
Businessman who plastered racist grooming gang posters around Fife claims it was a 'senior moment'
A radicalised racist who spent a fortnight sticking posters portraying vile lies about Pakistani 'grooming gangs' around Fife has been hit with a 'substantial' fine.
Grandad Ian McLauchlan was caught on CCTV sticking up slur-laden posters around Leven, Methil and Kirkcaldy.
The businessman and landlord, 72, claimed his conduct was a 'senior moment' but had previously told police it was a cover-up involving teachers and social workers.
Fifers were left shocked earlier this year by McLauchlan's flyposting, which exhibited his far-right views.
McLauchlan's posters claimed the Labour party had instructed police to do nothing about sexual abuse and heroin dealing and that local businesses were 'verified pedo shops', instructing readers to graffiti their premises.
At the foot of his poster, McLauchlan ordered readers to view Stirling-based historian Neil Oliver's video on grooming gangs on the GB News YouTube channel.
At Kirkcaldy Sheriff Court, a sentencing sheriff was provided with a three-page account of McLauchlan's campaign and photos of the posters.
The agreed narrative of the offending revealed the first of his bigoted bills to be noticed was on a bus shelter on Overton Road in Kirkcaldy, near St Andrews High School.
A dog walker spotted the soaking flier at 10am on January 30 and removed it before contacting police.
At 11am on February 3, police attended Sainsbury's in Leven for an unrelated matter.
Staff handed over an identical A4 poster a customer had found pinned to a trolley bay in the car park.
The following morning, another witness found one of McLauchlan's posters on a bus stop at Groban, Leven.
Police removed it and carried out a search of the wider area.
They seized another poster from the bus stop on the corner of Scoonie Road and Haughgate Street.
McLauchlan's flyposting was discovered again on February 12.
A woman using the ATM at the Co-op on Methilhaven Road, Methil, noticed a poster on the Salvation Army clothing bank there.
Having seen identical posters circulating on social media, she alerted police.
On February 17, McLauchlan was finally rumbled by a man walking to work on Welleseley Road, Methil, who found a poster on a bus stop and alerted police.
Officers were able to review CCTV there and saw McLauchlan's white Ford Fiesta van park up two days earlier.
He was caught on camera putting up posters.
Police traced him the next day and found a bag of identical posters on his van's front seat.
Further evidence was recovered from his home in Bayview Crescent, Methil.
McLauchlan told officers he 'knew this' from politicians who he could cite for court and 'they all knew'.
He repeated business owners from ethnic groups were grooming young girls, that police did not do anything and this was known by teachers and social workers.
McLauchlan told officers it was 'all a big cover up.'
McLauchlan's solicitor Kerr Sneddon explained McLauchlan's only other – non-analogous – conviction was 15 years ago.
'It's particularly unfortunate this 72-year-old is in court for the second time in his life.
'This all seems to have started when a young lady locally had given him a leaflet about her own abuse – that was in 2024.
'I think what he's done is then researched all the things that we hear about and certain members of society – some of which are well-founded, it must be said.
'Of course, we know when you go onto the internet, if you research a certain topic it creates an algorithm.
'It creates more and more and more. I think that is what has happened to Mr McLauchlan.'
'With no disrespect to him, it may be I think some degree of age has kicked in,' Mr Sneddon continued.
'He very much accepts the reasonable person would consider these types of poster would stir up problems – quite significant problems.'
Mr Sneddon added: 'He describes it as a stupid, senior moment and something he deeply regrets.
'He is still a very hard-working man, he works full time Monday to Friday and has his own business… and a separate business renting out properties.'
At a hearing last month, McLauchlan pled guilty to displaying posters which contained racist and offensive material and sentencing was deferred for reports.
He admitted that on various occasions between January 30 and February 15 this year, he communicated material a reasonable person would consider to be threatening, abusive or insulting.
He admitted this breached the Hate Crime and Public Order (Scotland) Act 2021.
McLauchlan spent a night in the cells following his arrest.
Sheriff Allan Findlay ordered McLauchlan to pay a fine of £2,000 and a £75 victim surcharge.
The sheriff labelled the offending 'in one view misguided, in another view very serious.'
He added: 'The potential that this conduct could have in stirring up racial unrest will be marked by a substantial fine.'
At the time, Inspector Matt Spencer said: 'We understand the distressing impact these incidents have on our communities.
