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The Lost Women Spies S01E06 (2025) [Full Movie] [Watch Free Online]Full EP - Full
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00:03World War II is over, but British women agents remain missing throughout Europe.
00:14The other English women, how many were there?
00:18Answer me!
00:20Nazi radio mastermind Josef Goertz gives spymaster Vera Atkins an explosive testimony.
00:28Yes, I believe that's him.
00:31Implicating Henri Derricourt as the double agent who betrays the British SOE to the Gestapo.
00:42Derricourt is arrested in Paris, but has Vera really got the man who betrayed her women agents?
00:52Whitehall has closed down the special operations executive.
00:58But Vera has evidence from a French resistance fighter that her agent, Noor Inayat Khan, could still be alive.
01:07Vera will not give up.
01:10One agent who does make it back alive is Odette Sansom.
01:14She is driven out of Ravensbrück concentration camp by its commandant, Fritz Søren.
01:20This man is a walker.
01:22Søren is now on the run.
01:25But his deputy, Johann Schwarzhuber...
01:28What happened to her?
01:29They were shot.
01:31...is in custody, awaiting the Ravensbrück trial.
01:46It's the 5th of December, 1946.
01:50In Hamburg, in the British zone of occupied Germany,
01:55The Ravensbrück trial begins.
02:00The defendants are concentration camp personnel from all divisions of the camp.
02:07SS officers.
02:09Camp doctors.
02:11Female guards.
02:13It is a Nazi camp like no other.
02:18Ravensbrück was a concentration camp, and unlike every other concentration camp,
02:23it was a concentration camp for women.
02:28It was particularly horrifying.
02:30For the sensibilities of people in the 1940s as well,
02:34where women are meant to be kept out of combat, out of war,
02:36and treated with some level of humanity,
02:39Ravensbrück was a particular horrific site to end up in.
02:47The Ravensbrück trial is important, and it's unique,
02:50because of the treatment of prisoners within the camp.
02:54In particular, the medical experiments that had been carried out
02:57for sterilisations, for example.
03:04Vera's role in the trial is to manage the extensive evidence
03:08she has brought together, passing it on to the prosecutors.
03:16But she must not reveal her role to the international press.
03:35The trial features one of the camp's most notorious SS officers.
03:44Johann Schwarzhuber.
03:47He is about to face one of his accusers.
03:52Barrister, could you please say who this man in front of us is?
03:56Johann Schwarzhuber.
04:00And who is your next witness?
04:04Adette Sansom.
04:09Odette Sansom is a star witness for the prosecution,
04:13giving damning testimony about what happened at the camp,
04:17at the hands of Schwarzhuber and others.
04:22The court hears from Odette and other witnesses
04:27about the treatment of female agent Violette Sabo,
04:31who is described talking about
04:34my baby, my baby,
04:37her young child left behind in Britain.
04:46and how Violette and two other agents,
04:51Lillian Rolfe
04:52and Denise Block,
04:55are brought from the punishment block,
04:58emaciated, dirty, and weak.
05:06They are then taken behind the crematorium building
05:11and shot.
05:14The trial would have been difficult for Vera
05:17as the witnesses took the stands,
05:19although she'd probably already interviewed
05:20some of them previously,
05:22she may have compartmentalised it in some way.
05:26But having seen and spoken to
05:29and befriended the agents
05:30that she had sent into the field,
05:32the realisation of what these women had sacrificed
05:36and what the overarching impact
05:38on their families were going to be,
05:40it must have been harrowing for her.
05:45At the end of the trial,
05:47Schwarzhuber is sentenced to death
05:51and executed on the 3rd of May, 1947.
05:56Five of the female guards
05:58are also executed.
06:01Fritz Suren, the commandant,
06:03remains a fugitive from justice.
06:07But before the closing statements are finished,
06:11Vera is already on her way to try
06:14and track down the last of her lost women spies,
06:17Nor Inayat Khan.
06:31Previously, Vera received a letter
06:34from a French resistance fighter,
06:36Yolande Lagrave,
06:39claiming she had contact with Nor
06:40in a prison in Pforzheim
06:42in the west of Germany.
06:49This directly contradicted Vera's evidence
06:52from crematorium stoker Franz Berg.
06:55He claimed that Nor was killed
06:57at the Natsviler concentration camp
07:00in France.
07:03Vera already has an eyewitness testimony
07:06from Natsviler saying that Nor is dead.
07:08And now she has another eyewitness testimony
07:10saying, no, that is not true,
07:12she is here.
