- 1 week ago
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00:00I'll tell you a little story I don't know whether you'll want to include this but I'll tell you a
00:13little story so only three weeks ago I was in the pub and somebody who hasn't lived in the village
00:20that long was leaving and somebody said to him oh are you going he says oh I'm just going to take
00:26the wife home I'm just going to walk her home she wants to go kind of thing he says he's got to be
00:31careful you know you can get murdered in this village and they kept joking about it these two
00:37people and I just looked around and I went enough and he went what what I'm only saying the facts
00:44and I went enough and he apologized and he said I'm so sorry I said she was one of my best friends you
00:55know it didn't leave our our lives it was all consuming that was all anybody was talking about
01:05it's such a central part to the village isn't it wherever you come from that's where you end up
01:12you know there was as I find here a substantial degree of pre-meditation
01:24having armed himself with the bar the defendant must have waited until Diana Garbutt was asleep
01:31and in the early hours of the morning crept silently into her bedroom
01:36he struck her head three savage blows with the bar smashing her skull and causing her immediate death
01:45as he plainly intended
01:47he told the same ludicrous story from beginning to end
01:52by their verdict the jury have exposed this to be pure humbug
01:58this was a brutal planned and cold-blooded murder of his wife she lay fast asleep in her own bed
02:08it was just how how have you come to this decision what have you based this decision on
02:17because it isn't evidence
02:19I order that the defendant serves a minimum term of 20 years before he is considered for release by the parole board
02:29the jury were told to be sure that he was guilty and I wasn't sure
02:35guilty Robin Garbutt is sent to prison for a minimum of 20 years for murdering his postmistress wife
02:43he never stopped did he no he was going to prove that there was somebody out there that had done this to die
02:51lawyers for a former sub postmaster from North Yorkshire are seeking a fresh appeal
02:55after arguing that the inquiry into the post office IT scandal shed new light on his case
03:00in my opinion there's another side to this story
03:04I looked at the statements from the post office officials and immediately I said
03:08well hang on a minute the jury haven't been given all the facts here
03:11this case may be the most egregious miscarriage of justice stemming from the post office scandal
03:41from my memory the verdict came in the afternoon
03:54by the time we left the court probably later than it normally would have been I was exhausted
04:04and then I started heading for home and never felt so far away from home
04:11it just makes you realize that you know you're lucky that you can go home
04:25didn't feel as if there's closure now
04:29which is what you'd hope for or you might expect
04:31you do hear families talking about justice what does justice taste like
04:41I don't know
04:47I want to know what happened you know I don't think we have heard what happened we haven't heard the truth
04:54I don't think we have heard the truth
04:58convicted
05:01feel lost
05:0320 years
05:04how could they have ignored my evidence
05:08no DNA on murder weapon relating to me
05:14unknown DNA on pillow
05:15clump of light brown hair on pillow
05:16clump of light brown hair on pillow photographed
05:20then lost by police
05:22no evidence connecting me with the murder
05:28we would have conversations with robin when we when we went in in the prison
05:33and he would also write
05:35so you know robin could give us an idea of you know what he thought we could help with
05:40he's an optimistic person but i'm sure underneath robin felt let down by the system
05:50does it surprise me that he's still protesting his innocence it doesn't really
05:55the only thing he can do is make a judgment on what's known and what's in the public domain really
06:00if there's something completely extraordinary which hasn't emerged which proves him to be innocent then
06:07you know that that of course would would explain his stance and it would be its most horrendous
06:13miscarriage of justice if that were the case
06:19my phd was on miscarriages of justice and then i started to write specifically about
06:24prisoners maintaining innocence
06:28and then i just was inundated with requests from people who were saying you're writing about me
06:34please can you help me you know how does the appeal system actually help the innocent who
06:39are caught up in this because our system actually doesn't care if you're innocent or guilty
06:44it's about process the work i do now for 12 years i set up the innocence projects in britain
06:50trying to overturn these wrongful convictions when they happen but i heard about robin's case
06:55through friend of robin's and that's how i started to look into it
06:59and as things stand there is no credible forensic evidence that suggests that robin murdered diana
07:08it's just circumstantial evidence
07:12so i haven't seen anything that says he did it but i don't know but i'd like to know
07:22it's now more than two years since diana garbage body was found in the bedroom of the post office they
07:27ran together in melsonby in north yorkshire he's always maintained his innocence claiming his wife
07:33was murdered by a masked intruder at trial the prosecution didn't believe the robbery took place
07:39they said that robin was stealing money it all blew up in the middle of the night he killed her for it
