Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Battered gran: I’m

Linda’s new campaign for release rule change

- BY LINDSEY HAMILTON

IN the years following the attack which left her close to death, Dundee grandmothe­r Linda McDonald refused to be called a victim.

Linda was left fighting for her life after Robbie McIntosh attacked her with a dumbbell at Templeton Woods in August 2017 while she was out walking her dog.

When I interviewe­d her following his sentence a year later, Linda said: “I refuse to be the victim of that person.

“I am not and never will be a victim – that would be letting him think he had beaten me.”

At the time of the attack, McIntosh was on a week’s home leave from prison after murdering Anne Nicoll, also from Dundee, in 2001.

Linda’s new campaign – Justice4Li­nda – calls for more answers about failings in the system which allowed this to happen to her.

She wants the authoritie­s involved to accept more responsibi­lity and give clearer answers on how McIntosh was allowed to strike again.

Now, the 57-year-old is proud to call herself a survivor.

She says: “You can only be a survivor if you have been a victim.”

Focusing on the campaign – along with therapy and her faith – has given Linda a new way to deal with her trauma.

She now considers McIntosh, eligible to apply for parole later this year, “a nobody”.

Linda said: “McIntosh is insignific­ant, he is a nothing. He is a product of the system.

“I used to call him a monster and evil – he wanted notoriety – but now I don’t care about him.

“I have no anger towards McIntosh.

“I am a Christian and it is for God to forgive.”

Despite her courage, Linda will never be the carefree woman she was before the attack.

She said: “I will never be the same again but I have learned to live with that and learned how to handle and accept that.”

After she returned home from hospital, Linda and husband Matt initially considered moving out of their home in Clatto.

However, the couple decided to stay put. They didn’t want their lives to be further torn apart. Linda said: “Why should we? This is our home and we love it.

“We shouldn’t have to move because of what he did – that would be another win for him.” Linda used to be too traumatise­d to go back to where McIntosh – aged 15 when he murdered Anne – attacked her. But the grandmothe­r has recently managed to visit the woods again with her husband by her side.

She said: “I used to be afraid but I have walked the path the other direction with Matt. I also went out with my doctor.

“It was so hard and I was shaking but I have been back out to that area and I survived.” She added: “I still feel like I am being stalked when I go back out there. I have only gone once or twice but it has been good to go back out and face it. I have moved on from the fear and I feel this is me moving forwards and dealing with everything that happened to me.”

The Justice4Li­nda campaign has given Linda a purpose.

She said: “I knew I had to face my fears to launch it.

“My campaign is what is keeping me alive. I have gone through hell but my spirit is not broken. I want people to see that I am smiling again.”

After McIntosh was sentenced for a second time, apologies from the authoritie­s were made to Linda and a review was carried out into what went wrong.

It said the second attack “could not have been predicted” but recommenda­tions into risk assessment­s for high-risk offenders were carried out. Linda says they did not go far

 ?? ?? Linda’s faith has helped her.
Linda’s faith has helped her.
 ?? ?? McIntosh killed Anne Nicoll
McIntosh killed Anne Nicoll
 ?? ??

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