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Farm 999 Season 1 Episode 3
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00:00Farming is the most dangerous profession in the UK.
00:06Within seconds, the whole barn was alight.
00:10And farmers are increasingly under threat from criminal gangs.
00:14Police officer, show yourself now!
00:17This programme follows the emergency services.
00:20I wasn't entirely convinced the outcome was going to be brilliant.
00:23And dedicated rural crime units.
00:25You're looking at the result of organised crime.
00:28Working in the UK's most isolated communities.
00:32There's a tractor! You're revving a lot!
00:35From heroic rescues to deliberate attacks on animals and farms.
00:40All the trouble started five years ago.
00:43And each year it seems to get a lot worse.
00:45Stand by for a slice of rural life like you've never seen before.
00:51You don't think about farming then.
00:54You're just thinking, am I going to live or die?
00:56I'm Steph McGovern and this is Farm 999.
01:05Coming up...
01:07An organised crime gang targets farms in the north of England.
01:13Stealing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of equipment.
01:16They were very clever.
01:17They never got within proper view of any of our security cameras.
01:21A massive bonfire breaks out on a farm in Leicestershire.
01:25While the farmer watches helpless from her hospital bed.
01:29I could see Blaise and Millie had run into the building.
01:32Where are they?
01:33Have they got the cows out?
01:34Have they got themselves out?
01:35And our reporter Paul Colgan reunites a farmer with the air ambulance crew who saved her life.
01:44I don't think I was going to wake him up.
01:51First up today, a real life detective story about a load of expensive kit being nicked from farms across the north of England.
01:59Now we're talking about the GPS units.
02:02They're the little boxes on top of tractors that are vital when it comes to helping farmers with growing and harvesting their crops.
02:10To the thieves, they're easy pickings worth thousands of pounds.
02:14There's been a wave of GPS thefts from farms across England.
02:34As part of Operation Walrus, a sting has been arranged on the M61 to catch the suspects.
02:41It's the culmination of years of painstaking police work.
02:46We knew they'd booked flights out of the country within seven days.
02:49So we were going to get hit quite hard across the northwest of the UK for GPS thefts and then they'd be gone.
02:55One of the victims of this GPS crime wave is Andrew Shaw, an arable and potato farmer with a 500 hectare farm in Runcorn, Cheshire.
03:13So we grow a lot of wheat, barley, oilseed, rape and then we grow a lot of potatoes as well.
03:21But life on the farm isn't always as wholesome as it sounds.
03:27Unfortunately, in the last 11 years, we've been robbed three times now.
03:32The first time, they stole my parents' car, they ransacked the house, but the second two were targeted GPS thefts.
03:40They took three GPS systems out of the tractors and one out of the combine.
03:44It cost £10,000 to replace it.
03:48GPS systems are fitted on farm machinery to provide highly accurate data.
03:54They've become integral in modern farming.
03:59So when we are spraying, the GPS system that sits on the top of the sprayer will detect where I am at any one time and it will only spray within that boundary.
04:09The system can also turn its nozzles on and off when necessary to ensure that the entire area gets covered, but that no part of the crop gets sprayed twice.
04:20It's not just a luxury, it's actually earning its keep all the time.
04:24Sgt. Rob Simpson works for Cheshire Police.
04:29It was the first time we were really becoming aware that GPS units were being stolen off the top of tractors.
04:38And we saw this kind of explosion of these GPS type thefts.
04:41And this wasn't just a picture in Cheshire, this was a picture right across the whole region and also the UK.
04:46So pockets everywhere were suddenly becoming alarmed by different rural crime teams and police forces.
04:51For farmers like Andrew, fatigue after a long day's work was making their GPS systems a sitting target.
04:59Climbing up the back of a tractor at 11 o'clock at night when it's dark just to try and take a GPS system off.
05:06It's dangerous for myself because, you know, one's a slip of the foot and then one's on the floor probably with a broken back.
05:11These thieves now, they're sort of like exploiting our industry because they know that there will be farmers that are too tired at night or too old to be climbing up and down.
05:21The thefts of the GPS units were coming in waves, lots of incidents and then nothing for weeks.
05:30There was no real joined up thinking.
05:33You know, these reports would come in, but no one was talking to each other.
