Meeting of the Parliament 10 March 2026 [Draft]
Brian Whittle talked about the international evidence on coercion, or lack thereof, which is what the debate is about.
Let us look closer to home, because, in my past life as a journalist, I did not need to look too far to see examples of trusted legal professionals targeting and exploiting elderly vulnerable clients. Those ugly cases were frequent. I looked up a few just now. In 1999, there was a solicitor who took £100,000 from elderly clients. There was a case in 2021 of a solicitor stealing cash from another elderly client in Edinburgh. There was another who was struck off for overcharging elderly clients in Aberdeen, and yet another, in 2023, who targeted someone with dementia and made off with their money.
Those are real examples of crimes in which elderly people were targeted by trusted professionals in later life—the most vulnerable time. The point that I am trying to make—I wonder whether Michael Matheson agrees with me—is that there is a chance that, if the bill is passed, we will see similar crimes to those but in relation to the bill.