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Anti-Nuclear Campaigner Willie McRae Suicided in 1985

 
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scienceplease 2
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PostPosted: Mon Jan 09, 2012 10:49 pm    Post subject: Anti-Nuclear Campaigner Willie McRae Suicided in 1985 Reply with quote

Another mystery, fogged by amazingly bad Police and Forensic Investigation that mirrors the David Kelly case... this time for a lawyer, an anti-Nuclear Campaigner Willie McRae who having just received crucial evidence for his case, supposedly committed suicide by shooting himself twice while in his car 30 yards off the road. (Who's gun? Not mentioned). The two copies of his new evidence disappear from separate locations...

Wikipedia entry

Quote:

Willie MacRae (May 18, 1923 – April 7, 1985) was a Scottish nationalist politician and lawyer, best remembered for the mystery surrounding his death.

MacRae was an active member of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and an anti-nuclear campaigner.[1] A solicitor, MacRae had contested the SNP leadership in 1979, coming third in a three-way contest with 52 votes to Stephen Maxwell's 117 votes and winner Gordon Wilson's 530 votes.[2]

He was active outside Scotland too, having served in the Royal Indian Navy and becoming friendly to the campaign for independence for India.[3] He was also the author of the maritime law code of Israel and emeritus professor at the University of Haifa. After his death a forest of 3,000 trees was planted in Israel to mark his passing.


The Israeli connection is very strange: 3000 trees?!

http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/news/special-reports/crimes-that-rocked-s cotland/2007/10/19/the-mcrae-mystery-86908-19978476/

Quote:

The McRae Mystery

Oct 19 2007 By Reg Mckay

JUST another car crash off a hazardous country road? No. The most intriguing, unsolved murder of the last 25 years. Willie McRae was a larger-than-life character.

A prominent Scottish lawyer, he'd fought and won many cases opposing the government. As an SNP activist, he'd held national office and come close to becoming an MP.

Yet McRae also reveled in his radical anti-nuclear stance - a dangerous position in the 1980s.

On Friday, April 5, 1985, he left his Glasgow office to head north to his weekend home in Kintail.

Laden with his usual bulging briefcase and armfuls of legal document a big grin splitting his face, he turned to his office sta and said: "I've got them!" without further explanation.

They were to be the last words he was known to have spoken.

Around 10am the following I day, an Australian tourist and his wife pulled their car in at an isolated spot on the A87.

A maroon Volvo lay 30 or so yards off the road, straddling a burn, and the couple wanted to check no one was hurt. He found a man slumped in the driver's seat, unconscious, his head smeared with blood.

The next car to arrive was driven by Dr Dorothy Messer, accompanied by her fiance David Coutts, a Dundee SNP Councillor who was shocked to the injured man as Willie McRae.

Dr Messer immediately examined McRae and found he was alive, though dilated pupils indicated serious brain damage.

The police were alerted by another motorist. PC Kenny Crawford arrived from Inverness on his own.

The cops had been told that a prominent Scottish politician, activist and lawyer was lying injured in an isolated spot. What did they do? Send one lonesome PC.

PC Crawford did his best. He and David Coutts struggled to get McRae's limp body out of the car.

With the limited facilities available to her, Dr Messer had concluded that McRae had been hurt in a road accident. The good doctor had done her best. There was nothing to contradict that view -yet.

Willie McRae was taken to Raigmore Hospital, Inverness, and then on to Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, the standard procedure for I brain damage treatment.

There, six hours after his discovery, a nurse washed the patient's head and found a bullet hole. An X-ray confirmed McRae had been shot above his right ear. The hitman's bull's eye.

Willie McRae died at 3am on April 7, 1985, at least 36 hours after being injured. Already folk were questioning how the whole affair had been handled.

Realising there had been a c***-up, Chief Superintendent Andrew Lester, of Northern CID, took over the case immediately.

Yet McRae's car was promptly removed from the site of what was now a suspicious death. Normally the scene would have been cordoned off and the car kept there while forensics, photographers and scenes of crime officers completed their work.

It was later revealed police couldn't remember where Willie McRae had been found. They were a mile out until their mistake was pointed out by one of the civilians who had been at the scene. The tragic comedy of errors continued.

