Former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell admits embezzling over £400,000
Quick Look
- Former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell has pleaded guilty to embezzling over £400,000 from the party.
- He used the funds for luxury goods, jewellery, cars, and a motorhome.
- Murrell, 61, has been remanded in custody and will be sentenced on June 23.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Peter Murrell, former chief executive of the Scottish National Party (SNP) and estranged husband of Nicola Sturgeon, has admitted to embezzling over £400,000 from the party. The funds were used for personal purchases including luxury goods, jewellery, cars, and a motorhome between 2010 and 2022.
Former SNP chief executive Peter Murrell has admitted embezzling more than £400,000 from the party.
Murrell, the estranged husband of the former first minister Nicola Sturgeon, pleaded guilty at the High Court in Edinburgh and has been remanded in custody.
The 61-year-old used party funds to illicitly purchase luxury goods, jewellery, cosmetics, two cars and a motorhome.
He admitted to embezzling a total of £400,310.65 between 12 August 2010 and 19 October 2022.
Murrell, who served as SNP chief executive for more than 20 years, now faces a potentially lengthy prison sentence. He is to be sentenced on 23 June.
Murrell was handcuffed before a hushed courtroom and led from the dock.
Judge Lord Young said the ex-political heavyweight was responsible for a "gross breach of trust".
When details of the charge emerged earlier this year, Murrell was accused of embezzling £459,046.49 between 12 August 2010 and 13 January 2023.
However, it was confirmed at the High Court hearing that the total sum had been cut to £400,310.65, with the period of offending also reduced by three months.
SNP leader and First Minister John Swinney apologised to party members.
He said he was "horrified" by Murrell's conduct, describing it as an "overwhelming betrayal".
The court published 125 pages of documents detailing Murrell's purchases.
The largest single transaction, in 2020, was £124,550 for a luxury motorhome, paid for entirely with party funds. Murrell was accused of creating false documents to disguise the payment as a legitimate party expense.
His first major purchase, a £33,000 Volkswagen Golf, was made in early 2016 using £16,489 of SNP money.
He used £57,500 of party cash to buy a Jaguar I-PACE car in 2019, and sold it for £47,378.76 two years later.
Murrell also used SNP funds to purchase two Bremont watches for a total of £9,350, a £4,225 Starwalker World Time fountain pen and a £3,500 Hamilton and Inches silver wine coaster.
The former SNP chief executive admitted to buying hundreds of other items using party funds, ranging from luxury goods to everyday items. They include:
Jura Giga 5 Cromo coffee machine - £3,232
Smythson dressing table and tea set - £3,192 (with a discount applied)
Husqvarna robotic lawn mower - £3,070 (including installation cost)
Feuilles salt and pepper grinders - £2618
Shetland Jewellery nine carat gold pendant - £425
Three Nintendo 3DS handheld consoles - £350
PlayStation 3 console - £247
Games including FIFA, Battlefield, the Sims, Grand Theft Auto and Pac Man
Caran d'Ache pencil sharpener - £110
Chopsticks set - £102
Timberland men's loafers - £100
Men's "slouch pouch" onesie - £76
Ideal Standard toilet seats - £67
Goldfish Chinese takeaway curry sauce paste - £12
Staples - £4
Neutrogena hand cream - £2.50
Murrell served as SNP chief executive for 22 years, overseeing a period of historic electoral success for the party.
He stepped down in March 2023 after taking responsibility for the media being misled about SNP membership figures.
Murrell was arrested a month later following a dramatic police raid on the house he shared with Sturgeon, as well as the SNP's Edinburgh headquarters.
The police probe, called Operation Branchform, had been launched 2021 to investigate what happened to £660,000 in SNP donations.
Murrell was charged with embezzlement in April 2024 and first appeared in court in March 2025.
Sturgeon and former SNP treasurer Colin Beattie were also arrested as part of Operation Branchform. Both denied wrongdoing and police confirmed last year that they were no longer under investigation.
Sturgeon announced in January last year that she and Murrell had decided to end their marriage.
Following Murrell's court appearance, Sturgeon said she was "angry, hurt, sad and very distressed about the impact of his actions on family, friends and the SNP".
The former first minister said in an initial statement: "I had no knowledge or suspicion whatsoever that he was using SNP funds for personal purposes.
"I am utterly appalled that he did so and cannot begin to understand why."
She said that while there would be "political discussion in light of what has happened", the case had been a "profound personal trauma" and that she would make no further comment.
'We had separate bank accounts' - Sturgeon
A number of hours after the court hearing, Sturgeon issued a further statement through her solicitor Aamer Anwar.
In it she said she had "seen questions raised [in the media] about how I could not have known about this".
Sturgeon added: "In relation to many of the items in question, for example expensive watches and games consoles, I was not aware of them having been purchased at all.
"Indeed in relation to the item of largest value – a campervan – I was not aware of its existence until it featured in the police investigation in early 2023, nor was it parked in our driveway as has been claimed by some.
In respect of any items I was aware of Peter having purchased, I had no reason to doubt that he had used his own money.
"We were both earning high salaries and, due to the responsibilities of my job, rarely socialised or went on holidays. We had separate bank accounts and I had no access to his financial records."
"These circumstances should never have arisen."
Swinney denied that the SNP's management system had "failed", saying that they had been "bypassed".
He insisted that the party was now under "good governance and good financial management".
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
Peter Murrell will receive a significant prison sentence.
Very likely · Within months
The SNP will implement stricter financial controls and undergo further internal reviews.
Very likely · Within months
There will be ongoing media and public scrutiny of Nicola Sturgeon's knowledge and the SNP's financial management.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- How did the embezzlement go undetected for so long?
- What specific internal controls failed within the SNP?
- Will there be further investigations into other party finances?
- What is the full extent of the impact on SNP membership and public trust?






