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00:00All we do is hide away
00:07All we do is, all we do is hide away
00:11All we do is lie and wait
00:14All we do is, all we do is lie and wait
00:19I've been upside down
00:23I don't wanna be the right way around
00:27Coughing paradise on the ground
00:30And it is male?
00:47Looking at the brow ridge, the mastoid process, I'd say, yes.
00:51And young.
00:52Anything else jumping out?
00:53Aside from the two bullet-shaped holes in his skull.
00:56Right from them?
00:56Not yet.
00:57This level of decomposition, might that suggest how long he's been here for, roughly?
01:02If you mean could it have been around the same time as Precious Faladay was killed, then yes.
01:06It's not inconsistent.
01:08Okay.
01:09Thanks, Leanne.
01:10DNA sample as soon as, please.
01:13So we need to speak to the letting agency, get a list of everyone who's lived here over the last ten years.
01:17What?
01:18And Anthony Hume, what have we not yet done to place him at the scene of Precious' murder?
01:23If he was there.
01:23He was there.
01:26All suggestions gratefully received.
01:28I'll message the team.
01:39Anthony Hume?
01:40Yes.
01:42So, Wischke takes 2k out of his savings on the 27th in cash, puts them right back in on the 28th.
01:53So what did he do to get his laptop back without handing any money over?
01:56Exactly.
01:57Exactly.
01:58Yes.
01:58Exactly.
02:30We have nothing to say to you.
02:37So whichever tawdry rag you're working for, you're wasting your time.
02:47I'm his daughter.
02:53What kind of messed up power game is this, Steve?
02:55There's no power game, I just want to talk.
02:57So we do it on the phone, you don't just turn up here, you left this house, remember?
03:01I'm sorry.
03:02An FYI, any phone call is going to be relatively brief on account of the fact you screwed my sister.
03:07Except I didn't.
03:08What?
03:08I did kiss her once, which itself is unforgivable, I know, but we never slept together.
03:18It was more of an emotional thing.
03:21So my sister is telling me a lie that makes her look worse?
03:25Your sister has a lot of issues.
03:27I think we know this.
03:31Look, Jess, I messed up massively, and I'm incredibly sorry for that, but I felt that you'd abandoned me.
03:38And I wanted you to hurt like I did, which is why I said I wanted to leave.
03:42But now I've calmed down a bit, and...
03:46And no, I don't.
03:47I don't think I believe a word you just said.
03:53Jess, please, I swear it's the truth.
03:57Jess, can we at least talk tonight?
04:06I found out on my 18th birthday, and contacted him when I was 23.
04:13I'm now 58.
04:14And what sort of relationship have you had with him in that time?
04:18In the multiple decades he's lied to you, you mean?
04:22Yes.
04:23Almost entirely financial.
04:25He's given you money?
04:27Reparation.
04:29Yes.
04:30So can I ask what it is you came here for?
04:33Well, obviously, to see him.
04:36There are things that I wanted to say before it became impossible.
04:42But I can see that I am already too late.
04:45So maybe you can pass on a message.
04:48Can you tell him, please?
04:52That I loathe him.
04:55That I have always loathed him.
04:59And I always will.
05:01But for all your loathing, you still obviously took his money.
05:09And there we are.
05:10You screwed multiple generations of my family over and then think it's okay because I got some money.
05:19I didn't screw anyone over.
05:21Maybe not as directly as him.
05:24But your privilege, your comfort, your happiness, this house, in fact, were all built on the bones of people like me.
05:35Weren't they?
05:36I'd like you to leave now, please.
05:37You knew what he did, didn't you?
05:40You knew the policies that he espoused for decades.
05:44You knew the millions of lives that had ruined, mine included.
05:52And you did nothing.
05:54You just looked the other way.
05:56So I didn't really come to speak to you.
06:03But now I'm here.
06:05Fuck you two.
06:08I loathe the pair of you.
06:10I loathe the pair of you.
06:40What we need is a list of all the ground floor tenants for the past ten years.
