Glasgow Times

HANGED AT BARLINNIE

THE KILLER COP

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THE involvemen­t of a city bobby in an unmarried mother’s murder made for one of the most scandalous High Court trials the people of 1950s Glasgow had ever witnessed.

Clever police constable James Robertson’s horrific crime might have gone undetected had it not been for one of his eagled-eyed colleagues.

It also appeared that, as details of this case emerged in court, PC Robertson was on the wrong side of the law.

The murder unfolded when police were called to the scene of what they had thought was a road traffic accident just after midnight on July 28, 1950.

A taxi driver who was travelling along Prospecthi­ll Road in Toryglen raised the alarm when he found the body of a woman lying on the roadway.

Cabbie John Kennedy said: “I slowed up and saw the lady lying, and thought perhaps she was drunk or perhaps she had been knocked down.”

PC William Kevan, of the Traffic Department, however, grew suspicious when he examined the scene of the apparent ‘road accident’.

The woman’s injuries were consistent with a vehicle having gone over her. The driver appeared to have then reversed to go over her again.

CID were called to the crime scene, and it was there that PC Kevan convinced them that the woman, Catherine McCluskey, had in fact been murdered.

The victim, 40, lived in the Gorbals’ Nicholson Street, and was the mother of two children. It also transpired that there was a connection between the woman and PC Robertson. The cop, 33, was a beat officer in the Cumberland Street area of the Gorbals where she lived. The pair had a relationsh­ip despite PC Robertson being a family man.

Once PC Robertson’s associatio­n with his victim establishe­d, the vehicle he used to travel to work was impounded.

It was also soon discovered that the car had been stolen and fitted with false number plates.

Forensic expert Dr John Glaister then examined the car and discovered traces of McCluskey’s hair on the underside of the vehicle.

PC Robertson was charged with murder. His charge stated that he struck McCluskey on the head with a rubber truncheon and that he drove a motor car carrying false registrati­on plates over her, causing her death.

He also faced additional charges of housebreak­ing and theft. He was accused of breaking into a premises on Cumberland Street and stealing a car from West Campbell Street months prior to the murder.

The interest in this trial was so huge that there was a queue outside the court, often hours before proceeding­s began.

The Evening Times reported: “More than half an hour before the

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 ??  ?? The Austin car used to run over the victim. Traces of her hair were found on the underside of the vehicle
The Austin car used to run over the victim. Traces of her hair were found on the underside of the vehicle
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