07:45it wasn't just that he found out she'd been sleeping with somebody or she'd been kissing someone it was
07:50also to do with finances i joined the post office in 1978 and then in 1988 my wife and i bought our own
08:02post office and we ran that branch for 38 years and all throughout that time i played a role helping
08:11and representing some postmasters when they got into disputes with the post office
08:15at trial experts from the post office working with the police and the prosecution they said
08:23that he was stealing money which undermined his version that we were robbed and that money was stolen
08:33in 2011 the jury would have had complete faith and trust in the post office it was a british
08:39institution so when an official from that organization turns up and gives evidence under oath you listen
08:47you know you tend not to disbelieve what you're being told the prosecution in robin garbutt's trial
08:53claimed data from the horizon system showed he was stealing from the couple's post office in melsonby
08:58in north yorkshire and killed diana to cover it up everyone likes to know there's a motive that they can
09:05understand and the potential of a motive through the misuse of cash seems to have been quite impacting
09:13on the jury at the end of the day each branch entered into the horizon system for cash declaration
09:21and that assisted then this algorithm to look back at the ins and the outs of customer transactions
09:29to see what cash you held in branch if they thought you had too much cash on the premises you'd get an
09:35automated request from horizon telling you how much money it thinks you should send back but a lot of
09:43postmasters simply ignored that because it was wrong and it was quite common behavior for a postmaster
09:51to do that robin knew how his post office ran and he actually stated that if you get the graph of our
09:59previous years overnight cash holdings and follow the graphs of rise and peaks and falls
10:06it'll follow what i'm declaring in my post office but the post office at trial said no not available that
10:14information however we found out after trial it was available
10:18when they finally got the records i looked at the statements from the posters officials and i could
10:25see no evidence of any fraud taking place that's would going to benefit mr garbert it showed that
10:32actually this is consistent with the way that branch conducted the cash management
10:42it wasn't until after trial we'd looked into it more after drowning we'd got of a previous seven
10:47years overnight cash holders that proved the records were correct that enabled us then to go forward to
10:53the appeal card
11:04today robin garford's legal team came back to court to claim fresh evidence could clear his name
11:09post office accounting records which they argued supported his side of the story
11:19when it comes to an appeal the court of appeal only receives cases if there's fresh evidence or there's an
11:25exceptional reason why the evidence that was available wasn't used that evidence judges said here today
11:33should have been made available to robin garbert during his trial but for jurors to acquit him they said
11:39they would have to believe that his wife was killed instantly that she raised no alarm and that garbert who was
11:45downstairs at the time heard nothing at all
11:48that they said was highly improbable
11:5824th of may not back day
12:02we are stuck with circumstantial evidence
12:05i feel so bad
12:06i have let die down again
12:09those killers are still out there
12:10there is always hope but how strong i am will be the test and time will tell
12:19the reason the appeal failed is that regardless of what happened with horizon regardless of what
12:25his financial situation was his version of events of a robber coming in and killing her it just wasn't
12:30plausible not a single witness was found who corroborated this notion of a robber getting in and
12:36getting out without being seen it just it just didn't add up tonight north yorkshire police has
12:42said it hopes today's decision will mean diana garbert's family can begin to rebuild their lives
12:49despite some in the village still supportive of the man convicted of her killing robin garbert will
12:54tonight continue his 20-year jail sentence
13:09in court they said that nobody could have got in and out of the post office on that morning
13:17what people didn't realize is you can access through the back of the garages
13:24it's a small little snicket down some steps and if robin was bringing in the stock he would have
13:33had the back door wedged open and the door into the shop would have been open
13:44so if robin's gone in through the shop and into the little stock room there
13:50quite easy for somebody to come down them steps who's been waiting in the back of the garages
13:58the staircase is immediately through that door and upstairs
14:03somebody could have got in there and gone upstairs easy access
14:11so they've got in unbeknown to him got upstairs murdered her why why would you murder her what's
14:17the kind of benefit from the robber's perspective there why why is the robber doing it why would
14:20you murder the postmaster's wife before you get access to the safe so rather than being a robber
14:25you're a murderer hey listen i'm not saying there's a logic to what robbers do but i can't i'm kind of
14:31struggling to see why you would do that in that context really it is unfortunately a common occurrence for
14:40robberies to take place through quite sophisticated means sometimes i have heard of branches being
14:47broken into where perpetrators have waited for the family to come down in the morning and then they
