Lady Elish Angiolini, LT DBE PC KC FRSE

Principal of St Hugh's College

Biography

Elish Angiolini grew up in Govan in Glasgow and studied Law at the University of Strathclyde, graduating in 1982.  Immediately after graduation she joined the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service and, following her traineeship, spent 8 years as a Depute Procurator Fiscal in Airdrie, prosecuting in Airdrie Sheriff Court.

In 1992 she moved to Crown Office to work as part of the Lord Advocate's Secretariat, when she developed her now long-standing interest in improving the support offered to vulnerable victims and witnesses, and in particular children. She also provided contributions to and comment on the development of Westminster policies and legislation affecting the criminal justice system in Scotland.

She was appointed Senior Depute Procurator Fiscal at Glasgow, taking on operational responsibility for the running of Sheriff and Jury trials, before being appointed Assistant Procurator Fiscal at Glasgow in 1995. 

In 1997 she was appointed Head of Policy in the Crown Office, with responsibility for the development of policy across all functions of the Department. In particular, she helped the department prepare for devolution and was involved in the preparation of the Scotland Act 1998. At the same time, she was responsible for the department's preparations for the introduction of the European Convention on Human Rights.

She was appointed as Regional Procurator Fiscal for Grampian and the Highlands and Islands in July 2000 based in Aberdeen, the first woman to hold such a post. 

She was installed as the first non - political Solicitor General for Scotland on 5 December 2001 - also the first woman, the first Procurator Fiscal and the first solicitor to hold the post.  She was installed as Lord Advocate on 12 October 2006.  She remained Lord Advocate following the change in administration at the election in 2007, again, the first to do so. While in Office she took forward the most wide-ranging programme of modernisation in the department's history.

During her appointment she took on particular responsibility for the approach to cases involving our most vulnerable victims - the national roll out of Victim Information and Advice service followed her piloting of that initiative when she was the Regional Procurator Fiscal of Aberdeen, but she has also ensured that prosecutors have provided skilled and enthusiastic support to youth courts, the domestic violence court in Glasgow, and the Drugs courts.

She has personally chaired the Department's Strategy Group on Diversity and helped victims from minority communities achieve greater confidence in the prosecution service.  Her leadership in the area of domestic violence was recognised by the charity Zero Tolerance when she was given their inaugural 'Women in the public Eye' award - one of several awards and distinctions she has received during her time in office.

The review of the investigation and prosecution of rape and sexual crimes which she instigated was a major undertaking which resulted in profound and successful  changes to prosecution practices including the establishment of the specialist National Sexual Crimes Unit, the first of its type in Europe. She also set up the highly successful Health and Safety Division and the National Deaths Inquiry Unit.

While she respects the strengths of the criminal justice system and the independence of its component parts as Lord Advocate she was unapologetically a moderniser, determined to ensure that the prosecution service in Scotland grew in strength to deal robustly with the challenges of crime in the 21st century.

Under her stewardship it has become a Service which has increased its efficiency and effectiveness, recently transforming the way in which High Court cases are prepared and which has become more open, accessible and visible in our communities. In 2007 the Howat Report described the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service as an exemplar body and as the most efficient and cost effective in the Scottish Government.

After demitting office in May 2011 she practised as a QC in Scotland and was appointed as a visiting Professor of Law at the University of Strathclyde. In 2011 and 2012 she chaired the Commission on Women Offenders which reported in April 2012. In February 2013 she was appointed to investigate and report on the cremation of babies at Mortonhall Crematorium in Edinburgh. The Mortonhall Crematorium Report was published in April 2014. Between September 2013 and September 2021 she was Chancellor of the University of the West of Scotland.

In 2014, she completed a major review into the Investigation and Prosecution of Rape in London by the Metropolitan Police Service and the Crown Prosecution Service. The Independent Review into the Investigation and Prosecution of Rape in London was launched in June 2015. In 2016, she carried out an Independent Review of Deaths and Serious Incidents in Police Custody for the Home Secretary. The report was published by the Government in October 2017.
She was made a Pro-Vice-Chancellor without portfolio of the University of Oxford in 2017.
In 2020 she published a Report of her review into the handling of complaints against the police in Scotland. In May 2021 she became Chair of the charity Reprieve. 

In June 2022 Lady Elish was appointed by Her Late Majesty The Queen to the Most Ancient and most Noble Order of the Thistle.

Lady Elish is currently Chair of the Public Inquiry into the abduction, rape and murder of Sarah Everard.