The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Councillor claims being sacked for ‘trivial’ sex assaults is not justified

- ALASTAIR GOSSIP

Ashamed Aberdeen councillor has belittled his sexual assault conviction as “absolutely trivial” – while rubbishing efforts to ensure no one placed on the sex offenders register is allowed to remain in public office.

Alan Donnelly returned from a paid year-long suspension in March, having been handed the most serious sanction a councillor can currently face who has not been sent to prison.

Now the local government watchdog, which was unable to remove the 66-year-old from his role as a councillor, is pushing for the Scottish Government to change the law so sex offender councillor­s automatica­lly lose their jobs.

The Standards Commission wants a law dating from 1973 to be reviewed to reflect the modern justice system, and to give it the legal right to strip anyone placed on the sex offenders register of their elected office.

Donnelly was added to the sex offenders register over an attack at a city function

At trial in 2019, Donnelly was found guilty of sexual assault – touching his victim’s face, hair and body and kissing him on the face – and was later sentenced to an eight-month supervisio­n order, placed on the sex offenders register and ordered to pay his victim £800 in compensati­on.

Speaking to Aberdeen Journals, the Torry And Ferryhill councillor claimed to be a “pawn” in a “conspiracy” against him, repeatedly stated his innocence and criticised the “cruel” sheriff, the prosecutor­s, witnesses and even his victim.

Pressed for a comment he pushed back, asking: “Do you kiss your mother at Christmas? Do you kiss your father? Is that a sex offence?”

And he suggested law change that, had it been announced in Scotland when it was elsewhere in the UK, would have led to him losing his job.

“What I’ve been through in the last two years, dragged through the mud, is completely out of proportion and had I been disqualifi­ed by the commission it would have been another act of gross disproport­ionality to what I have been convicted of,” he said.

“If I were disqualifi­ed for the absolutely trivial act which I supposedly did – which I deny but was convicted of – it would have been completely and utterly out of proportion.

“We are going to have someone in public life instantly sacked from their job because they have kissed someone in a bar after two drinks, and the female or male has objected.

“Can you compare someone who has seriously sexually assaulted or raped a person to someone who has done next to nothing?”

Claiming his life had been destroyed by the verdict – which he won’t accept “until the day he dies” – he added: “I think people are put on the sex offenders register for what I describe as trivia.

“There are people added for serious sex offences, there is a big difference between someone exposing their backside in public as opposed to strangling and raping someone.

“The demarcatio­n is that it depends on the level of the conviction and, naturally, the sentence.”

But the watchdog’s inability to sanction Donnelly as panel members might have preferred was laid bare at his hearing last November.

The Local Government Act 1973 dictates that a councillor would automatica­lly lose their job if jailed for three months – but sheriffs are expected not to imprison offenders for less than a year if community-based alternativ­es are an option.

The issue – already rectified in England and Wales – has been referred to by some at Aberdeen Town House as the “Donnelly Clause” – because he is the only councillor ever reported to the Standards Commission for Scotland after being convicted of a sexual offence.

Convener, Professor Kevin Dunion, said: “Our ability to impose sanctions on councillor­s, including disqualifi­cation, only applies when their misconduct occurs when acting in an official capacity.

“Misbehavio­ur in a personal capacity cannot be dealt with by the Standards Commission.

“However the expectatio­n has been that serious offences, such as sexual assault, would give rise to a prison sentence of three months or more, and automatic disqualifi­cation would follow.

“Sentencing guidelines now mean that short term prison sentences are less likely.”

“People are put on the sex offenders register for what I describe as trivia

 ??  ?? CASE: Councillor Alan Donnelly was found guilty of a sexual assault at a city function.
CASE: Councillor Alan Donnelly was found guilty of a sexual assault at a city function.

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