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00:00police called it a frenzied attack it happened as mrs. Thompson was walking her collie dog
00:10on the oxfordshire way just half a mile from her home
00:13the case of vicky thompson was an horrific crime and even though years had passed that
00:23was still causing members of the community some upset and fear there's a very firm view
00:31that the original investigation got it right but a man was allowed to walk free
00:38us got under which word is a very typical rural english village in the middle of oxfordshire and
00:54really is quaint and as pretty and as normal as you can imagine vicky thompson is a 30 year old
01:02mother she's got two young children she's married she's well embedded in the community she's very
01:10much middle class middle income living a lovely life in a nice rural village so she's got everything
01:19going for her it was a nice summer's day a bit like today really but certainly it was
01:32really warm that day vicky went out for a usual um walk with daisy the dog she was the usual route
01:41um as she as she did most days this is the actual lane that vicky would have walked every day um with
01:54daisy it's secluded but you feel absolutely safe
02:01vicky left her house at 4pm she'd normally be gone for an hour but that afternoon her collie daisy returned
02:09after just half an hour without vicky
02:16the children noticed notified dad and he just felt that perhaps daisy the dog would come back a little bit
02:25ahead of mum but of course she didn't and then as a consequence of them getting a little concerned um
02:34after about half an hour they thought this is a bit strange you know she would have been back by now
02:40and that's when they started going looking for vicky vicky's husband enlisted some help
02:49the search you you could say was a very thorough search by a significant number of the community
02:56just over three hours after vicky left her house the search party made a horrific discovery
03:05so here we are um at the bottom of the lane and just over there is the railway embankment
03:14where vicky was was found she was still alive when the search party managed to locate her
03:22but vicky had some extensive head injuries
03:25it appeared as though vicky had been battered with a rock or a stone
03:31and then dragged across fields
03:33she was going in and out of a conscious state
03:39she wasn't able to speak
03:41what was clear is that vicky had suffered
03:45the most horrendous attack
03:48although vicky was positioned near the train track
03:56it was clear that it certainly wasn't a train that had just caused an accident
04:02vicky was in a serious condition in hospital
04:09and so much so that she needed support
04:12to allow her body to try and recover
04:14with his wife still barely conscious in hospital
04:19jonathan thompson left her bedside for a few minutes
04:22to appeal for help in tracing her attacker
04:25the injuries to vicky in this vicious attack
04:27are so horrific
04:28and so unbelievable
04:31that i cannot understand why this should happen to anyone
04:36let alone my own beautiful wife
04:38she deserves to have her own plans and dreams come true
04:42yet all we have now is this nightmare
04:44the hospital staff did as much as they could for her
04:53but unfortunately her injuries were so so severe
04:57towards the end of the week
04:58six days i think
04:59i'm afraid the decision was taken to turn the machine off
05:03the attack on vicky thompson was now a murder inquiry
05:08the murderer struck in broad daylight just a few hundred yards away from the village
05:23detectives say they're still no nearer to finding the motive behind the attack
05:28police began house-to-house inquiries and a reward was put up to encourage people to come forward
05:35with information leading them to vicky's killer
05:38detectives are still looking for the murder weapon
05:41a team of divers have been called in to search the river evenload in the hunt for clues
05:46where vicky was situated the types of things that we were thinking of
05:52is obviously a any anything that might have come off
05:56um vicky's body such as um bracelets necklaces anything like that
06:01and there were a number of exhibits that were found
06:04but then we're also thinking about exactly where she was found
06:08what's been disturbed
06:10what might have been used as a weapon so there's lots of stone around and the crime scene
06:17certainly gave us some opportunities for forensic examination
06:21soil samples were taken as well so all that sort of thing
06:27you don't know the value of that exhibit of course until it's examined at a later stage
06:33vicky's husband jonathan organized his own search
06:38we've had so much support from uh friends and villagers
06:42that it seemed an obvious thing to do to ask other people to become involved in this
06:46a bag was found in a hedgerow
06:50it contained women's underwear
06:53they were found nearby but not necessarily connected with vicky
06:58and we are aware that they obviously did not belong to to our victim
07:04so i wouldn't say there was a plethora of evidence
07:08but there's a real opportunity to gather as much as you can
07:11but you actually don't know what you've actually got
07:14until time has passed and you've methodically decided what's important and what isn't
07:20and of course what your forensic experts will be able to deduce from what they found
07:26villagers are terrified the killer is still at large
07:30there's just no noise it's like a ghost town
