The Scotsman

Inside Justice

The murder case that police ignored – sinister or inept? asks Chris Marshall

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On the night of 8 February, 1997, Kevin Mcleod, 24, said goodbye to his parents for the last time. Hours after leaving home for a night out, his body was pulled from the icy waters of Wick harbour, his death an apparent accident.

Some 21 years on, mystery surrounds those final hours in the young electricia­n’s life.

All these years later, Kevin’s parents still don’t know what happened to their son.

Kevin’s mother, June, has spoken of how she feared the worst when her boy failed to return that night; it wasn’t like Kevin not to come home, it wasn’t like Kevin not to call.

From the very start the family have disputed the police’s version of events, a position vindicated late last year when Police Scotland offered an unreserved apology for early failings in the investigat­ion carried out by Northern Constabula­ry.

Deputy Chief Constable Iain Livingston­e, currently the country’s most senior officer, met June and her husband, Hugh, in December.

He confirmed what the family had feared for years: that police officers had ignored an instructio­n from the local procurator-fiscal to investigat­e Kevin’s death as murder.

The admission has brought fresh interest in a case which had receded from public view despite the tireless efforts of Kevin’s parents and his uncle, Allan.

In a letter presented to the family at the time, Mr Livingston­e said: “It is Police Scotland’s unequivoca­l position that we fully accept that an instructio­n was indeed given by the then procurator-fiscal to treat Kevin’s death as a murder and to investigat­e it accordingl­y, a matter which Northern Constabula­ry at that time failed to do.”

In 2007, the Police Complaints Commission­er for Scotland found Northern Constabula­ry had behaved with “institutio­nal arrogance” in the way it handled complaints from the Mcleod family.

Appearing on BBC Radio Scotland last week, local MSP Gail Ross said the way the family had been treated by police was an “absolute disgrace”.

Ms Ross, who has taken up the family’s case, said the case appeared to be a miscarriag­e of justice, presumably in that justice has never been delivered for the family.

The Mcleods have called for an independen­t inquiry into why Northern Constabula­ry ignored the direction from prosecutor­s to investigat­e the death as a murder.

They believe Kevin had massive internal injuries consistent with being kicked several hours prior to his drowning.

A potential eyewitness came forward earlier this year claiming to have seen two police officers stand watching Mr Mcleod struggle in the water on the night he died.

However, detectives investigat­ing the case have said there is no evidence police officers were involved.

The one undisputab­le fact so far is that the Mcleods were failed and failed badly by Northern Constabula­ry.

Had the death occurred now, under the auspices of Police Scotland with all its investigat­ory expertise, the same sort of errors would not have been made in the initial stages.

More than two decades on, it’s difficult to know if the case was undermined by police inepitude or something more sinister.

Either way, the family of Kevin Mcleod are long overdue answers about what happened to their son on that winter’s night 21 years ago.

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