05:36So they were ahead of us in terms of their, you know, how they operated.
05:40And we needed to do something about that.
05:42The National Rural Crime Team was assembled to help forces work together.
05:48The creation of the team, it really meant that we were now on a footing where when these kind of incidents were happening,
05:54we could react faster and we could put measures in place to try and tackle it if it was to start again.
05:59And when the thefts did start up again, the police were ready.
06:04It's because of these important relationships between the different teams that we were able to get the message about what cars could be involved,
06:11what our plan was if we were to find the people involved and how we could react and basically act as one team rather than a lot of different teams across the whole of the country.
06:19PC Rob Stordy was part of the investigation team, working alongside Sergeant Rob.
06:26We'd assessed the activity during the first wave of offending and we could see a clear pattern.
06:31And that was the offenders were going out at night and committing a series of offences overnight.
06:38Gathering intelligence across all the forces, give the team the data they needed, ready for when the thieves would strike again.
06:47After the first initial spree of these GPS thefts, these two males left the country.
06:52And it was almost like waving a red flag and saying we're involved because the crime stopped exactly at that point.
06:58So that allowed us to be able to say, right, it's going to be them, they're involved, they're coming back into the UK.
07:03Now it's that sitting and waiting game for them to land.
07:06Later we'll find out what happened when the two thieves came back.
07:14Time now to catch up with Paul Colgan who's been in the Highlands of Scotland to find out about an emergency service that for many farmers is the difference between life and death.
07:25Get your tissues at the ready for this one.
07:39Farming is recognised as the most dangerous job in the UK.
07:43And when accidents do happen, the ability to dispatch swift medical care to remote locations is crucial.
07:50I've come to the airbase for Scotland's charity, Air Ambulance.
07:54They're one of 21 air ambulance charities dotted around the United Kingdom.
07:59And these guys serve some of the most isolated farms and farmland in the country.
08:04It's 7.15 in the morning, the day is about to start.
08:09Morning all then, so here's the weather for today.
08:11So we've got high pressure in charge, so it's actually a really nice day.
08:16From their bases at Perse and Aberdeen, this air ambulance serves 30,000 square miles of Scottish mainland and around 100 islands.
08:26They get around 80 call-outs a month.
08:29Of course, the helicopters are just the transport.
08:32It's the medical experts that they carry that really save lives.
08:36Keir Lynch is a regular paramedic on board.
08:41What are the most crucial pieces of kit that you carry with you?
08:44Well, we have some ventilator tubing, simple oxygen masks.
08:47And because we're quite often first on scene, we have a little oxygen cylinder here as well.
08:51We have our defibrillator and monitor, so if their heart isn't beating, we can deliver an electric shock.
08:56You're a bit of a walking hospital.
08:57You are essentially, yeah.
08:59It's a lot to carry when you do get to scene, but again, it's also crucial.
09:05The air ambulances pride themselves on getting out in less than five minutes.
09:10And I'm about to see this in action.
09:14While the paramedics take the details of the incoming emergency, the pilot, Pete, heads off to prepare the helicopter for take-off.
09:22OK, I'll get the bag if you're happy to get the iPads, Susie.
09:27The pilot's gone out.
09:28The paramedics are here now.
09:29They're getting their gear together.
09:31Things are moving fairly quickly.
09:38Well, there you go.
09:39Just like in real life, from call-out to ready-to-take-off
09:42in well under five minutes.
09:49It's that kind of speed that was vital when Keir and the air ambulance team flew to help Debbie Dufus,
09:55a farmer from Tommantool who was seriously injured in 2023.
09:59She was attacked by a mother cow who charged at her when she tried to help a newborn calf that was having difficulty breathing.
10:09And I was like, hmm, I don't think I can watch this much longer because the calf was really starting to gasp for breath.
10:17So I'll just move in slowly.
10:19And as I bent down, she was having none of it.
10:22And she just put her head down and she just got me right in the stomach.
10:27She actually threw me like a rugby ball.
10:30And then she jumped over me, turned and then came back and trampled me en route to get back to her calves.
10:38Debbie didn't know it at the time, but the incident had punctured a main artery, leaving her with heavy internal bleeding, as well as crushed ribs, a burst spleen and a punctured lung.
10:49The speed with which Keir and the team got Debbie to hospital saved her life.