07:12What eyewitness do you trust?
07:15How does Vera make this decision?
07:18She needs some sort of corroborating evidence
07:21to prove one way or the other.
07:26So what did happen to Nor?
07:30Vera needs another witness statement.
07:35So she decides to interrogate
07:38one particular Gestapo soldier
07:40for a second time.
07:44Max Vassmer transported SOE agents
07:48to Dachau concentration camp
07:50in September 1944.
07:56Vassmer claims that he transferred
07:59three women to the camp.
08:01Even though other witnesses say
08:03there was a fourth woman.
08:06A woman from Pforzheim prison.
08:17Three.
08:19You're sure it was three?
08:23Three women.
08:26Not men.
08:27Women.
08:32Because the other guards
08:34say you're wrong.
08:41The receipt
08:42said three women.
08:46That is not
08:47what I asked.
08:48did you take
08:50three women?
08:57Three.
08:58Four.
08:59What's the difference?
09:00It's all
09:01the difference.
09:09So it was four.
09:18three from Carl Sragoa.
09:22And
09:23another.
09:27From
09:30Pforzheim,
09:31I think.
09:36Please tell me
09:37what they looked like.
09:39All of them.
09:44She looked like
09:47she may have been
09:48Indian.
09:59Vassmer describes
10:01the fourth woman
10:04giving a description
10:06of a woman
10:07who Vera believes
10:10is
10:11Nor
10:11Inayat Khan.
10:30Vassmer reveals
10:32that Nor
10:33is taken
10:33outside the camp
10:34with the other women
10:36and made
10:37and made to kneel
10:37in front of a mound
10:38of earth.
10:42The only word
10:43Nor says
10:44before she is shot
10:46is the French word
10:47for freedom.
10:49Liberté.
10:55Thank you,
10:56Herr Vassmer.
11:00We're done.
11:03Vera can now put to rest
11:05her quest
11:06to find out Nor's story
11:08and her final resting place,
11:10the concentration camp
11:12at Dachau.
11:21Now,
11:22Vera must ask
11:23the hardest question
11:24of all.
11:26Who betrayed
11:27her women agents?
11:30Who is the person
11:32that betrayed Nor,
11:35Violette Sabo,
11:37and all of Vera's
11:39other women spies,
11:41so they ended up
11:42in the hands
11:43of the Nazis?
11:46Could it have been
11:48Henri Derricourt?
11:50There were allegations,
11:52but Vera
11:53still doesn't know
11:54for sure.
11:58The man who would know
12:01is Hans Kiefer,
12:05the man in charge
12:06of Nazi intelligence
12:08in Paris.
12:12To find him,
12:14Vera needs
12:15the SAS.
12:23SAS intelligence officer
12:25Major Bill Barkworth
12:26and his men
12:27stake out a small town
12:29in southern Germany.
12:34They've received
12:35a tip-off
12:36from Vera
12:36that Hans Kiefer
12:38has been spotted here.
12:40It is Kiefer's
12:41hometown.
12:42They're looking
12:43for the caretaker
12:44of a local hotel
12:46who signs
12:47the town hall register
12:48as Hans Kiefer.
12:50The name
12:51is suspiciously similar
12:53with only one F
12:54removed.
13:01The name
13:10is Kiefer.
13:10The name
13:11is Kiefer.
13:12The name
13:13is Kiefer.
13:14The name
13:15Oh, my God.
13:46Joseph Kieffer, Senior Counterintelligence Officer, 84 Avenue Fox, Paris.
13:59Get him out of here!
14:04Barkworth and Vera have their man.
14:08Now, it is their chance to find out who betrayed all of Vera's women agents.
14:18It is January, 1947.
14:22Vera is face to face with her secret enemy, Hans Kieffer.
14:29Hans Kieffer is a lifelong Nazi, so he joined the Nazi party in the early 1920s, so very, very early
14:35on.
14:36And he rises to become, during the war, the head of the Gestapo and SS operation runner in Paris.
14:46So this was an operation specifically aimed at hunting down mostly special operations executive agents in the field, so agents
14:55of the SOE in France.
14:57But the thing about Hans Kieffer is he's a fascinating individual because he's not like you would imagine your archetypal
15:03SS bruiser.
15:05He's a subtle, wily, clever fox.
15:11Vera has waited almost two years for this moment.
15:15The chance to interrogate the man who could answer all her questions.
15:22The man who holds the key to her lost women spies.
