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Highland Cops - Season 3 Episode 5 -
Fugitive in the Woods

Category

😹
Fun
Transcript
00:00...is Britain's biggest beat.
00:03I'm injured. There's a car on fire.
00:06I've got three wounded persons.
00:08It is really easy to underestimate the Highlands.
00:12Patrolling 12,000 square miles of mountains, lochs and islands.
00:18We're going to need a launch to be able to go out and get this boy lifted.
00:22And searching for suspects deep in the wilderness.
00:25Please do the dog. Anyone hiding? Show yourself.
00:27The Highland cops must go above and beyond to protect their communities.
00:33We realised it was human remains, so we came back down and phoned the police.
00:37I think in the Highlands, the blue line is very thin.
00:40Tackling traditional rural crimes.
00:42It's absolutely related to a shotgun pellet.
00:45It's clear evidence that these birds are being persecuted.
00:49And crimes that plague the nation.
00:51Get out! Get out! Get out! Get out! Get out!
00:53Oh, good effort.
00:55Bags of a white crystalline powder.
00:57If you're getting one person off the street, then it's like you've done your job.
01:02This series goes inside the UK's most distinctive police force.
01:07We are close. We live in close-knit communities.
01:09All right, let's go.
01:10We look out for each other.
01:12To find out what it takes to walk the beach.
01:15There's monkeys, there's parrots.
01:17It's all completely out of our comfort zone.
01:19And keep the peace.
01:21You're just threatening to kill it.
01:22You said you were going to strangle it.
01:24In some of the most beautiful and wild places in the UK.
01:28The A9, the main road that connects the Highlands to the rest of Scotland.
01:51For the people who live here, it's a vital artery.
01:56But it also has a darker claim to fame.
01:59The A9 is a dangerous road.
02:07But it is the main route to the north of Scotland.
02:10So we've got everything from the HGVs and the lorries traveling with all the goods up to the shops and the towns.
02:15To a huge volume of tourist traffic as well.
02:23It's so sunny.
02:25I know.
02:26Half eight at night.
02:27You would think it's like one o'clock in the afternoon.
02:30How bright it is.
02:32Tonight, PCs Jamie Embry and Ross Nairn are on patrol near Aviemore.
02:39Go ahead.
02:41When a report comes in of an accident on the A9.
02:45Could you start making me get a response to the A9 car bridge?
02:50Call us against the A9.
02:52It'll be involved in RTC.
02:53Lots of screaming heard.
02:55Yeah, control from 4-1-0.
02:57As the night shift in, we'll start making our way.
02:59But we're quite a distance away.
03:02Yes, 2-1-0.
03:03Let's make it round.
03:06So it's plotting this side of the car bridge junction.
03:11Female is heard screaming and a male is grunting.
03:15Tourist, we'll dig.
03:22As the officers make their way to the scene, they receive updates.
03:27November 569.
03:29They've received ambulance saying the helicopter is en route,
03:32landing 15 to 20 minutes.
03:34They'll need road closed.
03:36Reports coming in suggest this is a head-on collision between two vehicles.
03:44When we hear of a head-on collision on the A9,
03:48a vehicle travelling at 60 miles an hour northbound,
03:50a vehicle travelling 60 miles an hour potentially southbound,
03:53you know, meeting together,
03:55you know, you're talking about 120 mile an hour impact.
03:57That generally means that we're going to be driving into carnage.
04:12Don't match up.
04:13When we arrived on the scene,
04:33there was bodywork of both vehicles strewn across the road.
04:37The pickup truck was still on the road.
04:40The minivan was wedged on top of the barrier.
04:53There are three people trapped inside this minivan,
04:57all from one family.
04:58The moment the fire brigade have stabilised the vehicle,
05:04it's kind of perched on quite a steep embankment
05:06that drops down quite a distance.
05:08So they've winched up a cable to make sure
05:10that that vehicle doesn't go any further
05:12off the barrier and down into the embankment.
05:16As the fire brigade make the vehicle safe
05:19and the paramedics tend to the family inside,
05:22Jamie and Ross need to start gathering evidence immediately.
05:26We don't know the reason why these vehicles have crashed
05:30and we have to establish that,
05:31we have to investigate that.
05:34So, you's all witnessed it, yeah?
05:36Yeah, yeah.
05:37Right, let me grab names and details.
05:39Particularly if it's a serious one
05:41where there's going to be injuries,
05:42potentially life-threatening injuries.
05:44Or did you get straight?
05:45You got straight out 4909 and Ross.
05:47Yeah.
05:48Yeah.
05:49Just vaguely moved into the next lane
05:51and there was no braking before impact.
05:53You can stay here, make sure you're on the pavement though
05:55and just don't go sort of past the back of this fire engine,
05:59okay, just so you don't see anything, all right?
06:02This is one of the worst crashes on the A9 this year
06:06and there is devastating news about the mother of the family
06:10who was a passenger in the minivan.
06:13So, it's a fatal.
06:15One female's passed away, unfortunately.
06:18It's been confirmed,
06:19so she's been confirmed life-extinctous now, so...
06:23The woman's husband and adult children
06:29are still being treated by paramedics.
06:34The other driver of the pickup truck,
06:36who is the sole occupant of the vehicle,
06:38is being rushed off to Rigmore Hospital in Inverness,
06:41but there are quite a few people in that other vehicle
06:43where the female is now deceased.
06:46I know that they were working on somebody else there as well.
06:48The police see, you know, on a daily basis
06:53things that people wouldn't believe.
06:56We deal with horrific injuries and horrific incidents,
06:59which does take its toll.
07:04I get great support from my wife at home,
07:06so if I ever need to talk about something,
07:09you know, she's there for me.
07:11You know, we obviously are sympathetic
07:13towards the rest of the family who were in that vehicle,
07:16but we still have to maintain our composure
07:19and try and get on with the job
07:20and figure out what exactly went wrong
07:22for their benefit as well,
07:24just to make sure that they understand
07:25why they've suddenly lost their mother.
07:29Sorry.
07:30Disease confirmed three life-threatening.
07:32Two.
07:32Two life-threatening, one deceased.
07:34One deceased, two life-threatening at the moment.
07:35Right.
07:36One eyewitness did have a clear view.
07:44He was driving immediately behind the minivan.
07:47One minute was fine,
07:48next minute it just veered over to the right
07:50and sadly impacted into the oncoming vehicle,
07:55so it was a pretty nasty head-on.
07:57I just told the boys to contact emergency services
08:00and then I just approached the first vehicle.
08:02There was no braking before impact.
