Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Margaret Caldwell
Margaret Caldwell, seen here with her family’s lawyer outside Glasgow crown court, asked: ‘How long must I wait to be told who failed Emma, and why?’ Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
Margaret Caldwell, seen here with her family’s lawyer outside Glasgow crown court, asked: ‘How long must I wait to be told who failed Emma, and why?’ Photograph: Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images

Mother of Emma Caldwell calls for criminal investigation into mishandling of murder case

This article is more than 4 months old

Margaret Caldwell and her family also want public inquiry into failures by authorities after man finally jailed for 2005 killing

The mother of a murdered woman whose killer was convicted last week after a two decade-long campaign for justice has called for a criminal investigation into the mishandling of the case.

Iain Packer was jailed for life with a minimum of 36 years at the high court in Glasgow on Wednesday for the murder of Emma Caldwell in 2005, as well as for 11 rapes and 21 further charges including sexual assaults and abduction.

It emerged during the trial that Packer had been accused of rape and violent attacks on dozens of women going back as far as 1990, but police had failed to act, particularly because many of the victims were sex workers.

The family of Caldwell, who was 27 when she was found dead in woodland 44 miles from her Glasgow home, have called for a public inquiry into failures by the authorities in the investigation of her murder.

Her mother, Margaret Caldwell, is also calling for a criminal investigation led by an outside police force and steered by independent prosecutors to scrutinise the conduct of authorities involved in the case.

She told the Sunday Post: “The only thing the crown office should have been announcing after the trial was an immediate and independent criminal investigation. It is not just my family that needs reassurance about our justice system. Everyone in Scotland needs that reassurance.”

The crown office, which is meeting with Caldwell’s family this week, said a full independent investigation into the handling of the case found there was “insufficient evidence of criminality on the part of any police officer involved in the investigation”.

The first minister, Humza Yousaf, has said a public inquiry into the investigation of Packer was “not off the table”.

Margaret Caldwell, who is also meeting Yousaf and the Scottish justice secretary, Angela Constance, welcomed the possibility of a public inquiry but said there could be no more delay.

She said: “I was 57 when Emma died and I’m 78 now. How long must I wait to be told exactly who failed Emma and why? I have no patience for more talk and empty promises. Only actions count now.”

Caldwell was reported missing by her family in April 2005 and her body was found the following month in Limefield Woods, near Biggar, South Lanarkshire.

In 2015 a Sunday Mail newspaper story called Packer “the forgotten suspect”, and Police Scotland launched a reinvestigation of the case following instruction from the Lord Advocate.

Police Scotland has apologised to the family of Caldwell and Packer’s other victims, admitting they were “let down” by policing and that it was “clear that further investigations should have been carried out into Emma’s murder following the initial inquiry in 2005”.

More on this story

More on this story

  • Independent inquiry into 2005 murder of Emma Caldwell announced

  • Violence against women a ‘national emergency’ in England and Wales, police say

  • Violence against women in Brazil reaches highest levels on record

  • Police examine unsolved murders of women in Glasgow after Packer trial

  • Met chief says millions of men are danger to women and girls in England and Wales

  • Humza Yousaf ‘open’ to inquiry into police failings in Iain Packer case

  • Police face scrutiny after man found guilty of 2005 Emma Caldwell murder

  • ‘Hidden homicides’: campaign calls for review of cases where women fell from height

  • Why did it take so long to convict Iain Packer of Emma Caldwell’s murder?

  • ‘I am weary’: Jess Phillips reads MPs list of women killed by men for ninth year

Most viewed

Most viewed