nowadays my primary source of income. My articles have however been published in newspapers including The Guardian, Independent, Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday, and very many others both nationally and internationally.

7. In or around March 2019, and from time to time over several months thereafter, I became aware of information tending to show that senior members of the SNP had sought improperly to involve themselves in the Salmond case. This included meeting with women to urge them to make or persevere with complaints to the police, coordination of complainers and their stories, liaison with the police over charges and attempts to persuade individuals other than the complainers to come forward as witnesses to allegations, which attempts were unsuccessful. I formed the view that these were genuine accounts, as they came from complementary sources who had access to the material under discussion.
I believed this to constitute prima facie evidence of, at the very least, politically motivated efforts to recruit and encourage complainers, and of illegitimate attempts to persuade “witnesses” to give evidence that, taken together, could amount to conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. As this involved some of the most politically powerful individuals and forces in Scotland, I believed there to be the strongest possible public interest in these facts and in publication of them.

8. Before I published many of the articles and tweets that are the subject of these proceedings, I saw the information listed in this paragraph. I was not given copies of any of these documents and have never possessed any, other than Ann Harvey’s email, which was given to my solicitors at Ms Harvey’s request on 19 January 2021 to assist in my defence and is now produced as production 41 and which I can confirm was the version I saw. I wish to make plain the documents were each shown to me briefly on a screen and my recollection of them is from memory. Doubtless there will be minor errors in my recollection but I have no doubt of the purport, gist and individuals involved. The information was:

(a) A series of written communications involving Peter Murrell, Chief Executive Officer of the SNP, and Sue Ruddick, Chief Operating Officer of the SNP. They discussed inter alia a pub lunch or similar occasion between Ian McCann, a SNP staff member working for them, and redacted, one of the complainers in the HM Advocate v Salmond trial. At the lunch, Mr Murrell and Ms Ruddick expected redacted to firm up her commitment to giving evidence against Alex Salmond, and to discuss progress on bringing in others to make complaints. They expressed dissatisfaction at Mr McCann for his performance in achieving these objectives and expressed doubt as to his commitment to the cause.

(b) A communication from Ms Ruddick to Mr Murrell in which she explained to Mr Murrell that progress on the case was being delayed by Police Scotland and/or the COPFS saying there was insufficient evidence, and in which communication she expressed the sentiment that, if the police/Crown would specify the precise evidence needed, she would get it for them.

(c) Text messages from Mr Murrell to Ms Ruddick stating that it was a good time to pressure the police, and that the more fronts Alex Salmond had to fight on the better.

(d) Communications from Ms Ruddick about her visits to a number of locations, including the Glenrothes area, and including in conjunction or discussion with redacted. These communications detail their unsuccessful attempts to find witnesses who would corroborate allegations of inappropriate behaviour against Alex Salmond. They include a report of a meeting with young people who were small children at the time of the incident they were seeking to allege, who did not provide the corroboration sought.

(e) A message from redacted stating that she would not attend a meeting if redacted were also present as she felt pressured to make a complaint rather than supported.

(f) Messages in the WhatsApp group of SNP Special Advisers, particularly one saying that they would “destroy” Alex Salmond and one referring to Scotland’s ‘Harvey Weinstein moment’, employing the #MeToo hashtag.

9. That information formed some of the basis for the articles and tweets I published before and during the trial. I supplemented that information from my own attendance at the trial as a journalist and from other media reports of the trial. In my articles, I sought to provided reporting of, and commentary on, the HM Advocate v Salmond trial, and also to provide wider commentary on the trial and the political context in which it took place.

10. It was in the course of that wider commentary on the trial that I stated my reasonable belief, based on the information I had seen, that the criminal charges against Alex Salmond were the result of orchestrated work by senior members of the Scottish Government and the Scottish National Party.

11. Before publishing my articles and tweets on the wider context of the trial, I saw the information set out at paragraph 8(a)-(f) above. As I have stated at paragraph 3 above, I considered that this information was genuine. I also considered that it showed that: (i) that senior members of the Scottish Government/SNP had sought improperly to involve themselves in the inquiry into Alex Salmond; (ii) they had discussed the possibility of pressuring the police; and (iii) certain of the complainers had felt pressured by the involvement of senior members of the Scottish Government or SNP.

12. I considered that, as a journalist, I acted responsibly and in the public interest in publishing my articles and tweets, and that I did so because of the information I had seen. It was, and remains, a matter of considerable public interest and importance that high-ranking members of the SNP would improperly involve themselves in an investigation into a political rival, and express sentiments such as a desire to obtain whatever evidence the police needed and a desire to pressure the police.

13. I emphasise that my reason for publishing the articles and tweets was what I understood from the information I saw before I published. My intention was not to publish the names of the complainers, but rather the names other members of the Scottish Government/SNP who had engaged in the actions set out above.
All of which is truth as the deponent shall answer to God.

Signed:

—————————————————–

 
 
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180 thoughts on “Schroedinger’s Evidence

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  • Blissex

    The “big picture” is that “troublemakers” are easily dealt with because the labor unions have been neutered and the “opposition” parties made to represent the same interests as the “government” parties, and the media are accordingly publishing within the permitted “guardrails”. See the enormous successes of the anti-Corbyn and anti-Trump campaigns.

    The only effective ability to disagree on politics (and even policy) will be limited to factions within the ruling castes, as in leavers vs. remainers, or industry and commerce vs. finance and property interests, like in the “good” old days before the founding of the Labour Representation Committee in 2018.

    And as the expulsions from the Conservatives in 2019 and the recent anti-Johnson campaign, even these ruling caste factions will seek to eliminate any public dissent from the others. So-called democracy is and will not only be managed, but strictly managed, and the width within its “guardrails” is and will be quite narrow. Riots will be just a cost of doing business.

    As long as the great pacifier of the middle classes, property prices and rents, will continue to boom.

    • Blissex

      «As long as the great pacifier of the middle classes, property prices and rents, will continue to boom.»

