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00:00The Highlands and Islands of Scotland is Britain's biggest beat.
00:07I'm injured. There's a car on fire.
00:11I've got three wounded persons.
00:13It is really easy to underestimate the Highlands.
00:17Patrolling 12,000 square miles of mountains, lochs and islands.
00:22We're going to need a launch to be able to go out and get this boy lifted.
00:27And searching for suspects deep in the wilderness.
00:30Police are the dog. Anyone hiding? Show yourself.
00:32The Highland cops must go above and beyond to protect their communities.
00:38We realised it was human remains, so we came back down and phoned the police.
00:42I think in the Highlands, the blue line is very thin.
00:45Tackling traditional rural crimes.
00:47It's absolutely related with shotgun pellet.
00:50There's clear evidence that these birds are being persecuted.
00:53And crimes that plague the nation.
00:56Oh, good effort.
01:00Bags of a white crystalline powder.
01:02If you're getting one person off the street, then it's like you've done your job.
01:07This series goes inside the UK's most distinctive police force.
01:12We are close. We live in close-knit communities.
01:14All right, let's go.
01:15We look out for each other.
01:16To find out what it takes to walk the beach.
01:20There's monkeys, there's parrots.
01:22It's all completely a lot of our comfort zone.
01:25And keep the peace.
01:26You're just threatening to kill it.
01:27You said you were going to strangle it.
01:29In some of the most beautiful and wild places in the UK.
01:33Case Ness, a remote landscape exposed to the storms of the North Sea
01:52and the winds that whip in from the North Atlantic.
01:59We're the furthest north that you can get on mainland Britain.
02:02We would definitely classify ourselves as an island on the mainland.
02:06Sergeant Stephen Todd's base in Wyck is as close to Oslo as it is to London.
02:17His beat covers more than 600 square miles.
02:21It's a fairly big patch for minimal staff and being a sergeant and four cops sometimes.
02:27It's a huge area we've got to cover.
02:31We are very remote.
02:32We are left for our own devices in terms of we've just got to manage the risk ourselves
02:38nine times out of ten.
02:39And any additional resources that we need, you're looking at a couple of hours at least
02:43before we can get them to us.
02:47This is a place which attracts those hoping to escape from the world.
02:53And that can bring its own policing challenges.
02:57We'll have a quick brief here before we go.
03:00Today, Stephen and a specialist dog handling unit from Inverness are providing backup to
03:06the SSPCA on a potentially dangerous assignment.
03:10We'll do a soft approach first.
03:12If that doesn't work, then OSU.
03:14They're fully kitted up.
03:15They'll force entry if need be.
03:16An SSPCA officer was investigating allegations of neglect at a remote property when they were
03:23threatened with a dog.
03:26It's a SSPCA-led warrant.
03:28So it's just be mindful of your surroundings and don't take any unnecessary risks.
03:33They've got a warrant here, but I've got a copy of it as well.
03:35Now the SSPCA are returning with a warrant to seize the dog, along with dozens of other
03:42animals they suspect of being kept in bad conditions.
03:46We know at least one of the dogs is subject to a dog control notice, which basically means
03:50that a dog's potentially bitten someone previously.
03:53Well, we're going to be in full riot gear anyway.
03:56Right.
03:56That's just our level of protection, so we need to put that on.
03:58The dog handling team are carrying shields that can deliver an electric charge to an animal
04:04if it becomes aggressive.
04:06Best way to describe it is a taser in a shield form.
04:10We know there's potentially one aggressive dog there.
04:13We know there's six in total.
04:15I've got to treat all six dogs as being aggressive until I can prove otherwise.
04:19The dog they are most worried about is a German Shepherd crossed with a Belgian Malinois,
04:25a breed known for its strength and fierce bite.
04:29It is aggressive, so she said it probably will be likely to try and bite.
04:33We use them in the police.
04:35We know what their capabilities are of them.
04:39Yeah, go ahead.
04:40We're just getting in the motors now.
04:42But dogs are just one of Stephen's worries.
04:45He's been told to expect a menagerie of exotic animals.
04:49There's parrots, there's some monkeys there as well.
04:52So it's all completely well out of our comfort zone.
04:56What we need is doggy treats.
04:58I wonder if dog treats work on monkeys as well.
05:02I feel sad for the animals because they're not kept in a suitable condition for them.
05:06For example, monkeys should be out in the jungle somewhere
05:09rather than in cave nests, basically living in a shack.
05:13The woman they're about to visit lives in an isolated stretch of coast.
05:20She recently moved here from England.
05:23There's definitely that mentality that cave nests were so far away.
05:27Who's going to stop them type of thing?
05:28But I'll be brutally honest, if people are kind of wanting to hide in the shadows,
05:32they need to go to cities for that.
05:35If they're actually, by coming up to places that are rural, they stand out more.
05:38People think they come to the ends of the earth because they're going to kind of escape it all,
05:44whereas actually they flag pretty quick on our radars.
05:48I think that's her van, that's her van.
05:50The grey one?
05:51Yeah, so she's just down.
05:53So if we...
05:53You see it, that's her house there right in front of you.
05:55I've got a copy of the Warrens, so I'll come down with whoever, with Dave.
06:06Try and make a peaceful entry.
06:08But the dogs are in the back.
06:09See no roof in that chimney coming out?
06:10Yeah.
06:11That's where the dogs are.
06:13Cool.
06:13Will we head up?
06:17All right, so it's padlock shut as well.
06:20Stephen is prepared to confront an angry dog.
06:23Hi.
06:26Sorry we've got to meet under these circumstances.
06:28We're here assisting the SSPCA, but they have a warrant.
06:32But the owner is also prepared and is in no mood to let anyone in.
06:38You've come to kill my Belgian man, I'm not.
06:41Chilly, you're just going to kill him.
06:43Take him away and kill him.
06:43He's going to kill him.
06:44While some parts of the Highlands are isolated from the rest of the UK, in its only city,
06:58others are grappling with the worst aspects of modern crime.
07:01Today, DC Ashley Templeton will be involved in an operation targeting the city's illegal drug trade.
07:09There is a drugs problem in Inverness.
07:14The drugs will be brought to Inverness by organised crime groups who originate predominantly in England,
07:22whether it be London, Newcastle, Birmingham, any big city.
07:25It's nearly the end of Ashley's shift, but the police have just received a tip-off about a suspected dealer
07:33connected to one of these groups known as the Frankie Line.
07:38Intelligence says she's currently dealing from her home address
07:41and she's sitting on multi-ounce quantities of controlled drugs.
07:45There is a fairly recent intelligence on it as well for operating for county blinds.
07:51About six weeks ago, she was assessed to be working for the Frankie Line.
07:55They're a Birmingham-based organised crime group.