06:44Now I realise that might take a while.
06:46So can you start by telling me who the tenant was in July 2016, please?
06:51And ask for when to when?
06:53Okay, the list of other tenants would be very useful.
06:55You've been very helpful.
06:56Thank you very much.
06:57Yes.
06:57Thank you, God.
07:02So the tenant of the garden flat from May 2015 to August 2016 was a Ballet Falladay.
07:10The body discovered buried in the garden of a flat in Greenford is believed to be connected
07:18to the recent discovery of remains found in a house in Hammersmith.
07:22Police investigated on the scene said it's...
07:25The local authorities were dealing with huge cuts and we were all basically doing the jobs of two people.
07:32So you were perma-exhausted multiple 12-hour days and from dealing day in, day out with people who had been abandoned.
07:44People who were angry and in constant crisis.
07:50People who blamed you.
07:53And over a sustained period that really began to take its toll.
07:57I was living on my own at this point and I started to feel very isolated, very low.
08:04And I just started to fixate on some really bad thoughts about women and taking certain sorts
08:18of photos of them in public and then in late 2015 I was attacked on the street and then in February 2016
08:33outside my synagogue and it was about a week after the second attack that I took my first photo of the tube.
08:44You think the two are connected?
08:46No.
08:48Well, maybe. I don't know.
08:51I'm certainly not trying to offer it up as an excuse.
08:54I'm just saying, you grow up being made to feel different.
08:59When we first moved to the UK all through school, then actually being physically attacked for being different.
09:09And it can affect you. Make you do bad shit.
09:14And these photos, they made you feel what? Better or...?
09:21In the moment maybe, but in the long term they made me feel much worse.
09:26But you carried on taking them, Carol. Eventually even taking them at work.
09:31Yeah. Why? Why do any of us do things we know are wrong?
09:40Because that momentary relief is better than nothing.
09:43I'd like, if I might, to take you back to the 26th of June 2016,
10:08which was the day that you visited Precious Valaday in a house in Hammersmith.
10:14And it was also the last time you ever saw her, according to your statement, when we spoke in Paris.
10:19Yeah.
10:20And was this also the day that you accidentally left your laptop there?
10:25You should assume we know everything, Carol.
10:32Yeah.
10:33And on that laptop, she found a number of your upskirting photos and tried to blackmail you for them.
10:39Yeah.
10:40For £2,000?
10:44Yeah.
10:45Showing the suspect exhibit KW01, a bank statement belonging to him.
10:52And if you have a look at the highlighted entries there, Carol, you can see that you did in fact withdraw £2,000 in cash on the 27th.
11:00But then just below that entry, you deposited the exact same amount again in cash into the same bank account on the 28th.
11:09Which suggests to me that you never paid her the money.
11:12I didn't.
11:16So could you tell us then, please, how you did manage to get your laptop back?
11:36Can I, um, drop these off for a patient, please?
11:39What would?
11:40Um, I don't know, but her name's Sophie Coulson.
11:43She hit her head and...
11:47Just tell her I'm sorry, yeah?
11:52The first thing I noticed as I walked up the driveway was that there was a car parked up outside.
11:56Okay, and this is the day after you say you last saw her?
11:59Yeah.
12:00Yeah.
12:01So you went in?
12:02Yeah.
12:03And what happened then?
12:04I couldn't see anyone, so I called out her name.
12:09No one answered, so I walked straight ahead into the sitting room where we'd met the day before.
12:13The floor was wet, not all over, like someone had just mopped it, but no precious.
12:23And then in the corner I saw my laptop on the table.
12:26This was my property, you know?
12:28So I walked over and took it and then left.
12:31It was as I was heading for the front door that I saw him.
12:35An old man at the end of the corridor with a mop and bucket.
12:41Did you speak to him?
12:42I called out hello and he turned clearly surprised.
12:47I introduced myself and told him that I'd come to see Precious.
12:51He quickly said that she was out and that he'd tell her that I'd come over.
12:55Anything else?
12:56He'd asked if I'd been to the main room to look for her.
