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Transcript
00:00my journey to orkney began on the return flight from bangladesh where the gentleman i was sitting
00:12next to he offered a job with his brother's restaurant i thought why not never been to an
00:18island let's go i was around about 20 21 when my brother asked me to join him in the orkney isles
00:28and he was like a experience of a lifetime and then samuel joined us in the restaurant
00:38he was uh always smiling he had like a little giggle constantly he was full of life we all
00:46called him handsome because of his dress sense all the customers used to call him handsome as well
00:54and he liked it he was a friendly type of a fella yeah it wasn't dangerous to anybody
01:10what we're seeing here is a live ram being fired at point blank range which is what happened with
01:15chum shooting so his perpetrator literally went up as close as he possibly could it was like
01:20a scene out in american gangster movie doesn't sweat doesn't hesitate calm cool no sweat which is what
01:35you need to be to walk into arrest and kill somebody at point blank range asking your son if you killed a man
01:46is
01:48horrendous ballistic evidence should have led detectives straight to 15 year old ross
01:53but his father seen here was a police officer involved in the inquiry and he covered up evidence to protect
02:00him
02:04michael ross is a racist murderer the punishment 25 years in prison michael was not just like any other 15
02:12year old he had access to guns
02:15how could this have been a 15 year old boy it's not the kind of crime that is committed by a 15 year
02:26old boy in orkney well i believe this to be the good man and that's not make a loss
02:35although it seems like odd behavior there is a convincing explanation
02:40but then michael does something with his balacalava which is harder to explain
02:49somebody came out of the toilet it was a young boy he had a gun in his hand and i knew where
02:55he was i was terrified
03:04this call is from a scottish prison it will be logged and recorded and may be monitored
03:09yeah i can't be any queerer hey i never murdered samson
03:13if not michael who did kill shatney
03:20man with a mask on came in and thought he was in to shoot everyone
03:35welcome to orkney the murder of shamsud and mahmoud who was affectionately known as shamal is one of
04:01those cases which i think shocks you
04:08let me fill you in on where we're up to so in 1994 the 26 year old bangladeshi waiter
04:14was killed in cold blood by a man in a balaclava
04:18from the outset police suspected 15 year old michael ross but with no motive no forensics and no weapon
04:30the case collapsed against the school boy then 14 years later and following a new witness coming
04:37forward he was charged and convicted of the murder
04:42yet to this day many in orkney don't believe michael ross murdered shamsud and mahmoud
04:56the
05:01orkney is a landscape of wild unspoiled beauty varying from gently undulating countryside to cliffs that rise
05:08perpendicular to the sea
05:14i suppose orkney was the kind of place where
05:16very little happened then you would be kicking about in the street with your friends and
05:24playing kirby and running about in the parks and there was no crime as such other than minor
05:32petty crime i just remember it being really safe i suppose
05:36my name's karen i've been involved in michael's campaign for 13 years
05:46the first i knew that michael's name was being entered into the frame if you like was
05:51my mum coming home from work and saying you're never going to believe this but
05:57but moira's family are somehow implicated in this and they're saying that it was her son and
06:03her husband who's a police officer that have had something to do with it
06:13it was so out of this world like something you would never ever expect in a place like this
06:20how could this have been a 15 year old boy it's not the kind of crime that is committed by a 15
06:26year old boy in orkney it just seemed to me to be absolutely ludicrous
06:31then and i feel even more so now that it was a wild theory that um went completely out of control
06:40michael ross is a racist murderer the punishment 25 years in prison whoever committed that crime was
06:50beyond psychopathic
06:51i'm interested to know what kind of person could carry out a murder like this
06:58do they have to be a psychopath or could an ordinary person do it
07:02is it really something a 15 year old could do
07:14this particular gun is a glock nine millimeter and interestingly it's the exact same caliber that
07:34was used in the shooting of sham shooting mahmoud my name is dr shaham das and i am a doctor in
07:41forensic psychiatry so i've seen a range of murders i've seen knife crime or murders by gunfire i think
07:47it's very rare in general in the uk
07:56so what we're seeing here is a live ram being fired at point blank range which is what happened with
08:01sham shooting so his perpetrator literally went up as close as he possibly could and they're literally
08:06looking at somebody in the eye and they can see the fear they can see their expression it's a very
08:11intimate and visceral way to win somebody's life i think
08:20i think it's fair to say that society sometimes glamorizes