07:58They've been putting out synthetic heroin that's been responsible for a number of drugs deaths.
08:05Synthetic heroin is generally a lot stronger than traditional heroin.
08:11There was a spate of overdoses, and that was induced by a synthetic opiate
08:17that the Frankie group ended up using.
08:20So the plan is effect entry and just to contain the occupants of the address.
08:24Following that, we'll be looking to crave a search warrant.
08:30As the intel has just come in, the police have had no time to arrange a search warrant.
08:36But because the drugs believed to be sold at this house are so lethal,
08:39they decide to raid the property immediately
08:42and then wait for the search warrant to be granted.
08:47There is situations where we can enter a property by use of force without warrantry.
08:55On this occasion, it was due to information we had received
08:59that the Frankie group were selling heroin that contained synthetic opiates,
09:05and it is a huge public health concern.
09:11This is more of an ad hoc, on-the-job, kind of less planned approach.
09:16Organised crime groups and county lines groups are always looking to adapt their tactics
09:20to avoid being detected by police.
09:23These are the exciting ones.
09:24We have to be willing and open-minded enough to adapt our tactics as well within the law
09:31in order to detect crime and to protect people.
09:35This is just the ram we use to put the doors in, so the big red key, some people call it.
09:47With it being county lines related, it's likely to be crack cocaine and heroin.
09:54The quantities can vary quite a lot.
09:56On a good day, a few ounces of drugs would be nice,
09:59but there might not be as much as that.
10:01There could be more than that.
10:02We'll just wait and see.
10:03You do get the wee rush before you go in,
10:07especially when you get the responsibility of putting the door in.
10:19She's seen you.
10:20Open that door!
10:23Hit it. One hit, one hit.
10:26Police!
10:26Police!
10:26Police!
10:27Police!
10:28Don't, don't, don't!
10:30Don't, don't, don't!
10:31The dog's fine.
10:32The dog's fine.
10:34You's a, you's okay, just to give her a quick search.
10:38Can you stand up for me?
10:40Okay.
10:40As we were running in, she was like, she bent down and she was messing about with that table
10:44for something, I don't know what.
10:46Inside, they find two women who are taken into custody,
10:50leaving Ashley and his colleague to look after the dog, who seems friendly.
10:54But until they get a search warrant, the police can only look, not touch.
11:03There's signs of drugs misuse in the house and one of the females has got a quantity of cash in her pocket.
11:10Questions are raised as to why there's so much cash on her person.
11:13Um, like there's needles and there's scales and wrappings and all that kind of stuff.
11:20And there's one more telltale sign that the people who live here could be involved in supplying drugs.
11:26Well, that's a phone.
11:27That's been ringing constantly since we've been in the address.
11:30I don't know about you, but I'm not as popular as these people anyway, you know.
11:32Um, which again is another sign of drugs misuse, you know, they do all their dealings over the phone.
11:41So the fact that it's ringing pretty constantly is a sign for us.
11:46If the tip-off is correct, this unassuming house is at the centre of a lucrative trade in a deadly drug.
11:54This particular person is living in a lovely row of almost kind of retirement bungalows, elderly people on either side.
12:04They'll have people knocking on their doors all the time in the night, mistaking their house for this house.
12:10Uh, people banging on windows.
12:13And it'd be terrifying for anyone if like two, three in the morning someone's rattling your door or rattling your window.
12:19But, you know, you've got elderly people, vulnerable people in the street who are trying to live a quiet life.
12:25Back at headquarters, Ashley's colleagues are working on getting sign-off on the search warrant.
12:31Until then, he will need to wait.
12:34Car keys in hand, ready to go home for a nice sunny evening.
12:37And, uh, here we are, standing in the house for hours on end.
12:41This is me getting the text, when are you due home?
12:44Are you going to be home in time for dinner?
12:45No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
13:15Before the SSPCA can inspect the house, the dangerous dog inside needs to be safely removed.
13:23The Shepard Malmoor cross.
13:26Would it be amenable if you were to bring the dog out rather than us?
13:30You're killing him, aren't you?
13:30You're just going to kill him.
13:32You're going to sleep with me because it's going to be so traumatic.
13:34I'm not saying that's going to happen.
13:37It's just we can't do an assessment on a dog that's going to try and bite us all the time.
13:41They'll be going into one of our cages.
13:42It's a crate that they've got.
13:43I see him again and he died with strangers on the road.
13:48And without me to hold him, you'd have to shoot him.
13:51She was very clearly distraught.
13:53As far as she's concerned, those animals are her life.
13:58The woman reluctantly allows the police to approach her dogs.
14:01We're going to go for the dangerous one on her foot.
14:09As you can tell from the noise in the background, she's got no control over it whatsoever.
14:12The plan is to take any animals living inside.
14:32The only ones that are staying are the ones that can live outside, to which your pigs and your horses.
14:36Finally, the police can enter the house.
14:46I don't even know how to describe it.
14:50They find a menagerie of tropical animals, including marmoset monkeys and parrots, exposed to the caithness weather.
14:59Obviously, we're in the house now, exposed to the sky.
15:04All the rainwater and wind's going to be coming straight at the house.
15:07There's no door.
15:08She's living in this.
15:10For Stephen, the smell of animal faeces is overpowering.
15:15It's quite ammonia-like.
15:19You'd expect some dirt with animals, but certainly not this.
15:24It's just complete and utter state.
15:29I mean, you've got light fixtures above, like a falling down.
15:32You've got a roof that's caving in.
15:34I would say the house, in general, is probably the worst house I've ever been in.
15:40It didn't even have a roof.
15:41There's tiles missing on part of the roof where she was living out of.
15:44One wall is completely missing, completely exposed to the elements.
15:47Stephen is here to protect the animal's welfare, but as he explores the house further, he realises the welfare of the owner is also at risk.
16:02Well, see, in terms of any, like, additional support, is there anything that we can try and put in place for you to help?
16:07Well, we can't leave you when you're making comments like that.
16:13Yes, I'm going to leave you, because I will.
16:16We can't.
16:16There's nothing left for me.
16:17I'm concerned about you living here.
16:18You've not experienced a winter in Katniss.
16:21I've experienced a winter.
16:21I've lived in a stable for two and a half years with these dogs.
16:24It can't for minus ten.
16:26I've lived in a stable, minus ten.
16:28I've been in there for two and a half years.
16:30So, yeah, I can cope.
16:31Are you quite happy to live like that?
16:33Yes.
16:33I've got my dogs.
16:37We're not in the business of taking things away just because we can.
16:40We have to weigh it up with the pros and cons, and ultimately, we've got to look after the welfare of the animals.
16:47Her attitude towards the dogs, she clearly loves them.
16:51She clearly cares for them.
