The Herald on Sunday

What really made Lady Poole leave the Covid inquiry?

- Andrew Tickell is a writer, legal academic and occasional broadcaste­r

I WANT to tell you a tale of two judges. From time to time, a report appears in the Scottish media which seems to have all the makings of an important news story.

Perhaps it involves public money, a public scandal, or a public figure caught in some wrongdoing – and then the story disappears from the news agenda with barely a peep. The public imaginatio­n goes uncaptured, and we decide to focus on smaller scandals instead.

Sometimes there are good legal reasons for this disappeari­ng act. These reasons can’t always be disclosed in public. Contempt of court rules are strict in this jurisdicti­on.

Defamation laws remain powerful. Sometimes privacy rights are engaged, and the lawyers won’t sign off disclosure­s in the public interest. But sometimes the press just chooses to shut up.

Earlier this month, Lady Poole abruptly resigned as chair of the Scottish Covid inquiry after less than a year in post.

Poole has a distinguis­hed career as an advocate behind her and seemed wellqualif­ied for the task – though some thought the Lord President’s decision to appoint a fairly green judge to the role was surprising, given the high profile of the inquiry and massive commitment of time involved, just two years into her Court of Session career. Ten months later, she was gone.

On Thursday, John Swinney told MSPs that she will be replaced by Lord Brailsford. Brailsford has been a judge since 2006, and the Deputy FM said he was confident he had the “sensitivit­y, empathy and compassion” to clear up the mess his predecesso­r left behind her.

The official explanatio­n was that Lady Poole left the inquiry “for personal reasons” – an ambiguous phrase beloved of resigning Cabinet ministers everywhere. So, what was the real story?

The opposition in Holyrood and much of the Scottish media immediatel­y leapt to the conclusion that Scottish Government interferen­ce must have been responsibl­e for the judge’s abrupt departure, but it quickly transpired that John Swinney hadn’t tried to stitch up the inquiry’s efforts to “establish the facts about the devolved response to

the Covid-19 pandemic”.

‘Protect family’

THE Times subsequent­ly quoted sources close to Poole who indicated that she threw in the towel “to protect her family and health” – but the scuttlebut­t doing the rounds in Scottish legal circles eventually leaked out into the wider media: underpinni­ng Poole’s “personal reasons” were what have been described as “tensions and disagreeme­nts” within the Covid inquiry team itself. This came as news to bereaved families who were left in the dark for days about the real reasons the judge had stepped down.

Representi­ng these families, Aamer Anwar said the inquiry looked like “a sinking ship” and that his clients felt “betrayed by those who promised them the truth”. You can understand the sentiment.

Instead, it emerged that four members of Poole’s inquiry team – including her leading counsel Douglas Ross KC and three of his juniors – had tendered their resignatio­ns just the day before. This isn’t the equivalent of your solicitor passing your file to another lawyer in the same firm. These departures gutted the inquiry’s core legal staff. Mass resignatio­ns like this don’t just materialis­e from nowhere.

From the perspectiv­e of a jobbing advocate, being instructed to act as counsel in a major public inquiry is a licence to print money. By resigning, these lawyers were not only foregoing a guaranteed and substantia­l income for years – but also the opportunit­y to work on a major investigat­ion of universal public concern.

Team toxicity

JUST how toxic must the atmosphere have been to prompt all four senior and junior counsel to up sticks and forego these opportunit­ies? The lawyers involved are all being characteri­stically discreet, leaving us only with the vaguest public understand­ing of what prompted the inquiry to collapse in this way.

Public inquiries operate independen­tly of Government. Ministers can draw up their terms of reference and civil servants are routinely seconded to do behind-thescenes work, but it is ultimately up to the chair how their inquiry is run.

This includes appointmen­ts, staffing and working practices. Judges often seem like good appointmen­ts to public inquiries – and often do a good job.

Their title gives the appointmen­t some gravity. The public is generally confident in judges’ independen­ce from the political process.

Judges are generally experience­d decision-makers too. But most judges aren’t experience­d people managers and team players. The bar breeds lone wolves.

Most also have only limited experience in delivering large-scale, long-term projects – which helps explain why judicial inquiries tend to come in overtime and budget.

Adding 10 months to the Covid inquiry isn’t likely to help on either front.

Perhaps Poole felt she couldn’t rescue the situation. Perhaps Parliament House gossip made it impossible for her to recruit a functionin­g slate of legal replacemen­ts – particular­ly if the news got around about the inquiry’s dysfunctio­nal working environmen­t. But all of this is speculativ­e.

If there are better answers – better explanatio­ns for what happened – then let’s hear them. But on discoverin­g that the Scottish Government couldn’t

Respecting judicial independen­ce doesn’t mean judges can act with impunity. This is public money which has been poured down the drain

reasonably be blamed for this unanticipa­ted interrupti­on in the inquiry’s work, the political caravan rolled on, and the parliament­ary questions and outraged headlines dried up.

Not so fast. Respecting judicial independen­ce doesn’t mean judges can act with impunity. This is public money which has been poured down the drain. This is 10 months of public work up the chimney.

“Personal reasons” isn’t approachin­g an adequate explanatio­n for why this happened. It isn’t the Scottish Government’s job to run a PR cover for a judge who seems to have blown her first public inquiry – just as it isn’t the opposition’s job to give the story a free pass because it doesn’t seem to have a strong political angle. Where is the accountabi­lity?

Botched probe

LADY Poole isn’t the only judge who finds themselves in the middle of unresolved questions about their role in Scottish public life right now. During the Salmond affair, it suited some people to pretend that James Wolffe – the former Lord Advocate – had been responsibl­e for the Crown Office’s botched fraud probe into the sale of Rangers Football Club. This was not true.

At the time, Frank Mulholland was the chief public prosecutor. Mulholland has since been appointed – and continues to sit – as a High Court judge while the

Crown Office slowly settles the debts accrued during his period in office.

In a statement to Holyrood last year, Wolffe admitted that the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service launched these prosecutio­ns without “probable cause” – which is to say, without sufficient evidence to establish any crime had been committed. The damages which have been paid out to the victims of these malicious prosecutio­ns are eyewaterin­g. Audit Scotland has confirmed that more than £40 million has already been paid out by the Crown Office, which is to say – paid out of the Scottish Budget. Further claims are pending.

Crown hierarchy

ALL the fundamenta­l questions about how this came to pass remain unanswered. The Crown Office isn’t a hivemind. It is a hierarchy, at the head of which you find the Lord Advocate. Someone signed off on these prosecutio­ns. Someone reviewed the evidence and concluded that raids, arrests and prosecutio­ns could in good conscience be set in train. In all probabilit­y, several people were involved.

But as I write, we still have no idea how this happened, and what role in the story – if any – the former Lord Advocate played.

Some politician­s have been critical of Lord Mulholland’s continuing role as a High Court judge, while his part in this story remains unclear.

In Holyrood last year, Adam Tomkins argued that “Frank Mulholland’s judgment as Scotland’s prosecutor is in the dock, while Frank Mulholland himself sits in judgment”.

In response, Lord Mulholland took the remarkable step of putting out a press release through his solicitors, characteri­sing this as an “unfounded personal attack” on his integrity and committing to fully co-operate with any subsequent inquiry into what happened.

As contretemp­s between serving politician­s and serving judges go, this was unpreceden­ted – but curiously passed without much public comment.

Oh. And we’re still waiting for that inquiry.

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 ?? ?? Lady Poole resigned as chair of the Scottish Covid inquiry after less than a year in post
Lady Poole resigned as chair of the Scottish Covid inquiry after less than a year in post

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