08:24killings and if we look at media tv shows films i'm thinking of characters like james bond
08:30but in reality to take somebody's life is actually psychologically quite taxing it's very rare to
08:36see somebody just completely out of the blue do something so brazen and so public
08:44those individuals tend to lack empathy and sometimes there's early warning signs
08:49like there's a lack of of closeness and sometimes even more obvious warning signs like cruelty towards
08:55animals towards pets when we think about the psychology or the reasons for killing there's a
09:00lot of understandable motivations like rage hatred it could be racism it could be to eliminate a rival
09:07used in a crime such as a robbery but occasionally we see it committed for no discernible understandable
09:14reason sometimes it's just about the power and the thrill and i think colloquially some people might
09:19say that these individuals are psychopaths so what was michael like as a 15 year old and was he capable
09:29of committing such a crime in 1994 police searched michael ross's family home
09:39i've never seen anything like this the search revealed a house that seemed obsessed with guns
09:52i mean look at all this all these licensed guns were found which is like an arsenal from a hollywood film
10:01during their search police found five pistols two revolvers three rifles and a shotgun
10:10i don't know anyone with this sort of thing in their house i wonder what kind of impact
10:17this might have had on a teenage boy
10:22this is one of the most interesting cases i was ever involved in i think it's probably a once in a lifetime
10:30my name is brian mcconachie i am a king's counsel in 2008 i took this case to prosecute
10:39it was what they now popular jargon call a cold case in the sense of it had been a number of years
10:49since the incident had taken place it involved relatives of police officers it involved a soldier
10:56it involved allegedly a 15 year old boy i think in many ways that was one of the hurdles for the prosecution
11:07was that the jury were looking at this photograph of a young boy i'm sure many of the jurors were
11:16parents themselves probably with children of that age and were being asked to make a decision
11:23which would say that that young boy had on that occasion assassinated
11:28the uh the waiter mr mahmoud in the indian restaurant
11:38michael ross has never spoken publicly about his case
11:42but i've got hold of audio recordings of him answering questions which have never been heard before
11:48he hasn't been challenged by a journalist but his answers give a unique insight into his version of events
11:56there's a view that i've done this to see how it felt like to kill somebody
12:10i thought of doing something like that totally out of connection
12:14all i ever wanted was to join army be a soldier get married and have a family and have a normal family life
12:30this photograph here is of a shooting competition within the cadet force where michael's been presented
12:36with the trophy for the annual shoot as it were
12:40this photograph is one of michael i think it was about 1995 when he was in the army debt force
12:48photograph was taken in inverness at cameron barracks i think he enjoyed it and he worked well and he
12:53he was good with a lot of the young guys too who needed instruction and assistance with things
13:00it's not was really just a youth group for kids to mingle and get together and have a bit of after
13:06school activities and stuff like that but for me maybe i took it more serious than a lot of other ones
13:12because i purely because i was wanting to join the army
13:19a boy joins the army cadet force because he has some sort of interest in the army some sort of
13:24interest and discipline and uniform in shooting
13:38michael's wearing a color sergeant rank he looks quite formal here whereas we're used to seeing him
13:45at the time more informally because we were you know we were all part of a group of friends
13:55i'm claire and i was in the cadets with michael ross around that time
14:01i joined in early 1994 not long before the murder happened in orkney
14:07i think lots of us had had maybe had problems at school or problems at home and i think the cadets
14:15was a a place for everybody just to be themselves and just be part of something bigger
14:23at school he was quite quiet and maybe a wee bit shy but at cadets he was a bit more relaxed and
14:28um he was quite funny he smiled a lot sometimes we called him smiler because he had like a really big
14:38happy smile he was quick to look out for people and and stick up for people if he felt they were
14:45being treated unfairly he was a small guy like myself he wasn't that tall we had the nickname for
14:55him it was arnie yeah after arnold schwarzenegger yeah i think we just called him that because
15:01his short hair and he was a kind of big build right i've kept him for a long time he went to
15:07primary school with him and then ended up being me next to a neighbor i mind being in english or mass
15:16and i mind someone coming into our classroom and taking michael out of the classroom and all the
15:22class were in shock like where's michael going what why are they taking about a class i never thought
15:28he was going to be questioned about a murder my name's angus alexander chisholm i was detective