16:52She's just physically incapable of looking after them.
16:57Who's my dog?
16:59I say, you know you're acting in the dog's best interest and whatnot, or the animal's best interest, but, as you say, it's a family.
17:07It's heartbreaking, really, our life and soul.
17:12Terrible watching it, isn't it?
17:14This is the crap out of our job.
17:15The animals will be checked by vets before being rehomed or sent to specialist sanctuaries.
17:27Only three horses and two pigs will remain in the woman's care.
17:30The SSPCA were right to get that warrant.
17:35The animals needed to come away with them.
17:37The actions we took were legal and ethical.
17:41The animals can go off to, you know, other homes, habitats, you know.
17:46That wasn't the right place for them.
17:47The Cairngorms.
18:03One of the most spectacular mountain landscapes in the UK.
18:07But in bad weather, one of the most hostile.
18:12It's Scotland.
18:13We're going to help you.
18:14We manage Kinrara estate on the outskirts of Abidmore.
18:19Every year, people lose their lives in these hills.
18:23And some of those who have disappeared here still haven't been found.
18:27We've had some contractors on the place today who believe they may have come across the remains of a body.
18:36Today, DS Joe Newsom is investigating a terrible discovery in the hills above Abidmore.
18:43We're just going to the Kinrara estate, which is just to the southwest of Abidmore,
18:48which is where the remains were found up on the hillside.
18:52We were found by a chap who was up on the estate doing a deer survey
18:55and saw what he initially thought was a deer carcass.
18:58When he went over, he realised it was a human remains with clothing on.
19:03So he came back down and phoned the police.
19:06The initial assessment is to primarily look at the remains themselves,
19:11the kind of position they're in, anything untoward about what we see.
19:17Abidmore is a fairly small town sitting in the Spey Valley.
19:21You don't have to go very far at all from the town itself.
19:25Until you're in some pretty remote and inaccessible terrain.
19:31It's quite possible for people to go missing in the wilderness up here
19:36and the chances of them ever being found is pretty minimal.
19:41These human remains are lying on rough terrain just over a mile away from the nearest road.
19:47According to the caller, they are badly decomposed,
19:51so identifying the body could be a challenge.
19:57I'm winging it a bit now. I think it's probably up that track.
20:01Joe does have one lead.
20:04The discovery of the remains could be linked to the disappearance of a man 16 months ago.
20:09His name is Rodrigo Falcón.
20:14Rodrigo was an Argentinian male who'd been living in Avivor for a year or so.
20:21He'd been on a night out with friends, left the nightclub at closing time,
20:26and it was the last time he was seen by his friends.
20:29That night, it was minus 10 and snowing,
20:36so a major police search was launched to try and find him.
20:41Rodrigo was considered high risk from the outset,
20:45particularly given the weather conditions, the sub-zero temperatures.
20:48We do know that he was a very popular and outgoing individual,
20:54and he enjoyed going to house parties after the pub.
20:58So one theory is that he was potentially trying to visit friends
21:03who live on the outskirts of Avivor in that direction.
21:08You do have a massive area to try and search.
21:12It really is looking for a needle in a haystack.
21:15Despite a huge police effort,
21:17Rodrigo was never found, perhaps until now.
21:24You know, I'm expecting the outcome of this to be that it is Rodrigo.
21:29I'm not anticipating it being anyone else,
21:32but we never assume that our kind of hypothesis is correct.
21:38You know, we'll do everything we can to check,
21:40and it's not impossible that it could be someone else.
21:43You have to be open-minded to that.
21:45If these are Rodrigo's remains,
21:49the next question Joe needs to answer is how and why
21:53did he come to be in such a remote location,
21:56and could anyone else have been involved?
21:59A kind of working assumption would be that the remains have been here
22:03since kind of December 2022 when Rodrigo went missing.
22:09Obviously, if there was information that the remains have ended up there
22:13a period of time after Rodrigo disappeared,
22:16then that would bring a whole new kind of angle to the inquiry,
22:20and there's a lot of questions we would need to find answers to.
22:28You can see over there on the other side of the valley in the trees,
22:31you can see the police tape.
22:32That's where the remains are.
22:36With Joe today is crime scene examiner Matthew McLeod.
22:40It's his job to thoroughly photograph the area
22:42so other forensic specialists can assess it
22:46and make a plan for how to remove the body.
22:49Given the terrain, we've got what's called the Police Mountain Rescue Team,
22:53and they specialise in recovering living and deceased persons
22:57from challenging locations.
23:00All right, let's give it a go.
23:08Descending the gorge,
23:11crossing the burn at the bottom,
23:15and climbing up the other side
23:21to where the remains have been found
23:24proves tough going.
23:32Having come down here now,
23:33I...
23:34I...
23:34I can't see how someone
23:38could have successfully made their way
23:40from where we left the vehicles
23:42to here and then further up there.
23:44This would be quite a mission to get through here
23:46in the dark.
23:48It's hard enough in the daylight.
23:51After a steep climb up the far side of the gorge,
23:56the team reach the spot where the body is lying,
24:00half-hidden in a hollow in the heather.
24:03That is a huge piece of luck.
24:05Oh.
24:06He's been found.
24:07And I think in a year's time,
24:08he'd be covered over by moth.
24:09Yeah.
24:10Even if he was wearing a green jumper...
24:12Yeah.
24:12..he wouldn't have been seen.
24:13Key to identifying who this is
24:17are the clothes that are with the remains.
24:21We know from speaking to his friends
24:23and the CCTV footage from the nightclub
24:25that when he left,
24:26he was wearing a red jumper, jeans,
24:29and he was wearing his Argentina football shirt.
24:32If that wasn't a red jumper,
24:37if that was a green jumper or a brown jumper,
24:39you wouldn't even notice it from here.
24:43That is an Argentina shirt, isn't it?
24:46It does look like it.
24:48Are you OK with moving just a little bit of grass?
24:51Yeah.
24:52Yeah.
24:52If this is Rodrigo,
24:55it's still far from clear
24:57how he came to be here
24:58and how he died,
25:00and there are other questions
25:02relating to his clothes
25:04or the lack of them.
25:06We know Rodrigo was wearing jeans
25:07when he went missing.
25:09There's no sign of that.
25:12Back my bag up.
25:13I'm happy with him.
25:15OK.
25:16I think.
25:19My confidence remains the same
25:20that it is Rodrigo,
25:22but with the same caveat
25:24that further kind of investigations
25:26and tests
25:27would be required to confirm that.
25:32It's pure luck or coincidence
25:34that the chap who found him yesterday
25:37happened to be in that area.
25:38He was on a quad bike,
25:39so if he'd been
25:40in a slightly different direction,
25:42he would have never seen the red jumper,
25:45never stopped,
25:45never got off his quad.
