Avoiding the Spotlights

You can hold whatever view you like on the Celtic FC abuse scandal but, whatever that may be, there is one question which should be universal – how can that club not be punished over this?

Anyone on twitter should be following the @spotlight_CFC66 account – this provides a melt-water of information from the glaciers of abuse that span decades. Much of the content comes as a revelation as the subject has been given relatively scant exposure in the Scottish press. Overall, it draws a vivid picture of the streams and tributaries of the very singular Celtic entity that enabled and facilitated the abuse, with the 70s and 80s appearing particularly depraved. And within that picture there is a trend that is equally clear – the Celtic top brass at the time were very heavily involved with both the boy’s clubs and the abusers. There was little or no separation of entities in any practical sense. A fact that was very much used and exploited by the undesirables.

I’ve written on this a few times and attracted a bit of ire, particularly with accusations of point-scoring or tribal spite. I can see now that the aspersions are designed to curb any discussion and exposure of the subject where Celtic are involved. The point-scoring may be true and may even have been the original driver, but over time I have been made aware of the views of the victims and as I learned more then so my sense of both empathy and real injustice have grown exponentially. It is clear that the victims voice has not been given any oxygen at all and for many long years and no-one has listened to them, simply because there’s been no exposure to listen to. One can only imagine the frustration and hurt endured as door after door has been closed on them – for this alone we should listen and support them. From what I can tell, it has only been in recent years that have podcasts and interviews have started to appear, but even then, that has been on the fringes and far from the mainstream.

For me one recent tweet from the Spotlight account really stood out and it related to an internal investigating at Celtic FC in 1987.

A few points. Why are Celtic investigating what they now claim is a completely separate entity?

The internal investigation was bad enough in its own right because it was so obviously a paper-thin deception. Ultimately, a cover-up – which conveniently managed to overlook and avert attention from so many cases of abuse that have since been proven in court. And arguably worse still, it provided cover for further abuse to continue. How can the club not be punished for this?

Sadly, this is far from an isolated incidence of cover-up from Celtic FC, fast-forward 30 years and we have Celtic FC playing the same tired worn cards. Without exaggeration they currently have three or four internal investigations ongoing – all throw out to deflect and deceive. We never hear or see the results of these investigations and it’s all merely pretence – a fiction that it’s been dealt with in-house which is too easily accepted by a servile press. None of the current stable of Celtic investigations is more serious than their latest investigation into the mountain of child abuse and their handling of child abuse. Let’s be honest, this is an investigation which was only dreamt up in 2017 when some heat reappeared. Once again the victims and wider public are fobbed off with a fantasy investigation which will achieve nothing but to deflect and put time and distance between Celtic and any tricky questions. Celtic FC have no desire to find truth or right wrongs (we know this because the victims have told us – how thorough can an investigation be that fails to consult the victims?). Celtic FCs only desire is to protect the club, their friends at the club and ultimately avoid the heavy punishments that they know are due.

This is crux for me. We can see what they are up to, it is really that transparent. Celtic FC have worked tirelessly for decades to cover this up. It’s just another layer of immoral, criminal activity on top of the horrific crimes of abuse that ruined so many lives, and it’s one that football surely has to act on clear the air?

It should be devastating for them. But part of the web they’ve woven over the years also provides their multiple safety nets. People exist on the Celtic FC board who put Celtic before everything and so the same applies outside. The SFA, an organisation distinguished by its lack of real comment and action, has seen a stream of Celtic people who have a vested interested in dampening any justice where it looks like breaking out – with hindsight it’s fairly logical to see this as just an extension of the cover up. The same goes for Holyrood as it goes for the press. Any talk is curtailed and played down, and the obvious, rational progression to the question of punishment never materialises.

Similar to the doubtful intent of the internal investigations, concerns also apply to those of any external investigations where they appear. Certain characters and certain remits don’t ring remotely true or trustworthy. Once you start looking then conflicts of interest start to appear regularly around this subject. Are the stance of silence of BBC Scotland or Clyde FM by accident or design? Once you’ve made that first big deceit it’s then a small step to carry that out elsewhere and it’s naive to think it won’t occur. This is the discussion that Scotland really needs to have about Celtic.