      The point here is well understood in other countries where politics is properly regarded not as a contest of ideas among nice people who respect each other’s rights, but as a conflict of interests, often brutal: “deviant” speech and actions need to have political “cover”, that is to have some strong backing from “civil society” at least; from organized labour, from opposition parties, from masses of politically active people.
      But the long property boom has drugged civil society, and made such a large number of people so smugly satisfied that their main politics is “don’t make waves”. Our blogger here is making waves, and easily disposed of as other “troublemakers”.

      https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/mar/25/george-osborne-britons-economic-cannon-fodder

      Call it housing-market heroin: the special high the Brits get when property prices are really taking off and Sarah Beeny is on the telly explaining how we can all cash in. Thatcher was the first PM to really push housing-market heroin with her right-to-buy programme and her Lawson boom but, with their love of aspiration and Home Ownership Task Force, Blair and Brown knew its potency, too.

  • pete

    Craig, thanks for publishing your submission regarding your hearing for contempt, the details are most illuminating, even with the redactions. It is almost incomprehensible that your submission was dismissed out of hand. It seems the judges decided to focus on a very narrow legal fiction, that somehow you had maliciously decided to reveal the identities of the alphabet women by providing some key pieces of an otherwise incomplete and many faceted jigsaw.
    They seemed to take the view that they can ignore the verdict of the Salmond trial, ignore the information published in the main stream press and instead trust the testimony of the anti-Salmond plotters when it comes to evidence.
    It is true that, even at this stage, revealing those identities could have adverse effects on their careers. But you would have to weigh this against the damage done to Mr Salmond’s reputation, given all the lurid headlines the case attracted.
    Now we have seen what passes for law in Scotland, I don’t doubt your appeal will fail, therefore I wish you the best of luck when the matter passes on to the European court. Please advise us when we need to make further contributions to your legal fees, it is important that this matter is seen through to the end, I hope real justice will win.

  • Colin Alexander

    “SPEAK TO THE EVIDENCE”:

    In cases where it’s party A v party B, what I was advised is that for a court in Scotland to consider evidence, a party has to do more than lodge evidence with the court as a production: A party must also “speak to the evidence”. E.g. reference must be made to it in court, such as when a solicitor or advocate says: “I refer the court to production no.1”. Otherwise the court will ignore the production / evidence.

    I have no knowledge if the same rule applies in contempt of court hearings.

    It seems to me contradictory to argue the evidence is so patently untrue, so acknowledge the evidence but on the other hand argue it was never accepted as evidence.
    Case Law:
    Browne v Dunn 1893
    The rule in Browne v Dunn states that if counsel intends to rely on a version of events contradictory to a witness’s testimony, then counsel must put that version of events to the witness on cross-examination. E.g. “I put it to you witness Mr X, that your account of events is a falsehood: You did not witness Mr A stealing Mr B’s car”.

    • craig Post author

      Colin,

      Thank you very much. If you look at my account of the appeal hearing. linked in the article, Browne v Dunn was indeed the case Roddy Dunlop dug up over lunch to give the judges. He had not produced it in the first place because he regarded it as so axiomatic as not to need to be produced. The judges were however arguing that either the evidence did not exist as such, or that Browne v Dunn does not apply when evidence is “self-evidently untrue”. There was also an implication it only applies in civil cases.

  • Shatnersrug

    It frustrates me that anything you write on Russia will get thousands of views and yet this stuff very little. It’s extremely important that people understand what has gone on in Scottish law here and how it affects Scots, and the wider world in general, and is much more closely linked to the goings on in the Ukraine than most think

    • Blissex

      «anything you write on Russia will get thousands of views and yet this stuff very little»

      In part it is because most people with practical experience have seen, while working in offices, using public services, attending schools, what happens to whistle-blowers and trouble-makers, how their superiors dispose of such “nuisances” and their “rights”. So what happened to people like Corbyn, Assange, Murray, is not exactly surprising or news to many among the public

      https://www.pepysdiary.com/diary/1664/08/07/

      “While we were talking came by several poor creatures carried by, by constables, for being at a conventicle. They go like lambs, without any resistance. I would to God they would either conform, or be more wise, and not be catched!”

    • Andrew H

      What is Tatayna supposed to comment on this matter when she supports Nalvany being locked up in a Gulag? This case is very peculiar to Scottish law, and so the people able to comment on it intelligently is limited. (Even US 1st amendment rights are quite different to the Scottish version)

      • bevin

        Is gulag a new synonym for jail? As in Leonard Chretien has been in a gulag since 1977? Or should we retain its meaning as a Labour Camp used in the Soviet Union now closed down? Navalny is in jail because he was found guilty of defrauding his employer and then escaping in order to avoid serving his sentence.

        • Andrew H

          You appear to be confusing Nalvany with Assange. Ever the Putin apologist. The handful of Russians opposing the Russian invasion of Ukraine are also going to be found guilty. You suggest Russia has greater freedom of speech than Scotland or the UK, but not even Craig would agree with that. In the fight for justice which of these cases has the greatest merit and which has the least?

          • glenn_nl

            You appear to be very keen to demonise every single Russian, and find them guilty for being ruled by a ruthless effective dictator. Even if they oppose the invasion, they “are also to be found guilty”.

            What is your guilt for the Iraq invasion and occupation? What was your punishment, given you are absolutely responsible for it to a much greater degree?

          • Andrew H

            It is true that everyone who voted for Tony Blaire and G.W.Bush or any MP that voted to go to war is in part responsible for the war in Iraq (regardless of opposition to those wars after 9/11). Indeed, that means most of the UK population bare responsibility – since we cannot distance ourselves from the actions of our government. Our democracy is flawed, and we should ask ourselves how we can improve it and why we are so slow to learn from history. There will be no punishments, not even for the architects of that war.