10:55And today, she's come to the station to share her experience and catch up with Keir.
11:01Hello. Hi, Debbie.
11:02One of the paramedics who treated her on that fateful day.
11:08During the flight, we were very, very worried about Debbie.
11:11She had an unrecordable blood pressure and her heart rate was going very, very fast.
11:15Her level of consciousness was also dropping as well.
11:17I remember feeling sick because you're just lying there and your life is literally in their hands.
11:25Before leaving scene, we had pre-alerted the major trauma centre to say, please make sure that you have blood hanging and ready for Debbie's arrival.
11:32Because we knew straight away that she would need that as soon as we arrived.
11:35I don't remember the helicopter landing, getting into the hospital.
11:41I only remember waking up in the trauma room with lots of people and voices.
11:45And hearing.
11:53Did I call her husband?
11:56I didn't think I was going to wake her up.
11:58It took two days of surgery to fix Debbie's multiple injuries.
12:10And having made a full recovery, she feels she owes her life to the quick response of the air ambulance.
12:16They truly melt my heart when I look at them.
12:21Because if it wasn't for them, I wouldn't have had time with our grand twins.
12:26I wouldn't have been at my son's wedding.
12:28And to be there was the most special day.
12:31Thank you to the pair of you for sitting down today and telling me what is an amazing story.
12:40And it's great to see you're in such great health, Debbie.
12:42And long may it continue. Thank you very much.
12:45And I do all my life to them.
12:52Great to see Debbie so well there, isn't it?
12:55Well, with me now is Ronnie and Joe Barker, who are farmers from Hertfordshire.
12:59And Ronnie, you've got your own dramatic rescue story, haven't you? Tell us about it.
13:03Yeah, I picked up a trailer back in November, three years ago.
13:08Went to adjust the brakes on it.
13:09I thought I'd tethered it correctly, but I hadn't.
13:12And it fell on top of me.
13:14It fell from a bit of a height.
13:17I degloved or dislocated my ankle, came away from my foot.
13:22It was left in my boot.
13:24Fractured three vertebrae in my back and dislocated my right hip.
13:27I thought she was able to pull myself out from underneath it,
13:29phoned Joe and said, I'm in trouble, I need an ambulance.
13:31And so what was the scene you arrived to, Joe?
13:34When I got there, all I could see was his foot in the boot
13:38and then his leg bones sticking out the bottom.
13:41So I just assumed that was it, sort of foot off, game over,
13:44and then updated.
13:46I was on the phone to the ambulance at the time
13:48and just kept updating them.
13:49Yeah, so this is the Essex and Hearts air ambulance.
13:52Yes, yes.
13:53So tell me what it was like when they turned up, what happened?
13:55When they turned up, they obviously do a full assessment
13:57of where you are.
13:59They thought they were going to have to probably remove my foot,
14:03but fortunately they made a decision to keep it intact.
14:06How much of a difference do you think it made
14:08having the air ambulance come to you?
14:10I would think probably it made the difference
14:12of probably keeping my foot possibly to not.
14:15That's incredible, isn't it?
14:16I think.
14:17And it's just having that knowledge, the expertise they have
14:20and the different that can carry blood, the different drugs they've got.
14:23It's just a little bit more than the ordinary paramedics have carrying.
14:28And since the accident, you've been doing your bit, haven't you, Joe,
14:30to try and raise money for air ambulance because it's a charity?
14:33Yes, it was when we went back to visit the centre
14:36and realised that they are totally dependent on fundraising to run.
14:40We put on a charity ball.
14:42Wow.
14:43And we raised £37,500 for Essex and Hearts.
14:46Wow.
14:47And that's purely, I think, the rural community coming together
14:50and being so generous.
14:52Well, I am so pleased you're OK and it turned out well.
14:55And thank you for coming on the programme to talk about it too.
14:57My pleasure.
15:00Still to come on Farm 999.
15:03We find out what happened to that criminal gang.
15:06who were costing farmers thousands of pounds by stealing their valuable GPS systems.
15:12By being able to spread it out across the region,
15:14they were chanting their luck that we wouldn't be able to piece it together.
15:18Fires cost farmers over £100 million a year
15:22and the effects of them can be devastating.
