The Guardian

Yousaf says he is shocked by charges of embezzleme­nt against Murrell

- Severin Carrell Scotland editor

Humza Yousaf has said he is shocked by the embezzleme­nt charges levelled against Peter Murrell, the former chief executive of the Scottish National party.

Police Scotland announced on Thursday that Murrell, who is married to Yousaf ’s mentor and predecesso­r as first minister Nicola Sturgeon, had been rearrested and charged with embezzleme­nt of SNP funds.

Murrell, 59, who was released after spending more than nine hours in custody on Thursday, has not commented on the investigat­ion or the allegation­s since first being arrested as a suspect on 5 April last year. He has resigned as an SNP member.

Police Scotland said a full report would be sent to prosecutor­s at the Crown Office for considerat­ion.

Yesterday Yousaf described it as “a serious developmen­t. [An] allegation of embezzleme­nt from and of party funds, that’s a very serious and concerning matter. And all of those people who have known Peter Murrell for a number of years within the SNP and indeed across Scottish politics will be shocked.

“This will be a shock to many people, including myself.”

Speaking to the media outside her home in Glasgow on Friday, Sturgeon said the situation had been “incredibly difficult” before asking for peace for her neighbours as she left by car.

The first minister, who is also SNP leader, said he first became aware of the charges when the police announced them publicly on Thursday: “We have to allow the police and indeed the crown to do their job.”

The charges against Murrell follow a police investigat­ion code-named Operation Branchform launched nearly three years ago into complaints that the SNP had mishandled about £660,000 in donations to an independen­ce referendum fund.

Those donations were not separately listed in the party’s accounts. Murrell and Sturgeon insisted the money had been fully and properly accounted for internally.

Sturgeon was also arrested in June 2023 and questioned as a suspect after agreeing by arrangemen­t to a police interview. She was later released without charge, as was Colin Beattie, the then party treasurer, who was arrested in mid-April 2023.

Sturgeon grappled with a wider dispute within the SNP over the party’s accounts after several members of its finance committee stood down, to be followed by its then party treasurer Douglas Chapman.

Sturgeon has repeatedly protested her innocence. Yousaf added that he hoped the controvers­y would not dent support for the SNP as it heads into the next general election.

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