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Friday, August 27, 1999 Published at 18:38 GMT 19:38 UK

Law change to keep killers locked up


Law change to keep killers locked up
Scottish ministers have announced details of emergency legislation to stop killers being released from the state psychiatric hospital at Carstairs.

The move came as child killer Karl Tonner sought to exploit a legal loophole which led to the release of Noel Ruddle.

Ruddle shot a neighbour dead in 1991 and was sent to Carstairs without limit of time, but earlier this month he convinced a sheriff he could no longer be treated there because his condition had changed.

Tonner, who has changed his name to Karl Anderson, began moves to win his freedom on similar grounds at Lanark Sheriff Court on Friday.

Now the Scottish Executive, which has faced severe criticism over its handling of the Ruddle affair, has announced proposals aimed at stopping any further releases.

Justice Minister Jim Wallace said courts would be asked to take public safety into account when considering applications for release.

The bill, which will amend existing legislation, will go before the Scottish Parliament next week and also includes:

The bill would mean that all appeals heard after it is introduced - that is likely to be next Wednesday - will be covered by the legislation.

The Scottish Executive has confirmed this would mean Karl Tonner's case, and that of Brian Docherty who is planning a similar action, would be affected by what would be a rare piece of retrospective legislation.

Mr Wallace said he had discussed the proposals with Scottish National Party justice spokeswoman Roseanna Cunningham and Scottish Tory leader David McLetchie.


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He said: "The key issue raised by the Ruddle case was where a sheriff has no alternative but to release a mentally ill patient if he is untreatable.

"Our legislation will place a requirement on the courts to take public safety into account when considering an application for release.

"The sheriff in Lanark was unable to do this in the case of Noel Ruddle. That is the loophole we are closing."

At Lanark Sheriff Court on Friday, lawyer Yvonne McKenna, who also represented Ruddle, made an application for Tonner's release.

Tonner killed a 12-year-old Dundee girl in 1968 and was sent to Carstairs without limit of time. He was not present in court for the short hearing.

The 51-year-old is seeking to use the same clause in the Mental Health Scotland Act 1984 as that employed in Ruddle's case.

Hearing adjourned

Miss McKenna asked for an adjournment and Sheriff Douglas Allan, who heard Ruddle's case, agreed to a hearing on 7 and 8 of October.

At the time of the killing, Tonner admitted culpable homicide, on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

He had stripped and strangled Helen Phin with a length of rope in a workhouse close.

Mr Wallace faced the brunt of the criticism over the Scottish Executive's handling of the Ruddle affair and there have been demands from the Scottish National Party for an independent inquiry.

The convener of the parliament's justice committee Roseanna Cunningham said: "We are only at this stage because of the Ruddle case and the fact that opposition put pressure on the Executive.

"The primary issue here is that of public safety. The second important issue is that we satisfy the European Convention on Human Rights."

Some reports suggest a further four killers in Carstairs are preparing to launch similar legal actions. One of them is 26-year-old Brian Docherty.

Docherty mutilated 11-year-old Kieran Hegarty in Belfast two years ago and buried him in a shallow grave.


Relevant Stories

'Knee-jerk' warning on emergency laws (25 Aug 99 | Scotland)
Killers row prompts emergency laws (24 Aug 99 | Scotland)
Inquiry call as killers seek freedom (23 Aug 99 | Scotland)
Wallace pledge on Carstairs killers (23 Aug 99 | Scotland)
Release bid killers 'timebombs' (21 Aug 99 | Scotland)
Wallace defends killer case actions (04 Aug 99 | UK Politics)
Anger at killer's loophole release (02 Aug 99 | UK)
Legal loophole murderer freed (02 Aug 99 | UK)

Internet Links

Scottish Executive
The Law Society of Scotland
The Scottish Court Service

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