charismaticWillie McRae |
I have always been fascinated by conspiracy theories even if I don't believe most of them. There is a fair few going around after former First Minister Nicola Sturgeon's arrest and subsquent release in connection with alleged missing funds from the SNP an accusation which she vehemently denies.
I can't comment on that when it's an ongoing police inquiry but many people I have spoken to don't trust the police and that's hardly new.
One of the many mysteries/conroversies that has always interested me was the death - or was it murder or execution of - Scottish independence hero Willie McRae.
Who was Willie McRae?
Born in Falkrik, he was a razor sharp prominent lawyer and politician who had won cases against the then English based UK government (remember, this is many years before devolution). He didn't want Scotland used as a nuclear dustbin and was an advocate for Scottish independence.
He also wasn't as cosetted as so many of today's politicians having served in WWII as a naval officer and then in the Royal Indian Navy. He was also an advocate for Indian independence.
Against nuclear power and pro- independence for both his beloved Scotland and India, these were considered dangerous views by some back then.
The car crash?
In 1985, Mr McRae's apparently crashed car was found by two tourists who flagged down a passing car driven by Dr Dorothy Messer. Immediately, the doctor attended to the man inside the car, noticing that Willie McRae was still breathing but suspecting he might have brain damage, probably from the crash.
It was only in hospital when a nurse was washing Mr McRae's head that a bullet wound was found. He'd been shot. An x-ray proved this to be the case.
What had first appeared to be a car crash now became something more sinister. Who shot Willie McRae? Or, did he really shoot himself?
Suicide was suspected but the gun was nowhere to be seen. It wasn't until later it was found 60 feet away from the car's supposed resting place in a burn. How had it got there?
There were two theories -
1. The car had been moved by the police and that's why the gun wasn't next to the car. Well, dead men can't throw guns away after they shoot themselves in the head can they?
Note - later it was claimed that the police assumed the car has been in an accident and had it moved but they moved it back once they discovered McRae had been shot.
If that was the case, it sounds like a sloppy investigation right from the start. Can we trust the findings of such sloppy police work?
2. Someone else had shot Mr McRae. Friends believed the secret services had been following him. To give that theory credence, a former serving British police officer (at that time there was no Police Scotland) who had become a private investigator insisted he had been hired to keep tabs on Mr McRae.
There was good reason to believe that Mr McRae had been got at.
A man of strong principles and an even stronger constitution, he was a boil on the backside of the pro-nuclear British establishment and a fervent believer in Scottish independence. Firmly anti-nuclear, he was credited with almost single-handedly having plans to dump nuclear waste in the Galloway Hills of Scotland turned down by the local authority.
Could he have brought down the Thatcher government?
There were rumours McRae had evidence of a paedophile ring at the heart of the Thatcher government which would be bad enough to bring down the whole English government.
He was also currently working on stopping even more nuclear waste being dumped in Scotland. He was so paranoid about what he was working on that he carried a copy of his files around with him at all times. No such paperwork was found in the car.
Had it been removed by someone else? Or had he suspected he'd been followed and hidden it somewhere?
Stolen files before his death
To make it even more suspicious, it was claimed the only other copy of his files had been stolen in a break-in at his home before his death. Nothing else had been stolen. Coincidence or something more sinister? Will we ever know?
Yet more questions that still haven't been answered.
Questions still abound and it doesn't kill off the conspiracy theories when those seen as part of the establishment have refused to -
1. hold a FAI (Fatal Account Inquiry)
2. give them investigator Winnie Ewing who was a qualified lawyer and SNP President a copy of the police files.
3. meet with Fergus Ewing the son of Winnie. He requested a meeting with the Solicitor General for Scotland and was rebuffed. The Official Secrets Act may have been quoted.
What do they have to fear from the truth?
Then there was the investigation into his death conducted by 'A Justice for Willie' group. In the report in 2016 they said there was nothing to suggest that his death had been anything other than a suicide.
Did that investigation put the tin lid on it? Well, sadly not.
The nurse who says someone shot McRae
In 2018, one of the nurses who treated the dying man, insisted that the bullet wound had been to the back of his head and not his temple. It's not completely impossible that someone could shoot themselves in the back of the head or neck but less likely than putting a gun to the temple of their head or the gun in their mouth and then pulling the trigger.
Also, why would a man who respected the rights of other people to live their lives shoot himself whilst driving his own car, something that risked injuring or killing someone?
With time marching on, maybe we will never find out the full truth of what happened to Willie McRae on that lonely road. The one thing that is certain is that he was a great loss to the Scottish independence movement of which he was a strong advocate.
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