            Actually, I am trying to defend Navalny, who I thought was Russian. I don’t demonize Russians who are against war, only those who try to justify this invasion and who send their children to fight in it. For me, war is wrong, and you can draw all the parallels you want with the wrongness of the Iraq invasion and I will have to agree. I have tried to bring up my children to be peace loving and not to join the army forces and to understand that they no feudalistic duty to their country. If all parents were like me, there could be no wars, since without soldiers there can be no conflict.

          • glenn_nl

            Sorry, you don’t get off that easily. Even people who didn’t vote for Blair are responsible, by your own standards. So I ask again – and try not to evade the question so obviously this time. What do you consider to be your personal guilt for the Iraq war, and what punishment do you think is fit for yourself?

            AH: “If all parents were like me, there could be no wars […]”

            Yours is surely a standard to which we can only aspire. Nevertheless, by your arguments – yours – these wonderful children of magnificent parents are equally as guilty as every Russian.

            Stop wriggling around and address the point or concede it.

          • Gerarld

            no one as ardent as the new convert! Enjoy your new Ukrainian imports, they will be demanding and after a wee while will be joining with every tiny tin pot fascistic group in London and the UK, forming drug gangs, raping, extorting, but bringing small arms to the mix. The fascists and Bandera worshiping Ukraines are not an easy like, just ask the Moldovans and the Transcarpathians who only a week in are tiring of their boorish overdemanding new brothers and sisters. I feel sure your daily tears will succour them. Time reveals all and what a waste this whole project has been. You’ll never get the time back you know, but I guess doing your research and understanding what is going on in these regions is too much of a task. I don’t like Putin, he’s basically a tory (and a moderate at that – so be careful what you wish for, there are many darker more violent elements waiting in the wings to take control) but I am glad he is killing Nazis all over Ukraine and will continue to the end. Once the Country has been cleansed it may attempt a new way in whats left of its rump state. Lets hope he does a better job of denatzification than the Germans/Americans/British did in Germany as I see that particular DNA was never fully expunged in the likes of Scholz and Baerbock (whose father was a Nazi who she admired for killing Russians and said as much in a speech she gave at Aushwitz of all places) ‘we must rearm to protect the Stepan Bandera worshipping Azov, Aidar, Right Sektor et al. We must protect or brother Nazis’ The West is surely in a state of dementia, its delusional 12% bubble. Well over 6 billion people in the world do not support the sanctions and refuse to impose any of their own, that is a warning to you delusional types, the rest of the world you have been genociding for the last 200 years have had enough, the US are unreliable partners and ultimately run away when the enemy shows his head, why do business with them? when you risk being sanctioned and your assets stolen from central banks or storage vaults. Puitn and Russia will be here a long while, he hasnt even counter sanctioned yet. I read an article from Goldmann Sachs today who reckon it will take 9 months for Russia to recover, for Europe it could be years and the US are getting itchy now about oil imports and beginning to do backroom deals with Putin already .. the Ukraines were a tool to do a job for good old uncle sam, which failed, so lets just move on now shall we because thats how western powers work. The ‘people’ can cry for the Ukies and pay the price. Its called Realpolitik.
            As for Navalny he is an American stooge taking the dollar for 15 years and all in Russia know it, he has never had any support above the statistical margin of error, he should have stayed in Germany after the MI6/Bundeswehr ‘novichok’ fiasco. He will have nothing when he is released, surely he can run away again in a ‘daring escape to the west’ (aided by the Russians of course) and join the wailing wall of western failed colour revolutions. Guaido, Tikanovskaya, the Belarus Council, Khordokovsky haunting the Brussels corridors.

          • Andrew H

            I accept that I am totally responsible for the war in Iraq? Do you? (or are you claiming to be an Iraq/Russian citizen called Glenn?). Although I am guilty, I have few feelings of guilt or remorse. (so that is probably my second crime ). A fitting punishment would be for the people of UK and USA to go and live in Iraq and Afghanistan for say 10 years to see what we have done. (whilst those in Iraq/Afghanistan come and live in our nice centrally heated homes and have our jobs). I understand it is trite to say these things – when I have no remorse or intention of submitting myself to any punishment, but you have pressed me on the point. As I have said there will be no punishments [how does one square that with the crime? – I don’t know]. I hope that answers your question.

          • glenn_nl

            AH: This doesn’t answer my question, or your charge against the ordinary Russian people, in the least little bit. You get away Scott free, hands wringing all the while, yet you demand all sorts of punishment on ordinary Russians. And take cheap shots at Craig Murray while you’re about it.

            Your response to me is nothing but wrangling words around some miserable apologia for your own gross hipocrisy – you have been arguing for days how Russians are culpable for war crimes, yet offer nothing but weasel words about your own culpability on exactly the same score.

            So no – you didn’t answer my questions or come even close to doing so. Not to worry, I didn’t expect any better.

          • Fat Jon

            @Andrew H “A fitting punishment would be for the people of UK and USA to go and live in Iraq and Afghanistan for say 10 years to see what we have done.”

            No it wouldn’t. A fitting punishment would be for the US and UK to be brought to their knees by punitive world trade sanctions. All overseas flights banned from their airports, and UK and US teams/individuals banned from all major sporting events, including the Olympics; but this will never happen.

            In my book, bullies can only be tamed by complete ostracisation, until they understand how other far less aggressive people are feeling.

          • Johnny Conspiranoid

            “The handful of Russians opposing the Russian invasion of Ukraine are also going to be found guilty.”

            They are going to be found guilty of being in an unauthorised demonstration and probably fined or given short prison sentrnces. This will be the law in UK as well, shortly, and with ‘all party’ support.

            “You suggest Russia has greater freedom of speech than Scotland or the UK,”

            Well now it appears that it does.

            “In the fight for justice which of these cases has the greatest merit and which has the least?”

            Craig’s.