Of course, with no trace of irony this is the very cultural omertà that enabled the original abuse. The club always comes first and shall be protected with any dissenters pushed out and rejected. Yet another layer of injustice that needs exposed, shamed, eradicated and redressed.

Troublesome tribalism: does it matter who asks the questions?

That’s the problem with the tribal nature of football at times, and of football and politics in Scotland – folk will act tribally. You’d be wrong to assume anything else. The loyalty to your own group, or identity, conditions you against impartiality; and more so when that impartiality damages your tribe.

tribalism

So where a situation arises that requires digging, leg-work, probity, disclosure, then only those proven to be wholly professional, non-conflicted or uninhibited would be trusted to deliver to a suitable standard.

Within that there’s another truism. A member of the opposite tribe will typically dig deeper, work harder and longer if it derives damages to an opposing tribe.

Case and point. Rangers tax case. The genesis of this appears to be a leak of certain private documents which then ended up in the hands of Celtic fans. A resolute process then set in motion. Evidence was harvested and then sculpted into a formidable weapon. Other structures were constructed around this and the rest is what it is. The cry to this day is that crimes were committed and justice had to be done.

A rather obvious fact of this entire process is that the key players were not Rangers fans, in fact it was predominately Celtic fans or had links back to Celtic. The press in particular had a large influence throughout the course of events.

All of which throws up another couple of permutations to consider. How would the whole saga have turned out had Rangers fans been in control of the information? How would the saga, coverage and outcomes have looked had Celtic used EBTs to the same extend?

As per the opening statement of this article both would presumably look a lot different. Rangers fans would downplay events or certainly not consider them worthy of the shit-show that subsequently ensued. The truth is we’d probably have sat on any leaked documents and the chain reaction would never have begun. The same applies to a switch in character positions. Celtic fans would not have gathered data against their club, would not have built a case and driven it through – especially if they’d suspected a possible endpoint to be liquidation and newco of the holding company and a demotion to the bottom division. This anticipated level of damage is an important factor, it’s easy to make concessions when there’s no consequences, not so much when your clubs future depends on it.

This anticipated level of damage is an important factor, it’s easy to make concessions when there’s no consequences, not so much when your clubs future depends on it.

Can we actually predict those outcomes with any confidence? Yes, we probably can. The press and BBC Scotland performance on topical football-based debates over the past decade support the theory. As an example, coverage on sectarian singing has been selective. Head-lines proclaimed, discussions arranged across the network and platforms. Celtic-friendly experts have been brought in and feel comfortable and emboldened enough to freely debate the issues, when they relate to Rangers that is. Yet when it occurs elsewhere, against their tribe, the debate is never held. Simple as that.

More importantly, it is relevant to the ongoing coverage (or cover-up) of the Celtic child abuse scandal. The coverage simply doesn’t add up. The story has not grown organically or remotely to scale of the severity. The clamour for results, to unearth information and facts and see it all through to the logical conclusion has been found wanting. If we consider that this is the self-same press that gorged themselves on the Rangers tax case, then it is not that much of a surprise. It can be explained by the same tribal behaviour.

This throws up questions on conflicts of interest. In short, any investigation or coverage cannot be expected to be completed satisfactorily if key personnel are conflicted, or tribally inclined to either suppress evidence or simply not dig for it in the first place.

There’s a point here – which can be extrapolated from the progress of the scandal so far – if the victims want to be unreservedly represented, if they want their story and situation to be investigated and reported, to its exhaustible limits, then that is unlikely if people with a conflict of interest are involved. It’s a tribal certainty in fact. Some detractors certainly appear more concerned with who is asking the question, than the question itself. Crimes have been committed and justice had to be done, remember. They are also over-looking why others aren’t asking the questions, when that too is pretty obvious.