12:58I said no and then left.
13:00Could you describe him?
13:01Late 60s, early 70s.
13:04Well spoken.
13:06Okay.
13:07So, the day after this, you resigned.
13:11And then three weeks later, you left the country for good.
13:16I assumed that she'd have downloaded the images elsewhere and would continue to extort me.
13:20I felt like my life in England was over.
13:24Listen.
13:26You'd be hard pressed to find a man who hated himself more than me for what I did do.
13:32Or the women I abused by taking those photos.
13:34Yeah.
13:37I hope I've become a better person.
13:39But I'm also fully aware that I may well be kidding myself that I only did it because I was depressed or lonely.
13:46Maybe I actually did it because I'm a fucked up human being.
13:50I generally don't know the answer to that.
13:53But one thing I am sure of.
13:56I never saw Precious Faraday after the 26th.
13:59And I never hurt her.
14:01The NA test has confirmed that Jay Royce is indeed the child of Precious Faraday and Eric Royce.
14:15And the body in the garden is the child of Precious Faraday and David Bell.
14:19Joseph Bell.
14:20Bell never mentioned she had a second grandchild.
14:24Do you think it's possible she didn't know?
14:26I think it's perfectly possible.
14:28The boy was invisible.
14:29Off the radar of social services, the education system.
14:33The real question is, what does he know?
14:36Indeed.
14:37Okay.
14:38Murray, what you got for us?
14:40Forensic have confirmed that a bullet found in the wall at Waterman Road was fired from the same gun as the one that killed Precious.
14:46Yeah.
14:47Not a surprise.
14:48Excellent.
14:49Anything else?
14:50Yeah.
14:51You wanted to try and place Hume at the murder scene on the 26th?
14:54I mean, my name is on the contract, but he paid the actual rent, so he absolutely knew where the flat was.
14:59He probably had keys.
15:00Who did?
15:01The day after it all happened, he paid for me to go away for a few days.
15:03He sent me to bloody Cornwall day.
15:05Calm down, Bellay.
15:06Who did?
15:07My father.
15:08He put Joe there.
15:09I thought you never knew your father.
15:12Bellay!
15:13Did you kill your granddaughter, Mr. Hume?
15:17They don't have a granddaughter, three grandsons.
15:20I'm talking about Precious Faladay.
15:22What evidence do you have that Precious Faladay is Mr. Hume's granddaughter?
15:26We can do DNA checks in time, but for now, I think his daughter Abele Faladay would confirm this.
15:32And if he denies that Abele is his daughter, well, Ellen, I'd simply ask why he's been paying her money via standing order for the past 30-something years.
15:39No, I didn't kill her.
15:40Did you kill your great grandson, Joseph Bell?
15:45No, of course not.
15:46Were you with either of them the night they died?
15:49No.
15:50Or at or near 64 Waterman Road on the 26th and 27th of June 2016?
15:55No.
15:57And when was the last time you saw either of them?
15:58I've never even met either of them.
16:00I'm showing the suspect, exhibit TH01, a copy of a credit card statement belonging to Mr. Hume.
16:09Mr. Hume, could you read out the fifth credit down, please?
16:14It's a payment to an S.O. filling station for £60.
16:2026th of June 2016.
16:24And the address of the petrol station?
16:28Inverdale Road.
16:29Postcode?
16:30W67CX.
16:31Which is, in case you don't know, Hammersmith.
16:34And Inverdale Road is the road at the bottom of Waterman Road.
16:38And do you see a time for the payment there?
16:421923.
16:43So, just before half seven, on the night that Precious died, we now have you no more than 100 yards from the house in which she died.
16:53Is there anything you'd like to add?
16:54No comment.
16:58So, the day after this, the 27th of June, we also have a witness who says they saw you with a bucket and mop near a room shown by forensics to have been spattered with blood,
17:11which we have since identified as Precious Validates.
17:14What witness?
17:16Our social worker.
17:18You refused consent for video ID earlier, so we took a covert ID in custody, and our witness identified you very easily, Mr. Hume.