15:25And when it happened on the Tomlinson's farm,
15:28things were made even worse by the fact one of them
15:31had to watch it all unfold from their hospital bed.
15:36A barn fire is raging on Charnwood Farm.
15:48Within seconds, the whole barn was alight.
15:51While Blaze and his daughter work frantically to move the cattle away from the flames,
15:56his wife Deborah is in hospital watching the horror unfold on the farm's CCTV.
16:02I could see Blaze and Millie had run into the building.
16:06I hadn't seen them come out.
16:08And no-one knows how it started.
16:11We were pretty sure it had to be arson.
16:16We're a dairy farm.
16:18We milk about 250 cows.
16:20I work here.
16:21My daughter and my wife work on the farm with us.
16:23I remember the day quite vividly because it was the end of the summer, really,
16:28so we were just getting the barns filled with hay and straw.
16:32Two days before, I was rushed into hospital
16:35and had emergency operation on my bowels.
16:39So I wasn't feeling too great.
16:44I'd just fed these cows and the phone rang
16:46and it was Deborah ringing from hospital.
16:48So I turned the tractor off and I was chatting away to her.
16:52Then all of a sudden we could hear the cows making a lot of noise,
16:55a lot of mooing.
16:57We have security cameras around the farm.
17:00I said, oh, I'll switch to the cameras and see.
17:02He said, oh, I'm going to go and have a look.
17:04So put the phone down.
17:06I looked towards the barn
17:08and all the top of the haystack was on fire.
17:11Deborah looked on her phone
17:13and she could see the barn alight as well.
17:16I just saw my daughter and Millie running then back across the yard.
17:21I think it was just starting to smoke.
17:23I could see smoke coming over from the back of the bales and over the top
17:26and it was just happening so fast.
17:28Immediately I got on the phone to the fire brigade.
17:33While Blaise and Millie moved the cows,
17:35Deborah watched helpless on her phone.
17:38Just utter fear.
17:39You can feel your sort of heart pounding in your chest
17:42and what can I do?
17:44From previous experiences,
17:46you're wasting your time trying to go and put the fire out.
17:49The first thing was get the animals safe.
17:52So we're there trying to push them out.
17:54The heat is like right next to us.
17:57Black smoke as well just burning.
17:59I could see Blaise and Millie had run into the building.
18:03I hadn't seen them come out.
18:04Where are they?
18:05Have they got the cows out?
18:06Have they got themselves out?
18:10After ten minutes, the fire brigade arrived.
18:13Dean Pidcock was the station manager responsible
18:16for organising the fire crew's response.
18:19So when I arrived on scene, the roof had gone completely.
18:23The fire spread really quickly.
18:25There's lots of straw, lots of hay, very combustible fuel.
18:28When heat source is introduced, they're going to go up really easily.
18:32The heat was very intense.
18:34The cubicles here, the plastic cubicles,
18:36which were probably a good ten feet away from the burning here,
18:40they were just melting like candles.
18:43The cameras that I was watching, I could see cutting out.
18:47The vision that I had was gradually going,
18:51and I was thinking at that point,
18:52how far is this fire going to spread?
18:55It was quite clear that the barn involved in fire
19:01was a lost cause.
19:03We carried out what we call a controlled burn,
19:05allowing all the straw and hay that's already involved in fire
19:08and no longer fit to be used to burn freely.
19:12And we employed our water carrier,
19:15which supplies 18,000 tonnes of water,
19:17in addition to what we've got on the fire appliances.
19:20Luckily, there was enough water for us
19:22to be able to extinguish this fire and control it.
19:24The sheer amount of forage and straw and hay that was in the barn,
19:32it kept smouldering and smouldering.
19:35This particular fire was in attendance
19:37from the local fire and rescue service
19:39for about five days plus.
19:41The fire was only a small part of it.
19:44The hassle begins afterwards.
19:46By the time they've finished,
19:48towards a quarter of a million pounds,
19:50the total cost of the fire.
19:52It took five months to repair the damage
19:55and questions remain about how exactly the fire started.
20:00I can tell you that in the back right behind me
20:02was where the fire started.
20:04How it started, I can't tell you because we don't know.
20:07We were pretty sure it had to be arson.
20:13It went up so fast that you can't believe it.
20:17It just happened naturally.
