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Judge told a crime probe is in the public interest over malicious prosecutions in the failed Rangers fraud case
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Judge told a crime probe is in the public interest over malicious prosecutions in the failed Rangers fraud case QUESTIONS emerged over whether there would be a public judge-led inquiry into the malicious prosecutions over the collapsed Rangers fraud case, as a former club administrator said it was in the public interest that there was a criminal probe. David Whitehouse has argued to a judge there should be a crime investigation after for the first time in Scottish legal history there were admissions of malicious and without probable cause prosecutions.
By Press Association 2021
David Whitehouse
A former administrator of Rangers Football Club could take a complaint over his malicious prosecution to police or other relevant authorities, a court has heard.
David Whitehouse and Paul Clark had been appointed joint administrators of Rangers in 2012, but were arrested in 2014 regarding their involvement with the administration.
The pair were awarded more than £20 million after charges brought against them were dropped or dismissed.
After they were cleared, they launched a civil action against the Crown Office and Police Scotland, with the current Lord Advocate, James Wolffe QC, admitting liability last year.
Lord Advocate James Wolffe QC has said an inquiry would be held into the malicious prosecution (Andrew Cowan/Scottish Parliament/PA)