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Transcript
00:00I see one male, elderly, found by a couple of teenagers off their head.
00:04The orbit of the right eye has been perforated with a screwdriver.
00:08You need your pills, the doc says you've got to take your pills.
00:10Just grab your stuff and let's go, yeah?
00:12A man's been found dead nearby.
00:14And you think we have something to do with it?
00:15No, Adele, we're investigating, not accusing.
00:18No history.
00:19We used to be friends when we were kids.
00:21No, us friends.
00:23You help everybody.
00:24That's who you are.
00:26Gotta find somewhere to live.
00:28What if she calls a social on us?
00:29Don't worry about the cop.
00:30She's done it before, doesn't it?
00:32I need a permanent contract.
00:33Permanent?
00:34I need it for a flat.
00:35Do you need any gay?
00:37We did it.
00:38No!
00:40I know things.
00:42They'll lend me the money.
00:43I'll keep a secret.
00:44Percets!
00:45Shut up!
00:46Or what?
00:46You keep it shut!
00:49I believe the house is set up like a doctor's surgery.
00:51But he wasn't a practicing doctor.
00:53Dad?
00:55Shit.
00:56A man's been killed and we've just broken into his house.
00:58You're acting like you killed him.
01:03You're acting like you killed him.
01:07You're acting like you killed him.
01:19You're acting like you killed him.
01:23Go dead or disappear.
01:32And then you're acting like you killed him.
01:37When he was a peddog.
01:39You have just a favorite of my family.
02:07And what needs about him, Danny?
02:09Oh, my God.
02:09What are you doing?
02:10I don't know where he is.
02:11It's not like him.
02:12Of course it is.
02:13It's exactly what he's like.
02:14We straightened things out yesterday.
02:15We made plans.
02:17There is no plans.
02:19He's not changing.
02:21God.
02:22I saw him yesterday at the Arches.
02:27He's selling gear.
02:40Ryan.
02:41I don't know.
03:28I don't know, I don't know.
03:36I don't know.
03:38Wake up!
03:41Don't do this, do you?
03:42Come.
03:43He can't stop, please!
03:45Ryan!
03:46Come on, come on.
03:46Ryan!
03:47No!
03:49That is it.
03:50Come on, come on.
03:50He can't stop, please.
03:52Ryan!
03:53Get off me!
03:54I can't keep a job.
03:58According to the Creekwood Archives, in the 19th century, a man was able to have a female relative sectioned simply
04:05by saying she was mad.
04:06Want another coffee?
04:07Women could also be sectioned for novel reading back then.
04:11What were these guys so scared of?
04:13My darling, can I just point out that this had nothing to do with me.
04:16Women could also be sectioned for keeping bad company.
04:19You'd have been in trouble then.
04:21They were searching to understand and find solutions to mental health then, like we are now.
04:25Just a bit more brutal.
04:26Perhaps because medicine was run by men.
04:29Ah, there it is.
04:30Can we not do the gender thing?
04:32It's early and it was a long time ago.
04:33History is instructive.
04:35You can't hide from the gender thing.
04:37The good news is that according to the GMC in 2024, more women than men were registered to practice medicine.
04:45Is that right?
04:45Yep.
04:47164,440 women, 164,195 men.
04:53First time ever.
04:55From 2023 to 24, 89 million antidepressants were prescribed.
04:59An increase of 3.3%.
05:02NHS website?
05:03NHS Business Service Authority.
05:05Why study when you have the internet?
05:07You feel that way too?
05:08What's your point?
05:09Do you think there's any correlation between the overprescription of antidepressants, antipsychotics and the rise of female doctors?
05:19Because I'm just wondering.
05:21You got a pill and an ice pick through the eye.
05:24What's the difference?
05:27Chemistry.
05:29That's why I married you.
05:31No, Jack.
05:33That's the difference.
05:39Nicky Alexander.
05:54Ryan Cooper, our prime suspect.
05:57What?
05:58He was found this morning.
05:59Possible OD.
06:08Paramedics say they removed a hypodermic needle from the left arm and they put everything they found around the body
06:12here.
06:19Use pack of citric acid, lighter, spoon with burn marks, drug use, mental illness, homeless.
06:33Harriet's trifecta.
06:36Signs of skin popping from previous drug use. Psychists tried to cover up the marks with tattoos.
06:44Relapse.
06:51Two wraps here.
06:53Both used.
06:55Two?
06:55Yeah.
06:57Intentional OD.
06:59Possible suicide.
07:00Guilt for killing Arthur.
07:13Looks like he's coughed up blood.
07:16Internal bleeding?
07:17Possible.
07:19Could have bitten his tongue.
07:32Possible.
07:37Hi.