'Police Scotland takes reports of hate crime very seriously and our officers are committed to ensuring this will not be tolerated.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
19 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Reform and indy will be at the heart of our debate for years
Of course, by now you already know the result, so you'll know which of the following scenarios and their consequences are the most accurate. But let me start with what the national polls tell us ought to have happened, by-election peculiarities – which I'll come to – notwithstanding. The SNP should have won with around 33% of the vote, down significantly on the 46.2% it won in 2021, with Labour in a narrow second on around 28% of the vote. Reform should have come third with just under 20% of the vote, while the Conservatives should have collapsed to under 10% of the vote. The rest of the vote, around 10%, will have been split among the Greens, Liberal Democrats, and myriad minor parties and independents. But by-elections rarely work out this way, even when the national polls are accurate. Firstly, voters are more likely to have voted in protest than they are at national elections, which may well help Reform in this case. As Jamie, a service engineer from Hamilton, told a focus group run by More in Common, it's 'time to give someone else a chance,' even if he thinks Nigel Farage is an 'a***hole'. Read more by Mark McGeoghegan Secondly, turnout will likely have collapsed. In the Hamilton and Rutherglen West by-election in October 2023, turnout fell by 43% compared to the 2019 General Election. A similar decline here would see around 15,600 voters who would otherwise turn out in a national election stay at home instead. Given that voters turning out to vote Reform as a protest against both the SNP and Labour governments are likely to be more motivated than SNP and Labour voters, this may also advantage Reform. In fact, assuming predictions based on national polling would otherwise have been accurate, Reform's vote will only have to have been marginally more resilient for it to finish ahead of Labour and narrowly behind the SNP. Factor in that first peculiarity of by-election campaigns, and such a scenario is hardly far-fetched. On the eve of the by-election, Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar accused the First Minister, John Swinney, and journalists of manufacturing Reform's competitiveness in the seat. Nothing could be further from the truth, and a Reform underperformance yesterday will have been more surprising than it coming second. It has demonstrated its strength in a succession of local by-elections, the latest of which saw it beat Labour to come second behind the SNP. Whether or not Reform came second yesterday, its performance will shape the narrative in Scottish politics going into next year's elections in conjunction with its UK-wide polling lead (it has led in 25 consecutive polls going back to the beginning of May) and strong results in recent local elections and Parliamentary by-elections in England. Ultimately, regardless of yesterday's result, the spectre of Nigel Farage looms over Scottish politics. There are three broad scenarios. Firstly, that Reform performed to its Scotland-wide polling, confirming that it is on course to win between 15 and 20 seats in next year's Scottish Parliament election. Secondly, that it did overperform, perhaps coming second, leading to the next 11 months to being dominated by the SNP seeking to present next year's elections as a choice between the SNP and Nigel Farage, and a bitter fight between Reform and Labour for status as the main challengers to the SNP. Thirdly, that it underperformed, in which case the SNP will be quick to emphasise divergence between Scottish and English politics. In any case, the SNP will use the prospect of a Reform government at Westminster to try to increase the salience of the constitutional question, attempting to return independence to the heart of the Scottish political agenda ahead of next year's elections and the following UK general election. It knows that that is its best bet for winning back pro-independence voters who have swung to Labour in recent years. Replacing Humza Yousaf with John Swinney may have stabilised the SNP's support, but the party not really recovered in any meaningful way. The longer Reform leads in UK-wide polls, the more likely that narrative will be to gain purchase among the independence-supporting electorate. Strong Reform showings in Scotland will reinforce the sense that they could win power in 2029; weak performances will emphasise the ways in which Scottish and English politics may be diverging. Both provide hooks for the SNP. The spectre of Nigel Farage looms large over Scottish politics (Image: PA) The bigger question is whether this leads to a change in the constitutional deadlock. Some recent polling suggests that support for independence may have edged up. Norstat recently recorded its first Yes leads in three years, finding Yes ahead by seven points in the wake of Reform's strong showing in the English local elections. Survation still has No ahead by two or three points, down from leads of seven or eight points a year ago. The data is not conclusive, and we should be cautious of hypotheticals around whether developments will change voters' minds – we had enough such polls around Brexit and Boris Johnson becoming Prime Minister that never bore out. But the prominence of Reform UK and Nigel Farage in UK politics is a gift to the SNP and the independence movement, regardless of how they performed yesterday or how they perform north of the Border in the coming year. If Anas Sarwar is frustrated with his opponents' and the media's "obsession" with Reform UK, he should get used to that feeling – they'll be at the heart of Scottish political debate for years to come. Mark McGeoghegan is a Glasgow University researcher of nationalism and contentious politics and an Associate Member of the Centre on Constitutional Change. He can be found on BlueSky @