07:32we've always been free and easy and everybody's always known one another
07:38the villagers really couldn't believe the news when they heard it
07:51and i know it's a cliche people always talk about the community are in shock
07:56but really we can't exaggerate it enough
07:58such was the speed with which all of this happened
08:02it took a long time for the the local village and the community
08:05you know to even assimilate this information
08:08police believed the killer could live in the vicinity
08:13the location of where vicky went walking
08:18and the location of where she was found
08:21would suggest that there was a local element and knowledge
08:27and whilst you're always going to keep an open view about these things
08:31where it is the local knowledge would have been very very helpful
08:36as the inquiry went on the potential hypothesis was that vicky had disturbed
08:44somebody acting inappropriately and she had possibly called them out on it
08:51one name was coming out loud and clear during the investigation
08:58a 20-year-old local odd job man by the name of mark weston
09:03there were some members of the community that were very clear
09:07that mark weston was you know a trouble causer
09:11there was a number of things that he did that caused people to be concerned
09:16and one of them was he was seen burning clothes in his back garden
09:21he was known in the village as not somebody that you know
09:28uh dressed particularly well
09:30he tend to wear the same things all the time
09:32so this was sort of considered to be unusual
09:36he brushed that off and said he was just burning some clothes
09:38because he didn't want them anymore
09:39but of course that raised concerns
09:42when he was questioned mark weston couldn't prove his whereabouts on the afternoon vicky was murdered
09:50his alibi was raising doubts as to where he actually was
09:56there was just lots of things that actually were causing the investigation team some concern
10:03police arrested mark weston but at this stage didn't name him
10:14allegations were put to him um about the evidence that had been presented
10:21and he denied all involvement and was quite um i'll say ferocious but ferocious in his in his denials
10:29mark weston was released the same day pending further inquiries
10:35the police had no other names in the frame
10:44so they decided to release more information to the public
10:47in the hope of generating new leads
10:50as an investigating officer you've got to consider where where are the answers
10:57and you know the answers are in that community
11:01so the police released as much as we could
11:05there is something obsessive or compulsive about uh about his conduct
11:11in relation to this attack certainly the attack was a frenzied one
11:16and appears to have been motivated by rage on his part
11:20by now the police knew where vicky had been attacked
11:24because her blood had been found on the ground near a gate
11:28we disclosed the location we also released information about a man that was seen running away with no clothes
11:41in the vicinity may have been unconnected but of course with the information that we also had
11:47there was a strong concern that this might have been the altercation um that vicky might have had
11:54so there's there's quite a lot of information that we did share with the public
11:59and we did get a great deal of information back as well
12:02six weeks after vicky thompson was killed
12:09police displayed photographs of two bras found in a plastic bag
12:13close to the murder scene
12:15they revealed that a number of items of women's clothing had been found
12:19during an intensive search of the area
12:22where vicky thompson was attacked while out walking her dog
12:25police are unsure about the significance of the underwear
12:33they refuse to be drawn on the possibility
12:35that vicky thompson may have disturbed a thief
12:38with a fetish for women's clothing
12:40but they're not ruling anything out
12:43two months after vicky was murdered the only person of interest to the police was still mark weston
12:56he was rearrested and taken in for further questioning
13:00this time he was named
13:02but the following day he was released once more
13:07the investigating officers at the time felt that there was not enough evidence in which to charge weston
13:15it's not uncommon that a main suspect can be released if the evidence is not there
13:20it does not stop the police capability to go and rearrest if the evidence comes to light
13:27villagers were most surprised that no arrest had been made two months after this horrific event
13:34i mean they couldn't understand it they couldn't understand it from a generic policing perspective
13:39but also because there was rumors in the village
13:42that there was one particular person
13:44that it was suspected had committed this particular crime
13:47and that was mark weston
13:48weston was detained yet again
14:01and this time the crown prosecution service agreed that police had enough evidence to charge him
14:07mark weston was designated as the prime suspect in this murder and with good reason
14:18he was considered to be predatory at best and criminally predatory at worst in the village
14:24he was a person who didn't interact
14:26he was a loner
14:27you might call him a social outcast which in a tight-knit community like that is most unusual
14:33so people were getting off vibes if you like from him that he was of bad character
14:39and that was really the best that people were saying about him
14:41some other people were saying far worse things about him