15:38inspector based in inverness i felt confident enough to submit a crime report to the property of fiscal
15:46what happened to it thereafter was out of my hands it was entirely up to the local fiscal and to the
15:53crown office and procurator fiscal service the case against 15 year old michael ross never went to court
16:01and as he moved on with his life the original lead detective angus chisholm retired
16:08after 10 years a new detective takes over the case
16:12in 2004 he gives an interview which proposes a very specific motivation for the killing
16:20i believe that we've evidence that indicates quite strongly that this was a racist crime
16:26and i believe that makes it a more abhorrent crime
16:32now he doesn't name the suspect but four years later michael is convicted of a racist murder it's
16:41one of the reasons he's given a particularly harsh 25-year life sentence
16:47summing up the judge said that the murder was motivated by michael's extreme racist prejudice
16:56where did the racism angle come from
17:02when police had searched the ross household in december of 1994
17:06one of the things they'd found was an army cadet notebook and on one of the pages they found corporal
17:12ross with a swastika inside the o and ss written in a nazi ss font and other doodles such as death to
17:20the english and death cures all
17:22it seems to have gathered quite a lot of significance at least for the police at some
17:29stage in the investigation
17:31it was just a notebook i used for at army cadets it was simple damn silly little doodles that i had
17:42done one of which was a like a small swastika i mean it was absolutely tiny it was just in the
17:47the grim reaper um what does that say death to the english it's just silly boys drawing
18:06he's no other one he wouldn't use the draw that stuff um books because of what's happened i wish
18:14he hadn't have drawn that but it's there to see
18:19the motive was racial and i believe that makes it a more abhorrent crime nothing in in my part of
18:32inquiry indicated racism i wouldn't have attached any great significance to it doodlings of a 15 year
18:40old i'm sure anybody's school jotter would have stuff like that in it
18:49so the jotter evidence against michael ross's racism is weak but there's more
18:57something else which i've come across which i think is much more concerning
19:01are witness statements that police took from fellow cadets ages 14 and 15.
19:08one cadet here says i don't think michael approves of girls being at cadets and has said things like
19:15treat the girls like they were and then uses the n-word this person then goes on to say i've heard michael
19:23at the cadets showing off to an audience and saying things about shooting blacks and putting a gun to
19:31their heads i mean reading that i think michael was racist i think you know i don't think
19:42that you can really disagree with that
19:45i certainly don't remember saying those words exactly but i i would imagine that i may have said
19:53things similar because i was saying stupid things like as a child i'm truly embarrassed by those things
20:01could michael's teenage racism be enough to make him want to kill a person of color
20:11i've never been a hundred percent convinced that it was racist in the sense of uh that he killed
20:26shamsuddin monmouth because he was black i feel more perhaps that michael wanted to know what it
20:33was like to kill someone i don't think he knew shammul i don't think he met shammul
20:38i don't think he was out to get shammul specifically but my thoughts are he may well have wanted to
20:48kill somebody and who would be most expendable on the island he wouldn't want to kill
20:53a local because that would not go down well but his thinking in my mind is that if i'm going to kill
21:00somebody why not pick somebody who's not from the island who's not local who there won't be so much of a
21:06fuss about if a murderer wanted to kill someone surely they wouldn't walk into somewhere that's
21:17full of people little children sitting at a dining table people just enjoying a meal if you're a sort
21:24of occasional criminal or you're just branching into the world of criminality you would think that
21:30you would have some sort of path that you would go along to get to the point where you would be able
21:34to commit a crime like that if michael ross did shoot shammul this motive remains a question
21:48i've seen no evidence that 15 year old michael was a psychopath for instance
21:54he said horrendous racist things
21:57but people on both sides of the case have asked was this a sufficient driver for him to shoot a man
22:05at point blank range
22:09so let's say then for the sake of argument that it wasn't michael was there anyone with the motive
22:17to murder shammul that night
22:26shammul came to orkney first in 1992 i worked as a waiter in the moment as he'd been there i think
22:32about nine months between 1992 and 1993 before leaving to work at other restaurants in england
22:40but in april of 1994 he asked to come back just six weeks before he was killed this is a photograph of
22:48shammul mahmood i think he was 26 years old at the time of of the murder and he just kept himself to
22:55himself he was a bubbly smiley kind of person i believe he was quite well educated as well he came