17:27What's your response to that?
17:34Lord Hume, I think at this point, the best cause is to stick to the covert.
17:41No comment.
17:42Really?
17:43Because maybe there's a perfectly innocent explanation as to why the day after a murder was committed in that room, you were seen in that house, clearly having just mopped blood off the floor.
17:54And if there is, then this is your chance now to tell us your side of the story.
17:59Poor Corfu, Mike and Liz were in there last year and absolutely loved it.
18:06They said it was just crystal clear.
18:10They said they'd go back in a heartbeat.
18:12I know.
18:13You all right, love?
18:14There's something I need to tell you about.
18:15I'm gonna go stay with Jordan for a bit.
18:29Just found a new squat with hot water.
18:31You need to sort your life out, J-Mon.
18:36I only found out about Belle when she was in her early twenties.
18:46The result of a very brief relationship I'd had with a mother in 1963.
18:57The mother died when Belle was young.
19:00And so as soon as I found out I had a daughter, I obviously offered her financial support, which she accepted.
19:07There was little further contact, which was her choice.
19:12I knew that she had a daughter herself in the mid-eighties, but I had no contact with her until late 2015, when she called me out of the blue.
19:25And also wanted money.
19:28Which again, willingly, I gave her.
19:32A few weeks before she died, I got a call from Belle telling me that Precious was homeless.
19:42Waterman Road was empty at that time, and of course I wanted to help, so I met her.
19:49To give her some keys and let her in.
19:53The meeting was brief, but cordial.
19:58She'd obviously lost her way in life, and I felt very sorry for her.
20:05The night she died, a man identifying himself as Precious's son called me from Waterman Road.
20:19He, uh, he was threatening all sorts of things, and again, wanted money.
20:28I rang Belle and she said she'd drive there immediately.
20:34But, um, I-I also decided to drive there myself.
20:47I-I got there first.
20:52To find that, uh, Joseph Precious's son was in a very bad way.
20:59He seemed to be coming down off something that was clearly very disturbed.
21:03Threatening violence to me and his mother.
21:06Uh, unless I-I took him to a cash machine and-and got our thousands of parts.
21:12And, uh, quite without warning, he pulled out a gun.
21:20Which he proceeded to point at me.
21:25But Precious was horrified and-and before I could stop her, she lunged for it and-and-it went off.
21:38Hitting him in the head.
21:41Hitting him in the head.
21:44He was held.
21:45Uh, I-I went to help him and, uh, as I was trying to get him into the recovery position, there was another shot.
21:56And I looked around and-
21:58Precious had turned the gun on herself.
22:02Straight into her chest.
22:05She died pretty instantly.
22:12Jess's heart stopped within seconds.
22:15I never even had a chance to call for help.
22:21And into this...
22:23Nightmare.
22:25Well, Benny.
22:28I explained to her what had happened.
22:31I-I'm not sure she entirely believed me, even though it was true.
22:38Well, obviously, we were both...
22:41In pieces.
22:44And that was how I...
22:48I ended up saying that I would...
22:52Dispose of Joseph's body.
22:55And...
22:56I ended up leaving Betty with her daughter.
23:02So you...
23:04Buried Joseph Bell...
23:06In the garden of your daughter's flat in Greenford?
23:10Yes.
23:11And why there, specifically?
23:14I had keys.
23:16It was private.
23:19Not for deflection.
23:21To incriminate her if anything ever went wrong?
23:25No.
23:26So...
23:28Why did you anonymously call the front desk of this police station last night and tell us where his body was?
23:39Apparently.
23:42Did you know that Bellé had hidden Precious in the fireplace?
23:46No.
23:48No.
23:51She told me she'd buried her in wood somewhere.
23:55So this...
23:56This is the truth now?
24:01Yes.
24:02Because you've lied to us repeatedly, Lord Hume.
24:05Both times we've questioned you.
24:08This is the truth.
24:10I swear.
24:18We need a Bellé Faladé.
24:19We need a Bellé Faladé.