14:44so as far as the village were concerned he was the number one suspect
14:48a lot of the police evidence was circumstantial
14:55weston had burnt his clothes on a bonfire
14:58he was known to hang around the area near the crime scene
15:02and by now his seamen had shown up in tests
15:06on the women's underwear
15:08what the police needed was concrete forensic evidence that linked him to vicky
15:15footprints had been found in the field close to where vicky was discovered
15:19so a plaster cast was taken of one of them
15:22and forensic sedimentologist peter ball was asked to look at it
15:27when i started to analyze the the lumps of mud that were in the footprint
15:34i noticed the mud was right up against the plaster
15:38and so if you think about it turn the plaster cast over
15:42it's the very very top surface of the field mud
15:47as the footprint went down on it
15:50it's the crime scene
15:52untouched
15:53and frozen wonderful the lumps of mud were slightly different color
15:59than uh the the the rest of the soil
16:02and i realized that if we look at the the detail of that piece of mud
16:08that we'll start to work out the past environment that it came from
16:14on closer inspection peter discovered some interesting materials trapped in the mud
16:20there was animal hair
16:22it also had lots and lots of fibers
16:25multi-colored fibers
16:27the fibers looked to me like
16:30carpet fibers
16:33and i made a note to ask the police to find out if the suspect
16:37lived in a house with multi-colored carpet
16:40there was pollen
16:41now pollen is everywhere
16:43but every flowering plant
16:45has a different pollen and so you can determine what plants were around and about
16:52peter established the pollen had an aquatic source
16:56weston had admitted he had been fishing in the river the morning vicky was attacked
17:01i was beginning to think this is beginning to look quite good
17:06maybe we can find something uh a bit more substantive
17:11but back in the 1990s forensic science was not as advanced as it is today
17:18angela gallop has helped crack many murder cases
17:21there have been so many changes and i mean if you think of
17:25things like um blood grouping which preceded dna profiling
17:30most of the blood groups we did didn't last more than i don't know four to six weeks at the most
17:35and so you couldn't go back to them
17:37years afterwards
17:39you might be able to do an abo test
17:41but that would only tell you sort of you know one in ten or one in whatever
17:45it wouldn't give you the statistics that you need to be
17:48a bit more confident about the results and the links that the results your results provide
17:52as the trial began at oxford crone court the prosecution suffered an immediate setback
18:07weston's defense team asked for the bag of underwear to be ruled inadmissible the judge agreed
18:14there was never any suggestion that it was the underwear of the deceased
18:18it was in fact the underwear of other ladies who lived in the village and which had been stolen
18:25from their washing lines by mr weston and what identified or connected him to that finding
18:32was semen on those items the dna profile of which matched his
18:38however the evidence couldn't establish when that item had been deposited in the place where
18:48it was found and whether it was related to the killing of miss thompson
18:53this ruling very much weakened the prosecution's case
18:58we had witnesses that had lots to say about mark weston
19:02but that does not convict an individual
19:05forensic evidence clearly strongly supports ultimately a conviction and that's what you've got to think about
19:14we were relying heavily on the forensic evidence soil was certainly a significant part of the forensic examinations and it did turn out to be very useful
19:34the defense barrister suggested that perhaps a bird could have been carrying some soil in his beak
19:41and when flying over the top of the footprint dropped it into the footprint and i said well whilst it's possible it's it's probably unlikely but they could think of no other reason nor could i as to why it was there except for the fact that the
20:02weston had been seen standing in a river before the attack
20:09police had recovered a pair of weston's boots from his house but the forensics team could find nothing on them
20:16they also couldn't prove that they had made the footprints in the field
20:21the issue was whether the size of the print matched the size of the footwear
20:28which is not a very discriminating comparison because the footwear was above average in size
20:34i think my recollection is it was either size 10 or size 11
20:38but even that's not especially discriminating there are a lot of men out there with even within a small village there'll be several men who have footwear of that size
20:48a farmer told the court that he believed the footprints belonged to him not weston
20:55all in all the footprint evidence that is the cast and the shoes themselves is circumstantial it's not definitive the most important thing that's come out of the out of this for the case itself
21:13is that the muddy blocks of soil were there they shouldn't have been there there's no reason for them to be there unless they were put there
21:26i can understand why the evidence that i had was more novel than anything else but it was factually correct and was accepted as such
21:36but because it didn't have the dna with it it it didn't have the punch