14:53pounce on them make them open the safe and get out before the public are letting i've heard of that on
14:59many occasions invariably there was evidence of of planning and the ones that would hide in the building
15:07if they could they were the ones in my opinion that would have taken the trouble to plan their attack
15:15the way postmas alarms would work is that they're time lock safes didn't take sherlock
15:22comers to work out that i've got to wait until the time locks release otherwise i'm going to set all
15:26the alarms off and as soon as it stopped they'd know that they can open the safe and that's the
15:32moment a bandit would choose to appear and carry out the robbery after the appeal and lost the appeal
15:47the work started with robin in prison you know letters going backwards and forwards asking for you
15:54wanting stuff and looking at stuff and the work was absolutely relentless
16:01trying to you know put things together find things out as best we could we plugged away and
16:08sort of helped him the best he could and he'd do all the work from his his cell realistically
16:14the work he did didn't he he just didn't give in i copied and copied and copied and copied didn't
16:20for hours copying yeah and sending to him so he could look at it and then he could write to
16:26people couldn't he wrote to specialists he he never stopped did he no he was going to prove
16:32that there was somebody out there that had done this to die and if he could prove he hadn't done it
16:38then that person would be found
16:56i've struggled with robin getting attention he's always maintained his innocence
17:03of course i understand if he is innocent then it's terrible if he's wrongly convicted of a crime he
17:12didn't do and is serving a lengthy time in prison
17:19but at the same time it's about getting the truth about what happened to diana that's the
17:27most important thing is diana she was a real person and she was special
17:43i just think there can be too much attention and limelight given to the wrong thing
17:56the only body that can refer your case back to the court of appeal is the ccrc the criminal case review
18:10commission and the thing about the ccrc is it can only refer a case back to the court of appeal if
18:19there's fresh evidence that wasn't available at the time of the original trial and so it goes what is
18:25fresh what is new since you were convicted
18:33i got involved in the diana garbot murder case at the request of solicitors acting for the defendant
18:43at the original trial the really key evidence against him was about the fact that the pathologist
18:49had said that she died in the early hours of the morning
18:51it was kind of between 2 30 and 4 30 was said to the jury and obviously they were saying that they
18:57had evidence which suggested that that wasn't quite as clear cut that it could have been later which
19:02would have you know tallied with his version of events of a robber coming in and killing that sort
19:06of thing in terms of estimation of the time of death i think all the pathologists involved almost all
19:13agreed on nearly everything so we know when she was last seen alive and we know when she was found so
19:20that's the first thing and then we then start to look at the rigel mortis does that really assist not
19:27really the hypostasis the settling of blood that doesn't really assist the body temperature was measured
19:34but even that is variable and when you actually look at the sort of plots and the graphs it doesn't really
19:40take us any further than the two parameters when she was last seen when she was found dead
19:47so then we come into the stomach contents which is the one area where i thought there was problems
19:56this is the uh statement from jennifer miller this time of death ladies and gentlemen dr miller a
20:05botanist who also specializes in digestion as far as the time of death goes when it came to trial
20:12the food science lady said that the digestion rate of the food showed that dino died in the
20:16allowance of the morning because of the remaining undigested food in the stomach she concluded that the
20:23most likely time of death was within the window of 2 30 until 4 30 a.m during the trial i believe the
20:31time frame was said to be between half past two and half past four which really shouldn't be that
20:38specific because you don't know the variability in the meal size that started off precisely when she
20:45ate that meal did she eat all of the meal i mean there's just so many variables that to be so specific
20:52just didn't stand up when an expert gives a time slot of death it does make for powerful evidence
21:00especially when the jurors are used to films and television where the thought just comes along
21:07and says i at the time of death was ten past eight these days on a much more sort of scientific
21:12basis that pathology works on we don't do that at all having reviewed all of the material i just felt
21:19that the timing of death wasn't as specific as was suggested and then in fact we had a much broader
21:28time frame over which to operate including timings that would fit in with the account provided by the
21:35defendant
21:47so the time of death has been discredited as far as we're concerned
21:50it was submitted to the ccrc that this was problematic to say the very very least it was unreliable
22:00and the ccrc dismissed it
22:11is
22:19how can there be the evidence that there is
22:22the people that have given statements have spoken you know the professionals
22:28how can they disregard it it does not make sense i can't make sense of it
22:33I've been a private investigator for about two years, and then out of the blue, I received
22:50a telephone call from the defense of Robin Garbutt.