15:26And what really happened to Knorr, codename Madeleine.
15:33Berlin considered the French section of SOE particularly dangerous.
15:40Both the Führer and Himmler had shown a personal interest.
16:08I remember, Madeleine.
16:16Refused to cooperate, unlike the others.
16:25She tried to escape with a group of male agents.
16:31It would have ruined us if she made it back to SOE.
16:35Ruined me.
16:38So, I sent her away.
16:43She ended up in Fortsheim, I think.
16:51She was a brave one.
17:00Her name was Knorr Inayat Khan.
17:05She is most likely dead.
17:09Shot through the head at Dachau.
17:19Kieffer, if one of us is going to cry, it is going to be me.
17:23You will please stop this comedy.
17:30Who betrayed them, Kieffer?
17:34Who betrayed Knorr?
17:39You're asking me if there was a traitor in your ranks?
17:48Why are you asking me?
17:52You know yourself?
17:54You know yourself?
17:54There was one.
17:57You recalled him to London.
18:01Gilbert?
18:07And who is Gilbert?
18:11Well, I think you're now.
18:15Of course you're now.
18:19Only tell me go.
18:25Did you pay him?
18:28Yes.
18:40Here, at last, is Vera's definitive proof that Henri Derricor is the double agent.
18:48Don't worry, Derricor.
18:50We'll clear this whole sorry business up.
18:53Thanks, sir.
18:54Despite Buckmaster and Boddington's investigation clearing him.
19:04There is no doubt in Vera's mind that with all the resistance evidence coming in,
19:09all of the information that Kieffer knows about Derricor,
19:12obviously now, for Vera,
19:15she knows Derricor is the mole.
19:18He is a double agent.
19:20He's the reason that all of her agents, or a lot of them,
19:23ended up in concentration camps.
19:25He's the reason that they were murdered.
19:27And the anger that must have pulsed through her at that point.
19:31This isn't a sinking feeling anymore.
19:33This is something that she needs justice for.
19:38Now, Vera has a star witness
19:40who can testify against, and hopefully convict, Henri Derricor.
19:55June, 1948.
20:02Henri Derricor is brought to trial in Paris.
20:10Here is Vera's chance for justice.
20:15Vera had spent the last few years building up her case against Henri Derricor.
20:20I mean, she had everything.
20:22Now she was a civilian, obviously.
20:24She wasn't leading the prosecution,
20:25so she couldn't determine what evidence they were going to use in court against him.
20:29But she had so much.
20:30She had, like, affidavits from actual Nazi war criminals who named him.
20:36She had all of the evidence that she'd gathered from her own agents.
20:40She had all the evidence from the French resistance.
20:43Henri Derricor was at the centre of this web of lies,
20:47and she could prove it.
20:49It was all right there.
20:50She must have felt so confident when they entered the courtroom.
20:54But it is soon clear it may not be as easy as Vera hopes.
21:02It's now been over a year since Vera interrogated Hans Kieffer.
21:08She is told that in June, 1947,
21:11Kieffer was convicted of the murder of five SAS men
21:15and executed before he can give evidence at the Derricor trial.
21:24Hans Kieffer would have known more than anybody else
21:27about every single agent who was arrested when and how
21:31and the radio game and also what informers he was using.
21:35So one might think that his evidence would have been,
21:38or a statement at least,
21:39would have been crucial to the eventual trial of Henri Derricor as a traitor.
21:47I mean, there's a potential conspiracy theory around the fact
21:51that he was deliberately executed so that he couldn't reveal the full extent
21:56of the SOE failings and disastrous infiltrations.
22:02Next, Vera discovers the statement which she extracted from Kieffer
22:06is not going to be put before the court.
22:10Finally, no former SOE officers will appear in court to give evidence.
22:20But on the final day,
22:23one former officer does make the trip to Paris.
22:29None other than Nicholas Boddington.
22:37Could Boddington be the man to help get Derricor convicted?
22:50Boddington gives evidence.
22:52But instead of giving evidence against Derricor,
22:55Boddington testifies that Derricor's contact with the Nazis
22:59was fully authorised for counter-espionage purposes.
23:09Henri Derricor is found not to be a traitor.
23:14Instead, partially thanks to Boddington's testimony,
23:17he is acquitted.
23:19Derricor is a free man.
23:24Vera has to face the possibility
23:26that her women agents were compromised
23:29so that Derricor could supply intelligence to London about the Nazis.
23:34Put yourself in Vera's boots.
