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MP Margaret Ferrier pleads guilty to exposing public to Covid MP Margaret Ferrier pleads guilty to exposing public to Covid
(32 minutes later)
An MP has pled guilty to breaching Covid rules by travelling by train after being told to self-isolate during lockdown. Margaret Ferrier pled guilty to culpably and recklessly exposing the public to the virus
Margaret Ferrier admitted that she culpably and recklessly exposed the public to the virus. An MP has pled guilty to breaching Covid rules after travelling by train despite knowing she had the virus.
Ms Ferrier travelled in and around Glasgow and between Scotland and London in September 2020. Margaret Ferrier spoke in parliament in September 2020 while awaiting the results of a Covid test.
She then took the train home to Glasgow after being told she had tested positive.
Ms Ferrier admitted that she had culpably and recklessly exposed the public to the virus ahead of a trial at Glasgow Sheriff Court.
She was elected as an SNP MP but lost the whip and now sits as an independent.She was elected as an SNP MP but lost the whip and now sits as an independent.
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version. The MP for Rutherglen and Hamilton West took a Covid test on Saturday 26 September because she had a "tickly throat".
You can receive Breaking News ona smartphone or tablet via the BBC News App. You can also follow @BBCBreaking on Twitter to get the latest alerts. Margaret Ferrier: Who is the MP who broke Covid rules?
While awaiting her results, she is believed to have gone to church and to a bar in Prestwick on the Sunday.
She then travelled to London by train on the Monday and spoke in the Commons later that day before finding out a short time later that she had tested positive for the virus.
Ms Ferrier decided to get a train back to Glasgow the following day, fearing she would have to self-isolate in a London hotel room for two weeks.
She has previously said she "deeply regretted" her actions and referred herself to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards, as well as to the police - but has so far refused to resign as an MP.
'Dangerous and indefensible'
The 61-year-old first became an MP in 2015 in the SNP landslide that saw the party take 56 of the 59 seats in Scotland.
In May 2020, Ms Ferrier was one of the MPs who called on the prime minister's adviser Dominic Cummings to resign in the wake of the controversy over his visit to the North East of England during lockdown.
At the time, she said his actions had "undermined the sacrifices that we have all been making in lockdown to protect each other from coronavirus" and described his position as "untenable".
After it emerged Ms Ferrier had travelled with Covid symptoms, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon condemned her actions as "dangerous and indefensible".
The SNP leader later called "with a heavy heart" for her to resign as an MP.