I have been thinking a little more overnight at to why I have such a difficulty with Salmond going for judicial review at this stage. Actually it goes beyond the issue of funding and of the message it sends to the accusers (both of these are still powerful issues).
No there is a broader issue - that it seems an inappropriate use of the court option. Judicial reviews are typically the option of last resort, the final in a series of checks and balances that are used when a decision with serious consequences of itself have been made. So it is often used when a decision to deport someone has been made, or a decision to remove care from a vulnerable person has been made, or to approve a planning application with major public consequences, or to remove public funding from an organisation. In every case the people taking the action are in the last chance saloon, so to speak - this is their final option to try to prevent the effect.
But this isn't the case for Salmond. As far as I can see he is challenging an initial finding of an inquiry, which has, of itself, no consequences. The initial decision appears to be that the Scottish Government has determined that the claims of the women have merit and if true that they might amount to criminal offences. Hence they have effectively suspended their inquiry and passed the issue to another, completely independent body - the police. This is a very early stage in the overall process and one that has absolutely no direct effect (ignoring political consequences) on Salmond - he hasn't been suspended, nor disciplined internally, nor charged let alone convicted by the police. Salmon has many , many further stages before their are any actual consequences arise.
So rather than challenge via judicial review simply the initial stage in the process he has the checks and balances already - if he feels the internal inquiry process was unfair, his case in now been considered by a completely independent body, why not trust that the police will fail to find sufficient evidence (they have a stricter burden of evidence than the internal inquiry) to be able to bring charges. And even if they were to press charges, why not trust the court procedures where he would need to be found guilty (beyond reasonable doubt) that he would be acquitted in a trial, or even win on appeal. Only if all of those further steps go against his are there real consequences.
So overall I think this is an inappropriate use of the judicial review approach, and it may be that the authorities refuse to allow him to go for judicial review. If judicial review were allowed in this case (effectively to challenge merely an initial stage in a process without any final consequences) then the flood gates would be opened (or at least would for those with deep enough pockets).
Just as an example - the case I'm hearing next week also had an earlier stage where the police were contacted and involved - in a Salmond world that should trigger a judicial review - that is ridiculous and to my my would be an abuse of the process.