Alistair Duff
Alistair John MacKenzie Duff (born 1954) is a former Scottish advocate and sheriff who later was Director of the Judicial Institute of Scotland.
Personal life
Duff was born in Kirkcaldy, Fife in 1954 and moved to Glenrothes where he attended secondary school at Glenwood High School, Glenrothes then to Glenrothes High School where both his father and uncle were teachers. In 1971 he went to Edinburgh Law School where he graduated with first class honours. He married Carol Ferguson in April 1978 in Edinburgh, with whom he had five children. They divorced in 2007 and in the same year he married his current wife Susan Duff.[1]
Susan Duff was a defence advocate at Compass Chambers in Edinburgh, subsequently appointed a Sheriff in October 2021 for Tayside, Central and Fife regions.[2]
Legal career
- Alistair Duff was admitted as a solicitor in 1977 and worked as a procurator fiscal between 1977 and 1981
- He was in private practice as a solicitor specialising in criminal defence between 1981 and 2004
- He qualified as a solicitor-advocate with criminal rights of audience in 1993 and conducted cases before the High Court of Justiciary
- He was engaged to advise the two Libyan nationals accused in the Lockerbie case in 1993 and subsequently represented Abdelbaset al-Megrahi at the Pan Am Flight 103 bombing trial in the Netherlands between 1999 and 2002
- He was appointed Resident Sheriff in the Sheriff Court of Dundee in 2004
- In 2007 he was appointed to the Scottish Prisons Commission[3] alongside Henry McLeish, Lesley Riddoch, Dr Karin Dotter-Schiller, Geraldine Gammell, Richard Jeffrey and Chief Constable David Strang
- He became involved in judicial training in 2011 and was appointed Director of the Judicial Institute for Scotland in 2014.[4] The Institute provides education and training for Scottish judges in all aspects of Scots Law.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] In his role of Director he attended many high level conferences concerning judicial reform in Scotland and Europe.[14][15][16][17]
- In 2016 he gave a presentation to National Youth Justice Conference organised by the Children and Young Peoples Centre for Justice[18][19][20]
- In 2019 he was appointed to a tribunal alongside Lord Bracadale and others to look into the case of Aberdeen Sheriff Jack Brown concerning alleged sexual misconduct,[21] the tribunal's findings were later overturned.[22]
- He has formerly been a member of the following bodies: -
- Law Society of Scotland Council [23]
- Scottish Sentencing Council
- McInnes Committee on Summary Justice Reform [24][25][26]in December 2021 he abruptly retired from the Judicial Institute for Scotland.
Arrest
He was arrested and charged in December 2021 and was due to appear in court though as of August 2022 this is yet to happen, and the nature of the charges have not been revealed.[27]
References
- ^ "Advanced Search - births, marriages, divorces". Scotlands People - Scottish Government records.
- ^ "New sheriffs and summary sheriffs appointed". Judiciary of Scotland.
- ^ "Report of the Scottish Prisons Commission". Scottish Government Publications Archive.
- ^ "Raising the bar for the bench". Law Society of Scotland.
- ^ "Scotland's judges and sheriffs to undertake training for new domestic abuse law". Scottish Housing News.
- ^ "Annual Report 2015" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Report 2016" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Report 2017" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Report 2017-2018" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Report 2018-2019" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Report 2019-2020" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Civil Justice Conference 2021" (PDF). Judicial Institute of Scotland.
- ^ "Request to attend Justice Committee" (PDF). Scottish Government Justice Committee Inquiries.
- ^ "Restorative Justice and the Criminal Courts" (PDF). The Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research.
- ^ "Minutes 2021 video conference" (PDF). Scottish Sentencing Council.
- ^ "Rule of Law Webinar" (PDF). The Commonwealth.
- ^ "NOTA Scotland Conference 2020" (PDF). National Organisation for the Treatment of Abuse.
- ^ "National Youth Justice Conference 2016". Children's and Young People's Centre for Justice.
- ^ "Speaker Biographies" (PDF). Centre for Youth & Criminal Justice.
- ^ "CYCJ recording of Duff's address to conference". soundcloud.
- ^ "Sheriff suspended as police launch sexual misconduct investigation". Aberdeen Press and Journal.
- ^ "Tribunal Investigation Quashed". Law Society of Scotland.
- ^ "Annual Conference 2019". Law Society of Scotland.
- ^ "Summary Justice Review Committee report to Ministers". Scottish Government Archives.
- ^ "Summary Justice Reform Undertakings Evaluation". Scottish Government Publications.
- ^ "Summary Justice Review Committee FOI Report". Scottish Government Publications.
- ^ "Sheriff Alistair Duff to appear in court". Scottish Legal News.