08:06There was nothing to suggest
08:07there was any animals across the road
08:09or anything like that, so, yeah.
08:12But there's still a lot of work to do
08:14to find out the exact cause of this crash.
08:19Specialist collision investigators
08:21have just arrived on scene.
08:23They will work through the night
08:25in search of answers.
08:26Glencoe and Fort William
08:44are among the busiest tourist destinations in Scotland.
08:48But even with thousands of people passing through
08:51in the surrounding vast wilderness,
08:54it's all too easy to disappear
08:56and perfect for somewhere to hide.
09:03This evening, Glencoe cop Stephen Cooper
09:07and Roddy Sanderman
09:08are travelling north to Fort William
09:10to meet up with some colleagues.
09:13Together, they plan to search for someone dangerous
09:16who doesn't want to be found.
09:19Later on, we'll be attempting to try and apprehend
09:22a male who's a high-priority wanted person
09:25for us at the moment.
09:26But there's a number of things he's been accused of,
09:28one of them being a knife-point robbery,
09:30so he's quite a sort of dangerous individual.
09:32But a lot of road traffic offences as well
09:34in the course of his trying to escape.
09:36This male has evaded capture on a number of occasions.
09:43I was searching and came within a few feet of him.
09:46He exploded out from underneath a load of bushes
09:48in front of me and gave me the fright of my life,
09:50if I'm honest, because I wasn't quite sure
09:53what was going on.
09:53And he ran off, came close,
09:55but no luck, unfortunately.
09:59There's a dog unit starting at Inverness at 9 o'clock
10:02that will come straight down to Fort William to help us.
10:05I mean, he's never going to outrun a dog,
10:06so hopefully that will be the thing
10:08that changes the game for us and captures him this time.
10:19Stephen and Rory are part of a seven-strong team
10:23being deployed tonight
10:24to try to capture this 31-year-old fugitive
10:27who has been on the run for around a year.
10:31They've had a tip-off.
10:33He might be hiding in a tent in the woods
10:35near Loch Eilot, about 30 miles west of Fort William.
10:40He's in those woods.
10:44That's the lay-by there.
10:47So not too far from the road.
10:49OK.
10:50And Mark goes along.
10:52We give a very brief update on, you know,
10:54because if we can see the tent or something.
10:55The intel also suggests when the man will be in his tent.
11:01So we received some intelligence
11:03that the male's working on a fishing boat
11:06and the fishing boat's dropping him off nearby
11:09and he's staying overnight
11:10and then getting on the fishing boat
11:11early the next morning.
11:13And we have sort of times for when he's likely to be at the tent.
11:16So that's where we're going to go and find him.
11:21Or try to, anyway.
11:22That means they will need to go into the woods after dark.
11:27Tonight, the team is led by Sergeant Emma Mackay.
11:31He does run.
11:32I would rather us were all there, ready and waiting.
11:35So he will like it.
11:37That's been two or three times now he's run away from the police.
11:40I can provide bulk, just not speed.
11:45Also joining the team are dog handler Adam
11:48and his German shepherd, Wolf.
11:51If he does run, then just stand still, just stop
11:55and we'll get the dog with him.
11:57He is going to be quite dangerous.
12:01There's certainly intelligence about him carrying weapons
12:03and knives specifically.
12:06And given he's wanted for a knife point robbery as well,
12:08that kind of tends to ring true.
12:12Positive that we're going to get him, is what I would say.
12:14Enough resources and some good intel.
12:17So hopefully the game's stacked in our favour.
12:20OK, let's go.
12:23I think when someone's evaded cabochin for so long,
12:25you've got that bit between the teeth, I suppose, if you like.
12:29It's just like with any wanted person.
12:31We want to get them.
12:32They're wanted for a reason.
12:35Primary job of the police, isn't it?
12:36To catch the bad guy.
12:37You've got a lot of these in the shows, like bad ones like that?
12:51Yeah, all the time.
12:53A-9's a nightmare.
12:54I was in a nightmare.
12:57Investigations are underway into a fatal two-car collision on the A-9.
13:03Police have spoken to eyewitnesses.
13:05Now, they must secure physical evidence.
13:12I've turned away the cars that are there.
13:14Every other car has pretty much turned round anyway.
13:17There's one possible vehicle that has dash cam.
13:23He can't access it just now, but he's going to try.
13:26Have you got details of...?
13:27I've got details of them.
13:28But before dash cam can be examined, it is vital that specialist crash investigators are able to examine the scene in detail.
13:38Once all the emergency crews pack up their gear and leave, the road policing units that are here, they'll be taking numerous photos, videos, markings, just to establish exactly what's happened.
13:50Leading the team is Sergeant Callum McAuley.
13:55Our people from the police are usually first at these scenes are our divisional colleagues.
14:00They'll attend initially, and we'll come and take things over from there.
14:03We deal with the collision to its end point.
14:14The best opportunity that we have to go and recover evidence from what's happened at the scene is just now.
14:21I'll give that to you, sir.
14:23The first task tonight is to build a technical picture of the scene before the road is cleared.
14:31The road is closed for such a long period of time because once we open that road, all the evidence is impacted then.
14:39We'll do the grind marks, and then we'll do that vehicle.
14:42Mm-hmm.
14:43All right?
14:43Yeah.
14:44All good.
14:45Collision investigators form a conclusion about what's happened, purely worked out from the physical facts taken from the vehicles, taken from marks left on the road, what they've found through the detailed examination.
15:00They're carrying out a scan of the scene, which will be used as part of a report that will be put to the Procurator Fiscal.
15:07Investigators will also piece together a picture of those involved in the crash to see if any personal factors could have contributed to the collision.
15:17We have inquiry officers who will go and speak with families, witnesses, and the people who've been involved in the crash.
15:24One of the investigators, Ben, finds some documents in the minivan.
15:30Yeah, this is the agreement, Sarge.
15:32The minivan is a hire vehicle, picked up earlier that day.
15:35Confirmed home address in the United States.
15:38There's contact numbers on here as well.
15:41The fact that the driver of the minivan is not from the UK could be significant.
15:47Travelling here, for people who've never been to Scotland before, can be confusion, because we drive on the left.
15:54So confusion could be something that we would consider, something that we'll look at.
16:00Fatigue contributes to nearly one-fifth of Scotland's road traffic deaths.
16:04So police are looking for signs of brake marks on the road.
16:08If there aren't any, that may suggest the driver has fallen asleep at the wheel.
16:14We keep an open mind and we try to get to the bottom of what it is that's happened.
16:18But something that we will consider is, was tiredness a factor?
