The Scotsman

No FAI into Scotland’s worst Legionnair­es outbreak in a decade

- By ANGUS HOWARTH

0 Helen Booth fell severely ill with Legionnair­es disease. She is ‘devastated at the decision Survivors of a Legionnair­es disease outbreak that killed four people have been told there will be no fatal accident inquiry into the deaths.

The decision not to hold a long-awaited investigat­ion was reached last year but no public announceme­nt was made and victims and relatives have only recently been informed.

There were 56 confirmed casesinsou­th-westedinbu­rgh in the summer of 2012, in what was Scotland’s worst Legionnair­es’ disease outbreak in more than a decade.

Criminal proceeding­s are now being considered against “a number of companies” for health and safety breaches unrelated to the deaths.

Helen Booth, 64, was one of those who fell severely ill with Legionnair­es’ in June 2012, when she worked as a council receptioni­st in the Gorgie area of the city. She said she was “devastated” at the Crown Office’s decision not to hold an inquiry.

She added: “It’s a disgrace. It’s pathetic, really pathetic. But I will not leave it. This is not going to go away.”

Mrs Booth, who was left with scarred lungs as a result of pneumonia caused by her Legionnair­es’, said the tragic events five years ago had been “swept under the carpet”.

The Crown Office has informed the families of those who died and the representa­tives of a number of survivors about last year’s decision.

Lawyers representi­ng victims said they had been left “surprised and disappoint­ed” at the move.

They have spent the past few years trying to launch civil actions against two Edinburgh firms.

But the cases were stalled while the Crown Office deliberate­d over whether to launch an inquiry, which would have investigat­ed the circumstan­ces of the deaths.

And now crucial documents will remain out of bounds once again while criminal proceeding­s are ongoing - further frustratin­g families’ attempts to get answers.

A report by NHS Lothian in 2015 named nine sites as potential sources of the outbreak, which spread through an “aerosol release” of bacteria.

But no definite cause was ever found and no-one was ever prosecuted.

A Crown Office spokesman said: “Crown Counsel are satisfied the [NHS Lothian] report has put all the available informatio­n in the public domain, providing a detailed descriptio­n of the investigat­ion and the steps taken in attempting to identify the source of the infection and that on that basis there is no requiremen­t to hold a fatal accident inquiry.”

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