Scotsman
22 minutes ago
- Scotsman
Hamilton by-election result: 'Surprise' voter turn-out explained and how it compares to other polls
Polling expert says voter turn-out for the Hamilton by-election showed there was interest in the result. Sign up to our Politics newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... The turnout at the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election was higher than expected, with 44.2 per cent of voters casting a ballot. However, this is down 16.7 per cent on the turnout in this constituency in the 2021 Scottish election where the turnout was 60.9 per cent. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Thursday's turnout is, however, higher than the turnout in recent by-elections in the South Lanarkshire area. In the 2023 Westminster by-election for nearby Rutherglen and Hamilton West, which ultimately led to Labour's Michael Shanks being elected, the turnout was only 37.19 per cent. Nights like last night rely on so many people showing up and working hard. | Lisa Ferguson During the election campaign there seemed to be apathy amongst voters who were disillusioned with the SNP Scottish Government, the Labour UK government and the previous Conservative UK government, which many had thought would result in a low voter turnout. Polling expert Mark Diffley said the turn-out showed there was a concentration of interest in the Hamilton area on the result of this by-election. He told the BBC: 'The turnout was 44 per cent, which is higher than some of us had expected - often in these mid-term elections the turnout can be below 40 per cent. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Having been in the constituency myself, there was this word used throughout that people were scunnered', that word cropped up over and over again. 'A lot of people translated that into people staying at home, but that didn't turn out to be the case. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Forty per cent is a decent turn-out and in the end it does tell us there is a concentration of interest in this campaign.' Ultimately Scottish Labour's Davy Russell was victorious after picking up 31.5 per cent of the votes.


STV News
22 minutes ago
- STV News
Scots have ‘voted for change', says Starmer following Labour's surprise win
Sir Keir Starmer has said people in Scotland have 'voted for change' following Labour's shock win in the Hamilton by-election. The Prime Minister congratulated his winning candidate Davy Russell and looked ahead to next year's Scottish Parliament election, saying it is a chance to 'turbo charge delivery'. Mr Russell took the seat vacated by the death of Scottish Government minister and SNP MSP Christina McKelvie. Posting on social media on Friday morning, Sir Keir said: 'People in Scotland have once again voted for change. 'Next year there is a chance to turbo charge delivery by putting Labour in power on both sides of the border. 'I look forward to working with you.' Labour's candidate, who is the deputy lord lieutenant of Lanarkshire, beat out SNP candidate Katy Loudon – who fell to her third defeat since 2023. The win comes against the backdrop of national polls which place Scottish Labour in third place behind the SNP and Reform UK – and will undoubtedly give a boost to Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar's bid to become first minister in next year's election. The Nigel Farage-led Reform UK saw a surge which took them into third place, just 800 votes away from the SNP, but fell short of expectations that they may place second. Reform UK deputy leader Richard Tice also reacted to the results, saying his party is 'delighted'. Speaking to BBC Radio 4's Today programme, he said: 'It's truly remarkable. 'We've come from nowhere to being in a three-way marginal, and we're within 750 votes of winning that by-election and just a few hundred votes of defeating the SNP, so it's an incredible result.' At the election count earlier, Tice told the PA news agency he was 'thrilled to bits' with the result. When the votes were counted, Russell polled 8,559, with Loudon coming second on 7,957, ahead of Reform's Ross Lambie, who secured 7,088 votes. Speaking to PA after the declaration, Sarwar said: 'I think people need to change the script, because we've proven the pollsters wrong. 'We've proven the commentators wrong, we've proven the bookies wrong. 'We've proven John Swinney wrong and so many others wrong too.' In the final weeks of the campaign, the First Minister said it was a 'two-horse race' between the SNP and Reform, but Sarwar asked what it says about a Government that has been in power for 18 years and 'all it has to offer in a campaign is vote SNP to stop Farage'. Russell had faced criticism for his perceived lack of media appearances, but Sarwar said such arguments were borne of 'an element of classism and elitism'. Speaking from the stage after his win, Russell said: 'Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse has voted tonight to take a new direction with Scottish Labour. 'Like the people here in Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse, and right across Scotland, we all feel we have been let down by the SNP.' The newly-minted MSP also hit out at Reform, saying the win 'sent a message to Farage and his mob tonight – the poison of Reform isn't us, it isn't Scotland and we don't want your division here'. While First Minister Swinney said Loudon had 'fought a superb SNP campaign' and that he was 'clearly disappointed' they were unable to win. 'Labour won by an absolute landslide in this area less than a year ago – we came much closer tonight, but the people of Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse have made clear that we still have work to do,' he added. 'Over the next few days, we will take time to consider the result fully.' Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country