20:19Three days previous to that,
20:21a contractor stacking straw in the barn,
20:23putting the last bit of straw in the barn,
20:25and out of the corner of the eye,
20:27he saw somebody leant on that post watching him.
20:30And then he turned around and they'd gone.
20:33And two days later, the barn went up in smoke.
20:39I think it worries Dad and Mum that it's going to happen again.
20:42I think it's been a lot of stress on them,
20:44waking up through the night
20:45to check that something's not happened
20:46or somebody's not about.
20:48It's just a constant reminder really.
20:51Well, what an ordeal for the Tomlinsons,
20:57but thankfully nobody was hurt.
21:00And with me now is Lauren Finlay,
21:03who is from NFU Mutual Northern Ireland.
21:05Thanks for coming in for a chat
21:06because fires on farms,
21:08they're such a big problem, aren't they?
21:10They are a really big problem, Steph.
21:12And our latest figures show that
21:14110 million was attributed to farm fires.
21:17And that was really probably just the buildings.
21:18We would look at agricultural vehicles
21:20agricultural vehicle figures differently.
21:22And that would have attributed
21:23to maybe just under 40 million.
21:25Yeah, so that is a lot of money going towards
21:27sorting out fires that have happened.
21:29The thing with these fires is
21:31you've got the financial impact,
21:32but you've also got, I guess,
21:34the worry and stress for the farmers too.
21:36There is a lot of worry associated with it.
21:39You always have to remember
21:40that this isn't just a workplace.
21:42It's also generally the farm family's home
21:44and the effort and love and passion
21:46that they put into building that.
21:48And that just can be wiped out in a second.
21:50So it is a very, very stressful time.
21:52I think arson sometimes is very emotive
21:54because the farmer feels
21:55that they have been victimised in that.
21:57And there's also then the impact
21:58of getting the farm back up and going again.
22:00And it's difficult sometimes to get workmen
22:02to be able to do that.
22:03And also actually even sometimes
22:05just get the site cleared.
22:06Yes, because you can't just sort that out
22:08in a week, can you?
22:09No, whilst the insurance is there
22:11and potentially provides the financial income
22:13to support on that.
22:15It's the availability.
22:16It's the investigation potentially after it.
22:18And it's if you have a dairy herd potentially
22:20with certain bloodlines,
22:22how do you get that back up and going
22:23and getting them back to their milking capacity.
22:25But it's not kind of all just about the money.
22:27There definitely is the mental and psychological element
22:29to it as well.
22:30Yeah. What can farmers do to protect themselves then?
22:32If you think about a cleaning and maintenance regime
22:35around the farm or in the farm machinery
22:37can be one element of it.
22:39Electrical inspections as well
22:40and kind of keeping up that regime
22:42can be another element.
22:43And I think an important aspect is to ensure
22:45that you've got a farm evacuation plan
22:47to minimise the impact that may come out of a farm fire.
22:50Gosh, there's so much to think about, isn't there?
22:52Lauren, thank you for that.
22:53Really interesting stuff.
22:55We are now going to go back to the north of England
22:57where police are investigating a spate of equipment theft.
23:00They've identified the suspects.
23:02Now they're waiting for them to strike again.
23:15Cheshire Constabulary are leading an investigation
23:18into a gang who are stealing GPS units.
23:21It was almost like a military operation.
23:23They were well-planned, looking at maps
23:25and doing all their sort of recon.
23:26So we had to ensure that we were better than them
23:29to be able to get ahead of them
23:30and stop them doing what they were doing.
23:32The thefts are causing a real headache
23:35for farmers like Andrew Shaw.
23:38We couldn't go harvesting in the afternoon with the combine
23:40because the GPS system had been taken out.
23:43We were lifting potatoes that day
23:44and we couldn't lift potatoes.
23:46We got fined for not lifting potatoes that day
23:49because we were under contract.
23:53To have something that's standing still for three or four days
23:56was really harmful to the business
23:58on top of the financial aspect.
24:01Police began to coordinate efforts
24:03but soon realised that thefts were being carried out
24:06by an international organised crime group.
24:09Part of how this organised crime team operates
24:12was that they would go out
24:14and they would hit a number of farms on one evening.
