04 October 2010

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04 Oct 2010
Angiolini's tenure "a disastrous experiment” says Professor Black
Professor Robert Black QC, emeritus Professor of Law at Edinburgh University has said incumbent Elish Angiolini’s tenure as Lord Advocate, a role traditionally held by experienced advocates, was a “disastrous experiment” in his daily blog.

“In the past, the law officers have traditionally come from the ranks of the practising Bar and were supporters of the governing party,” Black says.

“Elish Angiolini, as well as being the first woman, was the first solicitor and the first legal civil servant. It is to be hoped that it will be recognised that the appointment of a Crown Office staffer as Lord Advocate was a disastrous experiment which should never be repeated.”

Professor Black’s blog, which provides daily updates on matters relating to the Lockerbie case which he assisted in setting up, has been critical of the Crown Office during the affair and during her tenure.

“Is it too much to hope for that Mrs Angiolini's successor - who, it is devoutly to be wished, will not be another Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service civil servant - will have a more open mind about Lockerbie, about the damage and loss of public esteem that the Scottish criminal justice system has suffered because of it and about the best way to rectify this?” he asks.

Sources close to the Lord Advocate are briefing journalists that Frank Mulholland, the present Solicitor General, ought to be appointed as her successor. Angiolini’s successor will be appointed by the Queen on the recommendation of the First Minister with “the agreement of the Parliament". No details have yet been announced about when this will take place or who that successor will be.

1 comment:

  1. Yes Angiolini was a disaster, but I wouldn't put it down to being a a legal civil servant or a practising solicitor. What's necessary in this job is an independence of mind and a spirit of scepticism, and until Scotland gets that back in its judges, its legal officers and its practising lawyers, the truth will continue to be betrayed. Take a leaf out of the book of informed public opinion on Lockerbie, people like Jim Swire, Professor Black and Tam Dalyell who have shown beyond reasonable doubt that the conviction of Mr Magrahi is corrupt beyond belief by a lickspittle legal system pusillanimously prepared to sell its soul for American ends and American gold.

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