    • Deepgreenpuddock

      hello, I have slightly eird theory that (nearly) everything is connected. The strange business with Alex Salmond and Craig’s outlandish imprisonment for reporting mainly facts on ‘new media’ are related to shifts and reshaping of our ideas about authority and social organisation. I am not alone in thinking that the actions and events around the AS affair are causally related to changing perceptions mediated by the explosion of information available to us all now through the internet. Whether this has raised consciousness or created widespread disoriented thought patterns seems to me to depend on yjr individuals concerned. Without the internet there would not gave been a ‘me too’ movement that shifted perceptions and tolerance in a wide section of the population and created a mini me too movement in Scotland. I don’t have a shadow of a doubt that Sturgeon and some of her supporters were motivated and corrupted in their zeal to challenge “patriarchy”
      Somehow AS hove into view and became a target for a group of discontented women who belived they could she events further . Meanwhile the judiciary and established lines of authority were being shaken by the access to knowledge provided by the internet, That authority was (and is) being challenged.Blogs like this and that of Gordon Dangerfield have eroded the mystique of authority.None of this would have happened without the
      change in individual power that access to information encourages.
      By the same token the Ukraine/Russia situation would not have arisen without the communication technology so many of us have, literally at our fingertips.
      So I believe that , like the fungal mycelia that inhabit and promote the life of the forest, so communication tchnology creates a near infinite network of knowledge and contact leading to new and unexpected events. I remain unconvinced this change is entirely benign.There will be unexpected and unpredictable and uncontrollable consequences.

  • Joe Mellon

    Isn’t the Crown Office censoring parts of the affadavit in itself a contradiction of the assertion that it is “self-evidently untrue”? Were that true it would not be necessary.
    I am also surprised that there is no mechanism to prevent the breath taking abuse of process by the judicial system. Scots lawyers used to be so proud of its standard of jurisprudence: and yet here we see behaviour which would disgrace a dictatorship with no legal tradition. How do these judges walk through Parliament House without melting in embarrassment? How do the legal profession tolerate it?

  • Joe Mellon

    I have little doubt that the key players in this sad story – Crown Office, judges, politicians, SNP leaders, alphabet ladies – are very deeply frightened of you Craig. Perhaps one motivation for the extreme and unusual sentence for contempt was the hope that – given your parlous health – it might bring about your demise. Please stay with us.
    Something that might give them pause: you might have deposited the full information about the malfeasence you have experienced and uncovered sealed with an international blog. In that case should mortality bring your legal processes to an end (as they might hope) it would also make you unprosecutable. They maybe should be deeply concerned for your well-being!

  • Robert Dyson

    I assumed that in law you had to show why something was true or untrue not just assert it. This is like Pope Urban VIII saying it is obviously untrue that the earth orbits the sun and telling Galileo that he had to recant. They are digging an ever deeper hole for themselves.

    • Blissex

      They are digging an ever deeper hole for themselves

      It is quite the opposite: in similar situations “they” are flaunting their power and impunity, to deter other “nuisances” from “trouble-making”. It is a show of strength.

      • amanfromMars

        Only the greatest of arrogant fools and ignorant tools would be relying on and expecting that to be an overwhelmingly successful strategy, Blissex. To consider it even slightly effective demonstrates a catastrophic lack of intelligence in that and/or those who would think it wise.

      • Robert Dyson

        I would say the opposite. They are desperately plugging holes in the dyke they have built in as covert a way as can be managed. To flaunt would be for Peter Murrell’s salary as CEO of the SNP to be published.

        • Blissex

          «They are desperately plugging holes in the dyke they have built in as covert a way as can be managed.»

          The person who has been ruined and sent to jail is our blogger, and the hit on Salmond was huge too. The other side are sitting pretty in their positions of power, supported by the media, etc.

          The whole Salmond and Murray stories are meant to send the message that stepping out of line leads to some degree of martyrdom, while being “aligned” leads to impunity and even rewards. It is a powerful message.

          • amanfromMars

            The whole Salmond and Murray stories are meant to send the message that stepping out of line leads to some degree of martyrdom, while being “aligned” leads to impunity and even rewards. It is a powerful message. …. Blissex

            It is no doubt a powerful but despicable message which invariably inevitably very quickly results in a very worthy period of extremely disruptive “Troubles” for those responsible but expecting to remain unaccountable.

            And such a turn of events is a wholly natural progression and logical expectation, is it not?

  • Paul Cunningham

    1) Do you think this is “so self-evidently untrue as not to require cross-examination?
    2) Why do you think the legal Establishment are so anxious that this evidence does not exist at all?

    1. Clearly it makes little sense to say of your evidence that it is self-evidently untrue. But if they actually believed that then surely that belief would have been more likely to lead to cross-examination? After all, if they really thought your evidence was untrue then all the frailties that they believe to be in your statement could be dissected for everyone to see under cross-examination. It would be in their interests to cross-examine you. I would have thought that, by contrast, it is in relation to evidence that is accepted by all sides where the desire to dispense with cross-examination makes greater sense. I suspect the truth is that they didn’t fancy giving you a platform from which to speak nor would they have wished to have to take account of the answers you would have given to the questioning when it came to the articulation of their decision making.
    2. They are doing what the media does, suppressing truth.
    • Andrew H

      I don’t think the legal establishment is anxious. They are just dismissive. For people, who are in high places (either power, or academia), there is an automatic reflex reaction against the outsider who doesn’t know what they are talking about. When you have been doing this long enough you don’t even have to read the submission to know it is bollocks. (I work in math, you don’t need to read a proof to know it is wrong – you just look at the author’s name, compare it with the claim and chuck it in the bin. For most of the famous problems the general rule is that it is going to be harder to get your paper published than to do the proof). This is precisely the same attitude you have to Tony Blaire – you don’t actually have to listen before you roll your eyes. Judges are human too and therefore your ability to communicate effectively with them is limited.

      • Mighty Drunken

        Mr Murray knows his stuff.

        You are hilarious. You don’t judge mathematical papers that way unless you are a tosser of paper into the bin.

      • Feral Finster

        Your argument can be summarized as “We just know!”

        Unless there is some reason that Mr. Murray is making a obviously preposterous claim, I am not sure that your standard of “we don’t need any evidence” should apply, and certainly not in a court proceeding.