07:38Erin.
07:39I'm Dr. Alexander.
07:41I know this is difficult, but I need to ask you about Ryan's drug use.
07:45It would help us to know what drugs Ryan might have taken.
07:49I know what you're thinking.
07:50He was just some scaghead who messed up, but Ryan was clean.
07:54How long had he been clean for?
07:56Nearly a year.
07:57Did he go to rehab?
07:59He couldn't get a place.
08:00The dog helped him.
08:02The dog?
08:03Arthur something.
08:05Arthur Lane.
08:07Arthur Lane helped Ryan get clean?
08:09Yeah, he gave him blockers.
08:11Maltrexone.
08:12Do you think that Ryan would ever have harmed Arthur?
08:15No, that's mad.
08:16He was good to Ryan.
08:17He saved his life.
08:19He gave him the drugs he needed for his problem.
08:21For his drug problem?
08:23Ryan was bipolar.
08:25He couldn't get his prescription without an address.
08:28After a while, he'd start to lose it.
08:30He'd be gone.
08:32And when he couldn't get the lithium, I tried to give him monkey dust or K or whatever
08:37I could get, you know, just to take the edge off.
08:40And then Ryan found Arthur.
08:42It's a good sentence.
08:44Arthur didn't care about the rules.
08:45He knew what was right.
08:47Gave Ryan what he needed.
08:49He's a good man.
08:51How did Ryan find Arthur?
08:54Arthur was a volunteer for the bit at the food bunk.
08:57It's where Ryan met him.
08:59It's what all people like Arthur are for, yeah.
09:02To know what's right.
09:06Ned.
09:19Don't be trailing.
09:24Heこれは interviews with CONTIES
09:25It tastes good now.
09:27His arm, too.
09:27I'veلا be, Taing is escuela.
09:27Oh God, for me,
09:28I have to move.
09:35WHISTLE BLOWS
09:36Where, er, where are you going to go?
09:39They've put her on the waiting list for emergency housing.
09:45Look, I... I know it's... it's not much, but...
09:59Let us know where you're staying. You promise?
10:03Yeah.
10:20Victim is Ryan James Cooper, age 21.
10:24No fixer bode.
10:26Puncture wound to the left upper forearm,
10:28consistent with intravenous drug use.
10:31A hypodermic needle was found at the seam.
10:34Mm-hmm.
10:37Dental decay, gum disease.
10:40Multiple short regular cuts on both thighs.
10:44Cell palm.
10:46Looks like a fresh injection site.
10:49Not done with precision.
10:59Some bruising on the right upper inner arm.
11:01And here, on the left upper arm.
11:05Maybe he was grabbed.
11:07When still very much alive.
11:09But why inject twice, and why there,
11:11when he has decent veins still in his arms?
11:15Rhetorical?
11:15Not entirely, but good question.
11:18Aren't all questions good?
11:19No, that is rhetorical.
11:21I like rhetorical questions now and then.
11:24When they're the springboard to new creative insights.
11:27I like questions I can answer.
11:30Mm-hmm.
11:30I love it.
11:38Finally.
11:43Certainly I like that too.
11:44I have to leave on a document after I try to figure out my sicilies.
11:47Mookie?
11:48I love him for a few minutes.
11:59I mean in the morning riding pin.
12:04Jack?
12:10Ryan and Eric.
12:11D.I. says they were in care since they were young.
12:14Grew up together.
12:15How many homeless people were in care as kids, do you think?
12:18Social worker told me once he reckoned about a quarter.
12:22There's a lot of children who've never known the sense of home,
12:25too, for granted.
12:27They age out of the care system on their 18th birthday
12:30with nowhere to go.
12:49Nothing.
12:50How do you inject yourself but leave no prints?
12:54Jack?
12:57Victim's clothing.
12:58Looks like silver paint.
13:02Transferred.
13:03What kind of paint?
13:05I want it.
13:22Saddle embolus.
13:24I should say so, yes.
13:33Ryan here was taken from his mum and put into care as a toddler.
13:39His dad was never on the scene.
13:41The care home was closed due to allegations of abuse.
13:44He was fostered for a while and subsequently diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
13:49He became homeless soon after his care provision fell away at 18.
13:56Birth is a lottery, eh?
14:00Yeah.
14:02How are you, Gino?
14:04Yeah.
14:05Well, it is what it is.
14:09What do you need?
14:12We talked about the contract.
14:13Yeah, about that, Danny.
14:15Yeah.
14:18Gino.
14:19I can't do it.
14:20But I need it for the flat.
14:21I've been crunching the numbers with the missus.
14:23Please.
14:24Sorry, Danny.
14:25I'd love to help you.
14:26But I can't.
