The Sunday Post (Dundee)

– Dr Stuart Hamilton

- By Marion Scott mscott@sundaypost.com

AScot living in Israel was beaten to death and a catalogue of failures allowed her killer to go free, a leading pathologis­t has concluded after studying post mortem reports.

Dr Stuart Hamilton has rejected official findings suggesting Julie Pearson died from a natural spontaneou­s bleed.

He believes Julie, whose body had 78 bruises up to seven inches wide, died hours after being beaten in Israel four years ago by her abusive ex Amjad Khatib.

Dr Hamilton said: “I believe this is a missed homicide. If Julie’s case was presented to me today, I would be advising the police that I believe this to be a homicide and I would expect them to investigat­e it as such.”

He said: “Deaths like Julie’s are the reason why Scotland needs to change its position to ensure a second post mortem always takes place for citizens killed abroad, as we currently do in England.

“The pain of not knowing what happened is, for a family, almost unbearable.

“Indeed, I have found for many of them, not knowing is even worse than knowing.

“We owe families a duty, as well as those who have lost their lives, to investigat­e.”

Mr Hamilton is offering to come to the Scottish Parliament to tell MSPS why the rules must change.

He said: “In Julie’s case, I believe there has been a missed homicide, or at the very least the case should be given a great deal more scrutiny than it already had.”

He says the explanatio­n given by Israeli officials was “not logical” in the circumstan­ces.

Mr Hamilton said of the post mortem: “A spontaneou­s internal bleed is incredibly rare.

“You need to be absolutely sure that the injuries were not caused by an assault, and in Julie’s case there are allegation­s of assault.”

He is backing her family’s campaign to make standard a second post mortem back home in Scotland for Scots killed abroad.

Julie’s aunt Deborah Pearson, 58, from West Lothian, is preparing to lodge a petition to the Scottish Parliament Public Petitions Committee.

She said: “For the past four years, we’ve suffered terribly because the system is flawed and does not help families like ours when faced with trauma and loss.

“If we had been able to access a second post mortem, we would have been spared four years of anguish which only added to our sense of loss and helplessne­ss. But at the present time, a second post mortem is granted only at the discretion of officials instead of being offered as standard as they are in England.”

Mr Hamilton issued his findings after reviewing how Kinross woman Julie, 38, died in the seaside tourist town of Eilat in November 2015.

The man witnesses have identified as beating Julie viciously hours before she collapsed, has never been charged with her death.

Julie’s abusive ex Khatib was questioned and jailed for two weeks for assaulting her and another girl.

Julie’s distraught mother Margaret, who raised concerns, was assured by Scottish Government officials that Israel’s post mortem would be thorough.

A Crown Office spokespers­on said it had limited jurisdicti­on to investigat­e deaths that occur outside Scotland but confirmed that “any decision on legislatio­n over the instructio­n of second post mortems as standard in all cases of Scots killed abroad would be for the Scottish Government”.

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