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McKie officers 'forced to quit' McKie print experts 'forced out'
(about 8 hours later)
Four fingerprint officers at the centre of the Shirley McKie case have taken redundancy. Four fingerprint experts at the centre of the Shirley McKie fingerprint scandal have left their jobs.
BBC Scotland understands that they left the Scottish Fingerprint Service on Friday. BBC Scotland understands that they took redundancy from the Scottish Fingerprint Service on Friday.
The Shirley McKie case centred around a fingerprint found at a murder scene that was wrongly identified. Labour MSP Ken Macintosh said the officers concerned had been "forced out of the door" and "gagged".
Eventually ministers awarded the former Strathclyde Police detective £750,000 in compensation. The McKie case centred around a print found at a murder scene which was wrongly identified. The former detective got £750,000 compensation.
'Shown the door' Forensic scientists
It emerged on Friday that the four fingerprint officers had taken redundancy one day after their boss resigned. The fingerprint experts left the SFS the day after the resignation of the man in charge of the service. Ian Todd stepped down as acting director of the Scottish Criminal Record Office, which encompasses the SFS, after a year in the job.
Ian Todd stood down on Thursday as head of the Scottish Criminal Records Office, which encompasses the fingerprint service. Although he came to power long after the Shirley McKie affair, Mr Todd reportedly supported the forensic scientists involved in the case. Ms McKie, a former policewoman from Troon, Ayrshire, was accused of leaving a fingerprint at the Kilmarnock home of murder victim Marion Ross 10 years ago.
The contrast between their treatment and the £750,000 paid to Shirley McKie is disgraceful Labour MSP Ken Macintosh Four officers originally identified the print.
Two more fingerprint officers involved in the McKie case are also expected to take redundancy. Six officers, who have given long years of public service, have been investigated over and over again and have always been cleared Ken MacintoshLabour MSP
Labour MSP Ken Macintosh, who has supported some of the fingerprint staff, told BBC Scotland they had been shown the door and prevented from speaking out. But Ms McKie challenged the findings of the experts and was later cleared of perjury.
Two other fingerprint officers involved in the case are also expected to take redundancy.
Labour MSP Ken Macintosh, who sits on Holyrood's Standards Committee and has spoken on behalf of some of the officers, told BBC Scotland they had been shown the door and prevented from speaking out.
He said: "Six officers, who have given long years of public service, have been investigated over and over again and have always been cleared.He said: "Six officers, who have given long years of public service, have been investigated over and over again and have always been cleared.
"Yet what is happening is that they're being shown the door and forced to sign contracts in which they are gagged and not allowed to speak about this case in public."Yet what is happening is that they're being shown the door and forced to sign contracts in which they are gagged and not allowed to speak about this case in public.
"They are not being offered any kind of decent enhancement and the contrast between their treatment and the £750,000 paid to Shirley McKie is disgraceful.""They are not being offered any kind of decent enhancement and the contrast between their treatment and the £750,000 paid to Shirley McKie is disgraceful."
The Scottish Fingerprint Service is now set to be taken over by the new Scottish Police Services Authority. 'Tainted experts'
Iain McKie, who has campaigned on behalf of his daughter Shirley, said any experts "tainted" over the affair had to go to ensure the fingerprintservice's credibility.
He told BBC Radio Scotland: "There's no doubt in my mind that unless they rid the new service of the tainted experts, then the new service will have no credibility.
"While I have got no feeling about individual experts myself, I feel thatthis action will take the new service forward."
A Holyrood inquiry into the case found there were "fundamental weaknesses" in the fingerprint service which had to be addressed.
The inquiry also ruled there was no evidence the fingerprint officers concerned had acted maliciously when they made the identification.
The fingerprint service is due to be taken over by the new police service body, the Scottish Police Services Authority, from next week.