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Former Edinburgh council leader back in Labour after being cleared of ‘inappropriate messages' claim

Former Edinburgh council leader back in Labour after being cleared of ‘inappropriate messages' claim

Daily Recorda day ago

Labour has ended the suspension and Day will resume his duties as party councillor.
A former Edinburgh council leader is back in Scottish Labour after he was cleared by police of inappropriate behaviour.
It is understood Cammy Day's administrative suspension has been lifted by Labour after a probe into allegations about his conduct.

Day quit as leader in August amid allegations he bombarded Ukrainian refugees with messages about sex on apps.

The Sunday Mail reported last year that two refugees said they felt unable to ignore unsolicited approaches from Day due to his position as leader of Edinburgh City Council.
At the time of the story, police were examining a complaint made in the previous year to the council's whistleblowing service.
However, a Police Scotland spokesperson said in April: 'Following a report relating to inappropriate behaviour, extensive enquiries have been carried out, no criminality has been established and no one has been arrested.
'Time is no barrier to our enquiries and any further information received will be assessed.
'I would urge anyone who wishes to report a crime, regardless of when it happened, to contact us so we can conduct a thorough and professional investigation."
Labour also suspended Day when the allegations about Ukrainian refugees broke, but he is a member of the party's group on the council again. Day's administrative suspension has ended.

In an interview with the Sunday Times, Day, who led a minority Labour administration before he quit, alleged that he was the victim of a political plot: 'What they've done is ruined a whole number of lives.'
'Things were leaked to the media, leaked to the Labour Party and reported to the police all at the same time. So someone co-ordinated this, and I think it was an orchestrated political campaign against me.
'It was clearly politically motivated, the fact everything seems to be coming from one party tells me where it's coming from.'

He added: 'I'm just pleased that police have said there's nothing to see and I can get on with my job.'
Day said of his use of gay dating apps: 'Have I used apps for a gay man like me? Of course, yeah, I have no issues saying that.
'So does every other gay man in the City Chambers. That's what people do these days. But that's not illegal. Have I done anything offensive? Absolutely not.'
He also denied ever acting inappropriately, targeting any particular group or 'chasing any Ukrainians'.
'I've chatted with gay men on an app,' he said. 'The content of that chat I don't think is relevant. I've had a chat with another gay man, we've exchanged pictures together, we've had chats. We've maybe met and had a drink, or maybe not. That's what people do.'

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