23:02from a good family and i've never been in trouble there was only one other of shammul's relatives who
23:09was living in britain at the time i think that this is the last ever interview that shammul's brother
23:17abel gave before he died a few years ago and you can tell how profoundly impacted he's been by shammul's
23:25death let me just play it for you we lost our brother whatever will happen we won't get him back
23:38so we had to come to terms the fact that we lost him
23:43you'd never get over that and i think you can really tell that that's how he's feeling
23:47this was shammul's second trip to orkney i want to know why he wanted to come to the islands
24:08my name johar islam so my journey to scotland began on the return flight from bangladesh where we
24:17gentlemen i was sitting next to he offered a job with his brother's restaurant i thought why not
24:23never been to an island let's go my brother joined me soon after my name's uh ran ishmael um
24:35i think i was around about 20 21 when my brother asked me to join him in the orkney isles
24:48the phone was going crazy people trying to book tables and it was like a
24:55elephant stampede i've never seen anything like that
25:04shammul lived in a room above the restaurant with two brothers jerule and rhyman
25:08it was a tiny room with three three beds close and personal i'd say but it was fun it was fun
25:19just laughing and joking and you know staying up half the night we'd talk about things like you know
25:25how he grew up and where he came from where we came from and we'd laugh and giggle about that
25:37shammul was short talkative he was ambitious he said he wasn't successful like his brothers
25:46one was a barrister and he couldn't make himself in a higher position but he was dating a girl she
25:56wanted to be a doctor so he his goal was if i can't have the status at least i've married somebody with
26:05the status shammul's full name is shamsuddin mahmood he was born in daca in bangladesh in 1968. i have
26:19in my hands a statement from shammul's brother abu and in it we get some great detail about shammul
26:26we know that he's the youngest of seven brothers
26:29and that he's always getting into fights over girls back home in daca so it seems that his family
26:35then sent him to the uk to live the fact he was having troubles with girls didn't appear to be
26:42an orkney thing because we found no issue with him and orkney having any relationship problems with
26:48or any relationship with girls to be honest on his day off he'd go pubs here or there he could uh
26:56swing the whiskey back same as the islanders neat whiskey he was flirty and i think the islanders had
27:06never seen asian people so we was uh getting a lot of girls talking to us you kind of like get the fact
27:19that you knew something different i don't think he grasped the idea he's on a little island yeah
27:27they're islanders he was just playing the field you know looking for sex going out here going out
27:34there talking to people yeah but uh just your human urge yeah it wasn't danger to anybody so i found
27:45some documents which tell us a bit more about that time in may 1991 shamal arrived on a two-year
27:52holiday working visa he's working full-time and a year before his murder his visa runs out
27:59he's one of a number of staff with visa irregularities working in the restaurant
28:04well he didn't come here legally you know he overstayed many people overstay but his paperwork's not
28:11right that's why he's gone north of scotland everybody's got a reason why they've gone to this
28:20little island whether he was legal or not in the country wasn't the focus of our inquiry we wouldn't
28:25have been paying a great deal of attention to that i'm really acutely aware that by digging into
28:32shamal's past it somehow looks like we're victim shaming and that's really not the case you know
28:39shamal was a 26 year old man who was the victim of a horrendous murder but in the interest of looking
28:50for someone who wanted him dead these are legitimate questions we have staff here who are working
28:57illegally which more than likely include shamal so did the police look into this we deployed teams to
29:06visit all of the indian restaurants throughout the country where he had been employed we tried to delve
29:12into his background as much as possible he appeared to keep himself to himself on the island he had not
29:18been involved in any altercations or any issues in restaurants where he had been before nothing untoward
29:24no issues i've been digging into what the police did during the investigation the police spoke to
29:32105 members of the asian community from the highlands all over the highlands down to southampton
29:40so on the surface that's great you know that's really thorough and then you look at who they spoke to
29:45and drill down into that a little bit more the police spoke to one blood relative one blood relative
29:56during the investigation shamal's brother abu the number of people who'd known shamal for more than two years
30:02they spoke to six of them so that's people like acquaintances or any colleagues people who kept in touch with friends
30:09but the biggest number which jumps out at me is right at the bottom here and it's the last point