23:36She's been trying to prosecute Henri Derricor for years.
23:39And here, it's almost like a farcical trial.
23:43And not only does the prosecution not really try and pin him down
23:46and brings virtually no witnesses,
23:48but the defence,
23:50they bring Boddington.
23:51Like, this is a man that Vera's worked with
23:54and he knows what she's been doing.
23:57He knows that she's desperately been trying to bring justice
24:00to all the women who,
24:02some of them were tortured to death.
24:03And she feels responsible for that
24:06because she's the person who sent them out there.
24:09How could you, Nick?
24:10Vera.
24:11How could you support that traitor?
24:15Testify for him
24:16after everything he did to my agents,
24:18our agents.
24:20Vera.
24:20You're a liar.
24:22Everything I said was true.
24:24You're a liar.
24:26Vera, Derricor's contact with the SD was authorised.
24:30I sent my girls to war
24:32with no protection under the Geneva Convention.
24:35If they were made as spies,
24:37they faced certain death.
24:39You sent them to their deaths.
24:43You sent a widow with a young daughter to France.
24:46That child is now an orphan.
24:49You pulled Nora out of training early
24:51because you needed a wireless operator.
24:54You volunteered for this job.
24:56Begged Buckmaster to play with the big boys.
24:59Don't forget that.
25:07It appears that the men at the top of the British establishment
25:11want the true story of the women spies to be lost permanently.
25:20But others are now interested in what happened to Vera's spies.
25:26In the early 1950s, writer Jean Overton Fuller
25:31begins researching a series of books about the SOE.
25:36Jean wants to find out what happened to her friend Noor Inayat Khan,
25:41who disappeared during the war
25:43after telling Jean she was going away.
25:49Despite being warned off by establishment figures,
25:53Fuller interviews former members of the SOE,
26:12Her work results in three books about the SOE,
26:17with the last called Double Webs, published in 1958.
26:23The book makes the controversial claim
26:26that Noor and other agents
26:28are sent by the SOE
26:30into the hands of Henri Derricourt,
26:33with the full knowledge
26:35that Derricourt is a double agent,
26:39working with the Nazis.
26:44The book makes headlines.
26:47Delivery for Mrs. Ward!
26:49Several MPs receive letters
26:50from the families of lost women spies
26:53wanting to know the whole truth about their daughters.
27:02One MP is Conservative member for Tyneside, Irene Ward.
27:11Irene, through the Home Office,
27:13requests an interview with someone who knows what happened.
27:18The Home Office sends Vera.
27:33Overton Fuller writes, and I quote,
27:35I have read the book, Mrs. Ward.
27:43It's a shame, really, that accuracy appears to be secondary concern.
27:50I find these things of such importance.
27:59You're disputing that Henri Derricourt was a double agent?
28:04Perhaps you could ask him yourself.
28:06I'm sure Miss Overton Fuller could direct you to him.
28:13Miss Atkins.
28:16What concerns me is that the SOE,
28:20that your superiors,
28:22that you,
28:23were sending women to fight
28:25in the full knowledge they had no chance to survive.
28:28Mrs. Ward,
28:31what did you do during the war?
28:33I served my constituents.
28:44Atkins.
28:47Your mother's name, I believe.
28:51Your father's name,
28:53Rose.
28:55Rosenberg, if I'm not mistaken.
28:59And you're from Romania, originally.
29:04How did a young Romanian girl like yourself...
29:07I'm so sorry, Mrs. Ward,
29:09but I have another meeting.
29:15Good day, Miss Atkins.
29:18See yourself out, please.
29:24After the meeting,
29:25Irene Ward digs into Vera's personal history.
29:29Who she is,
29:30where she comes from,
29:32and what she really did at SOE.
29:40Irene Ward's digging threatens to reveal the story
29:44of the lost women spies.
29:47The security establishment goes into damage control.
29:52An academic,
29:53called M.R.D. Foote,
29:55at the University of Oxford,
29:57is engaged to produce an official history
30:00of the SOE.
30:03M.R.D. Foote is ex-SAS.
30:06He also was captured in the war,
30:09and he was put in a prisoner of war camp in France.
30:12So he has all of this direct experience within the war,
30:14but he's also a historian.
30:16So he's got that authority as well.
30:18He understands how to write about history,
30:20and he understands that there are still some secrets
30:23that must stay secret.
30:26His exhaustive work concludes that...
30:30To the question of why people with so little training
30:33were sent to do such important work,
30:36the only reply is the work had to be done,
30:40and there was nobody else to send.
