The Sunday Post (Inverness)

FIVE YEARS BUT NO ANSWERS FOR FAMILIES OF COUPLE UNDISCOVER­ED AFTER M9 CRASH

- By Craig Mcdonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

The police officer at the centre of the M9 crash tragedy has retired as the Crown Office investigat­ion into the tragedy enters its sixth year. Today, on the fifth anniversar­y of the accident, the family of one of the victims describes the wait for answers as “ridiculous”. John Yuill, 28, and Lamara Bell, 25, were returning from a camping trip when their car left the motorway and plunged down an embankment on July 5, 2015.

A call was made to police that day to report the crash but it wasn’t entered into the police computer system or followed up. Officers only attended three days later when a further 999 call was made.

John was found dead at the scene, near Stirling, while Lamara passed away in hospital on July 12, a week after the crash.

Five years on, their families and friends have still to learn whether anyone, or the force itself, will be prosecuted over the case. They also do not have a date for any Fatal Accident Inquiry as this cannot proceed until a possible criminal case is concluded. We can reveal the officer, Sergeant Brian Henry, 58, who handled the 999 call at Police Scotland’s Bilston Glen call centre, and who has spoken of his devastatio­n over the crash, retired in 2018 with the inquiry still not concluded.

John’s dad Gordon, of Falkirk, said: “People are asking us how it can take anyone five years to decide whether police have broken the law. We just have to say we don’t know. It seems no one at the Crown Office wants to take the decision and it’s reached the stage where it’s ridiculous. We know it’s a difficult decision but we need answers to try to move on with our lives. We cannot do this with no decision having been reached and, as a result, an FAI possibly being years away. “I accept that my son was driving and is, therefore, responsibl­e for the accident. We do not want to try to blame police but we do believe they were responsibl­e for what happened afterwards.

“The authoritie­s have spent five years looking at evidence and getting reports and we were told a decision was expected last summer.

“We are now a year on, with another major milestone passed with the fifth anniversar­y, and still there is nothing and we find it quite unbelievab­le. “Surely the time cannot be helpful as it becomes increasing­ly difficult to ask witnesses what they remember from something which happened years ago.” David Kennedy, deputy general secretary of the Scottish Police Federation, which represents rank-and-file officers, said individual­s were unable to comment as the anticipate­d FAI had not yet been held.

He added: “The length of time it has taken for an FAI to be held is far too long. It seems like forever before an FAI is being held and the delay is unacceptab­le for all involved. “On behalf of the officers involved, and for the benefit of all parties, we would like to see an FAI take place as soon as possible.”

The Crown Office said: “The case team and staff from our Victim Informatio­n and Advice service have communicat­ed with family members and their legal representa­tives throughout and will continue to keep them informed of significan­t developmen­ts in relation to the investigat­ion.” Scottish Lib Dem leader Willie Rennie said: “It is unforgivab­le that, five years on from the M9 crash, the families and friends of Lamara and John are still waiting to find out what precisely happened. The wait has been glacial and agonising. “It has been four years since the Lord Advocate told me it would be ‘inconceiva­ble’ not to hold an FAI ‘given the public concern over this tragedy’. I warned then the wait was already too long. The Crown Office has shown itself incapable of handling FAIS.”

We need answers to try to move on with our lives

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Gordon Yuill

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