People from the same tribe can absolutely fail such an investigation, knowingly fail, but the opposite isn’t true. A serious investigation cannot be investigated too much, cannot be over-worked, too many facts cannot be unearthed. It’s not point scoring to see serious crimes given an appropriate chance at justice. It is point-scoring to deny that justice for the sake of your tribal compass.

As a disclosure it may come as no shock that Celtic aren’t my tribe. I support the rival tribe of Rangers. I know some good folk who support Celtic and even enjoy supporting them. But I don’t like Celtic, the club. They exist, I’ll concede that much to them. The sanctimonious and quixotic mythologies they peddle are mawkish and tiresome. I find the unrepentant support of republican terror groups offensive and I’ve never seen what part or future it has in Scotland.

Like every man and his dog I’d heard rumours about Celtic for as long as I can remember. The trials in the 90s came and went. Rumours persisted. Social media opened up a world of discussion and information that was unavailable before. Facts came to light. Naturally these would lend themselves to theories and the jigsaw, of perception and probability, would start to take form. The attitude and behaviour of Celtic in response to the scandal did little to endear this onlooker. New facts, new theories. Same old response from Celtic. Then Rangers tax case blew up. The behaviour of the Celtic support was something else and often still is; especially knowing that their own club had this scandal skulking in the background. Then again maybe that’s a reason why they attacked Rangers with such desperate primal vigour?

So yes, hands up, I don’t like Celtic. I don’t want to see them get away with anything. I expect the full force of the law and of any governing bodies to be brought to them where-ever it is merited. Much like they did with Rangers tax issues.

I use several examples above to set out some points but let’s not pretend that these are in anyway equivalent. Under a socially conditioned level of loading the membrane containing tribal allegiances should burst. The laws of a footballing governing body are one thing. The laws of the land and the protection of children is another. In absolute terms one is many orders of magnitude bigger.

Could my conscience cope with knowing that the management of my football club had inserted a line in a remuneration contract of a player to enable it to pursue loophole-based tax efficiency schemes? Probably, yes.

You’re clearly not going to hold the guilty parties to account, so it should be no surprise that rival tribes will.

Would the same be true for the crimes committed, or acts carried out, under-the-guise-of and then in-the-name-of Celtic? I’d like to think not. That’s for the conscience of Celtics spinners and the Scottish press and politicians to ponder – those at Parkhead, Holyrood, Pacific Quay, the Daily Record, the Herald, the Scotsman, Channel 4 etcetera. Sports clubs and religious organisation most definitely should be included in any inquiry. You’re clearly not going to hold the guilty parties to account, so it should be no surprise that rival tribes will. Rangers, like all clubs, should be part of any inquiry. The inquiry must be thorough and must be ruthless and exhaustive. If Rangers and Rangers people have questions to answer, then so be it. That would be disappointing, probably heart-breaking to be honest, but ultimately necessary. Absolutely.

Actions and consequences…

It’s the twenty sixth of May, 2019. The weather’s sunny but changeable. The 2018/2019 football season in Scotland has just ended. Two days ago Theresa May resigned as Prime Minister. Celtic football club took that opportunity to release a statement on their former employee and kit-man Jim McCafferty having been convicted of offences against children. That conviction took place 10 days previous.

Celtics statement expressed regret and sorrow but never expressed any apologises. Presumably because to do so would be to accept some responsibility, in both the legal and moral senses. And when responsibility is applied to actions then come consequences. And when crimes are involved the consequences should balance. It’s called justice.

Celtics adopted legal stance from the day that abuse was uncovered has been to ignore the issue, to hide it and to consistently accept no responsibility. That moment and that legal stance didn’t coincide with a single point in time were all and any abuse simply stopped. We know it didn’t. It continued and it was allowed to continue through either neglect or complicity. The omertà endured.