24:48We need a Bellé Faladé.
24:49We need a Bellé Faladé.
24:50We need a Bellé Faladé.
24:54We need to clean our teeth.
24:55We need to do our stories.
24:58I'm going to put a Bellé.
24:59Bellé.
25:00Two...
25:01Five...
25:02Four...
25:03Three...
25:04His behaviour's been disgraceful, which he realises.
25:08He loves you, Jess.
25:10And needs you.
25:12And the kids need him.
25:15I don't believe him, mum.
25:16No, I'm sure you don't.
25:19I did shite, but nothing's perfect.
25:25Not even you.
25:27Call you later.
25:46So my mom, Yotunde, was a second-generation Nigerian.
26:13Her parents came over here after the war.
26:17She was born in 1946.
26:20And in August 1963, age 17,
26:25she got a job as a cleaner in the city's stockbrokers
26:29where her parents already worked in the canteen.
26:32The son of one of the directors was working there
26:36in the months between Bollingham and Cambridge.
26:41And one night after drinking with work friends,
26:45he went back to the office late to pick up some papers
26:48and encountered my mom, who was working nights.
26:52And after pressuring her to have a few drinks with him,
26:58raped her.
27:02She went back home that night and, of course, told her parents
27:09who blamed her.
27:11And she did consider going to the police,
27:15but in the end didn't because he was the rich white son of the boss.
27:22And she wasn't.
27:24A few weeks later, she realized that she was pregnant
27:29and wrote to the son, who was now at university.
27:35And he didn't reply, so she wrote to his father,
27:41Sir Henry Hume, who asked her to come into his office
27:48and told her that if she pursued this any further,
27:52he'd sack her and her parents.
27:55Morgan Lavelle had originally made money from the sugar trade,
28:01so she really shouldn't have been so surprised.
28:04And on the 3rd of March, 1964, I was born.
28:13Three weeks later, she wrote me a letter,
28:16which was meant to be given to me on my 18th birthday,
28:21and deposited it with a local solicitor.
28:25And...
28:28jumped in the Thames.
28:33I was raised by my grandparents,
28:35who saw me as a child of evil
28:41and filled me with shame and self-hatred.
28:48And after I read that, I realized why.
28:53So, if he told you that he was decent about it
28:58when I finally approached him,
29:01then again, he lied.
29:05He was more interested in protecting his reputation
29:09and made a number of threats of violence against me.
29:15I ignored them and I got his DNA from a glass lecture that he did
29:22and had a test done and told him that I would go to the news of the world.
29:28But the result, that was 1988, you know.
29:33After that, he was a...
29:35Does he care?
29:37So, nothing about him is what it seems.
29:43And whatever he told you about that night, whatever he told me,
29:48won't be what actually happened.
29:55So, why don't you tell us what you witnessed there?
30:00He called me and said that Joseph had called him, threatening him.
30:12Did Joseph know that this was his great-grandfather?
30:27I had told Precious about you a few months before I guess she had then told Joseph.
30:33And why hadn't you told her about him before then?
30:39Because I knew that she would mess up the financial arrangement, which I needed.
30:48So?
30:49So, um...
30:53After my father called me, we both headed to Waterman Road
30:58and when I arrived, I walked into a vision from hell.
31:09My daughter was already dead and my grandson was dying
31:14and my father told me that my daughter had shot her son accidentally
31:21and then shot herself.
31:23Did he tell you how that happened?
31:27He said that Joseph had taken drugs
31:30and that there'd been some sort of row about money
31:34and that he'd pointed a gun at Hume
31:38and that Precious had tried to get it off him
31:40and it had gone off hitting Joe.
31:44And she then turned it on herself.
31:47Okay.
31:48Did you ever question this version of events?
31:51Oh, no. Not in the moment, no.
31:54You know, I was in shock, obviously.
31:57And also, I'd only met Joseph three or four times
32:01and I knew that he'd already been in a young offenders institute
32:04for assault using a gun.