14:28Gino.
14:31Gino, please.
14:36Okay, tell us.
14:38There were no fingerprints found on the syringe.
14:40None at all?
14:41Nope.
14:42Not a one.
14:43Ryan didn't inject himself.
14:45Suggesting whoever did wiped it clean.
14:47Oh, a used glove?
14:48Yeah, pick one.
14:48Traces of heroin were found in the syringe.
14:51And the surrounding area of the injection site.
14:54We found considerable bruising to his arm, suggesting some sort of fight or struggle.
14:58We've sent fingernail swabs for DNA testing.
15:01Do we know how he died?
15:02Cardiac arrest from a subtle embolus.
15:06Kick, what do you have?
15:08Arthur's bank account.
15:09Usual stuff.
15:10Utility bills.
15:11Council tax.
15:12But found payments to several online pharmacies in the Netherlands.
15:17Accounts for the drugs found in his house.
15:19Hmm.
15:21Do we have the breakdown of the drugs found in his system?
15:23Not yet.
15:24I'm waiting for full tox results.
15:26One unexplained transaction.
15:28He withdrew £500 the last and first day of each month for the last 22 months.
15:34Same cash machine.
15:36I'd ask his daughter.
15:41Bye.
15:42Bye.
15:43Danny.
15:44How are you, mate?
15:45Yeah.
15:46Good.
15:46Right.
15:47Well, let's get this done, shall we?
15:48I've got some paperwork to fill out.
15:50A direct debit form there.
15:53Have you got the deposit?
15:55Yeah.
15:58And first month's rent.
16:02Cash?
16:02Good.
16:02Well, good.
16:04You normally do that by a bank transfer.
16:06I'm just changing banks, but I wanted to have this for you while I get everything settled.
16:11Yeah.
16:11Well, good.
16:12So, okay.
16:14Well, here's the lease anyway.
16:15I'm just going to need to see some ID and your employment contract.
16:20Here's my ID.
16:21I think you'll sell an employment contract.
16:26My boss is on holiday.
16:29I can't need this far.
16:32I'll do whatever it takes.
16:38Danny, without the employment contract, it's going to be three months' rent up front.
16:42About another two grand.
16:44It's about another two grand.
16:45Is that something that you can do?
16:50Danny!
16:52Danny's...
16:55Are you okay?
16:59Yeah.
17:00Yeah, yeah, yeah.
17:03Give me three days.
17:05Yeah.
17:09I can hold it for 48 hours.
17:12Jeez, mate.
17:13I'm all over it.
17:35I'm all over it.
17:42Nobody's way out.
17:44Shh.
17:48Shh.
17:49Shh.
17:51Shh.
17:52Shh.
18:14You were staying here now?
18:16Yeah, until I managed to go through everything.
18:19Stayed here often when my dad was alive.
18:22Your father took out £1,000 every month for cash.
18:27Do you know what that was for?
18:29No, I've no idea.
18:30Did he have a carer?
18:31No, he was too proud.
18:35Did you know that your father changed his name by depot in the early 1980s?
18:40What?
18:41He was born Henry James Dankford.
18:45And he was a surgeon at a place called Creekwood Hospital.
18:48No, he was a medical researcher.
18:52He did pharmaceutical research work on brain chemistry.
18:57Henry Dankford.
18:59Your father carried out a medical procedure called a lobotomy.
19:05It's also known as a lobotomy.
19:10My dad.
19:13Well, there's a mistake because this isn't him.
19:16My father was a researcher.
19:18He'd have homeless people here and he'd ask them questions and try to understand them.
19:22But Henry, Henry Dankford, that's someone else.
19:25Do you know Orion Cooper?
19:29No.
19:29Well, he seemed to know your father.
19:32I don't know him.
19:33Why?
19:35He was found dead this morning.
19:38Had your father received any threats?
19:40On or offline?
19:42Not that he told me, but why would anyone want to hurt him?
19:45One of the injuries that your father sustained looks as though it may have mimicked her lobotomy.
19:53He was found on a building site that used to be the old Creekwood Hospital.
20:04Would you mind if Dr. Alexander took a DNA sample?
20:07Yeah, just to eliminate you from our investigations.
20:16I'll pay you back, I swear.
20:19I don't have that kind of money hanging about.
20:21But you could get it.
20:22You won't.
20:24Take it as repayment and my wages.
20:27Danny, I can't help you.
20:30No, it's not a favour.
20:32It's an opportunity.
20:33You could charge me interest.
20:35Have I ever let you down?
20:38Haven't you got any family you can ask?
20:39I wouldn't be asking if I want desperate.
20:42What if you quit and disappear?
20:44How do I know you haven't done this before?