When McRae's body was found, PC Crawford had collected a small pyramid of the dead man's personal papers all carefully torn up, topped with his smashed wrist-watch and found 20 yards from his car.

Who had put them so neatly there? Who knows? Too many people had trampled over the ground, ruining any clues. A search the next day revealed a Smith & Wesson .45 in the stream 60ft from the car. The gun had been fired twice and had no fingerprints.

Twice? Who could shoot themselves twice in the head?

McRae wasn't wearing gloves when found. So who wiped the gun of prints?

Sixty feet? Who could throw the hefty gun that distance when they'd just put a bullet in their own brain?

Yet a post mortem would leave an open verdict, suggesting suicide. When challenged, the police suggested the heavy gun had been carried downstream by the water of the wee burn. That theory was soon dismissed.

While they were trying to remove McRae from his car, PC Crawford's cap fell off and David Coutts had bent to retrieve it, getting a clear view of the stream beside and under the car. There was no sign of any gun.

It also emerged the pathologist had failed to carry out a basic test on the wound to determine the range the gun was fired from,

A fundamental test, since suicides always press the gun hard into their skull to be sure. A hitman, on the other hand, might fire from inches or feet away. The closer you get the messier you get and mess is evidence that's difficult to conceal.

McRAE had left for Kintail laden with documents, a bottle of whisky and a pack of cigarettes to feed his chain-smoking habit. None were found in his belongings.

At the time of his death, McRae had been working on yet another sensitive case. Having previously legally prevented the UK Atomic Energy Authority in 1980 from dumping nuclear waste in the Ayrshire hills, he intended to have a similar impact on plans to dump waste from Dounreay in the sea.

McRae had hinted to colleagues that he had been passed classified government documents - not for the first time - and colleagues knew he was carrying highly sensitive papers on this case.

Friends believe it was the Dounreay inquiry he was referring to when, as he left the office, he said: "I've got them!"

Yet no papers of his relating to Dounreay have ever been located. Over months before his death, Willie McRae's house was repeatedly burgled, his legal papers disrupted and destroyed. He became cautious, security conscious and had a copy of the Dounreay papers with him at all times, as he did on the day he died. But they were never found.

The only other copy of the Dounreay papers were kept in his office. Who'd break into a big lawyer's office? But they were stolen when it was burgled. Nothing else was taken.

People began to look for a wider explanation of McRae's death. They didn't have to look too far back.

The year before McRae died, a gentle woman called Hilda Murrell was found murdered in her cottage in rural Shrewsbury. Hilda was a rose grower, a pacifist -who could want to kill her? A robber?

Yes. But the only thing stolen from her home were some papers to do with her other passion - anti-nuclear protesting. Later, it was leaked to the press that Hilda's nephew was a naval intelligence officer involved in the sinking of the Belgrano during the Falklands War, then a great controversy since the ship had been heading away from battle when deliberately sunk.

But no papers of his were taken - just Hilda's anti-nuclear evidence. It was yet another smoke screen. The question was why?

Retired police officers have revealed that because of his legal and political work, McRae was on the files of MI5.

One of the cars used to trail him was a Triumph, registration number PSJ 136X. Wherever McRae went, that car followed.

He had noticed the motor. Willie McRae was nobody's fool. When he raised the matter with a friendly cop, he checked the computer. The car came up marked as "blocked vehicle". That's shorthand for belonging to the Special Branch or I

Yet no inquiry was held into the death of Willie McRae. Instead, there was a whispering campaign suggesting that McRae was everything from an alcoholic, to a homosexual, to a man in deep financial trouble.

Good enough reasons why he might be troubled, why he might have killed himself, but absolutely without any substance.

No one has ever seen the post mortem report. The procurator fiscal in Inverness has refused to comment on the case, citing the Official Secrets Act.

When Madame Ecosse, Winnie Ewing, carried out an investigation for the SNP she was bluntly denied access to the Crown Office papers in spite of giving the customary legal guarantee of confidentiality.

Every independent person who has examined the case of Willie McRae concludes it wasn't suicide. If not suicide then what? Murder? But by whom and in whose name?

'Willie McRae was nobody's fool...he knew he was being followed by shadowy figures'
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