The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Judges urged not to jail ex-diplomat

- LUCINDA CAMERON

Judges have been urged not to jail a former diplomat who was found to be in contempt of court after covering the Alex Salmond trial on his blog.

Craig Murray, a former UK ambassador to Uzbekistan, attended two days of Mr Salmond’s trial in March 2020, sitting in the public gallery, and wrote about it on his website.

The former first minister was cleared at the High Court in Edinburgh of 13 sexual assault charges involving nine women following his trial.

Following previous hearings, judges on March 25 this year found that Murray, 62, was in contempt of court, relating to material capable of identifyin­g four complainer­s.

At a virtual hearing of the High Court in Edinburgh yesterday, Roddy Dunlop QC, representi­ng Murray, said there is little indication of any actual identifica­tion having happened as a result of the articles, and said there was nothing amounting to actual interferen­ce in the case such as the trial having to be adjourned.

He said: “The simple fact is that some complainer­s seem to have been identified as a result of comments made in publicatio­ns made by other entities with greater reach, and in so far as there is any instance of identifica­tion being made as a result of what Mr Murray did, it is limited.

“There are tweets that follow on what Mr Murray did, whether or not they amount to people just weighing in with their own identifica­tion as opposed to actually having completed the jigsaw we do not know and one cannot know, but my point is there is little indication of any actual identifica­tion as a result of this.”

He said the posts were redacted when the contempt proceeding­s were launched to “neutralise” the problems.

The Lord Justice Clerk Lady Dorrian, who was hearing the case along with Lord Menzies and Lord Turnbull, said: “The reality remains that for complainer­s in other cases, the fact that this has happened in such a high profile sexual offences case can only be detrimenta­l.”

In his mitigation submission, Mr Dunlop said Murray is a man of “impeccable character” and previously “untarnishe­d reputation”, and said it is no exaggerati­on to say the retired diplomat is already suffering “significan­t punishment” from the impact of the case.

Mr Dunlop said sending Murray to prison would be “harsh to the point of being disproport­ionate”, and he urged judges to deal with the matter by way of a fine.

He said: “Allowing that the finding of contempt has been ruled by this court to be justified the question is whether, given all the circumstan­ces, that justificat­ion extends yet further to countenanc­ing imprisonme­nt, to taking a retired diplomat with an exemplary background away from his wife, his 11-year-old son, and his baby.

“For what purpose? The response might will be “pour decourager les autres” (to discourage others). If that is the purpose, job done. Mr Murray’s blogging is inevitably hamstrung by the ruling itself, the decision is and has been widely publicised.

“If anyone thinks playing with fire in the field of jigsaw identifica­tion is a zero sum game, their views have been disabused by the ruling this court has already made.”

The judges will give their sentencing decision on Tuesday.

 ??  ?? BLOGGER: Former UK ambassador Craig Murray was found to be in contempt of court after the Alex Salmond trial.
BLOGGER: Former UK ambassador Craig Murray was found to be in contempt of court after the Alex Salmond trial.

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