21:43what's interesting about this particular case when it went to court was that the jury are out for 50 minutes that is most unusual that's a sit down get to know each other go through the brief facts of the case and come to you unanimous decision
21:58but when you think about it there was actually no evidence this was 1995 1996 there was compared to today you could get nothing or next to nothing from forensic science you could get something but not enough to convict
22:13mr western's name is obviously now cleared once and for all he regrets the ordeal he and his family have been through he also regrets the ordeal that the thompson family have been through he hopes that the police can reopen their other lines of inquiry as a matter of urgency
22:28next
22:48after the verdict her husband expressed concern that her killer was still at large
22:51still at large for us bringing vicky's murderer to justice would have helped us to come to terms
22:57with what had happened and allow us to look to the future more than this we could be sure that
23:02no other family would have to go through what we have been through at the hands of vicky's killer
23:11for the family of vicky thompson it's a re-traumatizing
23:15it's the state telling you that your daughter's life was worthless
23:29vicky's family were clearly disappointed not necessarily just because my western was was
23:37was walking free but they're disappointed because there is no justice for vicky
23:46life is almost on hold isn't it it's an absolute terrible ordeal for them
23:53following his acquittal mark weston went on the offensive i've done nothing wrong so
24:00well i knew that from the beginning but they still kept saying it was me though it wasn't
24:06but now they've come to realize they had the wrong person
24:09mark weston went on a crusade of demanding apologies from thames valley police going to the
24:21press you know he was a victim so very much focused on and seeking at one point seeking compensation he
24:32also started to harass members of the community that actually suggested that he might have been
24:39involved in vicky's death
24:44in vicky's death
24:56seven years after mark weston walked free thames valley police were offered a glimmer of hope
25:02the double jeopardy rule prohibited putting a man or a woman on trial a second time
25:15for the same offense after they have been acquitted the rule against double jeopardy
25:22was in effect abolished by an act of parliament passed in 2003 called the criminal justice act
25:29it doesn't apply to every charge it is confined to very serious charges including for example a charge of murder
25:38where fresh evidence comes along and nowadays the opportunities for that to occur are far greater
25:45than they used to be because of scientific developments it should be possible if that evidence
25:51is compelling and it is in the interests of justice to do so for an individual to be tried a second time
25:59a decision was made to reopen the vicky thompson case from a thames valley perspective what it
26:16enabled us to do was immediately look at those cases where there was perhaps a view that there was a
26:24miscarriage of justice and the vicky thompson case was an ideal case it was a case that was worth
26:33reviewing and utilizing that legislation and because it was still relatively new
26:41we were working through it at the same time as trying to also reinvestigate the murder
26:54when you reinvestigate um a cold case there may well be a wealth of evidence that points to a certain
27:03individual but the whole purpose of a review process is that you must also keep an open mind
27:09yes there was a wealth of evidence but there was also some evidence that suggested that the police at
27:16the time were just picking on weston because he was my western and you you can't just ignore that either
27:26it had been 10 years since vicky was brutally murdered detectives were pilling their hopes on two
27:32lines of inquiry they were hoping changing loyalties over time might mean someone would be willing to speak
27:40out but crucially they were hoping advancements in forensic science might lead to a breakthrough
27:49there's something that is quite difficult to sit down
27:54with a family who yes have been going through that terrible grieving process
27:59you're dragging up all this terrible news
28:03is this really fair vicky's husband was fantastic clearly always wanted justice for his wife why
28:11wouldn't he and he was very very supportive of the investigation we couldn't have asked for a more
28:18engaging family to help us vicky's mother margaret joined the appeals for help
28:26well i just feel somebody's had 10 years of freedom that they didn't deserve they took my daughter away
28:32from me and i need to be brought to justice the review team revisited all the original evidence
28:42we looked at what we we'd already kept and what we had retained from western from the crime scene
28:49we'd actually still had his boots
28:51the boots had been thoroughly examined by a forensics team during the original investigation to look for
28:59signs of blood none were found the team decided to resubmit them this was going to be our only
29:08opportunity to potentially put someone behind bars that has evaded that so you need the very best of
29:17people behind you so whilst we've got great detectives we also needed the very best forensic experts we could find
29:30mark weston's boots were obviously always going to be quite important because they were part of the
29:34clothing that the police suspected he was wearing at the time but it was the circumstances of the case
