- Ranald MacLean, Lord MacLean
Ranald Norman Munro MacLean, Lord MacLean, 66, retired from Scotland's judicial bench in 2005. However, he remains a member of the
Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland , and with two other Judges and five lay members, is responsible for selecting all new Scottish Judges andSheriff s.Brief Biography
* Educated at
Fettes College , where he was Head of School.
* Graduate of theUniversity of Cambridge (BA,Clare College ), theUniversity of Edinburgh (LLB ) andYale University (LLM ).
* Admitted to theFaculty of Advocates in1964 .
* AppointedQueen's Counsel (QC) in1977 .
* Served as anAdvocate Depute from1972 -1975 and was the Home Advocate Depute from1979 -1982 .
* Served on theScottish Legal Aid Board , theCouncil on Tribunals and theStewart Committee on Alternatives to Prosecution .
* Member of theParole Board for Scotland since1998 .
* Member of theSecretary of State for Scotland 'sCriminal Justice Forum since1996 .
*Chairman of thegovernor s ofFettes College inEdinburgh since 1996.
* Chairman of the Council of theCockburn Association from1988 -1996.
* Chairman of a committee established by theSecretary of State for Scotland to review the sentencing and treatment of serious sexual and violent offenders including those withpersonality disorder s in1999 .
* Chairman of the Inquiry into the death of loyalist leaderBilly Wright in the Maze Prison, [http://www.billywrightinquiry.org/ The Billy Wright Inquiry] .Lockerbie
Ranald MacLean was one of the Judges who presided at the
Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial . Although the conviction ofAbdelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi at the trial was widely criticised, MacLean believes the verdict was right. "I have no doubt, on the evidence we heard, that the judgments we made and the verdicts we reached were correct," he told "The Scotsman" newspaper onJanuary 31 ,2006 . As for Megrahi's application to theScottish Criminal Cases Review Commission (SCCRC), MacLean believes that that the SCCRC will refer the case back for further appeal: "They can't be working for two years without producing something with which to go to the court," he suggested to "The Scotsman". "But it depends upon what the bases are for a fresh appeal, but I wouldn't have a problem with that."
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