The Herald

Anger over police watchdog

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A WOMAN raped by the same man who murdered Emma Caldwell almost 20 years ago has accused watchdogs of ignoring her plea to reopen a complaint against the police in the wake of his conviction.

Magdalene Robertson said she had approached the Police Investigat­ions and Review Commission­er (Pirc) several times after 51-year-old Iain Packer was jailed for life in February 2024.

As well as being convicted of murdering Ms Caldwell in 2005, Packer was also found guilty of 11 charges of rape against nine women – with Police Scotland apologisin­g to his victims saying they had been “let down” by police handling of the case in 2005.

However, Ms Robertson told MSPS despite contacting Pirc a number of times, it had “ignored” her calls for her complaint to be looked at again. She also claimed the organisati­on, which is responsibl­e for investigat­ing allegation­s of criminalit­y by on-duty officers and misconduct allegation­s against senior officers, had failed to follow up informatio­n that she had given it.

With MSPS on Holyrood’s Criminal Justice Committee considerin­g new legislatio­n from the Scottish Government which seeks to improve the police complaints and misconduct process, Ms Robertson – known as Maggie – spoke out about her experience.

She was indecently assaulted by Packer when she was 14 and raped by him when she was 15, speaking to the police about him in 2006.

But she likened the process of complainin­g about the police to being on “hamster wheel”, adding: “You know you are butting your head, and you can’t get anywhere forward.”

She claimed: “It was an exercise to deplete me of my energy so I had nowhere else to go.

“That’s the intention of Pirc for me, I don’t see it as anything else.”

She told the committee she had wanted Pirc staff to “follow up against police officers”, saying: “There was one piece of informatio­n I gave them many times, but they absolutely refused to check up on it.”

Ms Robertson stated: “I think it is criminal they did not follow up on that, I still don’t know what happened.”

She also told how she had approached the watchdog organisati­on again immediatel­y after Packer’s conviction earlier this year.

Ms Robertson recalled: “I went back to Pirc and said, ‘given police have apologised, and given they have admitted liability, would you please consider opening up my case for complaint again?’.

“It was ignored. I went back on March 6, it was ignored. Back on March 8, it was ignored.”

Adding that Pirc “still ignored” her almost seven weeks on from the close of the court case, she said she now had “nowhere to go”.

Ms Robertson said: “There is no governing body for Pirc, it is mates and people who know each other, who can grease each other’s hands and help their mates out.

“That is what we have here. But I have still got nowhere to go with this complaint.”

SNP MSP John Swinney told Ms Robertson she had made a “really powerful case about the need for, what I might call, a significan­t hurricane of fresh air into this system”.

Meanwhile, Stephanie Bonner told MSPS she had been on a “hellish merry-go-round of distractio­ns, deceit, deceptions and manipulati­on” as she sought to bring forward a complaint about the way Police Scotland dealt with the death of her son, Rhys, 19.

He went missing on July 24, 2019 and his body was found in marshland between Easterhous­e and Gartloch on August 8 that year.

Ms Bonner made a formal complaint the following March.

She said: “It has taken four years to exhaust the police and Pirc complaints process.

“It has taken four long and painful years just to prove my son’s death was not properly investigat­ed.”

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