25:47So when people are lost
25:49in these very remote places,
25:50it's just sometimes
25:52a lucky coincidence
25:54that results in them being found.
25:58There's nothing more
25:59Joe and the team can do today.
26:01With the scene secured,
26:03they'll return tomorrow
26:04with forensic specialists
26:05and the mountain rescue team.
26:08They still need to confirm
26:09that this is Rodrigo
26:11and solve the mystery
26:12of how he died.
26:25In Inverness,
26:27Ashley and his colleague Duncan
26:28are waiting at the house
26:29of a suspected drug dealer
26:31for a search warrant
26:32to be granted.
26:33Getting hungry.
26:37For three and a half hours,
26:38they have been unable
26:39to search for drugs.
26:41While they wait
26:42at the front door,
26:43there seems to be
26:44a disturbance at the back.
26:46He's not home,
26:47we're from the police.
26:48You guys okay though?
26:50Yes.
26:50You're sound, right?
26:52This man is known
26:53to Duncan and Ashley.
26:55You're a bit of brandy mine,
26:57you know?
26:57Ah.
26:58Nobody got it here,
26:59ain't it?
26:59No, no, I'm all good now.
27:00I'm all good now.
27:02Right, take care of yourself.
27:03See you later.
27:05Yeah, Chief.
27:06How are you?
27:08Generally, the information
27:09is that instead of using
27:10the front door
27:11where everyone sees
27:12for people to come
27:13and go from,
27:15the general trend
27:15is that people go
27:16around the back
27:17to get their drugs.
27:19Who knows?
27:22There are signs
27:24suggesting the household
27:25are involved
27:26in drug dealing
27:27but the police
27:28still need concrete evidence
27:29and without the search warrant
27:31they can't look for it.
27:36Hello, Ashley speaking.
27:38Finally,
27:39Ashley gets the call
27:40he's been waiting for.
27:43Yeah, that's fine.
27:45Cheers.
27:45Bye.
27:46So that's us got
27:47the warrant
27:48from the sheriff.
27:49So now we can
27:50search the address.
27:53Just watch your fingers
27:55there's needles, Ashley.
27:55There's any needles around.
27:59Do you want to do the honours
28:00or will I?
28:03Small wad of cash.
28:05They are looking for drugs
28:06and any equipment associated
28:09with the drugs trade.
28:11Just being methodical
28:13and trying to think
28:15where people might
28:16put things
28:17that they don't need to find,
28:18you know.
28:19It isn't long
28:20before they find
28:21some telltale signs
28:22of drug dealing.
28:24Just having a look in here
28:25to see if there's any
28:26tick lists
28:27or any notations
28:29that might indicate drug supply.
28:31We've got a bit of cash there,
28:33mobile phones.
28:34It's tinfoil.
28:35No.
28:36It scales there, Ashley.
28:38Yeah.
28:39But there is a substance
28:39on there
28:40that I suspect
28:40that might be cocaine
28:41because it's white.
28:43So we'll test that
28:44back at the police station
28:45and see if it indicates
28:46positive for cocaine,
28:47which I suspect it will.
28:49And in notes
28:50scattered around the house,
28:52there's some more
28:52potentially incriminating evidence.
28:55Here, look.
28:573b plus 1w,
28:582 brown plus 1.
28:59So we'll see to that.
29:01Users of drugs
29:02will refer to drugs
29:03by different slangs.
29:05Crack cane
29:05will be referred to
29:06as W or white
29:07and heroin
29:08referred to as brown
29:10or B.
29:11So this here
29:12would suggest
29:14that the occupants
29:15may be keeping notes
29:16of what she's
29:17dishing out
29:17or what's being ordered
29:18and what she needs
29:19to run to customers
29:21out on the street.
29:21So that's quite useful evidence.
29:28What do you reckon to that?
29:29350 bits, aye.
29:36350 bits,
29:38bits is a slang word.
29:40It's used by dealers
29:41in the Emirates area
29:42to describe deals.
29:44So we'll seize that.
29:46They've found
29:47some incriminating material
29:49as well as some
29:50unusual items.
29:52What?
29:53I mean, I've heard of disguises,
29:55but I mean, come on.
29:56Surely not.
30:02OK, that's us then.
30:09Well, we started our shift
30:10at 7am this morning.
30:13It's now 25 to 11pm
30:16and we've just cleared
30:18the address.
30:20Ashley and Duncan
30:21have been on the go
30:22for 15 hours.
30:24Their search has revealed
30:25drugs paraphernalia,
30:27but no drugs.
30:30We're heading back
30:31to the police station.
30:32We will need to
30:33count the cash
30:34that we've seized.
30:35It's still a good result.
30:36Yeah.
30:36But one of the women
30:39who was arrested
30:40earlier that day
30:41was found to be
30:42in possession
30:43of synthetic heroin,
30:44the drug wreaking havoc
30:46on the streets
30:47of Inverness.
30:49We definitely did
30:50make the right decision
30:51to go into the house.
30:54We seized a quantity
30:55of controlled drugs,
30:56which were the drugs
30:57that were killing people,
30:58and we've taken them
30:59off the streets.
31:00We would never be able
31:01to confirm it,
31:02but potentially save lives
31:03doing it.
31:06D.S. Joe Newsom
31:26is investigating
31:27missing person
31:28Rodrigo Falcón,
31:30who vanished
31:3116 months ago.
31:33A body has been found
31:34on a hill
31:34with clothing
31:35that seems to match
31:36Rodrigo's.
31:38Now, Joe needs
31:39to piece together
31:40his final movements
31:41and try to explain
31:43how and why
31:44he ended up
31:45in such a remote spot.
31:48So this is Alvimor.
31:49The vault nightclub
31:50is around about here.
31:55So CCTV from the nightclub
31:57and from an Indian takeaway
31:58shows Rodrigo
32:00walking south
32:02through the town
32:02towards the kind of end
32:04of Alvimor.
32:05We don't know where
32:07Rodrigo was heading
32:08that morning.
32:09It was in the middle
32:10of winter,
32:10so it was a very cold night.
32:11It was lots of snow,
32:14sub-zero temperatures,
32:16and in the early hours
32:17of the morning,
32:18he walks south
32:19out of the town
32:20of Alvimor.
32:21And that's the last
32:22sighting of him
32:23on CCTV.
32:25The next sighting
32:26is here,
32:28which is the side
32:29of the A9.
32:29A gritter driver
32:30saw a male,
32:33slight-billed,
32:34dark bushy hair
32:35and wearing a red
32:36jumper or coat,
32:37which we believe
32:38was Rodrigo
32:39walking through the trees
32:42alongside the road.
