Former Scottish leader Nicola Sturgeon was arrested yesterday as part of an investigation into the finances of the political party she led for over eight years, police said.
Detectives quizzed the former leader for around seven hours, and she was later released pending further investigation, added Police Scotland.
“A 52-year-old woman who was arrested earlier today as a suspect in connection with the ongoing investigation into the funding and finances of the Scottish National Party, has been released without charge,” said the police statement.
Sturgeon said yesterday that she is innocent.
“To find myself in the situation I did today when I am certain I have committed no offence is both a shock and deeply distressing ... I would never do anything to harm either the SNP or the country,” she said in a statement posted on Twitter.
“Given the nature of this process, I cannot go into detail. However, I do wish to say this... I know beyond doubt that I am in fact innocent of any wrongdoing,” she added.
Her arrest is the third in the probe that has sent shockwaves through Scotland’s politics, long dominated by the Scottish National Party (SNP).
A spokesperson for Sturgeon said the former SNP leader voluntarily attended an interview with police.
Officers from the “Operation Branchform” probe, which was launched in 2021, arrested Sturgeon at 10.09am (09:09 GMT) and she was released from custody at 5.24pm.
The brewing scandal has plunged the SNP into deep crisis and damaged its dream for an independent Scotland.
Labour’s shadow Scottish secretary Ian Murray reacted to the latest news by saying: “For too long, a culture of secrecy and cover-up has been allowed to fester at the heart of the SNP.”
Meanwhile, Scottish Lib Dem leader Alex Cole-Hamilton said: “It’s fair to say that today’s events will have huge ramifications both for the SNP and the future of Scottish politics.”
Sturgeon’s husband Peter Murrell, the former chief executive of the SNP, was arrested in April as part of the probe.
At the time, police raided the Glasgow home shared by the couple, erecting a crime-scene tent in the front garden, and SNP headquarters in Edinburgh.
Murrell has long faced questions over the alleged diversion of £600,000 ($750,000) in SNP donations that were meant to support its drive for Scottish independence.
He also failed to declare a personal loan to the party of more than £100,000.
Party treasurer Colin Beattie was also arrested in April.
Sturgeon made her final appearance as first minister in the Scottish Parliament in March.
After over eight years at the helm, Sturgeon said in February that she lacked the “energy” to carry on.
However, the police investigation into Murrell, whom she married in 2010, had been a cloud over her head.
Murrell resigned from his SNP leadership post in March after the party falsely denied to media that it had lost 30,000 members.
The disclosure came as the SNP held a bitter election to replace Sturgeon as party leader and Scotland’s first minister, eventually won by Humza Yousaf.
Yousaf denied that Sturgeon had quit knowing the police investigation was about to come perilously close to home.
“Nicola’s legacy stands on its own,” he said.
Following Murrell’s arrest, Yousaf said that “clearly it’s not great, and I think the sooner we can get to a conclusion in this police investigation, the better”.
“I’ve never been an office bearer in the party, I’ve not had a role in the party finances,” he added.
Yousaf also said Beattie’s arrest was “clearly a very serious matter indeed” but added that he had not been suspended from the party as “people are innocent until proven guilty”.
Recent surveys show only around 45% of Scots back their nation leaving the UK – the same minority recorded in a 2014 referendum.
The Conservative government in Westminster has refused a new referendum, and polls show support for the SNP and independence have dropped since Sturgeon’s departure.
Opposition parties have accused the SNP of being mired in scandal and too focused on independence to govern Scotland properly.
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