Nicola Sturgeon is in custody after being arrested in connection with the investigation into the Scottish National Party’s finances.
Scotland’s former first minister was detained as a suspect and is currently being questioned by detectives.
A Police Scotland statement said: “A 52-year-old woman has today, Sunday, 11 June, 2023, been arrested as a suspect in connection with the ongoing investigation into the funding and finances of the Scottish National Party.
“The woman is in custody and is being questioned by Police Scotland detectives.
“A report will be sent to the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service.”
A spokesperson for Ms Sturgeon said: “Nicola Sturgeon has today, Sunday 11 June, by arrangement with Police Scotland, attended an interview where she was to be arrested and questioned in relation to Operation Branchform.
“Nicola has consistently said she would co-operate with the investigation if asked and continues to do so.”
Scotland’s former first minister is the latest high-profile figure in the party to be detained as part of Police Scotland’s Operation Branchform into the whereabouts of £600,000 of funding that had been earmarked for a second independence vote.
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Nicola Sturgeon is in custody
It is understood there have been complaints the ringfenced cash may have been used improperly by being spent elsewhere.
Her arrest comes on the back of the detentions of party treasurer Colin Beattie and former party chief executive Peter Murrell – also Ms Sturgeon’s husband – who were both subsequently released without charge.
Police previously searched the SNP headquarters and Ms Sturgeon and Mr Murrell’s home as part of the investigation.
A luxury £100,000 motorhome was also seized from outside the home of Mr Murrell’s mother in Dunfermline, Fife.
The SNP has said it has been “cooperating fully” with the investigation and would “continue to do so”.
At the time, Ms Sturgeon said she was quitting because the job “takes its toll on you and all around you”.
She said she believed part of “serving well would be to know almost instinctively when the time is right” to step down, adding: “In my head and in my heart I know that time is now, that it is right for me and my party and for the country.”
He also admitted that he was unaware that the SNP’s longstanding auditors, Johnston Carmichael, had quit in September 2022 following a review of their client portfolio until he became party leader.
The party had been under pressure to find new auditors in order to file its accounts with the Electoral Commission by 7 July or risk being fined.