Celtics tactics of self-preservation have evolved and been adapted over the years and within the past decade phrases like “separate and distinct” began to appear in relation to Celtic FC and the Celtic Boys Club. These days “separate entity” appears to be the preferred parlance. The Scottish media also gives Celtic the (from what i can see) unique courtesy of attaching the abuse to the Boys Club. And no doubt as part of this ongoing legal think-tank came the decision to change the name of Celtic Boys Club to St Patrick’s Sports Academy. A less than subtle attempt to distance the name Celtic from the scandal.

Responsibility, what that means and what should come with it is an area of debate (at least amongst the public that aware of this scandal). The stock defence from Celtic-minded detractors is that the victims don’t want the subject raised, whilst what they really mean is that they and Celtic would prefer that the subject wasn’t discussed. Unfortunately for them this has proven to be untrue with many victims stepping forward and demanding that Celtic accept responsibility and show some form of long overdue contrition.

Without a doubt the coverage of the scandal in the Scottish press has been bizarre. A story of its magnitude and severity, relating to an institution of Celtics standing, should be front page billing. The threads, lose ends, cast of famous and well-known characters involved, almost every connotation lends itself to months of debate and speculation across on any platform. And yet that hasn’t happened. The why is perhaps more obvious; simply, many key people don’t want Celtics reputation damaged, don’t want their chosen legal strategy undermined and for the good of the club they want any financial impact to be kept to a minimum. Against that the victims requests are secondary.

We’ve seen a slightly change in tact recently with some cheerleaders asking for Celtic to say sorry, but at pains to assure the public there is no associated blame. A weak but perhaps necessary concession to save face considering the rate at which evidence is accruing. Let’s be honest the likes of Graham Spiers, James Dorman MSP, John Mason MSP only want the best for Celtic and this has been a proven part of their operating model for many years. Unfortunately for them the family of Andrew Gray are determined and relentless in their demands for answers; where wrong-doing has occurred then they want it out in the open where it can be judged. But this is not what Celtic’s politicians and press men want, so they ignore the Gray family. Or they down-play their pleas. The SNPs Justice Secretary and vocal Celtic fan Humza Yousaf has chosen to ignore the Gray family all together, presumably because he realises how difficult it could make his nice and easy life. Spiers and Dornan had eventually contacted them (more through the uncomfortable fact they could ignore them no longer) and quickly realised that their determination would not be intimidated or manipulated, to the extent that they ended up in less than pleasant public spats with them – so much for sensitivity and meeting the needs of the victims?

And what the victims want may vary widely. Some just want it over with. Some just want to hear sorry. Some expect Celtic to compensate for a life damaged, knocked off course or ruined. Some expect Celtic’s part and actions to be held to a greater scrutiny and for the natural consequences to follow. The unacceptable length of time that has passed means that many of the victims are no longer with us and their wishes gone with them. They’ll never know what their justice, if any, looks like.

We know how Dornan operates and who he serves. Would we be surprised if Dornan selectively championed someone who backed his apology-without-blame stance? And then supply with the attention and devotion and prominence that the Gray family had been publicly denied from him? I say prominence because meetings with the SFA and meetings with selected MSPs and journalists to forge strategies carries a degree of responsibility, and if that process then deliberately refuses to involve all victims, or represent the views of all,  then it’s slightly disingenuous. There’s been enough games played already in this cover-up to be vigilant and cynical.

Also unfortunate for Celtic and the SFA, and for Celtic fans wishing this would just disappear, is that fact that the Penn State scandal happened. Across the pond the police acted decisively. The governing bodies acted, strongly and assertively. Penn State was dealt heavy punishments and fines as a consequence. The facts of the scandal are contained in this link.

The parallels with Celtic FC are abundant and eerily similar. Why this isn’t use as a topic or starter for discussions and as a model to follow falls into the same bizarre bucket as the rest of the coverage. Perhaps had Celtic and the SFA acted sooner then it could be dismissed. But they didn’t. And now the general public rightfully expect any club found guilty of similar conduct to Penn State to face the similar sanctions. The Scottish press and governing bodies have failed and are failing victims (and the public) miserably in this. Only recently have a few started taking this on. Perhaps some decent journalists in England or the US could join the dots and have the debate that Scotland refuses to have?