16:22Was a medical condition a factor?
16:24The next step will be to take the remains of each vehicle to a garage and examine them piece by piece.
16:31It's an exhaustive process.
16:34The majority of the work that we do around these crashes is done in the weeks afterwards.
16:41Once all this information has been gathered, the guys here will take it back and they will scrutinise it and analyse it.
16:52We're trying to support the families and make sure they have what they need to get them the answers for what's happened to why their loved one's no longer with us.
17:05It's nearly midnight in Fort William.
17:22In the darkness on the edge of town, police are on the trail of a wanted man.
17:27At the moment there's seven of us and a dog heading out here.
17:31Two of us are in sort of all black clothing.
17:34The hope is that they can sort of sneak in and get eyes on the campsite and see if he's there.
17:38And then we can all come in and back up along with the dog unit.
17:42It's only intelligence we've got at the moment that he's at this campsite.
17:45He's never actually been seen there by police officers.
17:47Our roads policing colleagues have been out and have seen the tents in position.
17:51So there clearly is somebody living there.
17:54It's just whether he's going to be there tonight.
17:57So we'll go along and see what we can see from the car.
18:03As soon as we can see anything, we'll just get everyone along and we'll just rush them, I think.
18:07Ready. Let's go.
18:10Emma and Roddy will take the lead.
18:13As soon as they give the signal, the rest of the team will go in.
18:21In gear, foot on the brake, ready to go.
18:23I think we'd all be lying if we didn't say we'd get an adrenaline rush out of something like this.
18:29It's going to be a不ess.
18:39It's going to come through nearby.
18:42It's coming up.
18:45Here we go.
18:47We're there.
18:47We're there.
18:49Here we go.
18:50Hi.
18:50Hi.
18:50Hi.
18:51Hi.
18:51Hi.
18:52Hi.
18:53Hi.
18:53Hi.
18:54Hi.
18:55Hi.
18:56Hi.
18:56Hi.
18:56Hi.
18:56Hi.
18:57Hi.
18:57I don't think it's this way.
19:14I think it'll be that worn path.
19:19In the dark, in this dense undergrowth, there are no clear lines of sight.
19:25Please find a door.
19:27And no signs of anyone running or hiding.
19:32The police are struggling to find anything that might point them towards a fugitive.
19:42But then, deep in the woods, they find something.
19:52Watch, barbed wire.
19:53So we've found the campsite.
19:58We're just trying to figure out if he's been here or not.
20:01Or if he's in the area.
20:03So, we're not sure at the moment.
20:05The search dog, Wolf, is drawing a blank.
20:15Nothing at all.
20:16I took him down that way to see, but there's no back out of here.
20:22I think there's one way and one way out.
20:24Pretty dense down that way.
20:26Well, I don't think he's here.
20:28I don't think we scared him off.
20:31There's no noise in the woods.
20:33Huh?
20:34No noise whatsoever.
20:35Nah.
20:35There's clothing.
20:38There's empty alcohol bottles and cans and some empty food tins and things like that.
20:45So, it's quite likely that that's where he's been.
20:49For quite a while.
20:50Who knows how recently, but...
20:51Well, that's it.
20:52We just don't know, do we?
20:53Good effort, guys.
20:55Good effort.
20:55Just relax, you're all right.
20:58The bad man's not here.
21:00Although there's no one at home, there's enough to suggest that intel is correct on where the man has been hiding.
21:07That's his campsite, as described.
21:10Now they know his location, the police hope the net is finally closing on Fort William's most elusive resident.
21:18Just getting a grid reference of the tent in case you need to make further attempts,
21:21because I suppose part of the problem was we struggled to find the camp initially.
21:29But we did get there relatively quickly.
21:31I don't think we did disturb him.
21:33But, yeah, if we need to come back again, if we can get a precise grid reference,
21:38then hopefully that means we can just get straight there.
21:41And a few more of us know the way out of the woods now.
21:43So, yeah, hopefully we can try again.
21:51Looks like he tried to booby trap it almost to his barbed wire across the entrance to the campsite.
22:04Where his tent's pitched and the efforts he's gone to,
22:08certainly, which Ted suggests, he's not looking to be found any time soon.
22:13A bit of disappointment.
22:14We've not caught him, but satisfied that we did everything we could to catch him.
22:17There's a phrase that's overused to the max that they need to get lucky every day.
22:24We only need to get lucky once.
22:25I'm sure you've heard that a million times, but it's very true.
22:28You know, you know you'll get him eventually.
22:30It's very true.
22:41Case Ness.
22:43One of the most sparsely populated parts of the highlands.
22:47And one of its most beautiful.
22:49Sergeant Andy Mackay has been policing here for 15 years.
22:54It's a really nice place to live.
22:56There's lots of, like, really nice scenery.
22:58It's a small, kind of, close-knit community.
23:02You just get left, basically, to your own devices.
23:06We're kind of trusted up here to just get on with it.
23:09And it's only when things go completely pear-shaped that we would then get that input from further up.
23:14Today, Andy and his colleagues are looking for a white van, which has been reported stolen in Orkney.
23:24The police believe it may be in Wick, one of the biggest towns in Case Ness.
23:28We're going to go and see if we can find this stolen vehicle.
23:34The person that we suspected is a possibility for removing the vehicle is from a village just north of Wick.
23:44But they have associates in the town.
23:47So I'm just going to go past the area of town where they've sort of been known to frequent before and see if the vehicle is there.
23:58So we're looking for a white transit van with a bit of rust.
24:13So there's a white transit, but it's the wrong ridge.
24:19Stevie G has found the vehicle on the other side of town, so we'll just get there quickly, quickly.
24:49Apparently, the driver says the vehicle was given to him, but we've just not had a statement saying it was stolen.
24:58You know, the fact that they've got a stolen vehicle and they're saying that it's really theirs is a bit suspicious.
25:14Let's go see what we've got.
25:15Let's go see what we've got.
25:45It was bought by somebody else.
25:48How have you come to be driving the van?
25:50Because they've asked me to go out and say I could borrow the vehicle to drive things a wizard.
25:53Yeah.
25:54Like, I put bikes across here because I don't have a van on myself.
25:57Like, motorbikes?
25:58Yeah, two motorbikes.
25:59So I was delivering them to someone who bought them off here.
26:01Ah, OK.
26:03The man claims he has borrowed this van, not stolen it.
26:06A search of his clothing uncovers something suspicious.
26:12I've got no reason to lie.
26:13What is it?
26:15I'm asking you.
26:16If I knew I would tell you, I'm not being anything but compliant.