24:16Now, that might have been one in Cheshire,
24:18one in Merseyside, one in Humberside for instance.
24:21And they were kind of relying on the fact
24:23that we'd all come in in the morning
24:24and we'd see one specific crime for us.
24:26So by being able to spread it out across the region
24:28they were chancing their luck
24:29that we wouldn't be able to piece it together.
24:31However, they were incredibly wrong
24:33because this is exactly how we were working together
24:35to make sure that we were getting that result.
24:38They've just found out from Border Police
24:40that the gang are back in the country.
24:43We knew we only had a very short window
24:45of perhaps just seven days.
24:47They had flights booked, the pressure was on.
24:49We were searching for them across the country
24:51and everyone was pulling out all the stops
24:54to make sure that we got them.
24:56We had markers placed on their vehicles
24:58and that meant that if they were to go for a traffic camera
25:00it would ping up on our systems
25:01and we'd be able to deploy patrols
25:03to wherever they were to intercept them.
25:06One of those markers did ping up
25:08and Lancashire Police were able to intercept them
25:10on the motorway network.
25:14One of the cars we'd identified
25:16had been intercepted by Lancashire Police
25:18with our two suspects in there.
25:19Now, in that vehicle were electric scooters
25:22which we knew were perhaps being used
25:24in their kind of operation as it were.
25:26They also had tools in there for cutting wires
25:28and for taking some of these domes off tractors
25:30and it was fantastic.
25:31For us, that's the kind of evidence we want.
25:33However, it was missing one thing
25:35and that was the GPS units.
25:36They weren't with them.
25:38The team had hoped to catch the suspects in the act.
25:41That didn't happen, but as they went through the evidence
25:44they knew this was the gang they were after.
25:48Here we're looking at the toolkit that was seized
25:50from the suspect vehicle.
25:52Our forensics team believed that they could match
25:54the cut marks from where the GPS unit had been cut away
25:57from the tractor with the pliers that were found
26:00in the suspect's vehicle.
26:02And when they began analysing the suspects' mobile phones,
26:06they knew they'd hit the jackpot.
26:08We had essentially a shopping list on the phones that described
26:13the items they'd taken them with.
26:15And it's a fascinating insight to just how prolific
26:17this organised crime group were.
26:19There's about 80 different units listed on there.
26:21But it was interesting to see that they'd put the price
26:23of how much they would get per unit.
26:26Now, some of them are down there for like 700 euros
26:28and we know that they would range from up to like 15,000,
26:3120,000 per unit to replace.
26:33We'd also found this imagery from the mapping as well
26:36of farms that had been targeted
26:38and that cross-reference with some GPS coordinates
26:40that we were also finding on the phones too.
26:42So all in all, this pattern, this jigsaw was coming together.
26:47This really was like a eureka moment for the team.
26:49The evidence was really strong now.
26:51It was putting them at the right places.
26:53It was showing what they were involved in.
26:55There's no way they could argue that they were innocent.
26:59Faced with such detailed evidence against them,
27:01both suspects pleaded guilty and were convicted.
27:05They are awaiting sentencing.
27:07Once we've got these guys in custody,
27:09we saw GPS thefts from tractors drop off completely.
27:13It is absolutely fair to say that this is the biggest
27:16and most complex sort of GPS investigation
27:18that's happened in the UK.
27:20Ultimately, you joined the police to put bad guys in prison
27:22and that's what we were able to do on this occasion.
27:25It's a great outcome for farmers like Andrew
27:28who suffer way more than just the financial cost of these crimes.
27:34There's the personal side as well.
27:35You're thinking, well, hang on a minute.
27:36You know, someone's staked out where everything was
27:39because they were very clever.
27:40They never got within proper view of any of our security cameras.
27:46Times are tough. Everything's hard.
27:48Hopefully, it's a warning to them saying,
27:51you might get to take it, but you will get caught,
27:53so it might make them think.
28:00Well, that was a great result for the police there
28:02and, of course, for farmers like Andrew.
28:05Good reminder to keep your valuable kits safe too.
28:08Well, that's it from us on Farm 999.
28:11We'll see you next time.
28:12But if you can't wait, then head to BBC iPlayer.
28:15We'll see you next time.
28:16We'll see you next time.
28:17Bye.
28:45Bye.
28:46Bye.
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