20:46What if you keel over and have a heart attack?
20:49I mean, you've not been looking too well of late.
20:51That's because I've been sleeping rough.
20:53You won't.
20:59Me and Adele are homeless.
21:03You could fix that.
21:05Don't put this on me.
21:06Come on, I need you.
21:08You need me.
21:09No, I don't.
21:10Oh, you reckon?
21:12Who else is going to work their arse off?
21:14All hours and all weather for what you're paying.
21:17Why do you think Ricardo had a heart attack, eh?
21:2080 hours in this kitchen.
21:21Your bleed is dry.
21:23Be careful.
21:23No, mate.
21:24You be careful.
21:27Get your things and get out.
21:29You're dumb.
21:34When I was a kid, I was playing down there and found these old boxes of papers.
21:39Nothing of much interest to a child.
21:43But when Dad found out, he totally lost it.
21:47He marched me out of there and put a lock on the door.
22:01The Life and Times of Henry Dankford.
22:03What are we looking for?
22:05A needle?
22:06We've got toxicology back on Ryan Cooper.
22:09Analysis shows the presence of heroin in the soft tissue of the arm, but not in the blood.
22:14So, heroin administered after death.
22:17However, the bloods do show a high concentration of tamazepam.
22:22Tamazepam, when administered intravenously, has been reported to be prothrombogenic.
22:27Intramuscular injection, as in this case, is likely to have the same effect.
22:31It's highly likely that it formed the clots that then moved to the heart.
22:35Causing heart attack.
22:36Arthur's tox results also contain tamazepam.
22:38I've double-checked, and there is no sign of an injection site on Arthur's body.
22:43Although skin slippage and fly larva could have obscured it.
22:47However, there was no tamazepam in the stomach.
22:50So, it is reasonable to assume that he was injected.
22:53Both Ryan and Arthur died of a heart attack.
22:56Tamazepam used as a sedative.
22:58Make them more pliable.
23:00Same MO, same killer.
23:03So, who was Arthur giving that money to?
23:12This is the cash machine I've been used.
23:20Ryan and Arthur are out of food bank.
23:44Hi, I'm Detective Inspector Ashley Moss.
23:48Hi.
23:48Do you work here?
23:50Yes.
23:51What's your name?
23:52Tom Al.
23:57Do you know him?
23:58He comes here sometimes.
24:01Did he have friends here?
24:03He came here for help.
24:05I helped him.
24:08Have you seen this man?
24:34Old medical papers and notes on lobotomy.
24:39Do you know about Phineas Gage?
24:41Phineas Gage?
24:431848 railway worker.
24:44Had an iron rod driven through his head, damaging his left frontal lobe.
24:48Oh, yes, I remember.
24:50It changed his personality and behavior, didn't it?
24:52He gave doctors the idea of the lobotomy to change how people behave.
24:56Severing the frontal lobe from the rest of the brain.
24:58He stopped doing lobotomies in 1978, thank goodness.
25:01Yes, we'd be hard pressed to find anyone alive who did it, but in the 50s and 60s, it was
25:05quite a common practice, quick in and out.
25:07The only problem was the follow-up.
25:10They often didn't follow our patients post-surgery.
25:13So they weren't seeing the after-effects?
25:15They used to say it was easier than curing a toothache.
25:18Today it looks barbaric.
25:20No, it was celebrated.
25:22E. Gageas Moniz won a Nobel Prize for lobotomy in the 1940s.
25:26Can they take a Nobel back?
25:28Oh, no, they never rebroke a Nobel Prize.
25:33Arthur was a protégé of a neurosurgeon called Wiley McKissick.
25:38Wiley McKissick.
25:40No.
25:42Pioneering psychosurgeon.
25:44I've subjected your samples to Raman microscopy and FTI or spectroscopy.
25:49Outcome?
25:5099.7% match.
25:52There's a strong likelihood that the paint found on Ryan is a match with the scraping from
25:56the mural done by...
25:57Ryan Seven.
25:58...the artist's tag.
25:59So, was the mural the point of transfer of the paint or the artist?
26:03Where was the paint found?
26:06Up around.
26:10Artist.
26:11Artist.
26:13So, who's lying at seven?
26:23Oh, Del.
26:25What are you doing here?
26:28Where's...
26:29Where's Donny?
26:31I need to see him.
27:08Hi!
27:11You know anything about this mural?
27:13I think it's fab.
27:16Line Seven, is that who did it?
27:18Line Seven?
27:19He's my friend.
27:21That's him.
27:23Line Seven?
27:24You all right?
27:25You can call me Vincent.
27:27Vincent.
27:28I'm Detective Inspector Ashley Moss.
27:30Can I speak with you?
27:32Come on in.