32:43Police officers
32:44attended
32:45and found footsteps
32:46in the snow.
32:47He followed the footprints
32:48which carried
32:49alongside the road
32:50down as far as here
32:52in the footsteps
32:53that was lost
32:54at that point,
32:55which is about
32:56two kilometres
32:57or less
32:58as the crow flies
32:59from the site
33:01where these remains
33:02have been found.
33:03That night,
33:04there was quite thick
33:05snow on the ground.
33:06Rodrigo,
33:07we had a drink
33:07that night,
33:08we know that.
33:09Perhaps the cumulative
33:09effects of cold
33:11and alcohol
33:12and perhaps being
33:13a bit disorientated
33:14on a dark night,
33:16he's simply,
33:17you know,
33:18lost his way
33:18and then has become
33:20even more disorientated
33:21and ended up
33:22on the hillside
33:24where he was
33:24ultimately found.
33:25So far,
33:27all the evidence
33:28points to this
33:29being Rodrigo's
33:30body on the hill
33:31and his death
33:32being a tragic accident.
33:34But Joe and his colleagues
33:35can take nothing
33:36for granted.
33:38They need to establish
33:39exactly how Rodrigo died
33:40in order to definitively
33:42rule out foul play.
33:44I think anyone
33:45can empathise
33:47with Rodrigo's
33:49family and friends
33:50and hopefully
33:50we can provide
33:51some closure
33:52to his friends
33:53and family
33:53that will
33:55kind of help
33:56them with
33:56that grieving
33:56process.
33:57The next day,
34:14the operation
34:15enters its most
34:16critical phase.
34:18First,
34:18the body will be
34:19examined where it lies
34:21by forensic scientists.
34:22then it will be
34:25carefully retrieved
34:26by the Police
34:27Scotland mountain
34:28rescue team
34:29led by Matt Smith.
34:32For Matt,
34:33it's a sad end
34:34to a story
34:35he's been involved
34:36with since the start.
34:39We played a
34:40quite significant part
34:41in the search effort
34:42at the time.
34:43When somebody's found,
34:45you immediately start
34:46thinking in your own head
34:47did we miss something?
34:48Should we have been
34:49in somewhere?
34:52But people,
34:53when they're missing,
34:54they tend to follow
34:54tracks or trails
34:55or they tend to have
34:56a really good reason
34:57to find themselves
34:59somewhere.
35:00This location
35:00is just
35:01a place that we
35:03probably wouldn't
35:03have considered.
35:10Joe is also
35:11on scene again today
35:12to oversee
35:13the specialist teams.
35:15Today,
35:15the whole purpose
35:16of the investigation
35:16is to try and
35:17piece together
35:18as far as we can
35:19what happened
35:21after Rodrigo
35:22left Avimor.
35:24How has he got here
35:25from there
35:26and what routes
35:29could he have taken?
35:30Are you ready?
35:31Yes.
35:31Yeah.
35:32Assembled,
35:34the teams can make
35:34their way to the spot
35:35where the body lies.
35:37The key experts
35:38in a case like this
35:39are forensic anthropologists.
35:42By examining bodies
35:43where they are found,
35:44they can often work out
35:46the likely cause of death.
35:48From what the anthropologists
35:49have found so far,
35:50it's just an initial
35:51assessment that it appears
35:53that the remains are intact.
35:55Okay.
35:56And...
35:56Including the footwear?
35:57No.
35:58He's not got his socks on,
35:59he's not got his shoes on,
36:00and he's not got his jeans on.
36:02Okay.
36:02The fact that the limbs
36:03that were in those
36:04are still there,
36:05but they're not,
36:06means that they've been
36:08taken off by him.
36:10In cases of hypothermia,
36:13it's common for people
36:14to become confused
36:16and start removing their clothes
36:18in the belief
36:19they are too hot.
36:20When people are in
36:21a hypothermic condition,
36:22they're not...
36:23What they think is happening
36:24is not...
36:25does not reflect the reality.
36:27So that clothing could be
36:29a kilometre away.
36:29Yeah, it could be.
36:30Yeah.
36:31Um, and in any direction.
36:33Put the traffic back here.
36:34Right.
36:35They could have been
36:36right next to him
36:36and then snowmelt over to Winters
36:38has taken it down to the river
36:39and where's it gone from there?
36:43After looking at the position
36:44of the body,
36:46the forensic anthropologists
36:47are reaching some conclusions
36:49about the likely cause of death.
36:52What you tend to find
36:53is that they'll pull their hand in
36:54and they'll go to back.
36:56Right.
36:57But face down.
36:58So if they were sleeping
36:59in fetal position,
37:00you'd be on your side.
37:00Yeah, okay.
37:01And put your knees tucked up.
37:02Yeah.
37:02But if his knees
37:03had been underneath him...
37:04Right, yeah.
37:05...and his hands had been up.
37:06That's more a digging.
37:08Okay, all right.
37:10The anthropologists
37:11can look at the position
37:12of the bones
37:13and from that make an assessment
37:14of the body position
37:16of the person
37:18when they came to rest.
37:19If someone's suffering
37:20with hypothermia,
37:22the body position of that
37:23is quite different
37:23to the position
37:25of someone lying down
37:26to go to sleep.
37:27This behaviour
37:28where people with hypothermia
37:30tuck themselves into the ground
37:31is called hypothermic
37:33or terminal burrowing.
37:35We can't say with absolute certainty
37:37but what we're seeing
37:38is consistent
37:40with hypothermic burrowing
37:41but obviously we'll look
37:42to confirm some of these things
37:44with all the scientific
37:46and forensic tests
37:47that are done
37:47at the laboratory.
37:48It's hard to say
37:50what the last few
37:52minutes or moments
37:54of Rodrigo's life
37:56would have been like
37:57for him.
37:58We're fairly sure
37:59he would have been
38:00disorientated
38:01for various reasons
38:04but primarily
38:05probably through hypothermia.
38:08I'm no expert
38:08but my understanding
38:09is that
38:10compared to some other
38:11ways people die
38:14someone just
38:15kind of slips away
38:16so I like to think
38:18there's maybe
38:20some comfort
38:21to be taken
38:22from
38:22the thought
38:24that
38:24probably his final moments
38:26may have been
38:27quite peaceful.
38:32It's finally time
38:34to lift the body
38:35carefully
38:35from where it lies
38:36and carry off
38:38the hillside.
38:41I think
38:42you're never going
38:42to rest
38:43when your loved one
38:44is missing
38:44in the mountains.
38:48But ultimately
38:49it's actually
38:50a rather positive day
38:52to be able
38:53to know
38:53that at the end
38:54of that day
38:55they've been found
38:56and the family
38:57can start
38:58that process
38:59of grieving
38:59is so important.
