FAI due into deaths of Katie Allan and William Lindsay

Katie Allan died at Polmont Young Offenders Institution in June 2018 aged 21 while serving a sentence for a driving offence, in which a 15-year-old boy was knocked unconscious in Eastwoodmains Road, Giffnock.

Glasgow teenager William Lindsay died in October that year at the age of 16, days after being sent there on remand.

A preliminary hearing for the Fatal Accident Inquiry (FAI) will be held on Tuesday, July 11, 2023, at Falkirk Sheriff Court.

Katie Allan deathLinda and Stuart Allan, the parents of Katie Allan, and their lawyer Aamer Anwar (centre) (Andrew Milligan/PA)

Solicitor General, Ruth Charteris KC, said she hopes the FAI will provide the families with the answers that they are looking for.

She said: “I acknowledge the deep anguish that the deaths of Katie and William have brought to their families.

“I met with Katie’s mother and father and William’s mother and brother, and having listened to them talk about their experiences I fully appreciate that the wait for these proceedings has been too long and distressing for them.

“My hope is that this inquiry provides them with the answers that they are looking for and helps to prevent similar deaths in the future.

“The Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service has introduced a number of reforms designed to reduce the time it takes to investigate deaths, improve the quality of such investigations, and improve communication with bereaved families.

“As part of these reforms, a specialist custody deaths investigation team has been set up to focus on cases such as those of Katie and William.”

The families of Ms Allan, from Giffnock, and Mr Lindsay have long called for justice in relation to the deaths.

In a statement issued by solicitor Aamer Anwar on behalf of John Reilly, the brother of William Lindsay, and Linda and Stuart Allan, the parents of Katie Allan, called for the lifting of Crown immunity which means that the Scottish Prison Service cannot be prosecuted.

They said: “We do not have the death sentence in Scotland but for William and Katie that is exactly what Polmont Young Offenders Institute meant. The lifting of Crown immunity must a priority for the Scottish Government.

“Whilst an FAI cannot apportion blame, the families of William and Katie hold the Scottish Prison Service and Health Service directly responsible for their deaths and will fight to ensure that other lives can be saved.

“The irony is that had Katie or William died in a private prison, a police cell or mental health hospital, it would have been possible to prosecute them.

“Crown immunity is a shameful abuse of power and in advance of the FAI both families are asking Justice Secretary Angela Constance and the Scottish Government what they intend to do about approaching the UK Government to save lives in our prisons.”

PolmontThe two young people were being held at Polmont Young Offenders Institution (Andrew Milligan/PA)

Katie Allan’s parents Linda and Stuart Allan added: “This Sunday will be the fifth anniversary of our daughter’s death. We will spend the day reflecting on Katie’s life and all she meant to us.

“Katie’s life, like many other young people, meant nothing to the Scottish Prison Service. If it had she would not be dead.”

Mr Anwar said an evidential hearing is expected to start in January next year.

Unlike criminal proceedings, FAIs are inquisitorial in nature and are used to establish facts rather than to apportion blame.

The inquiry will explore the circumstances of both deaths, with particular focus on the Scottish Prison Service “Talk To Me” strategy in relation to the prevention of suicide in prison.

The purpose of an FAI includes determining the cause of death, the circumstances in which the deaths occurred, and to establish what, if any, reasonable precautions could have been taken, and could be implemented in the future, to minimise the risk of future deaths in similar circumstances.