27:33How did you know Ryan Cooper?
27:37He uses the food bank.
27:39Ryan's been found dead.
27:42Yeah.
27:43I heard.
27:44What a waste.
27:45You're just a kid.
27:47Your paint was found on his body.
27:51How do you explain that, Vincent?
27:53You were going for one of the volunteers.
27:55Which one?
27:55Tomo.
27:56I look after Tomo.
27:57The way he was scaring him.
27:59It wasn't on.
28:00So what did you do?
28:02Pulled him away.
28:03With paint on your hands?
28:05Yeah, well, I didn't really think about it.
28:07I didn't want him to hurt Tomo.
28:09Tomo's a sweet guy.
28:10A big kid.
28:11And he's protecting.
28:12Where were you last night?
28:15How and about.
28:17Can you be a bit more specific?
28:20I was doing outreach for the centre.
28:23You know, handing out food, sleeping bags, worn clothes.
28:26I was doing here.
28:36There you go.
28:37There you go.
28:37There you go.
28:52journal music,
28:58Danny!
29:03Danny!
29:06Danny!
29:08Danny!
29:09Danny!
29:11What are you doing?
29:15Danny, I know what happened.
29:18I saw Gina.
29:20Don't worry, we'll find a way. We can get another flat and another job.
29:26But right now, you've got to help me.
29:31I can't help you.
29:37Look at me!
29:40Just look at me!
29:48I'm like her.
29:52I'm like my mother was.
29:57I can't do this to you.
30:06It's happening again.
30:08We'll sort it. We'll sort it together.
30:13Look, take it.
30:16No.
30:16Take it!
30:17No.
30:20You can do so much better without me.
30:24No.
30:27No!
30:30Danny!
30:34Vincent Delaney's alibi checks out.
30:36He was with a team of outreach workers.
30:38It's on CCTV in the city centre.
30:40What?
30:40Ryan Cooper's fingernail analysis shows a second DNA source.
30:44There's no direct match, but there is a familial match.
30:48Terence Layton.
30:50Two arrests for drunk and disorderly behaviour.
30:52Married to Rose.
30:54They had a son, also known as Terence.
30:56No known address for him.
30:58Do we have an address for Terence Senior?
31:11Terence Layton.
31:13I was asking.
31:16Protective Inspector Moss.
31:18Can we speak inside, please?
31:22You have children, Mr Layton?
31:24His son.
31:25Where is he now?
31:26We are estranged.
31:28It's a big word meaning he hates me.
31:32He doted on his man.
31:35I couldn't cope on me own.
31:37He blamed me.
31:39I blamed me.
31:40He got angry.
31:41I got drunk.
31:43He left after he'd done school.
31:45What did he blame you for?
31:48His man dying.
31:53We all look for something or somebody to blame, don't we?
31:56I blame the doctors.
31:58He blamed me.
32:00Maybe that's just what it was.
32:03How she was meant to be.
32:06How she was always going to turn out and nothing could change that.
32:10How did she die, if you don't mind me asking?
32:15Took her own life.
32:17Sorry.
32:19Doctors said she was of unsound mind.
32:21But her baby died.
32:23That's what she was suffering with, really.
32:27Our Jessie was stillborn.
32:30They put her in there, she got worse.
32:33At first, I begged them to let her out.
32:36Let her out?
32:37Rose was at Creekwood.
32:41They shocked her brain with electricity.
32:43They gave her drugs.
32:45Purple arts for up and barbiturates for down.
32:50Turned her into somebody crazy.
32:52In the end, they were begging them to keep her in.
32:57She came home.
33:02Three years later, she took her own life.
33:06The lad saw it.
33:08So sorry.
33:11Do you know Arthur Lane?
33:14No.
33:15Henry Dankford?
33:18Why?
33:20He worked at Creekwood Hospital.
33:22I want to forget everything about that place.
33:26When was the last time you saw your son?
33:28A few years back.
33:31We fought.
33:33He pinned me against the wall, he had that look in his eyes.
33:40Danny's got problems.
33:41Danny?
33:43Yeah, our lad.
33:44He's not right.
33:46I don't know that he's ever been right.
33:47What's that thing they say?
33:50Genetics loads the gun and life pulls the trigger.
33:53I thought his name was Terence.
33:55He uses his middle name after Rose's dad.
33:59Uses her surname too.
34:00Macmillan.
34:01Don't want now to do with me.
34:04Danny Macmillan.
34:14You guys wait here.
34:15I'll be alright.
34:28Adele.
34:30We need to speak to Danny.
34:31He's not here.
34:33Do you know where he might be?
34:34He's gone.
34:35I don't know where.
34:43You're pregnant.
34:45It's none of your business.
