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Man jailed for life over Skye gun rampage which left one dead and three injured

Finlay MacDonald, 41, murdered his brother-in-law and attempted to kill his wife and a married couple on August 10, 2022.

Nick Forbes
Friday 29 November 2024 11:49 EST
Finlay MacDonald has been jailed for life for murder and attempted murder (Police Scotland/PA)
Finlay MacDonald has been jailed for life for murder and attempted murder (Police Scotland/PA)

A man has been jailed for a minimum of 28 years after being found guilty of murdering his brother-in-law and attempting to kill three other people during a shotgun rampage on the Isle of Skye and the Scottish mainland.

Finlay MacDonald, 41, carried out the spree of violence on August 10, 2022.

The attacks began that morning when the father-of-four repeatedly stabbed his wife Rowena at their home in Taskarvaig on the islandā€™s Sleat peninsula after finding ā€œflirtyā€ text messages on her phone between her and her boss.

Giving evidence during the trial at the High Court in Edinburgh, Mrs MacDonald said the ā€œfrenziedā€ attack punctured both her lungsĀ and left her ā€œsquelching bloodā€ with every breath she took.

After attacking his wife, MacDonald got into his car with a pump-action shotgun, a ā€œcouple of hundredā€ cartridges and a ā€œmachete-typeā€ knife, and drove to his brother-in-law John MacKinnonā€™s house in the nearby village of Teangue.

His sister Lyn-Anne MacKinnon, who was outside on the driveway, told the court she saw him with the gun as he walked into the house, and said she heard ā€œbangsā€ as he shot Mr MacKinnon a number of times, leaving him with fatal injuries.

A GP who lived nearby attempted to save Mr MacKinnon but he died at the scene.

Sentencing MacDonald, Judge Lady Drummond said his crimes were ā€œbrutal and mindlessly violentā€ and perpetrated on victims ā€œin their own homes, where they had no opportunity to escapeā€.

The court heard MacDonald had borne a grudge against his brother-in-law since the pair had a violent falling out in 2013.

MacDonaldā€™s lawyer had argued for his client to be convicted of the lesser offence of culpable homicide rather than murder in relation to the killing of Mr MacKinnon, saying his ability to control his actions had been ā€œimpaired by reason of abnormality of mindā€.

However after three-and-a-half hours of deliberation on Friday, the jury found MacDonald guilty of one count of murder, three counts of attempted murder, and one count of possession of a shotgun ā€œwith intent thereof to endanger lifeā€.

Lady Drummond sentenced MacDonald to life imprisonment and ordered him to spend a minimum of 28 years behind bars.

After murdering Mr MacKinnon, MacDonald then drove to the house in Dornie in Wester Ross, on the mainland, where his osteopath John MacKenzieĀ lived with his wife Fay.

For them and the family of John MacKinnon, life will never be the same

Judge Lady Drummond, on MacDonald's victims

MacDonald claimed Mr MacKenzie had previously given him a treatment session which he said ā€œruined his lifeā€.

After arriving, MacDonald shot Mrs MacKenzie in the face through the windows of the house and then shot Mr MacKenzie twice, in his front and side, before being tasered and arrested by police who had trailed him to the property.

Mrs MacDonald, Mrs MacKenzie and Mr MacKenzie all survived their injuries, and gave evidence in court during the trial.

The court was shown footage of a police interview with MacDonald the day after the attacks during which he said he stabbed his wife in a ā€œmoment of madnessā€ and he then felt a ā€œtotal darkness come over meā€.

Lady Drummond said the jury dismissed suggestions that MacDonald was ā€œprovokedā€ into attacking his wife.

The judge said all the surviving victims could have died from their wounds, and she praised their actions and those of the emergency services.

She said Mrs MacDonald had suffered ā€œdevastatingā€ physical and psychological harm, including six weeks in hospital, while Mr MacKenzie also spent six weeks in hospital, including in a critical condition, and needed to have a kidney removed.

The judge said: ā€œThat they are alive today is down to their own actions, police and emergency services in reaching them ā€“ the outcome for each of them was likely to be fatal. For them and the family of John MacKinnon, life will never be the same.ā€

She told MacDonald he shot his victims ā€œat close rangeā€, and stabbed his wife Rowena nine times, before targeting his brother-in-law.

She added: ā€œThe jury decided your behaviour was not substantially impaired by abnormality of mind. They convicted you of murder. There was evidence you bought a shotgun and 1,000 cartridges about six weeks before and told others you were going to kill Mr MacKenzie.ā€

A central focus of the 12-day trial was the extent to which MacDonald was in control of his actions when he carried out the attacks.

The court heard evidence about his mental state from two psychiatrists and two psychologists, who all agreed he suffered from autistic spectrum disorder and depressive disorder.

However prosecutor Liam Ewing KC said MacDonaldā€™s actions after he stabbed his wife ā€“ including the fact he drove to two different houses, was able to load and use a shotgun, and was able to select his victims ā€“ indicated he had been ā€œfully in controlā€ of his actions when he murdered the osteopath.

Defending, solicitor advocate Shahid Latif said of MacDonald: ā€œHe is sorry for what he did that day.

ā€œHe wishes he could undo and go back in time to try and stop himself.

ā€œIn particular he indicates he has failed his children. He wants them to know he is sorry.ā€

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