Shirley McKie is a former Scottish policewoman. Experts from the Scottish Criminal Record Office (SCRO) accused PC McKie of leaving her thumb print on the bathroom door frame of a murder crime-scene on January 14, 1997. But she denied ever having been inside the house in Kilmarnock of murder victim Marion Ross, whose body was discovered on January 8, 1997.
A second civil action was then raised suing the Scottish Executive amongst others on the basis that a malicious prosecution had been caused by dishonesty of the SCRO fingerprint experts. A few days before evidence in this case was to be heard, in February 2006, McKie was offered and accepted £750,000 from the Scottish Executive in full settlement of her claim, without admission of liability. The case was then dropped. At an earlier stage of the case against the Scottish Executive the Lord Advocate Colin Boyd argued that expert witnesses should always be immune from prosecution – even if they gave false evidence.
However, the Scottish Executive ruled out both a public inquiry and a judicial inquiry (which has the power to compel the attendance of witnesses). Instead, the Scottish parliament decided to refer the McKie case to its Justice 1 Committee which began its inquiry in May 2006 and is expected to take evidence from 30 witnesses.
Ms McKie, accompanied by her father Iain and a team of legal advisers, appeared before the committee of MSPs on May 23, 2006.*. Her accusers – the four SCRO fingerprint officers Hugh Macpherson, Fiona McBride, Anthony McKenna and Charles Stewart – appeared a week later on May 30, 2006. The Justice 1 Committee has since requested that the Scottish Executive should provide it with four McKie case reports:
1963 births | Pan Am Flight 103 | Living people | Scottish police officers
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