Eh? Do you mean "here" as in ISF or as in the parliamentary select committee.
If the latter, well you don't seem to have much faith in the Scottish Parliament.
If the former, I think you might be letting emotion cloud objectivity and seeing polarisation where none exists. I, for example, am against Scottish independence - for precisely the same reason (unsurprisingly enough) why I was against Brexit. But from what I can see, Salmond is entirely in the right here*. It seems to me to be far more likely that not that Salmond, while he may have been a little too over-familiar in some of his physical interactions with women in the course of work, never went near to crossing the line into illegality - or even "conduct unbecoming". I suspect that the Sturgeon govt and senior party officials panicked (perhaps fearing that if they later stood accused of minimising anything, it might wreck the reputation of both the party and the government, and thereby seriously damage the independence movement), and that they then engaged in unlawful (and possibly illegal) behaviour to try to cover themselves.
* It's only your personal "commentary" on the case with which I take exception, not the case itself. But when Salmond starts referring to those women as liars, harpies and witches, do be sure to get back to me.