22:55And I was instructed to look at the evidence about the murder weapon.
23:09At the trial, it was alleged that Robin Garbutt, in the early hours of the morning following
23:14the murder, had crept across the road in the middle of the night and placed the metal
23:21bar on this position, just here, where the little marker is, where the tag is, as taken
23:27from the Scenes of Crimes photograph.
23:30So that is extremely specific as to where the bar was actually found three days later
23:36by police search teams.
23:40The murder weapon had been found sitting on top of the wall, hanging over the end of the
23:45wall by about four inches on either side, and therefore clearly visible from the opposite
23:51side.
23:52So the witness that we spoke to at the garage that used to be there, he was very specific,
23:59and he remembers standing on the morning of the murder, just behind the wall, on the garage
24:05side, looking down on the emergency services.
24:10And he clearly remembers that had there been a metal bar on the top of the wall, he would
24:18have removed it because it would have been in danger of being knocked off and falling onto
24:24somebody's head.
24:25A key part of the prosecution case was that Robin had murdered his wife and then put the
24:35bar on that wall.
24:38But the photographs taken on the day that she was murdered, it appears to show it's not there.
24:46But a couple of days later, it appears on that wall.
24:49Robin could not have put that there.
24:53Robin was taken to the police station, and then he went with his sister and his brother-in-law
24:58back to their home, which is about 70 miles away.
25:02And they were with him from then on.
25:07From Robin leaving Melsenby, even to this day, he's obviously in prison, but he's never
25:11stepped foot in Melsenby since then.
25:25The next question is to do with the DNA which is on the rust that was found on Diana's pillow.
25:33Diana's been hit over the head with an iron bar and murdered.
25:38It was a rusty iron bar, some of that rust has fallen onto the pillow.
25:44Just to put this in context, Doctor, there is evidence of DNA on the pillow, and the DNA
25:50does not match Mr. Garbutt.
25:55Yes.
25:56And the reality is that this could be DNA from a murderer.
26:01Potentially, yes.
26:04It's been tested for DNA.
26:06This has been independently looked at by an expert on behalf of Robin Garbutt.
26:12And they can't exclude the police officer, who wasn't on duty on that day.
26:17And the police officer's asked, where were you on this day, because you were off work
26:21that day.
26:22And he says, I can't remember.
26:24But yet when he comes back to work, he somehow manages to be one of the police officers who discovers
26:38the iron bar on the wall.
26:43Because we know that there was no DNA of Robin Garbutt found on the metal bar, it's another
26:50factor in this murder of Diana Garbutt that really does not make sense.
26:58The reason we're having this discussion now, the reason there is doubt about this case,
27:01is because of mistakes that were made earlier in the inquiry, really.
27:05And that's very difficult for his family, but it's even more difficult for her family.
27:12As we learn of the errors made, the confusion around things, questions around the DNA and
27:24the weapon that was used to kill Diana, it made me feel really angry.
27:30You know, it's a disservice to Diana.
27:35There's just so many question marks around a lot of the evidence, and I think there were
27:39a lot of errors made by the police, which just made it really hard to say with confidence
27:46what happened and whether he was guilty.
27:49Because of all of the question marks around everything, my dad and I are going to go and
27:59visit him in the near future to try and find something out or that might help make sense
28:06of things.
28:07So my dad and I are going to go together as a support for one another, really.
28:14Going to see him, if I had to think of a question for him, it would be, you've done the three
28:21quarters of your 20 year sentence.
28:24Why not put all your cards on the table and tell us what happened?
28:33In Robin's case, I have never known a case where you've got a murder weapon with DNA on
28:40it and it's not the guy who was sitting in prison for the murder.
28:45But the CCRC rejected that as well.
29:06It's just rejecting every single thing that's been submitted and whether it's time of death,
29:11whether it's the murder weapon, the CCRC is just like computer says no, computer says no, computer
29:17says no.
29:18Yes, we could find that out.
29:19We're not prepared to do it.
29:20We don't think if we do that, this.
29:22It just shows its reluctance and its lack of commitment to trying to find out the truth.
29:29I don't understand why it keeps getting knocked back.
29:33I don't think the justice system is fair.
29:36I don't know if he did it.
29:39But I've not seen any evidence that indicates that Robin did it.
29:44All the evidence that led to the conviction, it's been discredited to my mind.