30:16so the number of people that the police interviewed who had no knowledge of shamsu
30:21de mahmoud or had any relevance to the inquiry out of 105 was 82
30:27now these unexplored parts of the story may or may not have anything to do with his murder
30:38but it's hard not to feel there are gaps in the police investigation
30:42and it's the reason why for many questions still remain about this case
30:47what's interesting is in the lead up to the murder there are reports of a lot of strange
31:02comings and goings at the restaurant for instance this is a statement from a friend of shamal's abdul
31:10who was a waiter at another restaurant abdul says that on the day of the shooting
31:16shamal suddenly asks to swap shifts with another waiter could this be a coincidence maybe and
31:24there's more the arcadian second front page story is probably the most interesting story i've ever
31:28read about the case which is the title murder victim received death threat before killing
31:34and murder victim shamsu de mahmoud received a death threat only two days before being shot at
31:39karko's mumitaz indian restaurant
31:55close to midnight may 31st 1994 few customers are in the restaurant and they see a heated argument at the
32:03door of the restaurant two men arguing with shamsuddin mahmoud uh very heated argument i think one of
32:11the witnesses even said they had never seen anything like it and all their time in orkney and one of
32:15the people in the restaurant was an austrian tourist and he was fairly close to the door and he claims he
32:20had heard i'll shoot you being said on a number of occasions to shamsuddin by the man arguing with him at the
32:29door of the restaurant very specific threat i know you haven't got a motive but there was a possibility
32:37of motive in as much as before the murder there was a sighting of an argument going on at the restaurant
32:44the door of the restaurant yeah that's correct witnesses described to us that two people were
32:48arguing with the now deceased shamuel mahmoud outside the restaurant in the doorway of the restaurant
32:53then it falls off the radar completely in the public record in the case and it really does appear to
32:58have been totally forgotten about and you're left with a situation i suppose where somebody's in
33:04prison claiming he didn't commit the murder and as far as i can tell the police don't know who it was
33:09that allegedly threatened to kill the deceased two days before do you remember the story of a local
33:16man called robert smith who two hours before the murder says that he saw a well-built man acting
33:23strangely and behaving in a way that unsettled him
33:33then he went down the lane in front of me here
33:39and he went to the door to the restaurant and he held on to the handle and put one feet up in here
33:47staring off at me and he thought that i was going to make a delivery to the restaurant and he was
33:55waiting until id by and as soon as i went past him he went in and slammed the door and i knew he was
34:01such as another pedestrian
34:05six months after the murder when the police were focusing in on michael ross being the killer
34:10robert was asked to attend an id parade we actually had a physical id parade which involved
34:19michael standing in a lineup along with various other people that we would get off the street
34:26there's sex there 12 in total is it what i remember of the day was that um
34:35um there were two girls along with me and there had to be a police policeman uh present the whole time
34:45so we couldn't talk about it they took a student to have a look at this when we looked at them he
34:51said is there anybody there and um i said no and that was just basically they knew it
34:58there was no positive identification of michael that of course does not mean that he was not the
35:06person it just means that the people who viewed the id parade did not pick him out i would say that's
35:12not unusual okay let's say that it was one of those white men who killed shammel who was seen acting
35:21strangely around the restaurant in the days and hours before his murder a hitman in other words surely
35:28they'd have been seen afterwards not least because orkney is an island and they'd have had to get to
35:33the mainland whoever carried out the brutal murder of shamsuddin did it in a manner which was could only be
35:44described as professional cold-blooded leaving no trace of themselves walking in and walking out
35:54for many people look like a professional hit
35:59so the mumitaz restaurant is just around the corner and then the lane runs behind the kirkwall
36:06hotel there behind these houses and i find it quite
36:09hard to believe that if you're somebody that is prepared to shoot somebody at point blank range in
36:20the left eye in front of diners with young families and having their dinner on a day like today
36:29that you wouldn't have an exit strategy planned
36:33so did the police investigate this possibility hello thank you welcome aboard thank you so much
36:46right life jacket thank you police have issued a letter to all householders in orkney appealing for
36:54information the local guest houses hotels and public houses were also being visited as part of the police