29:40with a sort of a blunt instrument i think it was a rock in this case being used to bludgeon vicky thompson's
29:47head that produces a lot of blood and you can see that in the crime scene photographs the blood would
29:53have splashed out and there would have been tiny droplets of blood flying through the air and then they
29:58were very likely some of them to land on the assailant himself so it's really really important to be
30:04absolutely certain that you've looked as hard as you can to find the blood and so even though we knew
30:11that some good scientists had looked at it originally and hadn't found any blood we had learned by the mid
30:172000s that it was always worth going back and having another look after painstaking reanalysis the team hit the
30:29jackpot they discovered on one of his boots some very small blood spots in an interesting part of the
30:39boot so the blood here was around the base of the tongue a difficult area to get at you know even the
30:45microscope you're sort of trying to wiggling it around to get it exactly so you can you can see
30:51what's there some of it was blood spots some of it was light smearing and black leather and especially
30:56crinkly old black leather is a difficult surface to see blood against and i think that's probably
31:02why it wasn't found originally we knew immediately that this was you know could potentially be really
31:10important and so we took samples of it obviously and got it dna profiled and it turned out to match
31:17vicki thompson's
31:21it was the tiny blood spots and particularly their position on the boot
31:25it was the combination of those things which was so critical in this particular case along with
31:30the dna of course patterns in everything are really really important and particularly in blood
31:40staining i'm sure we recognized at the time that what we were finding was going to be deeply important
31:47to the police investigation and the possible retrial of mark weston
32:01the blood wasn't the only new evidence that was discovered that pointed the finger of guilt
32:06towards mark weston he was in a relationship with a young girl and had fathered a child
32:12the girlfriend had gone to the police after he had threatened her he tried to strangle the mother of
32:18his own daughter and then sent her a text telling her that he would do the same to her that he had done
32:24to vicki thompson these two new pieces of evidence were enough for police to charge mark weston
32:41with the murder of vicki thompson for a second time
32:51mark weston might have been charged with murder but under the new ruling the police had another hurdle
32:57to jump over so what had to happen in order to quash the acquittal they had to persuade the
33:04court of appeal that this new scientific evidence met the statutory test in other words it was one
33:10new and two it was compelling and then secondly having done that they had to persuade the court of
33:17appeal that it was in the interest of justice that mr weston should be tried for this offense a second time
33:23what really mattered in the court of appeal was persuading them that there was no credible plausible
33:30alternative explanation for the presence of vicki thompson's blood on mark weston's boots
33:40other than the proposition that he was the person who killed her
33:45the court ruled in their favor and with western still pleading not guilty a date for a retrial was set
33:52it was no surprise actually that he was not going to um admit to it he got away with murder once
34:02so what's the chance of having another go
34:20we were certainly confident that there was a very strong case against mark weston
34:26was i nervous yes and you know what i don't um i don't say that lightly but i'm not going to hide away
34:37from it either and you have to rely and put your trust now in those 12 members of the jury to make the
34:46right decision based on the evidence and of course beyond all reasonable doubts which you know we're
34:54constantly reminded of and rightly so fifteen years later to have to appear back in court to see the man
35:05you're pretty sure murdered your daughter it must have been horrendous for the family with no guarantee
35:12that he's going to be found guilty i was prosecuting counsel in the case of the second trial of mark weston
35:22charged with the murder of vicki thompson if you've conducted a prosecution against your suspect a
35:30first time and it's failed and then you're having a second go at it quite obviously there is additional
35:39pressure not for it to result in the same outcome but in this particular case i i i don't recall it
35:48feeling it especially severely for the simple fact that i knew perfectly well that first time round
35:54the case had been a weak one and i also knew perfectly well that the case that i'd been given
36:01to present was overwhelming to the relief of the prosecution this time the bag of underwear was
36:15deemed admissible once the prosecution had evidence of blood not merely by the gate but on the boots of the
36:25the person whose semen contaminated the items of underwear in the plastic bag everything changed
36:32what had been a very weak case became an overwhelming case after stroke and the case theory that was
36:39presented to the jury at the second trial was that western was hiding in the hedgerow that he was
36:49masturbating and that vicki thompson walking her dog came upon him and saw him doing this
36:57and he therefore faced exposure in circumstances which would have been humiliating for him for behaving in that way
