Ann Widdecombe received a lot of hate from the Left. EPA/ADAM VAUGHAN

Culture war World

Aberdeen University distances itself of employee who celebrated murder of Ann Widdecombe

3 minutes read

Heather Herbert, a web developer at the university, a transgender activist and a former Labour candidate.

The University of Aberdeen was forced to distance itself from a staff member who posted online hoping former Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe suffered “an extremely painful death” following news of her murder.

Heather Herbert, a web developer at the university, a transgender activist and a former Labour candidate, went on her Bluesky account to celebrate Widdecombe’s death, hoping she died in agony.

Herbert reacted on the reports of Widdecombe’s murder,  “Some good news for once.”

“I hope it was an extremely painful death.”

She added: “I hope she was handcuffed to the bed as she screamed in agony.”

The posts were made shortly after reports of the 78-year-old’s killing at her Dartmoor home, before police confirmed they were treating the death as murder.

The university issued a statement on Sunday saying the comments “are entirely the individual’s own and do not represent the views of the University of Aberdeen.”

It confirmed the matter is being reviewed “as a matter of priority” through established staff processes.

“The University is aware of social media posts made by a member of staff regarding the death of Ann Widdecombe and is reviewing this as a matter of priority.

Police Scotland have stated no criminality was established in relation to the posts.

Gaudie, a student newspaper contacted Herbert on Saturday after she made her controversial posts.

She replied: “I don’t want to see anyone murdered, but I’m still glad she is dead.”

“I’m not a hypocrite. I posted that before the murder investigation was launched,” she continued.

“I’m a nobody. I have no power to do anything. Ann Widdecombe was able to and made the lives of ordinary people hell.”

She also added: “Nobody appears to care – I also celebrated the death of the leader of Iran.”

Key Topics

More like this

Culture war

No safety in UK: Knife crime, gang rape by those with ‘protected characteristics’

By Kevin Myers

Goya drew evidence of what Napoleon brought to Spain, now known to Corsicans as 'cultural tourism' (Photo by Barney Burstein/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images)
Culture war

Corsicans want to reclaim the slaughtering monster Napoleon for ‘cultural tourism’

By Kevin Myers

Energy and climate

The piffle from von der Leyen: ‘The Union grows stronger’

By Kevin Myers

Defence

Kashmir twinned with Sarajevo: another ‘multi-ethnic paradise’ triggers war?

By Kevin Myers