34:49You can't stay here.
34:51Let me make a call.
34:52After last time.
34:53I was trying to help.
34:54It's none of your business.
34:57You knew when you called it in, if the refuge was full they'd take Liam away.
35:01I tried.
35:02You let them take away my little boy.
35:03He was in danger.
35:05Not for me he wasn't.
35:06But you're alright aren't you?
35:09Three kids.
35:10Big house in Harbourn.
35:12Bet I never crossed your mind.
35:15You do.
35:16I came to you for help.
35:18And I lost everything.
35:21You were my best friend.
35:23My best friend.
35:25I trusted you and you betrayed me.
35:28My beautiful little boy.
35:30How could you?
35:33The man you were with was beating you up Adele.
35:36He took your money and he spent it on drugs.
35:39I hadn't seen you for ten years.
35:41And I find you bruised.
35:43Abused.
35:45Lost.
35:46Trying to look after a little boy.
35:48What was I meant to do?
35:50Was I meant to let Liam see that?
35:53Was I meant to let it happen to Liam?
35:57Adele.
36:00Adele, you're bleeding.
36:01It's just spying.
36:04That's not spying.
36:06You need to go to the hospital.
36:07Oh.
36:07Let me help you.
36:08I go to the hospital.
36:09They call the social...
36:10Your way.
36:12You have to go.
36:15Or else you risk losing this baby one way or another.
36:22Address?
36:26Address.
36:27427 Knight or Lane?
36:29Hard�로.
36:41It's D.I.M.O.S.
36:42I need someone circulated as wanted for murder.
36:45Terence Daniel Layton, aka Danny McMillan.
36:48All right.
37:02All right.
37:17Adele doesn't know where he is or where he's gone.
37:19Pizza delivery guy, yeah.
37:21Yeah.
37:21He'll have an app on his phone.
37:22Adele's what?
37:23Says how far away he is with your pizza.
37:32Where now?
37:33He's leaving the jewellery quarter.
37:50Danny.
37:51My missus needs that far.
37:53You're all going to give it her?
37:54I can't, mate, alright?
37:55I can't.
38:13Hey.
38:14Hey, it's me.
38:17I've had some bleeding.
38:19Some of the placenta has come away,
38:21but the baby's heartbeat is strong.
38:24She's a girl, Danny.
38:27I say we're having a little girl.
38:31Anyway.
38:33Okay.
38:35Bye.
38:44Sonny, go.
38:47Sonny, go.
38:52Sonny.
38:53Sonny, go.
38:54Sonny, go.
38:54Sonny, go.
38:54Sonny, go.
38:55Sonny, go.
38:55Sonny, go.
38:56Sonny, go.
38:56Sonny, go.
38:57Sonny, go.
38:59Sonny, go.
38:59Sonny, go.
39:02Sonny, go.
39:03Sonny, go.
39:11Daniel McMillan, I'm arresting you on suspicion of the murders of Ryan Cooper and Arthur Lane.
39:15You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defense if you do not mention one question,
39:19something which you later rely on in court.
39:21Anything you do say may be given in evidence.
39:27Jack?
39:30What's this?
39:34So the oil from Danny's bike chain matches the oil from Arthur's jacket?
39:38Mm-hmm. Excellent.
39:41Child A. Henry Dankford seems consumed by him.
39:46A violent child who had problems with impulse control, struggled with right and wrong,
39:52attacked a vicar, set fire to his church.
39:55Henry assisted on 18 lobotomies.
39:58Child A was the first and last he was the named consultant on, as far as I can tell.
40:03He stopped after it, stopped being a surgeon, then changed his name.
40:08Child A was the only one he actually did the procedure on, according to his statement.
40:13The report's been anonymized, so how do we find out who Child A is?
40:18Well, if it's anywhere, it'll be with the West Midlands Integrated Care Board,
40:23and they should have archived all the hospital's unredacted records.
40:27Do you know anyone there?
40:30Your DNA was found in skin traces under Ryan Cooper's fingernails.
40:36Danny?
40:38Ryan Cooper?
40:42We had a row.
40:45Did you kill him?
40:47Ryan OD'd.
40:49He was murdered.
40:54How did you know Arthur Lane?
40:59Danny?
41:02I...
41:03I went to see him a few times.
41:06Why?
41:10Ryan...
41:11said he'd helped him.
41:15Said I could talk to him, get the...
41:18the drugs to make me right.
41:20Didn't need an address.
41:23Couldn't get a prescription without an address.
41:25Counsel couldn't help me find a flat.
41:27Circles.
41:30Circles.
41:31Circles.
41:34And then Adele needed a doctor.
41:37And about the baby?
41:39She didn't want to take a chance with Amy.
