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Controversial Corbyn staffer Laura Murray appointed Labour's head of complaints

Ms Murray intervened to prevent the suspension of a member accused of antisemitism and is facing legal action from Rachel Riley

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A senior Jeremy Corbyn aide who intervened to stop the suspension of a Labour member who was later arrested by police over alleged antisemitism, has been made Labour's head of complaints, it is understood.

The JC understands that Laura Murray has been officially made head of complaints for Labour and will be in charge of overseeing complaints made about antisemitism.

Ms Murray, who is believed to have applied for the role, was reported by the Sunday Times in March to have overruled a recommendation by party officials to suspend 72-year-old Patricia Sheerin last year.

The paper published leaked emails in which Ms Murray said Ms Sheerin, who had posted on Facebook claims that Israel was behind Isis, was not referring to "Jews or Jewishness".

Ms Sheerin, from South London, was one of three party members questioned by Scotland Yard in March on suspicion of “publishing or distributing material likely to stir up racial hatred”.

Ms Murray was recently moved by Labour from her role as "stakeholder manager" to Leader of the Opposition, to provide support to the party’s complaints department.

Ms Murray and other staff were moved to help the department after it was reported that Thomas Gardiner, a Corbyn ally and powerful chief of Labour’s governance and legal unit, argued against suspending a Labour activist who posted an image on Facebook showing the Statue of Liberty being smothered by an alien with the Star of David on its back.

Mr Gardiner advised Ms Bibby not be suspended because the picture was “anti-Israel, not anti-Jewish.”

The party advertised the Head of Complaints role shortly after this.

Ms Murry is also facing legal action from Countdown presenter Rachel Riley, who instructed a high-profile lawyer after Ms Murray said Ms Riley had claimed: “Corbyn deserves to be violently attacked because he is a Nazi.”

"We don't comment on staffing matters," a Labour spokesperson said.

But a party source said: "Our recruitment processes are open, fair and designed to find the best person for the job, and that's what happened in this case."

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