        • Andrew Howroyd

          You seem to completely misunderstand my comment. Perhaps just read the last sentence – the conclusion. (I’m just pointing out how difficult it is to go against the system which has inbuilt prejudice)

  • Paul Cunningham

    A further thought. If your evidence could not be challenged then cross-examination could be dispensed with and your evidence simply agreed by both sides. However, if they could not challenge your evidence, even in part, but nonetheless wished NOT to have to take account of it, then your evidence would have to be effectively struck off as part of the body of evidence in the case. I wonder, is that why they are anxious that your evidence does not exist at all?

  • John Monro

    Hello Craig, a very sobering account of likely malfeasance in the higher reaches of Scottish politics and justice. One thing, has Alex Salmond ever thanked you for the work you’ve done on his behalf? Has he ever publicly supported you or criticised the sentence you received? Has he ever contributed to your legal fees? Is he actually a decent man? He isn’t popular in Scotland, do the majority of Scottish people know something that you don’t?

        • Johnny Conspiranoid

          ““The answer to each of those questions is Yes.” Presumably except for the last one. To which the answer is No?”

          The last question is “do the majority of Scottish people know something that you don’t?” to which the answer is ‘yes’. The first part of that sentence was an assertion not a question.

          • Simon

            Did laugh…a very diplomatic response. You can take the boy out of the foreign service but you can’t take the foreign service out of the boy.

      • John Monro

        Thank you Craig, its just I haven’t heard much from Alex Salmond about you. And I wonder why he doesn’t seem to be a popular figure when he basically was the SNP and Scottish Independence for so may years. So there was no presumption here, but I wanted to be reassured that all your tribulations were worth it. Regards. JKM

    • Jeff

      “He isn’t popular in Scotland….”

      Since the media fitted him up, you mean?

      Otherwise your assertion is also bollocks.

      • John Monro

        They weren’t assertions – they were questions. I just wondered on the true character of the man. After all, Craig has put his freedom and his health on the line at least in part for his sake. (The other being of course to report on the state of politics and justice in Scotland)

  • Jm

    Staggering,shocking and terrifying what’s being done to you Craig.

    I couldn’t imagine a process further removed from true justice.

    300 years since the dawn of the Scottish Enlightenment and we’ve reached this desperate point: a man whose sworn affidavits and evidence weren’t heard because they were considered “self-evidently untrue” by a judge – without argument or cross-examination.

    Wow.

    Just wow.

        • John O'Dowd

          It certainly will not – or independence will mean nothing.

          As Prof Alf Baird has pointed out in his excellent book ‘Doun Hauden: Sociopolitical Determinants of Scottish Independence

          https://www.amazon.co.uk/Doun-Hauden-Socio-Political-Determinants-Scottish-Independence-ebook/dp/B086ZTRXM8

          The present judiciary and legal system in Scotland, derived from the terms of Scoitland’s betrayal by a ‘parcel of rogues’ handed over significant executive power to the higher reaches of the legal establishment to ‘manage’ England’s possession on its behalf, and to keep the rowdy revolting natives in check.

          As result resent judiciary and legal system in Scotland conforms to well-understood parameters of a colonial legal system whose primary purpose is to do as described above,

          This will end with independence.

          • Mist001

            It beats me. Virtually every vociferous independence supporter is under the impression that if Scotland does achieve its independence, then the very next day, all the wrongs of the past will be righted immediately.

            The legal system itself which is under discussion here, will take at least a lifetime to change, if it ever does. The average Joe in the street maybe thinks there’s nothing wrong with Scotland’s legal system and ‘it’s the best in the world’.

            The legal eagles running the show just now may not think there’s anything wrong with it, so may not be ‘minded’ to change anything about it.

            As it stands, there isn’t even a plan or roadmap in place for an independent Scotland – there’s no discussion, nothing – so imagining that the legal system will change with independence is seriously grasping at straws.

          • Alf Baird

            Mist

            Postcolonial theory tells us that under colonialism the institutions in a non-self-governing territory will tend to be colonial in nature, values, leadership etc, i.e. there to protect the interest of the coloniser. That is more or less what we are seeing in this case with Craig, and with Alex Salmond and other independence campaigners. Postcolonial theory (and the UN) also tells us that independence is decolonisation, though much of Scotland’s indy minded political class appears yet to figure that out.

        • Polly Titian

          “And this is the legal system that an independent Scotland will have”

          An Independent Scotland will only happen with the full support of the US, and that support will only be in place if an “Independent Scotland” is a full and committed member of NATO, i.e. hosting US military infrastructure and the nuclear arsenal. The idea that any nation is “independent” in the NATO controlled West is laughable. look at the way the EU is being dragged about by the US via NATO, to the point that the EU economy is sacrificed to advance the agenda of NATO.

  • Wally Jumblatt

    For most of my life right up until a few years ago, I went along with the notion that people are mostly driven by wanting to know the truth.
    Now I understand that people are mostly driven by the desire to be paid.
    Paid in the sense of the security it might offer.
    It can be deferred payment -like a pension, or it can be in grubby, immediate cash; there are various levels of sophistication and various levels of denial.

    My recent experience of the law -more as a bystander than a participant- is that Lawyers * only care about being paid.
    If they care at all about their cases, it is that success brings more business at higher charge-out rates.
    Remember, Judges and QCs are all still lawyers so the same applies, but even more since they have been many years corrupted by the time they reach these heights.
    * there are a few exceptions to the rule

    This case is a very big deal.
    If Craig goes all the way to ECHR or even the United Nations and still loses, the true victory will be in everyone seeing how extensive the corruption is.
    Lets hope the people care but sadly most won’t. There are only ever a small %age who care enough and none of them are in the mainstream media.

    Feudal Times.

    • Stevie Boy

      “… people are mostly driven by the desire to be paid. Paid in the sense of the security it might offer.”