41:41After what had happened to Liam.
41:45Did he help her?
41:48With me, he were decent.
41:51He were a good man.
41:53But he said he couldn't help Adele.
41:56Said she needed scans, hospital appointments.
41:59Said he were going to phone a doctor or the NHS.
42:05You were going to tell him about Adele being pregnant.
42:08So what did you do?
42:11We left.
42:12How did you get home?
42:14How did I get home?
42:17What the fuck's wrong with you?
42:19How does that matter?
42:21You take your bike?
42:23There were two of us.
42:24How would I do that?
42:26Oil matching that from your bike chain
42:28was found on Arthur Lane's jacket when he died.
42:31You want to talk me through how it got there.
42:35You went back, didn't you?
42:39When did you discover that Arthur Lane
42:41was formerly known as Dr. Henry Dankford?
42:43You are?
42:44Dankford worked at Creekwood Hospital.
42:48I've never met anybody called Dankford.
42:51You blamed him.
42:53Did you want to punish him
42:55because he once worked at Creekwood?
42:57There were good to her at Creekwood.
43:01And one more happy when I went to visit her.
43:08We used to have cake and play in the garden.
43:16I used to climb that tree when I were a lad.
43:22I'd go there
43:28when it all gets too much.
43:33Makes me feel close to her.
43:46I'm not blaming
43:48nobody for my mum.
43:52It's fate, isn't it?
44:00It's a chromosome.
44:08And you can't do now about it
44:09except try to keep it in a cage.
44:17And that's what Arthur did.
44:20He gave me that
44:21little pill
44:22and that little pill
44:24was the cage.
44:26Why did you go back to see him?
44:29To beg.
44:34To beg him
44:35to look after Adele.
44:39Yeah.
44:40And
44:44and to ask him a question
44:46that I couldn't ask him
44:48in front of Adele.
44:50Did he help you?
44:54He said he could get me some pills
44:55in a couple of days.
45:01The chain came off my bike.
45:05He helped me with that.
45:12What was the question?
45:14What was the question?
45:34Would our
45:35our baby have it too?
45:44Danny was either making deliveries
45:46in another part of Birmingham
45:47or on CCTV
45:48in the pizzeria
45:49until 2am.
45:50Finishes,
45:51goes back to the restaurant.
45:52He couldn't have got home
45:53until at least 2.30.
45:54By which point
45:55Ryan was probably already dead.
45:57And no trace of Dan's DNA
45:58on Arthur's body or clothes.
46:00Child A,
46:01West Midlands Integrated Care Board
46:03have come back to us.
46:04The records for 1970s
46:06are pretty sketchy.
46:07What a freak would have been lost
46:08and they'll never file for him
46:09but I do have a name.
46:10Thomas Eastman.
46:12He's 63 years old.
46:13Give me a sec.
46:15Thomas
46:17Eastman
46:18Birmingham.
46:20I've got a Thomas Eastman
46:21living in social housing
46:22in Birmingham.
46:23Do you think Arthur
46:23kept in touch with him?
46:24He kept his files.
46:25It may have been correspondence
46:26that we weren't looking for.
46:27And medical records
46:28under the name of Thomas Eastman.
46:31Ask his daughter
46:31to look again.
46:59Hi.
47:00Hello.
47:00Is it Thomas?
47:01Thomas Eastman?
47:04Come on in.
47:05Why am I here?
47:14You all right?
47:16Mr. Delaney.
47:17You live here?
47:19Yeah.
47:20Right.
47:21Is Thomas Eastman home?
47:23No.
47:24Thomas gone out.
47:25Tomo.
47:28I've got a warrant
47:29to search the premises.
47:31What's he done?
47:47Come on.
47:48What's going on?
47:50Are you his partner,
47:51Mr. Delaney?
47:52Of course not.
47:54Could you wait outside, please?
47:59I'll do it.
47:59No.
48:05Hey.
48:06Hey.
48:26Jack, Thomas Eastman and Vincent Delaney, they have a joint bank account.
48:42Disability benefits, plus one thousand pines deposited each month.
48:52Big house.
48:54Is my dad's?
48:58No, thank you.
49:04How do you know him?
49:08Arthur Lane.
49:12Dad's left you half of his estate.
49:16Dad.
49:18Arthur Lane.
49:23Thomas.
49:25Arthur Lane.
49:28Arthur Lane is Dr. Dangford.
49:32Dr. Dangford is Arthur Lane.
49:41So where does Tom out sleep?
49:43On the sofa.
49:45It's his flat, but he's sleeping on the sofa?
49:47He likes the sofa.
49:49You lodger here or his carer?
49:50What do you mean?