37:00search and also details of the ferry service and the planes being delayed as details were taken from passengers
37:14officers were this morning questioning passengers at the airport flights were delayed
37:18but it's possible that the killer was already off orkney
37:21the inquiry became very intensive just due to the location and uh orkney being very touristy i think had to be
37:33looked at in case a gang or somebody had traveled up to orkney and did a hit
37:38i printed out some of the timetables for ferries and cargo leaving kirkwall in 1994 and just leafing
37:52through these right now gives you a sense of how porous the ordinary isles are you've got 70 islands of
37:59which only 20 are inhabited i think there was something like 2 700 statements noted
38:05i wouldn't say we shut it off but we knew who was coming and we knew who was going okay maybe a vessel
38:14could get come in and noticed but in the main you were capturing everybody that was coming on to and
38:19off the island listen to this though the strongness scrabster ferry was delayed by one hour 230 passengers
38:29were interviewed by six police officers and that means they could have only spoken to each of them for about
38:35two minutes max not only that i've also discovered that only the ports and ferries leaving the island
38:42are checked no records were taken from people coming or going from the islands so does that
38:48seem thorough to you does that seem like no stone was left unturned
38:55personally i'm not convinced with so few police officers on the islands and so many ways to escape
39:01it feels like a hitman could have easily fled despite the best efforts of the police
39:09i'm smiling when you see every house has searched where's this at in orkney or kirkville
39:18yeah nothing rumors or everybody else being searched and i can tell you that never happened absolutely
39:27not no we mean one neighbor here and then they were searched so i don't believe that for one moment
39:34if i thought it was not i know for a fact it's not
39:44this whole theory might sound completely absurd a hitman in orkney but i've come across another
39:52interesting news story
39:54so this is a news article from 1995 and it talks about shamal's murder but it also talks about what
40:02it's calling the rising crime of the 90s the professional hit it says that in the last six
40:08years there have been more than 50 contract killings in britain i suppose the most interesting suggestion
40:14i guess right from the early days of the investigation is that it's a contract killing
40:18and a professional hat and i've i've seen some evidence of that is what the cops believed
40:22that this was a professional murder that was committed in 1996 the telegraph newspaper in
40:28london contacted the orkney investigation they told them about a contract killing in lancashire
40:34four years before which had similarities to the murder of shamal balaclavas were worn and the
40:40victim was shot in the head michael crossley from kent the man who police suspect fired the two
40:46shots that killed david wilson and his accomplice stephen playle also from kent who tied the family
40:52up so these are the two hit men we have stephen playle and we have michael crossley who killed a
41:01man in charlie they're two former british soldiers
41:08crossley and playle had traveled 250 miles to commit the murder at whitmore villa near charlie
41:13before disappearing back into the night detectives believe they expected to be paid for the assassination
41:18but never received a penny the charlie murder happened in 1992 but these two weren't actually
41:26arrested until 1996 so technically they could have been free in 1994 but how likely is it that two hit
41:34men from kent would travel around you know 800 miles to kirkwall to kill shamal well there is something
41:43that i find interesting although actually quite unnerving if you look at this map the two hitmen
41:52actually only lived within about 40 miles of where shamal worked in kent before he went to orkney for
41:59that second time as a theory the idea that a hitman rather than michael ross killed shamal might seem
42:14bizarre but it does fit parts of the case the killing was carried out in a calmly professional
42:22way there was no dna or fingerprint evidence no murder weapon has ever been found and then there's
42:29those statements of strange men at the restaurant before the murder it is however just a theory
42:38against it you have the fact that in 2006 while michael ross was free something happened that was to
42:44change everything you have the hard reality that 12 years after the murder a witness comes forward with
42:52this mysterious letter that led to michael being charged for the first time we've spoken to the
43:00man who wrote this and he tells an extraordinary story
43:04that's young michael ross that's the person he saw right you know i thought to myself i could be
43:15the next victim he was destroyed absolutely shredded in a courtroom as the judge addressed michael ross he
43:22escaped the attention of his prison officers and suddenly leapt from the dog i just thought oh god
43:27dear god michael it was desperation in my opinion do you think michael killed samuel
43:34is
43:37so
43:40so
43:42so
43:44so
43:48so
43:52so
43:54so
43:56so
44:00You
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