      Society has been manipulated to place the ordinary citizens into a position where dissent equals loss of income equals catastrophic destruction of one’s life.
      Debt has now been normalised. People spend what they don’t have. Banks are complicit in ensuring loans are freely distributed. Credit Cards and digital payments are prioritised over hard cash. Interest rates are manipulated to prevent people from saving. Removal of the Gold Standard ensures paper money is independent of real assets. Industry and Government follow the same path, building up huge debts just to exist and do business.
      In our debt driven society, there are no contingencies, no fall backs. Lose your income, lose everything. Who would risk that ?
      People literally cannot afford or risk dissent. The plan is working.

      • MrShigemitsu

        All money is debt.

        Removal of the the Gold Standard ensures that the money supply can expand alongside a growing economy; a Gold Standard OTOH is recessionary, maintains the scarcity of money, and guarantees constant austerity.

        With a sovereign fiat currency, austerity is just a political choice – which can always be overcome if the political will exists; with a commodity-based currency, austerity is more or less a necessity in a nation like the UK which runs constant current account deficits (i.e. a net importer).

        Be careful what you wish for.

  • Ron Maclean

    Lord Denning’s dismissal of the Birmingham Six’s 1980 civil claim set a relatively recent precedent for judicial hostility protecting Establishment corruption;

    ‘If they (the Birmingham Six) won, it would mean that the police were guilty of perjury: that they were guilty of violence and threats; that the confessions were involuntary and improperly admitted in evidence; and that the convictions were erroneous… That was such an appalling vista that every sensible person would say, “It cannot be right that these actions should go any further”.’

    ‘The convictions were quashed in 1991 when the ‘appalling vista’ was shown to be true. The six men would later receive £1m each in compensation.’
    — The Law Society Gazette 11 June 2018

    Lord Denning’s precedent still seems to hold good in backward, nepotistic Scotland. It is disappointing that those in a position to influence events in corrupted Scotland are not speaking out.

    Niemoller wasn’t joking when he said – ‘Then they came for me – and there was no one left to speak for me.’

    • squirrel

      I recall the direction to the jury in the de Menezes shooting was similar.

      The judge directed that the jury could not find that de Menezes was unlawfully killed, on the basis that a prosecution of the police who killed him must follow.

      I thought that was utterly perverse logic then as I do now. That it comes from judges is extraordinary

  • Jules Orr

    Those affidavits are a catastrophic indictment of the leader of the Scottish independence movement. Written under oath by a former British ambassador.

    Why, one wonders, would unionist politicians and media be happy for them to be struck from the official record and buried forever?

    • bevin

      Because the Unionists understand that there is no better protection than the sort of Independence movement that these affidavits describe. The equivalent of the mock gangs of Mau Mau run by the British.

      • Giyane

        Bevin

        ” protection ” for the establishment by the creation of fake political opposition.

        Like the Dudley Labour Councillor who had asked the EDL to make an angry demonstration so that Labour could be seen to be more competent with dealing with controversy. He later said that was normal in modern political practice.

        So there are academically approved methods , taught in British universities , how to subvert democracy. It has often been suggested that Nicola Sturgeon and others in her administration have all been instructed in the use of these anti- democratic ” expectation management strategies ”

        What is more the mainstream media is required , as we have seen this week, to perform this ” expectation management ” in synchronous harmony like a Musical or Ballet. Politics has become Cats or Hair, and is judged strictly on its coordination and unity, like X Factorr. I witnessed a fine piece of stage performance on the BBC ‘s Radio 4 10 pm live war porn show, with one performer citing Putin’s erraticness and the next one telling us about his form with Chemical weapons in Syria.

        There simply is no place for either truth or law in these choreographed West End Musicals.. Craig standing up for justice in the Salmond stitch up.is received by the establishment as an audience , unauthorised interruption to the supension of disbelief created by the Musical , which the audience has paid to see.

        Actually imho the Kirk has always taught that people should keep their beliefs to themselves, and not start trying to impose their beliefs on others. Craig raising his concerns about injustice is seen in Scottish culture as self-indulgent self-righteousness.

        This problem goes deeper than Nicola Sturgeon and the SNP , maybe from Scottish Presbyterianism or ancient cultural history. Craig is never going to be able to reverse a millennium of Scottish Cultural Diversity. Or should that be perversity? It could be called genocide to try.

        I certainly see in the Kashmir culture where I have made my home, a great pride in their cultural stubbornness, and no desire at all to change to English moral proclivities. I get gaslighted for being me in my own country.

  • davidwferguson

    The back story isn’t complicated. On the back of the Brexit vote in 2016, a vigorous independence campaign led by Alex Salmond, with the polls starting at 58-42 Yes, would have won by a landslide.That’s why he had to be got rid of.

    I wonder how many SNP loyalists who thought they were voting against Brexit realised they were actually voting for “Let’s sit around and do nothing for five years till we see what Brexit looks like, and then we can decide what we’re going to do. Which will be nothing…”

    • pete

      Re “Let’s sit around and do nothing for five years till we see what Brexit looks like, and then we can decide what we’re going to do. Which will be nothing…”

      Well it wasn’t nothing was it? The right to make an allegation in court and remain anonymous even when that allegation fails to be proven has been firmly established. The onus now seems to be on the one accused to prove their innocence, that is to prove that something that never happened, never happened. Let’s see that evidence in court!
      And to top it all the blogger claiming that it never happened and quoting the evidence of the false witnesses reported by the MSP has been jailed for quoting the evidence of the false witnesses reported in the MSP. To top it all we now are contributing to pay the people who made this all possible. It is like something written by NF Simpson.

