Nicola Sturgeon says husband’s arrest was her
‘worst nightmare’
Former first minister says she ‘could not have
anticipated’ events and they played no part in decision to quit
Severin
Carrell and Aubrey Allegretti
Tue 25 Apr
2023 18.06 BST
Nicola
Sturgeon has described her husband’s arrest as her “worst nightmare” and said
it played no part in the decision to stand down as Scottish National party
leader.
The former
first minister said the three weeks since Peter Murrell’s arrest at their home
in Glasgow had been “traumatic” and “very difficult”, in her first public statement
since the police raid.
Speaking to
reporters at Holyrood, Sturgeon said: “I understand the view that some people
might have, that I knew this was all about to unfold and that’s why I walked
away. Nothing could be further from the truth. I could not have anticipated in
my worst nightmares what would have unfolded over the past few weeks.”
Three weeks
ago Murrell, who had recently quit as the SNP’s chief executive, was arrested
“as a suspect” and questioned for nearly 12 hours by detectives investigating
allegations the party had mishandled more than £600,000 in donations.
Soon
afterwards the SNP’s headquarters in Edinburgh were raided by police, with
numerous boxes of documents and computers taken away.
Murrell was
released later that day without charge, pending further inquiries, but 13 days
later the party’s then treasurer, Colin Beattie, was also arrested before being
released pending further inquiries.
Flanked by
her former deputy John Swinney, Sturgeon said she had no prior knowledge of the
police raid and said she had not been interviewed by police. She said her
decision in February to quit suddenly was based entirely on the reasons she
gave then: that after eight years in charge, she was exhausted and believed the
party needed fresh leadership.
She
refused, however, to discuss the police investigation, including its seizure of
a luxury motorhome bought by the SNP in early 2021, from outside Murrell’s
mother’s home in Fife the day he was arrested. “I’m not going to get into any
aspect of the police investigation,” she said. “One of the frustrating things
just now, and I’m not complaining about this, [is] I’m not able to give my
version of what is under way.”
Meanwhile,
the wider row over the party’s inability to find new auditors to approve its
accounts escalated after Stephen Flynn, the SNP’s Westminster leader, denied
claims he knew they had no auditors in place.
It emerged
for the first time earlier this month that Johnston Carmichael, the party’s
auditors for 10 years, had quit last September – a fact the party’s national
executive committee and its new leader, Humza Yousaf, said they were unaware
of.
Flynn, who
became Westminster leader in December, told an audience at the Institute for
Government in London he first learned they had quit when he saw media reports
this month. He said he hoped new auditors would be in place before an accounts
deadline of 31 May but said he could not give a categorical assurance that
would be the case.
He
confirmed SNP staff could be laid off if that deadline was missed. This is
because the Commons will no longer pay Short money, the state funds given to
political parties at Westminster, if there are no audited accounts to show that
money is being properly spent.

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