32:07And in that moment, in the panic and horror,
32:11being told that by Lord Anthony Hume,
32:15I'm embarrassed to say that I believed him.
32:21Do you believe it now?
32:23No.
32:24So what do you think happened?
32:27I don't know.
32:30I just know that he is a evil, lying bastard
32:36and he could have done absolutely anything.
32:40Maybe he shot them both.
32:43You know, I don't know.
32:45And the disposal of the bodies?
32:48He told me that if we called the police,
33:00they might not believe it was an accident
33:03because of my criminal record.
33:09He wanted to take them both,
33:11but I said I wanted to look after Precious.
33:15And I spent the whole night with her,
33:20just holding her and rocking her and singing to her,
33:26saying sorry to her.
33:31And then it was morning
33:35and I walked out to the car
33:40and there were workmen in the street.
33:47I have regretted what I did
33:51every single day since
33:54because that was a dreadful way to treat my daughter.
34:03But...
34:04that was me.
34:12A few weeks later,
34:13I took Precious's key
34:16to get back in
34:17and had some...
34:20friend put a plasterboard.
34:22Okay, um...
34:23just...
34:24just one last question.
34:25Does the name...
34:26Jay Royce...
34:27mean anything to you?
34:28Who's Jay Royce?
34:29Who's Jay Royce?
34:41Who's Jay Royce?
35:00Jay Royce?
35:04What do you want?
35:06Can we talk about that night, please?
35:09Why?
35:10Nothing ever changes.
35:11People like me don't win against people like him.
35:16I'm so sorry that was your and Joseph's experience.
35:21But we're here to tell you
35:24that if you trust us, we will change that.
35:28We will listen to you, and we will act on what you tell us.
35:33And if you stay silent, then all I can say is, yeah.
35:37He probably will win again.
35:54I was one floor up.
35:58My mum didn't want me to meet my nan or him,
36:00so I was playing on my Game Boy.
36:05I saw Hume arrive in his car out of her bedroom window.
36:09So he arrived first?
36:13A good ten minutes before my nan.
36:16I weren't interested in meeting either of them,
36:18so I was just waiting for them to leave.
36:20Except then I started to hear shouting.
36:26Joe mainly, but mum as well.
36:30Both screaming at Hume, really.
36:34So I walked out onto the landing.
36:37My brother was obviously off his face,
36:40pointing and jabbing at Hume,
36:42telling him he was a dirty bastard
36:44and that he should fuck him up proper
36:45for what he had done to our family.
36:48To our nan's mum.
36:51And he's screaming right in front of him.
36:53And all his spit's getting in Hume's face.
36:58And suddenly Hume's got his hand around Joe's neck
37:01and he slammed him up against a wall.
37:04Said he could have him disappeared in an instant if he wanted.
37:07Because he was that fucking powerful.
37:09And he's squeezing Joe's neck.
37:15And squeezing and squeezing and I'm thinking he's going to choke him.
37:21He's going to kill him.
37:27Which is when Joe pulls out this gun from the back of his trousers.
37:31And Hume goes very fucking quiet, very quick.
37:35Starts to back away with his hands up.
37:37My mum's shitting herself and telling Joe to put it down, but he won't.
37:41And he's still shouting back at both of them.
37:43And then my mum just makes a grab for it.
37:53And it all goes quiet as she wrestles with him.
37:56And there's a bang.
37:58And she goes down.
38:01And Joe's in shock, man.
38:04And not really taking it all in.
38:07My mum's eyes are rolling up into her fucking head.
38:12And Hume's asking for the gun.
38:17Joe just gives it to him.
38:21Meek as a lamb now.
38:23Then Joe knows my mum to take her hand.
38:26Which is when Hume shoots him.
38:31In the back of the head.
38:36And there was obviously nothing I could do.
38:39You know, I was 14.
38:41I was also terrified he'd hear me and he'd kill me.
38:45So I sort of just...
38:47I sort of just froze.
38:49Then I heard my nan's car arriving and she walked in and just started wailing.
38:57So I used the noise to go upstairs.