  • Fearghas MacFhionnlaigh

    Not long started Harper Perennial’s 2009 “First Uncensored Edition” of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s ‘IN THE FIRST CIRCLE’, translated by Harry T. Willetts. Just felt there was some kind of mutatis mutandis Scottish echo (from our past or our future I am not sure) in Solzhenitsyn’s preface remark:

    AUTHOR’S NOTE

    Such is the fate of Russian books today. They bob up to the surface, if ever they do, plucked down to the skin. So it was recently with Bulgakov’s ‘MASTER’ — its feathers floated over only later. So also with this novel of mine: In order to give it even a feeble life, to dare show it, and to bring it to a publisher, I myself shortened and distorted it — or rather, took it apart and put it together anew, and it was in that form that it became known. And even though it is too late now, and the past cannot be undone — here it is, the authentic one. By the by, while restoring the novel, there were parts that I refined: after all, I was forty then, but am fifty now.

    Written: 1955-58
    Distorted: 1964
    Restored: 1968

    ISBN 978-0-06-147901-4

  • Barry

    Excellent disclosure Craig, as always. My answers to your questions.

    1) Do you think this is “so self-evidently untrue as not to require cross-examination?
    A perfectly ludicrous statement designed to discredit your excellent evidence and position. Says all we need to know about the independence of the court.
    2) Why do you think the legal Establishment are so anxious that this evidence does not exist at all?
    Desperate at all costs to keep the cover up – covered up. We are all watching, Craig, and fully support you.

  • Geoff Reynolds

    …………can you remember airing my story on your pages Craig?

    I am the 66 year old, disabled for life man who Scarborough police beat to the ground for the crime of standing in a pub during the great pharma hoax.

    You published links to Youtube, under the heading, ‘police thuggery against disabled man during lockdown

    ……………..despite trying to hide the incident by offering me the unique chance to accept a caution after waking up in a cell, that i rejected, they then fined me the sum of £1560 despite me only receiving just £36.81p per week for the last ten years since the DWP stole my benefits.

    Not being able to pay, the judiciary sent a bailiff around to my house, to collect £1800 they said i now owed.
    An argument then ensued and i was arrested and placed in a police cell.

    The case was then referred to the local magistrates and i stated that i was a living man and they were merely a for profit corporation listed under Dun and Bradstreet on the New York stock exchange and that i was not an incorporated body that gave permission to the Crown to lay charges against my estate. I required the magistrate to identify herself and informed me her name was Pamela Macfie….

    I told Macfie that i did not contract in any shape or form and that she needed my consent………..

    Macfie told me to get out of the court immediately!

    Four hours later many police turned up at my home and i was told i was being arrested for not appearing in court?

    Again i was locked up and thrust before a court who sentenced me to a months imprisonment in Hull prison on a wing with paedophiles and sex offenders.

    I was jailed for standing in a pub and have to see a probation officer and carry a ban not to leave the country or leave my place of residence for more than one night without permission.

    What makes this tale more chilling is the police sergeant that originally arrested me turned up at my home asking me to forgive him for what he had done to me before bursting into tears………..

    He later took his own life!

    I sincerely believe that you are being framed by the same people who set me up.

    • Geoff Reynolds

      …………Robert Bates of North Yorkshire police has been asked to supply film and video footage of my arrest and despite multiple complaints to the Freedom of Information Commissioners Office, Bates continues to hide the footage.

      Watch your back, Craig…………

      Would not put it past those hiding behind the scenes pulling the strings to order a hit on you to keep you quiet.

  • Tim Glover

    What is staggering is the number of people involved in the plot. How did Sturgeon manage to find so many bad apples? Is this evidence of a larger conspiracy able to place members of a club in positions of power?

    • Cynicus

      “ How did Sturgeon manage to find so many bad apples? “
      ——————-
      Have you never heard that flies are drawn to shit?
      The Dreghorn Midden is full of it.

    • johnny conspiranoid

      Perhaps would be MSP and high level functionaries are invited on freebie trips to the US at the start of their careers as a talent spotting exercise so that they can be funnelled into the right jobs. Part of that talent spotting might be to assess their potential for blackmail and bribery. Once suitable people are short listed they can be helped to develop their careers in a suitable dirrection with suitable jobs being found for them, ‘PR’ support etc. Being the right stuff they will be oven ready for any necessary conspiracies. What are the odds?

  • ET

    I see Nicola Sturgeon issued an apology for the historical injustice of witch hunts and issued a pardon. Should I assume Craig Murray’s and Alex Salmond’s are in the post…………

    • Neville

      Looking after their own.
      And if the poison dwarf and her acolytes were transported back to those times they would also be burnt at the stake, drowned or similar because they truly are witches.

      • deepgreenpuddock

        That’s an unworthy comment, drenched in appalling misogyny “truly are witches”? What is true about witches? Let’s all cast a spell to make things right.

  • deepgreenpuddock

    Here is a small section of an article in the Guardian

    So, yes, Putin must fail. But the west must find the courage to ensure that happens. If boots on the ground and no-fly zones are off the table, then the west’s response to this war must be economic warfare in the name of defending democracy and freedom.

    While one cannot fail to recognise the cliched meaning of the last 8 words, it left me wondering, in view of the Craig Murray/AS affair, the quality and nature of our current Johnson government, the treatment of Corbyn, the rise of Trump, the Brexit fiasco, the climate change catastrophe, the concentration of the media in a few hands, exactly what ‘democracy and freedom’ are we defending.
    Cant help feeling that ‘the west’ is well and truly f*ck*d.

    • Fat Jon

      I think you are right. Our fuel prices are rising to their highest levels ever, and not buying Russian oil or gas will only help petrol prices towards £2 a litre, which will cripple road transport. Inflation is already over 5% and the hike in electricity/gas prices next month will only add to the misery. We may be at 10% later this year (or higher).

      When people realise they cannot afford to eat, and heat their homes/power appliances/cook, and fill their petrol tank, and pay their rent/mortgage – they will have to seriously cut back on one (or more) of those necessities. No more nights out, restaurants, pubs, cinemas, theatres, take-aways; and the economy will start to collapse.

      We could be heading for a depression to rival that of 100 years ago.