49:52Look, can you just tell me what's going on?
50:06Same brand.
50:08There's one missing.
50:29The good to my spam.
50:54Arthur Lane was a bad man.
50:55No, Thomas.
50:56He was bad.
50:57He did bad things.
50:59You're wrong.
51:00He was a good man.
51:01No, no, no.
51:04You're wrong, Thomas.
51:05He was a bad man.
51:06He did bad things.
51:08Why are you in his will?
51:10I don't want his money.
51:18Vincent Delaney, I'm arresting you in connection with the murders of Arthur Lane and Ryan Cooper.
51:23No way.
51:24I can't be all responsible for what he does.
51:27You need to go and I'm calling the police.
51:29No!
51:29No!
51:35It was bad.
51:37You did bad things.
51:41I said...
51:43I said he would fix me.
51:46Nicky, it's not a great time.
51:49You can't have anything to fix.
51:50Nicky?
51:51I was good.
51:52I was a good boy.
51:55Thomas, please.
51:56Just put the knife down!
51:58I haven't done anything to you!
52:00It's really in Ian's voice.
52:01Kit!
52:02It's not meant to be fixed!
52:07Please.
52:09Thomas.
52:12Tomo.
52:13My name's Tomo.
52:17I help people.
52:21Okay.
52:23I don't know you.
52:24My name's Nicky.
52:25I'm a doctor.
52:29Can you put the knife down, Tomo?
52:32You don't want to hurt people.
52:35Like you said, you help people.
52:39Is that what you did to my dad, Tomo?
52:41Did you help him to change his will?
52:43Why does she want to hurt me?
52:44No one wants to hurt you, Tomo.
52:48Dr. Dankford hurt me.
52:56Arthur Lane is Dr. Dankford.
53:00Vincent told me.
53:02Vincent is my only friend.
53:06Vincent?
53:07Who's...
53:07Ryan wanted to hurt me.
53:11Why did Ryan want to hurt you?
53:13I don't know.
53:15Vincent protects me.
53:17He told me Arthur wanted to have me sectioned.
53:23Arthur couldn't do that.
53:25He could.
53:27Arthur Lane is Dr. Dankford.
53:30He wasn't a doctor anymore.
53:32No one wants to section you, Tomo.
53:36Vincent told me I had to help.
53:39Arthur Lane.
53:40Like he helped me.
53:43Help him?
53:49He...
53:51Fixed me.
53:54And I...
53:57I fixed him.
53:58Fixed him.
53:59What are you kidding?
54:00Fixed him.
54:02Fixed him.
54:07Is she okay?
54:10Let's help her, shall we?
54:14If you put the knife down, it will help her.
54:32Don't be sad.
54:36I...
54:36I...
54:37I...
54:37I...
54:38I...
54:38I can help you.
54:40Let me help you.
54:42Okay, Tomo.
54:46Okay.
54:53Wait.
54:54I help people.
54:55That's fine.
54:56You help people, Tomo.
54:58Help people.
55:02Okay.
55:06Tomo was child A.
55:08Trying to help people.
55:09Arthur Lane was trying to help people too.
55:11Homeless people with their mental health problems.
55:14Arthur helped Don Cooper.
55:16And all along the real threat was Tomo's friend, Vincent.
55:20Shook Arthur Lane down.
55:22A thousand a month wasn't enough.
55:24Half the estate, why not?
55:25Then get Tomo to fix him.
55:27To get people trying to do something good and this is how it ends up.
55:30Yep.
55:30Well, it's so fucked up.
55:48I'm sorry, Adele.
55:53I found a place.
55:57We get settled.
55:59Get Liam back with us.
56:03Plan?
56:14Plan.
56:20Plan.
56:28Plan.
56:29Plan.
56:35Plan.
56:36Plan.
56:42Plan.
57:13What are you two cooing about over there?
57:15Nothing. Maybe.
57:18A letter?
57:19Who writes letters these days?
57:21Probably a bell.
57:22Probably.
57:23Who's it from?
57:27The University of the West Midlands.
57:29Dear Jack Hodgson, we would be pleased to offer you the position of honorary professor at the School of Forensic
57:35Science.
57:36Congratulations, Jack.
57:38A professor?
57:40A new challenge.
57:41What?
57:43You've won the lottery, Jack.
57:46I won it twice.
57:58Before you go, I'd like to be clear for you.
57:59To save people or not,
58:01You should know.
58:02To save people.
58:02That's where I am.
58:12To save some money.
58:13A block of money…
58:14What do you want?
58:15No!
58:24To save people…
58:24To receive people…
58:24To save people…
58:24To save people…
58:24I won't be out…
58:24To save people…
58:25To save people…
58:30I'll see you next time.
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