39:06It's invariably
39:11a tragedy
39:12when a
39:13body is found
39:15but we
39:16do what we can
39:17to try and get answers
39:18for
39:19family and friends
39:21as to what's happened
39:22and hope that
39:24that helps them
39:26kind of work
39:27through their grief.
39:36In Inverness
39:50it's a hot
39:51and sunny
39:51bank holiday.
39:53Are you alright?
39:53Yes, I am.
39:54PC Siobhan Cooper
39:55is on patrol
39:57in the city centre.
39:59I'm having a good day.
40:00Are you having a good day?
40:01I am.
40:02That's good.
40:04Siobhan's family
40:05is steeped
40:06in Highland Policing.
40:07My dad joined
40:08the police
40:09when I was four years old
40:10so it's something
40:11I've always kind of
40:12been a part of.
40:14CCTV police one.
40:16I had an uncle
40:17who was in traffic
40:19in Inverness
40:20and then my auntie
40:21as well
40:21was in the police.
40:22It's always been
40:23in the family
40:23and then when we grew up
40:25my brother then
40:26became interested
40:27in it as well as me.
40:28He joined up
40:29literally the year
40:30before I joined.
40:31Yeah, we're not far away.
40:33I cover the city centre
40:35of Inverness
40:36it's a small team
40:37we're on foot patrol
40:38we don't have vehicles
40:39just to kind of
40:41show visibility
40:41speak with shop owners
40:43security
40:44and just provide
40:45that sort of
40:46extra bit of policing
40:47in the centre.
40:50Stop it!
40:53All he is need to go.
40:55You're going as well
40:56if not
40:57you're going to get lifted
40:57I don't care.
40:59The warm weather
41:00has brought
41:00dozens of teenagers
41:01onto the streets
41:02and some
41:04are out
41:04to cause
41:04trouble.
41:06Kids are
41:07off school
41:08there doesn't seem
41:08to be much
41:09for them to do
41:09they get bored
41:10they come to
41:11the city centre
41:11and they cause
41:12a lot of issues
41:13their attitudes
41:15towards police
41:16can be pretty shocking
41:17sometimes.
41:18It's really difficult
41:19dealing with
41:20kids
41:21the threshold
41:22for arresting them
41:23taking them into custody
41:24is so high
41:25but they know that too
41:26so they will
41:28run away from us
41:29commit crime
41:30expecting that
41:31there's no repercussions
41:32anymore
41:32and because they know that
41:33I just think it's like
41:34a vicious cycle
41:35it's just getting
41:36worse and worse.
41:38CCTV please one.
41:40Siobhan
41:41and her colleague
41:42Sam
41:42are on the hunt
41:43for suspected thieves.
41:46Yeah we're not far away.
41:49Some teenage boys
41:50were spotted
41:51stealing alcohol
41:52from a supermarket.
41:53We're on the left
41:54on the bar
41:54in the jailers street.
41:56CCTV cameras
41:58have tracked
41:59two of them
42:00down to this alleyway.
42:01I'm not chasing you.
42:03You're not getting
42:04arrested okay.
42:06Okay come speak to me
42:07then.
42:08Come speak to me.
42:10Well show us then.
42:11One boy resists
42:12Siobhan's attempts
42:13to search him.
42:16I'm not f***ing
42:17a bitch girl.
42:18Stop it.
42:19What are you saying?
42:21Listen I've got
42:21nothing on me.
42:21Search me.
42:23Search me.
42:23I've got nothing on me.
42:26I look at every person
42:27as an unknown risk
42:28and anybody on that street
42:30could harm me.
42:31Settle down.
42:32I'm settled.
42:32Do you want the jail?
42:33No.
42:34Well then I suggest
42:35you pipe down right now.
42:37Search me.
42:38Search me.
42:39You're walking around
42:40the streets.
42:40You don't know
42:41who you're going
42:41to be stopping.
42:43So yeah
42:43you do feel vulnerable.
42:44Can you keep a hold of him
42:46and take his details?
42:47While the officers
42:48were busy restraining
42:49one of the suspects
42:50the other boy got away.
42:53Leaving the angry
42:53teenager with her colleague
42:55Siobhan's got no choice
42:56but to try and pursue him
42:58by herself.
42:59Yeah where's the male gone?
43:00I pass up to another male
43:02and the boat's running
43:03down Georgian Street.
43:07Oh okay.
43:08You will encounter
43:09at some point
43:10a child being cheeky to you
43:12and abusive.
43:13They will shout at us
43:14they will assault us
43:15everything.
43:16You do go home
43:18sometimes battered
43:19and bruised.
43:21Attempting to make an arrest
43:23always has the potential
43:25to lead to violence.
43:26Something Siobhan
43:28experienced
43:29when she was assaulted
43:30on the job
43:31six years ago.
43:35I went into work
43:36that day
43:36and then I went
43:37away from work
43:38in the back of an ambulance
43:39to hospital.
43:45I was dealing
43:46with an individual
43:47I'd already dealt
43:49with the day before
43:50and I've then gone
43:52to arrest him
43:53for threatening
43:53or abusive behaviour
43:54and on doing so
43:55he's just gone
43:56from zero to a hundred.
44:00He has
44:01tried to punch me
44:04and then he's got me
44:05in a chokehold.
44:09I didn't know
44:10if he was going
44:11to kill me.
44:16His hands were
44:16like in my eye
44:18he was strangling me
44:19and he just wouldn't
44:20get off me
44:21his strength
44:21was ridiculous.
44:22There was three grown men
44:23trying to get him
44:24off me
44:24and they couldn't
44:25and then
44:26basically pulled
44:27a big clump
44:28of hair
44:28up my head.
44:29All I remember
44:30is just going
44:30to hospital
44:30and I couldn't see.
44:32I thought he'd
44:33taken my eye out
44:33at that point.
44:35So it was just a fear
44:36of like being blind.
44:41It took Siobhan
44:42months to recover
44:43from her injuries
44:44both physical
44:45both physical
44:45and psychological.
44:49So I had to work
44:50through a lot of stuff
44:51like mentally
44:52after that
44:52but I think
44:54that was probably
44:55the point
44:56in my career
44:56where I did
44:57seriously consider
44:58whether it was worth it
44:59or not.
45:01It was like
45:01kind of
45:02do I go back
45:04do I not
45:04is it worth it?
45:07You haven't seen
45:08two young lads
45:09run in here
45:09have you?
45:10No.