      Meanwhile, Russia is forced to sell gas and oil at preferential rates to China and India in their own currencies, in return for their manufactured goods which can be diverted from potential exports to the west. The Russia-Asia axis begins to thrive on this simple two-way trade, and resulting shortages in the west only serve to increase shortages of cheap clothing and electrical items.

      I read many reports that Putin has made a terrible mistake; but fear that the ones who are firmly in that disastrous decision camp are those shady characters who believe they run the planet through NATO.

      • Alf Baird

        This appears to be the geopolitical reality, with Russian emphasis looking to control Black Sea ports (less on inland cities etc), including Odessa which forms part of China’s Belt and Road initiative, thereby leaving Ukraine landlocked hence economically and militarily out of the game. As someone once said about global shipping/trade: ‘control of ports is control of destiny’.

    • Johnny Conspiranoid

      deepgreenpuddock

      Yes, America and her allies will be isolated and impoverished by thir own sanctions while the real international community caries on without us.

  • Stevie Boy

    While we are all distracted, let’s not forget a certain UK political prisoner.

    “I am defenceless and I am counting on you and others of good character to save my life… Truth, ultimately, is all we have.”
    Julian Assange, in Tariq Ali’s “In defence of Julian Assange”
    Belmarsh Prison, 13 Mai 2019

    https://setjulianfree.org/

  • Peter Mo

    So all the text books are wrong. Whats the point in learning the law.

    e.g. from text book…..

    SUMMARY PROCEEDINGS
    Trial procedure on a not guilty plea

    The prosecutor will outline the case, call their witnesses which will be cross examined by the defence. There may then be re-examination by the prosecution and also questions asked by the bench
    If appropriate the defence will then submit that there is no case to answer
    The defendant will then give evidence as well as other defence witnesses
    The magistrates then decide if case should be dismissed or proved
    The defence is given an opportunity to put forward any points in mitigation
    The case may be adjourned in order for a pre sentence report to be provided and the defendant sentenced.

    • Giyane

      Peter Mo

      A contempt of court case is different from an ordinary case, because the evidence of rape was concocted by Nicola Sturgeon and the Scottish MSM, both owned by wealthy interests in the US and UK, hence not available.
      In a contempt of court case there is no jury to say , hang on, where’s your evidence, and in a rape case all the evidence is confidential and in this case concocted consensually out of plots from Coronation Street, East Enders and Hovis Country.

  • Geoff Reynolds

    ………..are the mainstream media guilty of contempt of court?

    Nobody in any position of journalism was called upon to retract false narratives that were created to destroy both Salmond and our political prisoner in Bellmarsh prison, Julian Assange.

    You stand completely innocent Craig and you pissed the system off because you have one thing they will never have, truth and integrity!

    It takes a few conspirators to place enemies of the state (HA HA) before the beak to answer manufactured charges but you stand higher than any of them because you had the wisdom and fortitude to embarrass those by exposing the cracks in their testimonies.

    None of them dare look you in the eye because you stand head and shoulders above each and every one of the creeps trying to usher in the dawn of hell on humankind.

  • DunGroanin

    How is this ‘schroedingers evidence’ linked to the disaster In Ukraine? I’ll use the Welsh as the common denominator.

    The severe mental trauma being instilled in the minds upon the British peoples is designed to make us punch ourselves into brian damage in our version of Fight Club.

    The Scots are supposed to stop thinking of Independence for ever.
    The Welsh are being regressed from their tiny bit of devolution.
    A means of keeping a Union together while the City goes all ‘independent’ as a Freeport.

    Wales , probably not much different in size to the Ukrainian breakaway regions & having their own language , TV stations, newspapers and culture and history that predates ‘England’ – DON’T SEE themselves as more like these Russian speakers who want autonomy from the Master Race in Kiev and its US/U.K. imperial garrisons.

    They don’t want to know about constant attack for 8 years by neonazis.

    They ignore what happened there in 2014 onwards is what they would feel had England cut them off from their Bridge and insisted that all welsh place names and daily life would only take place in English. Their heritage and eistedfford would be cancelled and schools would teach the forever respect and worship of only all things English! And they would be daily bombed and face extermination.

    * But being keen to prove the thick as shit sheep worrying stereotypes – the yakkydas can’t see that their daffodil worshiping, leek eating ways are so shite they have not stopped at hating just Putin and Oligarchs, but fully bought into the Xenophobia and Racism and now hate all things Russian – including centuries dead composers, authors, cats and alcohol!

    Dumb. Yes they have made themselves into the caricature laughing stock they were nearly grown out of! My weepy Welsh friends have been informed of my view and they are not happy!

    The six nations rugby which usually highlights these ancient fault lines is now turned into a pointless exercise in jingoism and virtue signalling.The ‘junior’ nations are moved into supporting the Union they had damned nearly escaped, rushing back to the English Master, blowing his dog whistle.

    The Scots by the way are even dumber, having bought into the conspiracy of the goby women working as Crown agents to reverse the Indy mood which demands that independence be taken, if not given! Why even consider yourself part of an unequal Union? And subject to Lords of Laws appointed by the English invaders?

    * the racist stereotypes I refer to here are racist. I don’t actually feel about the Welsh, Scots, Irish or English peoples in that way, as most who know me would attest. I use them to show to my fellows they are leaving themselves open to such stereotypes by this insane behaviour.

    • Alf Baird

      The colonial mindset is ‘a disease of the mind’ (Frantz Fanon).
      This also helps explain why some people vote against their own liberation from oppression.

    • Courtenay Barnett

      DunGroanin,

      “They don’t want to know about constant attack for 8 years by neonazis.”

      At this time of allegations – counter-allegations – threats – and talk about nuclear war – I shudder.
      (Actually – I am on the side of us – human beings)

      Video: The Threat of Nuclear Annihillobal ResearchGlobal Research – Centre for Research on Globalization

      https://youtu.be/s4Kttb1WaJE

  • Antonym

    Fig leaves do much more justice, are truer, cleaner and much cheaper than many UK judges to cover for their Masters *sses.
    What some people do to get promotion!
    Power lu$t.

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