A cold case expert has been picked to head a fresh investigation into the controversial unsolved murder of banker Alistair Wilson.

Detective Chief Superintendent Suzanne Chow is expected to head up the new inquiry ordered seven days ago by Lord Advocate Dorothy Bain, head of the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service.

Ms Chow has had previous experience of handling unsolved murders as a senior member of the forces’ Homicide Governance and Review team.

She will replace Detective Chief Superintendent Paul Livingstone, whose role in the 20 year investigation was publicly criticised by the Wilson family at the weekend.

The senior officer has previously worked on cold cases with Police Scotland’s Homicide Governance and Review team.

Alistair Wilson was shot dead on his doorstep in Nairn in 2004

Alistair Wilson was shot dead on his doorstep in Nairn in 2004

Police forensic officers hunting for clues at the crime scene

Scotland’s chief prosecutor announced a fresh investigation into Alistair’s murder last Monday following a meeting in July with his family including his widow, Veronica, at her offices in Edinburgh.

However at the weekend the Wilson’s branded Police Scotland incompetent and criticised Chief Constable Jo Farrell for refusing to meet them to discuss their concerns over the long running investigation.

Their statement said: ‘Over the past 18 months, our relationship has steadily deteriorated because of unresolved and ongoing issues that are not being properly addressed.

‘The poor judgment and lack of accountability at the highest levels of Police Scotland has regrettably eroded any trust we have in their ability to secure justice for Alistair.’

Detective Chief Superintendent Suzanne Chow is expected to head up the new inquiry into Mr Wilson’s murder

The Wilson’s have made a series of complaints about Police Scotland’s handling of the murder investigation, including the conduct of DCS Livingstone.

How she caught killer decades after crime 

Detective Chief Supt Chow has previous experience of cold cases with Police Scotland’s Homicide Governance and Review team.

The officers have responsibility for examining ongoing murder inquiries and historic unsolved or unresolved cases.

A recent cold case success for DCS Chow was the conviction of Graham McGill in 2021 of the murder of 58 year old grandmother Mary Mclaughlin at her home in Partick, Glasgow in 1984.

McGill, 60, was finally brought to justice after two forensic scientists found his DNA on the ligature used to murder Mary during a review of the case.

Following his conviction at the High Court in Glasgow, Chow said: ‘Despite crimes occurring years ago, there is always hope of solving them one day. They are never forgotten.

“In all case reviews, families are uppermost in our minds and we work hard to present the best evidential case to ensure successful convictions.”

Chow led the investigation into the murder of retired librarian Esther Brown, 67, at her home in Woodlands, Glasgow in 2021

Serial sex offender Jason Graham, 30, was convicted and sentenced to life later that year.

Chow also brought 72 year old George Metcalff to justice in 2021 for the murder of missing woman Patricia Henry, 46, in Girvan, Ayrshire in 2017.

More recently she led the search for the body of murdered Glasgow financial advisor Lynda Spence who disappeared more than 13 years ago and remains missing.

They claim they were misled over the planned arrest of a suspect in May last year. Police Scotland have since apologised with a number of their complaints being upheld.

Mr Wilson, 30, died on November 28, 2004, in what has become one of Scotland’s most notorious unsolved murder cases.

Around 7pm Veronica answered the door of their home in the seaside town of Nairn to a man who asked for her husband by name.

At the time Alistair was reading his two young children Andrew and Graham a bedtime story.

He went downstairs to speak to the visitor and was handed a blue birthday card-style envelope with the name ‘Paul’ on it.

Alistair showed it to his wife then returned to the door and the gunman opened fire. On hearing the three shots Veronica rushed to the front door and dialled 999.

An ambulance took Mr Wilson to Raigmore Hospital in Inverness but he died an hour later.

He had just resigned from the Bank of Scotland and was due to begin a new job in Inverness with an environmental consultancy firm.

Detectives turned up nothing that suggested his murder was linked to his bank work, his personal life or was a case of mistaken identity.

Mystery still surrounds the envelope, which the killer took away.

Ten days later the murder weapon, an antique German pocket pistol, was found in a drain half a mile away. No forensic evidence was found linking it to any individual.

Two years ago cops revealed a minor planning dispute was now at the centre of their investigation.

Shortly before he died, Mr Wilson had objected to a large decking area built outside the Havelock Hotel, opposite his home. 

Owner Andy Burnett received a copy of the letter from the council two days before Alistair’s murder.

Detectives even travelled to Nova Scotia in Canada to interview him, later stressing he was a witness and not a suspect.

The 55-year-old had emigrated in 2013 with his wife after selling the hotel.

Detectives also revealed details of two men seen with a handgun on Nairn’s East Beach a month before Alistair’s murder.

Police Scotland’s Assistant Chief Constable Steve Johnson said yesterday: ‘Officers remain committed and determined to identify Alistair’s killer and to get justice for his family.

‘We are in the process of identifying the investigation team and it will be overseen by a Detective Chief Superintendent in their capacity as a Strategic Senior Investigation Officer.’

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