26:20I've got no reason to lie.
26:22So I was at the beach.
26:22It was a wet house or something.
26:24You were on the beach and you found a small white packet containing a substance and decided
26:28to pick it up.
26:28They were at Castletown.
26:29So they weren't just outside.
26:30It was an odd thing to pick up, no?
26:33I don't know what I pick up in my...
26:34I pick up bits of weird rocks, loads of bits of weird plastic, loads of bits of weird
26:38wood, like, sorry.
26:40What were you going to do with it?
26:41Nothing.
26:42I was like, what is it?
26:43Just a souvenir from Castletown Beach?
26:45I completely forgot to even put it in my pocket.
26:46Genuinely.
26:47We'll need to put it away for testing, OK?
26:49If it comes back in a controlled substance, you'll get reported.
26:52The man then tells the police there may be something else in the van.
26:56You said you think there might be something in the van.
26:58I didn't say I think there might be.
26:59There could be something in the van.
27:00My friends, they do what they do.
27:03They smoke weed.
27:03You said there might be cannabis in your backy pouch.
27:06Yeah.
27:07So would that be yours?
27:09What, my tobacco or my...
27:10But I can avoid the weed, the cannabis that's in the tobacco pouch.
27:13So whose cannabis is it that's in the backy?
27:15It would probably be mine, I assume.
27:18Probably be...
27:19It would be mine if there is any.
27:20It would be mine.
27:20OK, right.
27:22The police decide they now have enough grounds to search the van.
27:26Take it from there.
27:27More officers arrive on the scene.
27:30Sometimes with these things, you just find a little bit,
27:32and people are sort of like, oh, yeah, sorry, mate.
27:35I had it from the weekend or whatever,
27:37and kind of use it as a way to kind of subterfuge,
27:40to make the police go, oh, well, he's handed it over.
27:42That's fine.
27:43No need to worry.
27:44Like, here's a wee ticket.
27:46Slap on the wrist.
27:46Don't do that again.
27:47But that's absolutely our doorway to say, right, well, what's in your van?
27:52What's in your pockets?
27:53It may turn out that, who knows,
27:55maybe there's a toolbox in the back that's got more in it.
27:58In Nairn, the two vehicles involved in a fatal crash on the A-9
28:16are being examined by Police Scotland's
28:19Specialist Collision Investigation Unit.
28:22So we're taking photographs of relevant damage.
28:36Make sure that there's no, or as best we can,
28:38rule out any pre-collision defects on the vehicle.
28:41So checking all the joints and stuff,
28:43making sure everything's connected as it should be,
28:45albeit with crash damage, it can be hard to tell.
28:48The investigators are also looking for clues
29:05about the movements of both vehicles
29:08before and immediately after the collision.
29:11So this is the part of the prop shaft.
29:14This is the bit that's been disconnected.
29:16So it was dragging underneath the vehicle.
29:18And that's quite significant because
29:19we had two grind marks on the road
29:23that led back to the prop shaft,
29:25which shows its direction of travel after impact,
29:30back to its resulting position.
29:31So it gives us evidence of where the vehicles moved after collision.
29:34So that's quite significant for us.
29:37By matching parts of the car,
29:39like this prop shaft,
29:41to marks left on the road,
29:42the police can trace the movement of the vehicles
29:45before and after the collision.
29:48This will help pinpoint
29:50exactly where on the road
29:52the collision took place
29:53and could suggest
29:55one car had left its lane,
29:58causing the head-on crash.
30:01We tie it up to certain marks on the road
30:03and if you could place a vehicle in the road
30:05that can tell us where the collisions exactly happened
30:07and sometimes it can prove
30:09whether somebody's in the right
30:10or somebody's in the wrong.
30:13It's Sergeant Callum McCauley's job
30:16to put together a theory
30:17of what caused this crash.
30:20Collision investigators examine the vehicles in great detail,
30:23they examine the marks on the road in great detail
30:25and it's pieced together
30:27that the Volkswagen multivan was in...
30:32It was not travelling in its own lane
30:34at the time of the collision
30:34and that's...
30:36The responsibility of this collision
30:38rests with the driver of that vehicle.
30:40And there's one final, crucial piece of evidence.
30:44We have here dashcam footage of the collision.
30:48It gives us a really good opportunity
30:55for seeing what's happened.
31:00You can see that the van has crossed the middle of the road
31:02and collided with the oncoming vehicle.
31:06The van was being driven by an American tourist.
31:10When people visit Scotland,
31:12they tend to be trying to cover a lot of the country
31:16and the time that they're here.
31:18And that can sometimes lead to tiredness,
31:21there can be fatigue,
31:23it can be a case that they don't know
31:25or can get confused or disorientated
31:28about what side of the road they should be travelling on.
31:35The thing that we can prove in this collision
31:37is that the van's been on the wrong side of the road
31:39and the reason for that,
31:41it's almost immaterial.
31:42It's just that the van has been on the wrong side of the road
31:45and ultimately that's led to the death
31:47of a lady
31:48and the serious injury of her children
31:54and the driver of the oncoming vehicle.
31:56As things stand currently,
32:03the driver of the Volkswagen Multivan
32:08has been reported to the Procurator Fiscal
32:11for causing death by dangerous driving
32:13and also for causing serious injury
32:17and also for causing serious injury
32:17and dangerous driving as well.
32:20This driver has lost his wife
32:22and has seriously injured his adult children
32:25because of the way that he's driven the vehicle.
32:27The impact that that's going to have on him
32:30and on his family,
32:32that can't be changed.
32:39In Wick, police have stopped a man they believe
32:42is travelling in a stolen van.
32:44He has admitted there may be cannabis in the van
32:47which allows them to do a more thorough search.
32:52Right, let's open the back first.
32:55So he's been detained under Section 23
32:57for a search of the van.
32:58Don't go near the back door.
32:59There's two angry dogs in the back.
33:03The dogs kind of adds an extra layer to it.
33:06You have to think what we're going to do.
33:08There's a health and safety aspect to it as well.
33:09That dog's barking and appears to be aggressive.
33:11What happens if it bites me?
33:14If we were sort of close to Timberness,
33:16we'd probably ask for maybe the dog handler
33:18to come and help us.
33:22While the van is being searched,
33:24police test the man for drugs.
33:35I'm up positive for cocaine already.
33:37Waiting for the cannabis now.
33:38It takes eight minutes, but you're positive for coke.
33:40How?
33:41Yeah, because there's obviously cocaine in your system.
33:44Which is over the legal limit.
33:46Yeah, okay.
33:46The drive.