39:02To the very top floor and hide in the cupboard under the eaves.
39:06I stayed there for two whole days.
39:09When I finally came down, the bodies had gone.
39:13Hume had gone.
39:14The blood had gone.
39:16The blood had gone.
39:18Some of my mum's things were still there, like...
39:22Her laptop was in the drawer and a few of her clothes, which I took.
39:32And then I just ran.
39:33I wonder how kids like him turn out like they do.
39:53Right. Let's see what Hume has to say now.
39:56The lies that we tell ourselves.
40:01That that wasn't rape.
40:05That she liked me.
40:10That I was a good man.
40:12Who'd led a good life.
40:14Who'd leave good behind.
40:16Best part of my life.
40:18I truly believe that.
40:21Then in one instant.
40:25One look.
40:27It all fell away.
40:30I saw myself honestly.
40:34I couldn't bear it.
40:36To see who I really was.
40:39The awful truth.
40:40The awful truth.
40:42So I...
40:52I snuffed it out.
40:56So you shot Joseph Bell.
40:58Yes.
41:08I did.
41:15And I have tried.
41:17So hard for the last six years.
41:20To make some amends.
41:22But of course it was never even close to being enough.
41:31For that.
41:34All I did.
41:38I am so, so...
41:43So sorry.
41:52I mean, I wouldn't give up the day job.
41:58But there's definitely something there.
42:01You weren't trying to make amends, Mr Hume.
42:04You just saw the catastrophic effect of your life's work.
42:07And realised that that's how you'd be remembered.
42:10You were just trying to improve your wiki page.
42:14Yeah.
42:16We see you.
42:18But consider this, Lord Anthony Hume.
42:21You will only ever be remembered as a rapist who murdered his own great grandson.
42:25That's your fucking legacy, fella.
42:27I hope they throw away the key.
42:38I'll get someone to take you to your cell.
42:47Are you Jay?
43:03Yes.
43:12Do you know who I am?
43:14I think so.
43:16I'm your Nan, Jay.
43:22I'm Belle.
43:25Hello, Nan.
43:31I am so sorry, little one.
43:36I am so, so sorry.
43:39I told them, Nan.
43:41I told them he did it.
43:43I know, sweetheart.
43:46They rang.
43:49So now we know the truth.
43:51So you don't.
43:53Sorry.
43:55I lied.
44:00Mum killed Joe.
44:02Accidentally trying to get the gun off him.
44:04Then shot herself.
44:06But it was all his fault.
44:09What happened to our family?
44:11From him raping your mum.
44:13To everything that come after.
44:15It was all down to him.
44:17So I just thought, fuck him, you know?
44:20What's good for the goose, man, innit?
44:22Just...
44:24Fuck him.
44:25There you are.
44:27Sorry about earlier.
44:29I was, uh...
44:31I was a bit unprofessional.
44:32No apology needed.
44:33You took the word right out of my mouth.
44:35CPS call yet?
44:36Said we can charge him with the murder and the rape.
44:38Nice.
44:40I wasn't expecting both.
44:41That's a 57-year-old crime, DCI James.
44:42The Bishop Street record.
44:44Well, for now.
44:46I'm sorry.
44:48I'm sorry about earlier.
44:49Sorry about earlier.
44:50I was, uh...
44:51I was a bit unprofessional.
44:52No apology needed.
44:53You took the word right out of my mouth.
44:55CPS call yet?
44:56Said we can charge him with the murder and the rape.
44:58Nice.
45:00I wasn't expecting both.
45:02That's a 57-year-old crime, DCI James.
45:06The Bishop Street record.
45:07Well, for now.
45:11And it's Jessie.
45:13Please.
45:16Jessie James.
45:18So, you ever held up a stagecoach?
45:21Held up a bar.
45:23But now you're talking.
45:24I'll get my horse.
45:37Hey.
45:47Oh.
45:49Oh.
45:50Oh.
45:51Oh.
45:52Oh.
45:54LP
45:56Wow.
45:58Cool.
46:00You
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