29:49In general conversation, in the village, in the pub, it's not spoken about.
30:05It's spoken about in our close circle of friends.
30:09But no further than that.
30:15I suppose, you know, Melstonby has become sort of synonymous with it, hasn't it?
30:20It's certainly what I think of when I hear the name of the village.
30:23Somebody once said to us, he shouldn't know about what you're doing because it'll upset him.
30:29He won't be able to carry on with life in prison.
30:33So you separate it for him.
30:35Don't tell him all the details of what you're doing because he can't do it.
30:39That hasn't been right.
30:40He needs the people in Melstonby.
30:43He needs that commitment from everybody.
30:46And they're just there for him.
30:47And that keeps him so strong.
30:49And everyone keeps him going.
30:51But knowing about them and their lives keeps him with us in our world.
30:57We can't stop fighting for him.
31:02But as time goes on, I do feel Di gets lost.
31:07She'll only be remembered as the postmistress.
31:10She won't be remembered as Di.
31:14We've lost two friends.
31:16We've lost Di, who's obviously not with us anymore.
31:19And then you've lost Robin, who's sort of convicted of Di's murder.
31:25So it's a loss all around, to be fair.
31:47The post office today issued an unreserved apology.
31:50But for 14 years, it prosecuted hundreds of subpostmasters
31:54and subpostmistresses for stealing money,
31:57accusing them of fraud on the basis of a computer system
32:00it knew was defective and was wrongly reporting cash shortfalls.
32:06I've never trusted Horizon.
32:08It was introduced into my branch about 2001.
32:13It was shortly after its introduction,
32:15I started to hear these complaints from members
32:19that things weren't going right with their accounts,
32:21whereas before, everything works swimmingly.
32:26It was a slow build-up of information from thereafter
32:30that Horizon was not working as it should do.
32:37Why Horizon seems to be significant for Robin
32:40is because we see the Horizon evidence as being one of the main,
32:46if not the main piece of evidence,
32:47because it's claimed to support the motive
32:49for why he murdered his wife.
32:53And it discredits the reliabilities of the entries
32:56which were relied upon in the original trial.
32:58And I've said, this case may be the most egregious miscarriage
33:04of justice stemming from the post office scandal.
33:13Highly emotional sense of relief was almost palpable
33:16when hundreds of post office branch managers,
33:19wrongly convicted of embezzling money,
33:21learned today they will be exonerated and compensated.
33:24The public don't like their institutions that they hold dear
33:32to get involved in any form of controversy.
33:35And for a controversy as vast as what the post office
33:39became embroiled in,
33:40I think the loss of trust in the post office with the public,
33:44in a word, it's been devastating.
33:54Wife killer, or a victim of post office lies.
34:02Perhaps Robin's seen all this and thought,
34:05like, it's all his Christmases have come at once.
34:09The body which reviews potential miscarriages of justice
34:21is being asked to look again at the case of a sub-postmaster
34:24who's serving life in prison for murdering his wife.
34:27Garbutt is embarking on a farth attempt to have his conviction overturned.
34:32Evidence from the Horizon IT system helped convict him,
34:35but now his lawyers say new evidence has emerged
34:38about the faulty computer system,
34:40along with information from the post office inquiry.
34:43Friends have labelled it a final roll of the dice.
34:46Diana's mother has accused Garbutt of jumping on the Horizon bandwagon,
34:52but his supporters say he never had a fair trial,
34:56and it's time for a wider look at his case.
34:59Various people have said that Robin's using this
35:02to jump on the bandwagon, which is not the case at all.
35:06This isn't a recent thing.
35:08Back in the trial, our initial appeal was on the post office
35:13before any Horizon situation has come to light, anything like that.
35:19This has just added weight, and this has added power
35:23to what we've been fighting against all along.
35:27Even if one accepts that the Horizon scandal
35:29has impacted upon this case, you know, as it has done
35:32with so many other post offices across the country,
35:35how does that directly contradict the version of events
35:39that was given in terms of the events of that night?
35:43I've seen the appeal, this fourth application.
35:47I think there's definitely fresh evidence
35:49that the Horizon experts should not have been relied upon,
35:53and if the jury heard what they would know now,
35:56they might say that Robin's case was unsafe.
35:59He wants the CCIC to send him back to the appeal court,
36:02and he wants to prove that he wasn't...
36:05He's not guilty of this, and that's the only way he can do it,
36:08and he wants to go back, doesn't he? Yeah.