33:47Yeah, where it was.
33:49There's no way on banknotes or something like that.
33:51What the f***?
33:52Like, I'm...
33:53So please don't tell me
33:54you having cocaine in your system.
33:55Someone else's fault as well.
33:56No?
33:57No.
33:58No, I'm not saying that at all.
34:02You do a swipe.
34:04Sorry?
34:04You prove to me that you've not got cocaine in your system.
34:06Me?
34:07Yeah?
34:08I'd happily take a drug test right now.
34:09Do it.
34:10Let's see.
34:11I want to prove that these aren't f***ing tests.
34:14It's not how it works, though.
34:15We're here to test you.
34:16No.
34:16Okay?
34:18There was a certain aroma of something in the air
34:20when he was talking.
34:22It was just a pile of rubbish, to be honest.
34:24Like, we kind of all saw through it straight away.
34:27Positive for cannabis and cocaine.
34:28The man has now tested positive
34:32for two controlled substances,
34:34meaning he will be arrested.
34:36But the search of the van has just started
34:39and his troubles are just beginning.
34:42Bladed article.
34:44Where?
34:44It's more of a Stanley knife,
34:46but it's easy access.
34:47Where's the blade?
34:49It's just Stanley knife blades.
34:51Is that a locking one?
34:53It looks like it locks.
34:55The lock knife, it was within his reach,
34:58which means that he's therefore in possession of it
35:00and it's an offence to be in possession of a lock knife
35:03in a public place.
35:04If it had been stored in a toolbox
35:06in the back of the van,
35:09then that would be okay
35:10because, you know, people have legitimate reason
35:12to have lock knives and transport them about the place.
35:14This is the power for me so far that we've found.
35:17So we've got two pipes there,
35:19spoon for melting, sootting drugs on.
35:22And he's already been showing
35:24that he's got junked in his system already.
35:27Oh, another knife.
35:29And that was in the jacket pocket?
35:30That was jacket pocket wedged beside the passenger door.
35:36We'll put you in the van,
35:37we'll get you back to the office,
35:38we'll get you booked into custody,
35:39we'll get you your rights.
35:41We'll have to do the road traffic procedures
35:42because you're giving us a positive specimen
35:46at the roadside, okay?
35:48And then once we've done that, we'll interview you.
35:50Yeah, so I arrest you in terms of road traffic act 1988,
35:53so I arrest you for failing drug rights for cannabis and cocaine,
35:57so you're not obliged to say anything,
35:58but anything you do is to say you'll be noted
35:59and may be using evidence.
36:01Do you understand that?
36:02Yeah.
36:04Mind your head.
36:04With the man in custody,
36:18the police now need to negotiate with the dogs.
36:21Come on, there you go.
36:25It's all right.
36:27Have you got another treat?
36:28Yeah.
36:29It's all right, he's just terrified, that's all.
36:30He's not going for me, he's just a bit scared.
36:35There you go.
36:36There you go.
36:38Yeah, he likes the treat.
36:41With the dogs happy,
36:43officers can finally make a thorough search of the van.
36:46And although nothing else significant is found,
36:56there is already enough to charge this man
36:58with drugs and weapons offences.
37:01On the face of it,
37:02he doesn't appear to be the kind of Pablo Escobar of Orkney,
37:05but the fact that he has a little bit of cannabis on him,
37:09that's absolutely our gateway to make these further inquiries
37:12just to be doubly sure of what we're dealing with.
37:27North and west of Inverness,
37:29the landscape empties of people.
37:31The hills and mountains here
37:39are amongst the wildest
37:40and most remote parts of the United Kingdom.
37:46Usually, officers of the police mountain rescue team,
37:49like Katie Johnson,
37:51would expect to be sent here to rescue a walker
37:53or climber in distress.
37:56But today, they have a different and upsetting job to do.
38:02There has been a discovery of some human remains.
38:07It's really difficult to get to.
38:09So we're there to make sure everyone gets their stuff there safely
38:11and then recover the remains out of the area once we're done.
38:17You try not to jump to any conclusions
38:19of why they're there and who they are,
38:21but it definitely raises just a lot of questions in your mind
38:23about what's happened.
38:25The body is unidentified.
38:27It's in a remote location
38:29and the remains don't appear to be linked
38:31to any missing persons report.
38:33The task of the police
38:35is to help identify this individual
38:37and decide if they have been a victim of crime.
38:41So quite a lot of it is really unexplained.
38:45But what we do know is that
38:47the remains have been there for quite a long time.
38:48We have to treat it like there's potentially
38:53some suspicious circumstances
38:54until we rule it out.
38:56So we are going to preserve any evidence
38:58that has been left there.
39:02Police are managing this incident
39:04from a small station
39:05deep in the Western Highlands.
39:07Katie and her team
39:14are briefed on the body's discovery
39:16by crime scene manager Kevin Burn.
39:19About 1,500 hours on Wednesday,
39:21two local residents
39:22were walking their dog in the area
39:23when they became aware
39:24of what they appeared to be hiking boot
39:27and items of clothing scattered nearby.
39:30The thing felt like a bone inside the leg
39:32and it's been identified as a femur.
39:35It's possible the remains have been there
39:37for a long period of time,
39:39possibly over a year.
39:42It raises a lot of questions
39:43of why they were there
39:45and who they are.
39:47Yet you always expect
39:49if the remains of somebody is found
39:51there is information out there
39:53that someone's looking for them.
39:55So it is really unusual
39:57to have somebody found
39:59and not know any circumstances surrounding it.
40:02It's supposed to rain this afternoon
40:04so a good chance
40:05we're all getting soaked.
40:07I'll leave it to your discretion,
40:08Mountain Rescue guys,
40:09if you think the weather's closing in
40:10and when you go off the hill
40:11then let me know
40:12and we'll make that decision.
40:14Yeah, four o'clock I think
40:15the weather is really meant to change
40:17so it'll be good
40:18if we kind of get towards that time
40:21that we'll just take stock
40:22and see where we are with it.
40:23Any other issues?
40:25Okay, we'll go for it then.
40:27The biggest challenges today
40:35is the location.
40:36The terrain is very remote.
40:39It's boggy.
40:43We're very much open to the elements.
40:45We look to try and establish
40:47is there any criminality involved
40:49in the first instance.
40:50On the face of it
40:51it looks like it's maybe someone
40:53who's lost in the hillside
40:54but we have to keep an open mind.
40:59A team of forensic anthropologists
41:02will accompany Katie on the mountain
41:04which will be treated
41:05like any other crime scene.