45:15Like yeah
45:16okay
45:16he battered me
45:17he did
45:18seriously injure me
45:19my eyesight was
45:20wrecked because of it
45:22and I could sit there
45:23for the rest of my life
45:24and be angry at him
45:25and annoyed
45:27but then
45:28I just kind of
45:29turned it on its
45:29side and I was like
45:30you know what
45:31it could be worse
45:31I could be blind
45:33you know
45:33he could kill me
45:34he didn't
45:35I'm still here
45:36I love my job
45:38I'm not going to let him
45:39stop me from liking my job
45:40and I think I just
45:41got that fight back
45:42Hmm
45:46Siobhan moves on
46:00to help a colleague
46:01who has now stopped
46:03a third suspect
46:04Can you just show me?
46:06Someone's been past drink
46:07we're just trying to
46:09work out who it is
46:10but when they search him
46:11for the stolen alcohol
46:12they come up empty handed
46:14The alcohol has been passed on
46:16before we've managed
46:17to get a hold of it
46:1880 miles to the south west
46:30Siobhan's brother Stephen
46:32is on patrol in Glencoe
46:34It's a very different environment
46:40from Inverness
46:41Unlike his sister
46:43Stephen's chosen
46:44to stay in the glens
46:45where they both grew up
46:47I mean as a kid
46:50you couldn't hope for a better place
46:51to grow up
46:51I don't think
46:51because you've just got freedom
46:52to do what you want to
46:53when you want to
46:54It might be a bit boring at times
46:55when it's wet
46:56and the weather's horrible
46:57but when the weather's nice
46:58you've got a big playground
46:59in nature haven't you?
47:01So I've lived in this area
47:04from a very young age
47:05like
47:05seven years old
47:07I think
47:07I don't see myself
47:09leaving here
47:09I'm still happy
47:11I'm still enthusiastic
47:12I still enjoy the job
47:13so I don't
47:14really see any need
47:15to go anywhere else
47:16In summer
47:17Glencoe attracts tourists
47:19from all over the world
47:21Its narrow roads
47:23fill up with traffic
47:24Today
47:25it's sunny and warm
47:26and the roads
47:27are busier than ever
47:29These roads were designed
47:31for cattle carts
47:32years and years and years ago
47:34before carts were even a thing
47:35They've obviously been modernised
47:36and improved since then
47:37but there's only so much
47:39you can do
47:39with the winter
47:40Stephen's on his way
47:44to help some stranded tourists
47:46I spotted what looked like
47:48possibly a higher car
47:50in a ditch
47:50It just looked like
47:51it had gone too far over
47:52and just fallen in a little bit
47:54A lot of people
47:55have never experienced
47:56a single track road
47:57before they've come to Scotland
47:58so they don't know
47:58what they're doing with it
47:59I don't know
48:00underestimate the ditches
48:02at the side
48:02and drive into them
48:03I think this is where
48:05this car is
48:06in the ditch
48:07Stephen's been beaten
48:10to the scene
48:11by a group of
48:12good Samaritans
48:13Do you think it's beached
48:15or is it alright?
48:15Thanks
48:16Is it?
48:17I think so
48:17It's on the axles
48:24there's no way
48:24you're doing that
48:24without a winch
48:25I don't think
48:25No
48:26You got a rug?
48:27I do
48:28but I wouldn't do it
48:29without a winch
48:29The stricken drivers
48:31are a young couple
48:32from New York
48:33enjoying a Scottish holiday
48:35with their baby
48:36The dad says
48:37he was forced
48:38into the ditch
48:39by a passing lorry
48:40A lorry came
48:42did not even wait there
48:43and made us push inside
48:45Right, okay
48:46See, I'm worried as well
48:49if I pull you with this
48:50it might go in further
48:51and make your situation worse
48:52Right, I'll try and get
48:53my car out of the way
48:54a little bit
48:55so we can get the road moving
48:56Stephen's first priority
49:00is to keep the traffic flowing
49:02I'm trying to think
49:06how this is going to work
49:08traffic management wise
49:10When the recovery gets here
49:12the road will be shut
49:13so our biggest danger
49:14is going to be the sail
49:15back into the main road
49:16The A82 through Glencoe
49:19is one of the main arteries
49:21to the north of Scotland
49:22and attracts fast moving traffic
49:25If a queue of cars
49:26backs up onto the main road
49:28Stephen's worried
49:29it could cause a serious accident
49:31In an ideal world
49:33there'll be two of us
49:34one down there somewhere
49:35at a passing place
49:36and me up here
49:37at this passing place
49:37but unfortunately
49:40the world's not ideal
49:41and it's just me
49:42so I'm just going to have
49:43to try and manage it
49:43as best I can
49:44It's going to get interesting
49:46when we try and open
49:47the road again
49:47and everything's got us
49:48to try and pass
49:49on the single track
49:49Control 3 to whiskey
49:52It's time to radio
49:54for a car removal team
49:56I'm looking to arrange
49:57recovery for a vehicle
49:58causing obstruction
49:59if possible please
49:59So I've asked for the recovery
50:07to come
50:07so they make that phone call
50:09now
50:09it'll be soon
50:11they're just close by
50:11and they'll drag you out
50:12I'll be scared
50:13Nah, no problem at all
50:14Regards, the truck
50:15kind of forcing you off
50:17Did you get the registration
50:18of the truck or anything?
50:19Nah
50:19I'm afraid there's not
50:20very much we can do
50:21about that
50:21and it's a hazard
50:22of these roads unfortunately
50:23so I'm very sorry
50:25we are used to driving
50:27on the right hand side
50:28so now driving on the left
50:30was the first challenge
50:31and the single lane drives
50:34are fun
50:34you need to be always
50:36on the lookout
50:37won't be long now
50:39they're just leaving the yard
50:40which is 10-15 minutes tops
50:42so
50:42How old is she?
50:4510 months tomorrow
50:46She's older than 10 months tomorrow
50:47Ah right
50:48I think the thing I most enjoy
50:50about being a police officer
50:51is helping people
50:52Dad joined the police
50:54when I was very young
50:54and I saw the job he did
50:57when I finished school
50:59and I was presented
51:00with the option of
51:01going to university
51:02or joining the police
51:03I just decided
51:04that the police
51:05was the better option
51:06and haven't looked back since
51:07That's the recovery guys
51:14on scene now
51:15they're just reversing
51:16to the car
51:17to try and pull it out
51:18Is that alright there Colin?
51:23It's not in too far
51:24but I didn't want to try
51:24and drag it out myself
51:25to cause more damage
51:27than you'd solve
51:28The local car recovery team
51:31are father and son duo
51:32Colin and Mark
51:34How you doing Mark?
