He wouldn’t let me take Margaret home .. he threw me up against the wardrobe, he put his hands round my throat and started to spit on me
Court told daughter appeared too terrified to leave
A MOTHER yesterday told a jury she had concerns about murder accuseds Edward Cairney and Avril Jones looking after her daughter.
Margaret Cruickshanks, 71, said that until police launched a missing persons investigation in 2016, she thought her daughter Margaret Fleming was “getting on with her life and enjoying herself ”.
Ms Cruickshanks added: “I never thought anything like this had happened.”
She was giving evidence at the High Court in Glasgow where Cairney, 76, and Jones, 58, deny murdering Margaret Fleming at Seacroft, Main Road, Inverkip, between December 18, 1999 and January 5, 2000.
Margaret, who would now be aged 37, has allegedly not been seen for more than 18 years.
Ms Cruickshanks said that after Margaret’s father Derek died in 1995, Cairney and Jones volunteered to help care for her.
They had Margaret, who was on benefits for a learning disability, to stay at heir home in Inverkip for days at a time.
Advocate Depute Iain McSporran QC asked her: “Did you have any concerns about their ability to look after Margaret,” and she replied: “I did but I did everything I could.’
The prosecutor then asked: “Did you think you were welcome in her life?” and she replied: “No, I didn’t think so.”
Ms Cruickshanks sobbed in court as she told of going to the couple’s house to collect Margaret and being told she was not going home with her.
She told the court she thought it was November 1996, but Mr McSporran said that police had noted the date as November 26, 1997.
Ms Cruickshanks said: “I wanted to bring my daughter home and they wouldn’t let me bring her home.”
The witness told the court that she and Cairney had words and added: “He wouldn’t let me take her home. He actually threw me up against a wardrobe. He put his hands round my throat and started to spit on me.”
She was asked where Jones was during this alleged incident and replied: “She was watching everything that was going on. Margaret was upstairs. I shouted her down and said to her, ‘Where do you want to live?’ She looked terrified and said there at Seacroft.”
The jury heard that Ms Cruickshanks reported this to the police and said she wanted to be sure that Margaret was happy there. The police who spoke to her said she wanted to stay with Cairney and Jones. Her mother said that when Margaret stayed at Seacroft, her bedroom was upstairs – a small attic room with a bed and a table. The jury has been shown photographs of the house taken in November 2016 which show both the attic rooms covered in clutter and neither had a bed.
Earlier in her evidence, Ms Cruickshanks revealed Margaret had a temper and said: “She took all her anger out on me.”
So when Cairney and Jones, who were friends of her late husband, volunteered to provide respite care and take Margaret for a week at a time, she accepted their help. The court heard that Ms Cruickshanks sent a Christmas gift to her daughter shortly after she moved in with Cairney and Jones.
She later received a handwritten note asking her to collect the present or it would be donated to a charity shop.
Ms Cruickshanks was later quizzed about a possible sighting of her daughter with Cairney at a supermarket.
The witness told Cairney’s QC Thomas Ross that she “thought it was Margaret”. Mr Ross said: “You saw Eddie Cairney say something to the person and the person turned around to look at you.” The witness said: “It was outside Morrisons.”
The QC went on: “It would be consistent with Eddie Cairney saying: ‘That’s your mum’, and Margaret then turning round?” Ms Cruickshanks said: “Yes, I told you that.”
Mr Ross then asked: “If we hear evidence that something like that did happen but it was 2013 or 2014...could it have been as recently as that?”
She replied: “I don’t remember.”
The trial before judge Lord Matthews continues.
I never thought anything like this happened MS CRUICKSHANKS MARGARET’S MOTHER