41:08Once we get to the locusts
41:10and start the recovery of the remains
41:11it's a process that will take them
41:13as long as it takes.
41:15It's something that needs to be done
41:16methodical to make sure
41:17that they capture everything there
41:20that we need
41:21and it's something you can't always plan
41:23because you just don't know
41:23what you're going to find
41:24once you start moving things.
41:27Our first and foremost role
41:29is policing.
41:30So if it's not a sightseeing spot
41:32if it's not a well-known walking spot
41:34why have they taken themselves there?
41:36So it could be that
41:36they've gotten themselves
41:37in some sort of confusion
41:38if people are suffering
41:40from hypothermia
41:42they can do strange things
41:43that you wouldn't normally do
41:45and they could take themselves
41:46into that kind of area.
41:48Out here
41:52it's the end of the road
41:54the only way forward
41:56is on a specialist vehicle
41:58loaned by a local gamekeeper.
42:02I've been on one before
42:04and yeah they're sturdy
42:05but they are not comfy.
42:06See whose breakfast comes first.
42:10So the area itself
42:11it was pathless
42:12very difficult ground to walk in
42:15it was on a large estate
42:17that we had to access
42:19via 4x4 trucks
42:21and thereafter an Argo cat
42:23to assist us
42:23to get to the location.
42:25You can see a road
42:26but that's way off
42:28in the distance
42:29and there are no paths
42:30to get into the area
42:32that we were
42:32so it's not somewhere
42:34you would expect
42:35anyone to go walking
42:36especially someone
42:37with no equipment with them.
42:39Four hours after
42:50leaving Inverness
42:51Katie finally reaches
42:53the spot
42:53where the remains lie
42:55and her investigation
42:56can begin.
43:02Were you thinking
43:03that for the forward?
43:04Yeah that's where
43:04we've gone up
43:05and looked.
43:06They've come here
43:06they've not fallen
43:07after the fact
43:08pretty sure
43:09this is them
43:11there's what
43:11we're hoping
43:12there's maybe a hat
43:13with a lot of moss on it.
43:15If someone hadn't
43:16pointed out initially
43:17and you were walking
43:18at a little bit
43:18of a distance
43:19you wouldn't have
43:20even seen the remains there.
43:22The moss has grown over
43:24so it almost looks
43:25as if it's become
43:27part of the earth itself
43:29so it had been there
43:30for some length of time.
43:32If it had been
43:33another couple of years
43:34that it hadn't been
43:35discovered
43:35it might never have
43:36been discovered at all.
43:38At the moment
43:39I'd go white male.
43:40So what determined
43:41it was male?
43:42So at the back
43:42of male skulls
43:44there's a really
43:45big bumpy bit
43:46because males
43:47have heavier heads
43:48they have more muscles
43:49that go up
43:49back of the neck
43:50so the bone
43:51produces more bone
43:52because it needs
43:52a bigger surface area
43:53for that muscle
43:54to attach.
43:56It's a start
43:57but it's all
43:59the forensics team
43:59can conclude
44:00from these remains
44:02and the clothes nearby.
44:03as the weather closes in
44:07the team must leave
44:08the mountainside
44:09for the day.
44:12The body was in
44:13a difficult position
44:14so we have to
44:16get the remains
44:17out of that
44:18in a respectful way
44:20but also
44:20in a safe way
44:21that we are taking
44:22up hills
44:24and through an area
44:25with no paths
44:26and everything like that
44:26so our responsibilities
44:28are both to make sure
44:30that we're gathering
44:31everything respectfully
44:32but also
44:33the forensic opportunities
44:34are saved.
44:39It's bringing up
44:40more questions
44:41and answers
44:41at the moment.
44:43The kind of
44:44the choices
44:45for footwear
44:46and outerwear
44:47is not really
44:49what you generally
44:50see for hill walkers
44:52or anything like that
44:53and they had
44:54a fluorescent vest
44:56on again
44:56which is more
44:58for somebody
44:58that's by the roadway
44:59and in the dark
45:01so it doesn't
45:02kind of really
45:03fit in with that
45:04so again
45:04it just kind of
45:05it leaves us
45:06with more questions
45:07at the moment.
45:09The police will need
45:10to return to this
45:11hillside again
45:12to see if there are
45:13any more remains
45:14or clothing
45:15which could help
45:16solve the mystery
45:17of who this was
45:19and why he died
45:20out here.
45:21I think it's
45:22difficult to
45:23put into words
45:24how each
45:26sudden death
45:26feels to you.
45:28You feel
45:29a sense of sadness
45:30that this person
45:31has died alone
45:33in this remote area.
45:36It's difficult
45:37to not know
45:38who they are
45:39and not be able
45:40to provide
45:40a family
45:41with answers
45:42of where
45:43their loved one
45:44has come to rest.
45:49It's not something
45:50you want to leave
45:51unknown
45:52so we have to
45:54look at every avenue
45:55we can
45:55to try and identify
45:56this person.
46:10In Inverness
46:11PC's Dan Shield
46:13and Jimmy Sutherland
46:14are responding
46:15to a call
46:16from the post office.
46:17We've had a call
46:19from the mail
46:20sorting office
46:21to say
46:22that they've
46:23got a package
46:24that possibly
46:25contains cannabis
46:26and the smell
46:28of it
46:28is the
46:29tell-tale signs.
46:32We're just going
46:32to go down there
46:33and have a look
46:34and see
46:35if it is cannabis
46:36and take it back
46:37for testing.
46:39Drugs coming
46:39through the post
46:40is on the increase.
46:42It's easier
46:43to distance yourself
46:44when it's coming
46:45through the post
46:45because you're not
46:47in possession of them
46:48so it's a lot harder
46:50to find the person
46:51that's actually sent
46:52the items itself.
46:55Because the mail
46:56is becoming
46:56a more popular method
46:57of drug supply
46:59police across the UK
47:00are sending
47:01sniffer dogs
47:02to sorting offices
47:03on a regular basis.
47:05This morning
47:07a police dog
47:08got a whiff
47:09of two packages.
47:11So
47:12both of the items
47:14are here.
47:15It was the police dog
47:16that sniffed them out.
47:17In fact
47:17the police dog
47:18actually
47:18tore that one.
47:21It was so
47:22convinced
47:23there was something in it.
47:26The dog
47:26has identified
47:27one of the packages
47:28as containing
47:29some kind
47:31of controlled drug.
47:32We'll just get them
47:32opened up.
47:33We'll make sure
47:33that they do
47:34contain drugs
47:35and then we'll
47:35get the packages
47:36seized.