37:09faced with this possibility weston killed her the spots of blood on weston's boot proved critical
37:18there was a one in a billion chance of this dna evidence being incorrect as a comparison we stand a
37:28one in 74 million chance of being hit by an asteroid so i think we can be pretty sure this forensic evidence was good
37:38but even so the defense tried to discredit the forensic findings
37:42it may not surprise people to hear that when the forensic scientists who examined it the first time
37:49round were called to give evidence at the second trial they of course said i examined those boots very
37:56carefully i found no blood upon them and i believe that that is because there was no blood upon them
38:04however what the prosecution was able to do in the trial is is to be able to say
38:10that it was possible for these things to be missed without people seriously being at fault
38:17and we were also able to demonstrate that the techniques that were available for doing it the
38:22second time round lighting etc were much better than the first time round the issue was not
38:30is that her blood the issue was when and how did it get there
38:33i think was suggested by the defense at trial that the reason why the blood was on the shoe was because
38:42mark weston had walked in the vicinity of the attack and just happened to get some of the blood
38:47on his shoe well we were able to say because of the detail we had of the pattern of blood staining on
38:52the shoe that that they couldn't have been deposited in that way the forensics team were able to establish
38:59that the blood was wet when it landed on the boot because of the way it was ingrained in the leather
39:05so all this detail that forensic scientists are so hooked up on can be really really critical for
39:12answering some fairly basic questions like that and clarifying what actually happened
39:27the trial created significant questions which revolved around the legislation of 2003 so the
39:38double jeopardy legislation and the biggest issue was is that blood that was found on that boot
39:48compelling clearly it was but was it new because it had been there all those years
39:58so this was certainly a vigorous debate no matter how strong that evidence was
40:06it was down to whether it was new and whether it was compelling when the jury went out to consider
40:13their verdict in the second trial i felt very confident as to what what the result would be
40:20it was a very very strong case it would have been a truly remarkable outcome if they had reached
40:27a different verdict the only issue in the case was the identity of the person who was responsible
40:33for the killing of vicky thompson in the end the question the jury had to answer was are you sure
40:40that person was mark weston if the answer to that question was yes he was guilty if the answer that
40:45question was no he wasn't it was as simple as straightforward as that
40:48i'm delighted to say that mark weston was found guilty of murder and was given a life sentence
41:04delighted in that respect because we've now overturned a miscarriage of justice which you
41:13don't hear very often when you're talking about somebody that's walked free weston was told he'd
41:19serve a minimum of 13 years in prison it is a sense of satisfaction i suppose every time you are able to
41:27help a court make this decision about whether someone's guilty or not guilty and if they are guilty if
41:33they are capable of doing what mark weston did then it's absolutely right that other people should be
41:39protected um from him but i know ultimately in relation to the family that they will carry this grief
41:46forever and i know there's only a certain amount that anybody can do about that
41:53there is no doubt about it no matter how many expert investigators that you have in your team
42:03if you do not have the same level of expertise and support from your forensic colleagues
42:15you will not progress the types of investigations like vicki thompson to a successful conclusion
42:25forensic science and the advancement has meant that so many families for particularly vicki thompson's family
42:32all this time later can at least get their day in court where it's meaningful not meaningless like it
42:39was in 1996 forensic evidence is the independent expert witness and it made sure that mark weston and
42:49some people like me have been banged to rights
42:59mark weston was the first person in the uk to face a second murder trial following the discovery of new
43:06forensic evidence if this change in the law has brought about a situation where 20 to 25 people who
43:14committed an offence of murder and who first time round were wrongly acquitted and justice has since
43:22been done by convicting them i don't think you find many people who would suggest that that's not a good thing
43:29we knew when we embarked on the vicki thompson case that it was going to be certainly nationally
43:37under careful scrutiny why because it was the first not guilty trial where double jeopardy was used so for us
43:49it was absolutely important that we did everything right we dealt with the high bar that was required to
43:58to apply this legislation and i'm pleased to say that that man who caused all that grief
44:09and loss to a loving family got given a life sentence
44:14i'm immensely proud about what my team and i accomplished but i never underestimate
44:22that actually is that family really that should look back on this and think you know they've got
44:29the justice they rightly deserved
44:52so
45:02you
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