51:37We'll put the rope out
51:40We'll put a snatch
51:41to this corner here
51:42so it can only come
51:44towards you
51:45that way
51:46It can't run along the ditch
51:48you know
51:48He's got 50 years experience
51:50I've only got 14
51:51You should see us
51:54when we argue
51:54It is a very
51:57close-knit community
51:58and it's great
51:59to have that
52:00pro-police support
52:02because it's probably
52:03not for cities
52:03it's totally alien
52:04I would imagine
52:05but it's brilliant
52:06OK Dad
52:08At last
52:15the car is freed
52:16As easy as that
52:18If only all the recoveries
52:20were that easy
52:20it would be an easy job
52:22You come with me
52:23and we'll go down
52:23to the garage
52:24You jump in the lorry
52:26Thank you so much
52:27Not a problem at all
52:28Thanks guys
52:28Control
52:333-2 whisky
52:34Yeah that's me
52:37clear that vehicle
52:38off the road
52:38it's been recovered
52:39and the road reopened
52:40It feels quite good
52:43getting them out of the ditch
52:44and stuff
52:44I know they're going to
52:45get a bill for their
52:45recovery and things
52:46like that now
52:46but it's better
52:48than a ruined holiday
52:49so it's good
52:50that they can carry on
52:51with their journey
52:52In Inverness
53:01Stephen's sister
53:02Siobhan
53:03has managed to find
53:04some of the alcohol
53:05that was stolen
53:06from a shop
53:07along with another
53:08of the suspected thieves
53:10Hello
53:11Hi it's the police
53:13Sorry your son
53:14He's under 16
53:23so rather than arrest him
53:25Siobhan's attempting
53:26a different strategy
53:28and calling his mum
53:29Sorry my radio
53:30was going there
53:31He's been caught
53:32at the co-op
53:33stealing alcohol
53:33We've not managed
53:35to recover them all
53:35because they've tried
53:36to hide them from us
53:37so yeah
53:40it's kind of
53:41gone too far now
53:42I can tell a lot
53:43by how their parents
53:45are when I phone them
53:46and tell them
53:46they've just stolen
53:47this that and the other
53:48from this shop
53:49and then if they
53:50don't react
53:51then I worry
53:53because I think
53:54well like if that
53:55was my mum or dad
53:56getting a phone call
53:57when I was that age
53:58like I'd be terrified
54:00On this occasion
54:02Siobhan's reassured
54:03that the boy's mother
54:05is taking the matter
54:06seriously
54:07but it's not long
54:11before the peace
54:12is shattered again
54:13Is that the same
54:19group of males
54:19we've been dealing with?
54:21Yes indeed
54:22Yeah
54:23so the males
54:24are now having a fight
54:25on Falcon Square
54:27It's probably
54:28alcohol fuelled again
54:29the alcohol
54:30they've probably stolen
54:31so
54:31more than just a place
54:33like nice
54:33just punched him in the face
54:35ugh
54:35who's that idiot
54:39enough
54:41is he assaulted you?
54:44Yeah he slapped me
54:45on my phone
54:45CCTV police
54:47have you got eyes on?
54:48Yeah I've got eyes on
54:49just coming up
54:51Crane Road
54:52Yeah what's their location now?
54:55827-535
54:56Just coming up Crane Road
54:58towards the top of the
54:59hill by the
55:00stretch
55:01move!
55:03move!
55:06They eventually
55:07manage to catch the boy
55:09it's another of the
55:10alcohol thieves
55:11who they already
55:12stopped and searched
55:13earlier in the day
55:14What is your problem?
55:16He gives me money
55:16Doesn't mean you can
55:18start punching folk
55:19I'm not getting
55:20lifted for this
55:21I'm not doing anything
55:22If it was an adult
55:24we'd be arresting them
55:25for threatening
55:25abusive behaviour
55:26I understand
55:27like they are a child
55:28and that's like
55:29the last place
55:29they should really be
55:30Right who's your
55:32who's at home?
55:33I'm not getting lifted
55:33Give us your details
55:34I'm not going to be
55:35anything unless he goes
55:36You're not in charge here
55:38Shut the f***
55:39Right
55:39Enough
55:40Enough
55:41What are you going to do?
55:42Enough
55:42Cut the attitude
55:44Running out of options
55:45Siobhan calls a custody
55:47sergeant for advice
55:48He's only 15
55:50so you know
55:51the protocol is
55:52we shouldn't really
55:53be arresting him
55:53but he's being
55:54very abusive to us
55:55What a lot
55:56Look at him
55:56And he's assaulted
55:57somebody else in Falcon
55:58Square
55:58and he's stolen alcohol
55:59so
56:00You've got holes right
56:02in the
56:02Right
56:03Can't be hard
56:05You can't do a bottle
56:06shot him
56:06Honestly
56:07You can't do a bottle
56:08shot him
56:08F***
56:09Because he's now
56:10threatening to break
56:11our faces
56:11Yeah
56:13Yeah okay
56:14Thanks
56:15Cheers
56:15Right
56:16You're under arrest
56:17for threatening
56:17abusive behaviour
56:18okay
56:19Do you understand that?
56:20Yeah
56:20I'm so sorry
56:21Nah
56:22Too late mate
56:23Too late
56:23Too late
56:25I don't care
56:25Should have thought
56:26about that
56:26I'm really sorry
56:28I don't know
56:29what you do
56:29I have got to the point
56:31where I have had to
56:31arrest them
56:32and take them into
56:33custody
56:33where they do get
56:34a few hours in a cell
56:35and I've noticed
56:36even that on its own
56:37has sort of had an effect
56:39in a good way
56:39and made them realise
56:40that there is repercussions
56:42to their actions
56:42but as I say
56:43it doesn't happen often
56:45Too late mate
56:46Too late
56:47You can't get away
56:48with talking to us like that
56:49You can't get away
56:50with treating people like that
56:51I'm not going to be fine
56:52but I'm just sorry
56:53if I look down
56:54I shouldn't be drunk
56:55You've sobered up now
56:57though haven't you
56:58I'm getting this abuse
57:03sometimes
57:04you're being assaulted
57:05it's seeing the end result
57:07and if you're getting
57:08one person off the street
57:10and making that street
57:11a bit safer
57:12for everyone else
57:13then it's like
57:14you've done your job
57:15People have been drinking
57:16but beer, vodka, wine
57:18fuck fast
57:19Fuck fast
57:20Alright let's go down
57:22to cell number 19
57:23Police!
57:42Police!
57:43Police!
57:43Police!
57:44Police!
57:44Police!
57:45Police!
57:45Police!
57:46Police!
57:46Police!
57:47Police!
57:48Police!
57:49Police!
57:50Police!
57:51Police!
57:52Police!
57:53Police!
57:53Police!
57:53¡Gracias!
58:23It's bringing up more questions than answers.
58:27And police deal with a serious collision on one of Scotland's deadliest roads.
58:32There are quite a few people in that vehicle, so I hope they'll be okay.
58:53I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
59:08I'm sorry.
59:10I'm sorry.
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