47:40Yeah,
47:40there's not really
47:41much of a smell
47:41to be honest.
47:43I don't think
47:43Is that the one
47:44the dog's done?
47:45And that's been
47:46torn open as well
47:47so I think
47:48if it wasn't
47:49for the dog
47:49I think
47:50it's a wee bit
47:51of a smell
47:52but
47:52I think it might be
47:54what we call
47:55cannabis edibles.
47:57I see.
47:57So it might be
47:58a kind of
48:01a liquid
48:02kind of form
48:03of cannabis.
48:05I'm not even
48:09going to open
48:10that here
48:10just in case.
48:12So
48:12I won't open
48:14that just now
48:15Ali
48:15just because
48:16I'm just seeing
48:17that there is
48:18quite a lot
48:18of powder
48:20etc.
48:20Obviously
48:20we don't know
48:21what that is
48:21I don't want
48:22to open it up
48:22in case
48:23it is anything
48:24of harmful nature
48:25or anything
48:25like that at all.
48:26so we'll just
48:28seize that
48:28and we will
48:30do our own
48:31testing on it
48:31back at the office
48:32just so that
48:33we're not opening
48:33it up obviously
48:34in here.
48:37Whilst the
48:38officers can't
48:38say yet
48:39what this
48:40first package
48:40is
48:41there's little
48:42doubt what's
48:43in the second
48:44package.
48:45Strong smell
48:46of cannabis
48:46coming from
48:47that one.
48:47Yeah that one
48:48was more
48:49straightforward.
48:51Cannabis
48:51is kind of
48:52a sort of
48:53sweet
48:54sickly
48:55sort of smell.
48:55Yeah they've
48:56obviously
48:56you can see
48:57they've wrapped
48:58it up a number
48:58of times
48:59in an effort
49:00to disguise it
49:00but they've
49:02not done it
49:02very well.
49:04Then
49:04an unexpected
49:06breakthrough.
49:07The gentleman
49:08who says
49:10this is for him
49:10is at the
49:11customer service
49:12point right now.
49:13Oh is he?
49:13Yeah.
49:14Oh that's handy.
49:14I was going to
49:15say that's never
49:15happened before.
49:17But he's
49:18coming to get
49:19this.
49:19Oh right.
49:20He's obviously
49:21wanting him in a hurry.
49:23Dan and Jimmy
49:24will give the
49:25bad news
49:25to the waiting
49:26man.
49:27Not perhaps
49:28the delivery
49:29he was expecting.
49:31So we've
49:32obviously been
49:32taken here
49:34or asked to
49:34come here
49:35because they
49:35have seized
49:36a package
49:36which strongly
49:37smells of
49:38cannabis.
49:39At this moment
49:39in time
49:39you're under
49:40caution that
49:41you're not obliged
49:41to say anything
49:42but anything
49:42you do say
49:42will be noted
49:43and may be
49:43using evidence.
49:43Do you understand
49:44that?
49:44Yeah.
49:44What have you
49:45got to say
49:46about that?
49:48No comment.
49:49No comment.
49:49Okay.
49:50No worries
49:50to talk.
49:51We'll see
49:51where we're
49:51going to go
49:52from here
49:52just now.
49:52Okay.
49:54We need to
49:55go back
49:55to the station
49:56we obviously
49:56need to
49:56test it
49:57just to
49:57obviously
49:58make sure
49:58that it
49:58does
49:59obviously
49:59contain
49:59a drug.
50:00You can't be
50:01ordering your
50:02controlled drugs
50:02through the post
50:03you're eligible
50:03for what we call
50:04a recorded
50:04police warning.
50:05It was beneficial
50:06just to give
50:07him the recorded
50:07police warning
50:08because it just
50:09gets the matter
50:09sort of dealt
50:10with.
50:10Accepting a
50:11recorded
50:11police warning
50:11isn't an
50:12admission of
50:12guilt.
50:13I said it's
50:13a warning
50:14for you
50:15if he was
50:17to re-offend
50:18or if he was
50:18to be found
50:19in possession
50:20of drugs
50:20again
50:21then he would
50:22not be eligible
50:22to then receive
50:23the recorded
50:23police warning
50:24again.
50:25The man
50:25is sent
50:26on his way
50:27without his
50:28post.
50:30Finding
50:31suspicious items
50:32in the post
50:32predominantly drugs
50:34happens about
50:35two or three
50:36times a week
50:36on average
50:37and this system
50:39we like to
50:40think proves
50:40highly effective
50:41we've both
50:42got a record
50:42of it happening
50:43so there is
50:45the proof
50:45that these
50:46items are
50:47being intercepted
50:49it is a
50:50banned substance
50:50it's a
50:51controlled substance
50:51so if it
50:53gets sent
50:53through the
50:54Royal Mail
50:55network and
50:56we intercept
50:56it then our
50:57job is to
50:57contact the
50:58police and
50:58that's what
50:58we do.
51:00That's one
51:01thing that I
51:01would love to
51:02change would
51:03be to have
51:03no drugs
51:04within Inverness
51:05I know
51:05that's probably
51:06an unrealistic
51:06goal
51:07however
51:08fighting the
51:09war against
51:09drugs
51:10crime
51:10that's
51:12ultimately
51:12what I
51:13joined the
51:13job for
51:13and that's
51:14what I
51:14will keep
51:15on doing
51:15and I
51:16will carry
51:16on doing.
51:17I think
51:18he would
51:18have seen
51:18the police
51:19van.
51:20I thought
51:20maybe that's
51:22for me.
51:23I thought
51:23oh yeah
51:24I'm ordering
51:24cannabis.
51:32In the
51:33mountains of
51:33the Northwest
51:34Highlands
51:35police still
51:36have to
51:36confirm the
51:37identity of
51:38the man
51:38whose remains
51:39were found
51:40on a remote
51:40hillside.
51:42Today Dan
51:43Sutherland who
51:44is part of
51:45the mountain
51:45rescue team
51:46is heading
51:47back to the
51:48location to
51:49continue the
51:49investigation.
51:51I don't know
51:51who they are
51:52but we're
51:53coming back
51:53today to
51:54undertake
51:55further
51:55searches
51:55to see if
51:56we can find
51:56further
51:57remains.
51:57So we've
51:57got victim
51:59recovery dogs
52:00with us
52:00today.
52:00They're
52:00trained in
52:01recovery and
52:03sniffing out
52:03of human
52:05remains so
52:06fingers crossed
52:08we can get
52:09some good
52:09results with
52:10them today.
52:11The remains
52:12couldn't provide
52:13enough DNA
52:14to help
52:14identification.