36:10He doesn't want the easy way out.
36:12He doesn't want to just come out and walk out and come home.
36:15He wants to do the court and prove that he has not done this.
36:19He wants a retrial? Yeah.
36:21Then that proves without any doubt.
36:23We've not had closure, and we still can't move on
36:28from what happened to Diana because...
36:31Mm, yeah.
36:32...it still doesn't make any sense.
36:34You OK?
36:36I sense, probably, that the Horizon evidence
36:47will not be sufficient to bring about another trial.
36:49That's my sense of it, but I could be wrong.
37:02We want to know, should we have sympathy for this man?
37:05Should we have empathy for him being trapped in prison?
37:07Or should we not care that this man has the audacity
37:10to say he didn't kill his wife and he's just trying it on?
37:17Because if people can do these kind of murders,
37:20they can certainly tell lies to somebody like me.
37:23It's about 15 years since I spoke to Robin.
37:27I think it was the day of my 40th birthday.
37:30It's been quite a while.
37:33There are two possibilities, aren't there?
37:35One is that there is a terrible miscarriage of justice here.
37:38I would contend the opposite, actually.
37:40I think that there's a failure on his behalf
37:42to just acknowledge what he's done, really.
37:43And that must be a subject of some kind of contention
37:48and controversy for the people who just want to draw a line under it.
37:52I don't expect to come from here today being, like, totally convinced one way or the other.
37:59But, you know, we spent a lot of time thinking,
38:02well, if Robin didn't do it, what did happen?
38:05And it's like, it just drains your energy.
38:08So, you know, getting to the bottom of it is the absolute task.
38:12And Robin needs to know that we'll never give up.
38:15There's no reward.
38:28You know, we can't bring Diana back.
38:31But, you know, somebody's got to speak up and, you know, tell everybody that we missed Diana.
38:49You have this thing, don't you, where people convince themselves
38:52that, you know, that they haven't done it
38:54in order to somehow deal with it, I think.
39:01Hello. You OK?
39:03Yeah, I am.
39:04It's so hard to judge, isn't it, in these cases.
39:06You missed me?
39:07Yeah?
39:08Yeah.
39:10Let's be honest, there's only really a Robin Garbent knows, isn't there?
39:13What happened on that night.
39:18It did feel a bit like an audience with Robin.
39:22He's got his, erm, story and it's not going to change.
39:27He said, well, I'm doing the right thing, maintaining his innocence.
39:33It's like the right thing for Di.
39:37You know, sticking to the story, stroke, telling the truth.
39:42I guess he almost has to do that.
39:44Like, he was never going to sort of, you know, confess to you or...
39:49He's not going to buckle.
39:50He's not going to buckle any time soon, you know?
39:53But he's not been able to persuade you that he's an innocent man.
39:58No, he's tried to.
39:59Mm.
40:00He's definitely tried.
40:01But I'm, erm, an underweiser.
40:08Yeah.
40:09I'd say if he's done it, that's one definite thing from today.
40:12If he's done it, he's not going to, erm, change his tune.
40:18Like he'll take it to the grave.
40:21Mm.
40:22There isn't any closure.
40:25There can only be closure when somebody says,
40:27I'm guilty.
40:29Or...
40:30I was responsible.
40:31This is what happened.
40:33If Robin's appeal goes well,
40:36he's going to move on.
40:38And we're not going to be any other way, is it?
40:41Diana isn't able to say what happened,
40:54and so you won't be evidence to speak on her behalf.
40:59You know, the police have got a job to do,
41:02and when they don't do it properly, like,
41:04the...the outcome's devastating for the families left
41:07not knowing what truly happened.
41:11And there isn't justice for Diana.
41:41I've been so upset that...
41:42...and with no fehler,
41:43there's nothing to do right,
41:44there isn't justice.
41:45There isn't justice for you,
41:46there's nothing to do right.
41:47Goodbye.
41:48I'm sorry.
41:49I have faith that...
41:51...and can get to the side.
41:52Keep it safe.
41:53There's nothing to do right.
41:55If you have faith in the miejsce,
41:56you're a doctor,
41:57you're a doctor,
41:58you're listening to my book.
41:59No, I can't wait.
42:01No, I can't wait.
42:02Don't wait.
42:03There's nothing to bite.
42:04No, I can't wait.
42:05I can't wait.
42:06You're a doctor.
42:07You're a doctor that's got the right,
42:08I'll give you a doctor.
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