52:17Police hope
52:18Dan and the
52:18dogs unit
52:19might be able
52:20to find more
52:21remains for
52:21DNA testing
52:22or any
52:24clothing and
52:24effects that
52:25might have been
52:26missed in the
52:26original search.
52:27This is the
52:30first job I've
52:31come across
52:32where it's
52:32been really
52:33difficult to
52:34identify a
52:35body.
52:36The majority
52:37of bodies
52:37that we find
52:38tend to have
52:40some form of
52:40ID or there
52:42is an
52:42outstanding
52:43missing person
52:43where we've
52:44got a very
52:45good idea of
52:45potentially who
52:46they could
52:46be.
52:47But in this
52:48case it's a
52:48bit more
52:49difficult.
52:51We just
52:51don't know
52:52anything about
52:53him or the
52:54family and how
52:55he's come to
52:55be and how
52:56he's even got
52:56here.
52:59These boys
53:00are going to
53:00have to move
53:00it.
53:02First challenge
53:02of a day.
53:06Go on.
53:07Go on.
53:10Go.
53:18We always
53:19worry with
53:20young calves
53:21as well like
53:22cows and
53:22calves never
53:23great.
53:25That's it.
53:26Good girl.
53:33Where the
53:33body is
53:34located it's
53:34just quite a
53:35really remote
53:36section of
53:37land.
53:38Very little
53:38mobile phone
53:39signal if any.
53:40It's not a
53:41place where
53:42generally the
53:43public would be
53:44seen at all.
53:45So it was
53:45really quite
53:46surprising to
53:46find out that
53:47someone had
53:48been found
53:48there.
53:49Obviously we
53:50don't know how
53:50he died but
53:51it is sad that
53:53you can just
53:54lay down or
53:55fall down on
53:56the ground and
53:56they won't
53:57come across
53:57you for years
53:58and years.
54:05Dan will be
54:06accompanied by
54:07cadaver dogs
54:08Cooper and Gus
54:09and dog
54:10handlers Adam
54:11and Daniel.
54:14Good.
54:22So I think the
54:22body was here
54:23was it?
54:23Was the body
54:24just here by the
54:25locker was it?
54:26If there are more
54:27human remains on
54:28this hillside the
54:29hope is the dogs
54:30will find them.
54:32Today we've got two
54:33different dogs
54:33both trained to
54:34the same standard
54:34one's obviously a
54:36Cocker Spaniel
54:36he's nice and
54:37energetic he's
54:37ready to go
54:38and we've got a
54:39slightly younger
54:40Labrador.
54:41Both dogs are
54:41trained to indicate
54:42on decomposition
54:44by means of
54:45barking.
54:46Come!
54:47No come!
54:49Alright he's
54:49going to go back
54:49fine.
54:50Before long
54:51it looks like
54:52Cooper has found
54:53something.
54:56Cooper!
54:58Whether there's
54:59the scavenger
55:00that's a burrow
55:01and it's taken
55:02something.
55:03Is that quite
55:03the beat?
55:04Yeah.
55:06The dogs give
55:07an indication
55:08of this hole here
55:10so just see
55:12if anything's
55:13been taken down
55:14there by any
55:14animals.
55:16Body or bone
55:17or something.
55:18It looks like
55:21a burrow
55:21because there's
55:22obvious marks
55:23of burrowing
55:23further in
55:24some sort of
55:25small animal.
55:27Where the body
55:28was found
55:28obviously just
55:29behind it
55:30just over to
55:30our side here
55:31like so.
55:31Dogs
55:32indicated here.
55:34But the burrow
55:35is too narrow
55:36and deep
55:37for the officers
55:38to see anything
55:39themselves.
55:41Cooper's
55:41indicated at a
55:42sort of burrow
55:43relatively near
55:44to the recovery
55:44site.
55:45We just can't get
55:45to at the moment.
55:46It's impossible
55:47to say what it is
55:47but I suspect
55:48it's a bone
55:49and it's very
55:50specific and
55:51very close
55:51to the body
55:52site location
55:53which would
55:53indicate he's
55:54definitely right.
55:55The team
55:57search for the
55:57rest of the
55:58afternoon
55:58but the dogs
56:00don't find
56:00anything else.
56:02If there are
56:03more remains
56:03on this hillside
56:04it looks like
56:05they may be
56:06buried forever.
56:07I don't think it was
56:27completely unexpected.
56:29It's always going to be
56:29difficult but I was
56:31kind of hoping
56:32it would get
56:34at least a bone
56:35or two.
56:36Maybe that's just
56:37an indication
56:38of how long
56:38the body's been
56:39there.
56:42There will be
56:43no more
56:43searching on
56:44this hill
56:45but the
56:46investigation
56:47into this
56:47man's identity
56:48and clues
56:50about his fate
56:51will go on.
56:54They're going
56:54to have to
56:55start doing
56:56a lot more
56:56digging through
56:57historical records
56:58of missing people
56:59not just
57:01within Scotland
57:01but across
57:02all the UK
57:03forces
57:04and potentially
57:05international as
57:07well.
57:08Some people
57:09just don't get
57:09traced.
57:10They don't get
57:10found.
57:12When we are
57:13found like this
57:14then they don't
57:15necessarily all
57:16can be identified.
57:29people
57:43hear
57:43the
57:44things
57:45sound
57:45young
57:46specialists
57:47and
57:47from
57:48ïbe
57:49you
57:51until
57:55Next time, please deal with a crash on Skye's main road.
58:04We need to go with a casualty further away that way, please.
58:07Just in case the car explodes.
58:09In Inverness...
58:10Stop!
58:11Officers race to catch a fleeing suspect.
58:14Stop!
58:15And on the Isle of Skye...
58:17Hey, don't you help me!
58:19..a major drug operation is rumbled.
58:22I'm going around room to room,
58:23and there's cannabis plants everywhere.
58:53I'm going around room to room.
58:55Yeah, there's such a shame.
58:56There's nice things everywhere.
58:57There is a فر愉 movements in the wood,
58:59and there's no厨内海 in the street,
59:00every coastline does to our less 가격.
59:02There's no time I got enough meat in there from the Black anomaly.
59:05There's no time I can't imagine now that an sahal.
59:07It's a great amount of damage.
59:08The name of Iron.
59:09With Ironели and Le foul and Bad guys didn't show up
59:11The finally came to anыш.
59:13The The new world community of Sweden.
59:14That non-haInstated committees let narrator presence the same way of corn that was
59:17alone.
59:18It's what are going to come to you and vrai.
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