30:51Professor Foote?
30:53Before the book is published,
30:55Vera speaks to Foote and persuades him
30:58to omit her Romanian background
31:00from his history of SOE.
31:06So why does Vera hide who she really is?
31:10Because Vera is forced to cover up
31:13not just her public story and the lost women's spies,
31:16but also the private story of her family's life.
31:32Miss Atkins, I would like three copies of this, please.
31:35One for the war...
31:36It was a closely guarded secret at SOE
31:39that Vera was born in Romania rather than the UK.
31:46But that wasn't Vera's only secret.
31:58Vera was not born Vera Atkins,
32:03but Vera Rosenberg.
32:07Vera is one of three children of Max and Hilda Rosenberg,
32:12who are both German Jews.
32:15Just before the First World War,
32:18Max purchases an estate and wood mill in Bukovina,
32:22a region that will become part of Romania.
32:28But after Vera's father dies in 1932,
32:32and with anti-Semitism in Europe on the rise,
32:35Vera and her two brothers move to the United Kingdom.
32:41Vera's father is a family of the United Kingdom,
32:41where they take their English mother's surname of Atkins.
32:48Vera leaves behind in Romania an extended family.
32:53As the Nazis take hold of Europe,
32:56the family who stay are in mortal danger.
33:01The terror that people live with cannot be underestimated,
33:05even if they weren't actually at direct risk
33:08of being moved to concentration camps.
33:10This isn't just my family.
33:12This isn't just my aunt and my dad and my direct family.
33:15This is everybody with Jewish family
33:17who were living in the UK and England at the time
33:20were terrified about what was going to happen to their relatives.
33:23And I think everybody wanted to do whatever they could to help.
33:30According to a family story,
33:32Vera's family in the UK raise a large amount of money
33:35to help their European relatives.
33:40My dad, my uncle and Vera were very keen to provide any help they could.
33:45So they obviously found money and they found resources.
33:48But it was very clear that by this point,
33:50to get money, to get resources, to get a logistical plan,
33:53you probably needed to go.
33:55You needed to leave England, you needed to get on a boat
33:58and you needed to go and practically help.
34:01Vera travels to Antwerp, Belgium, in 1940,
34:06just as the Nazis are about to invade.
34:17During the war, people would often store their wealth
34:20in something that could be more easily hidden and transported.
34:31Diamonds.
34:42For hundreds of years, Antwerp has been the centre of the diamond trade in Europe.
34:50Vera is believed to have converted the money from the UK
34:53into diamonds for the family in Romania.
35:01But who are the relatives facing Nazi persecution that Vera wants to save?
35:17Fritz Rosenberg is Vera's cousin.
35:20Vera's relatives in the 1940s faced disaster.
35:30The region has been occupied by Hungary, an ally of Nazi Germany.
35:39Under new anti-Jewish laws, Fritz and his wife Karen lose their passports.
35:46They may even be deported to concentration camps.
35:53But without a passport, they are unable to escape to another country.
36:00This rise in anti-Semitism in the law is reflected in the population.
36:04They wouldn't be able to trust their neighbours.
36:07They wouldn't be able to trust that at any point they might be snatched away in the middle of the
36:12night.
36:13They could be put on a train and taken to God knows where.
36:15I mean, it must have been absolutely terrifying for them.
36:19Karen Rosenberg contacts a German family friend.
36:25Someone who has good contacts with the Abwehr, German military intelligence.
36:36karen is able to obtain aryan passports issued by the nazi government for her and fritz
36:45the rosenbergs pay the abwehr a large sum about 150 000 pounds in today's money to get the prized
36:54passports money that could be the diamonds that vera sources in antwerp karen and fritz are able
37:04to leave romania they are free but it's a freedom that comes at a personal cost
37:20fritz and karen relocate to the safety of istanbul
37:26where vera's brother ralph rosenberg lives
37:32the reason they go to istanbul is because of a condition set by the abwehr
37:42vera's brother is not only working for an oil company in istanbul but also supplying mi6
37:50with local intelligence
37:56the abwehr want karen to give them valuable information about ralph and mi6
38:10vera had almost certainly gone to antwerp to raise the money for fritz and karen's passports
38:18the very passports that allow the abwehr to get close to an mi6 agent vera has paid the bribe
38:27she's possibly met german intelligence officers face to face karen herself has had contact
38:36with a german intelligence officer who's asked her to work for the germans
38:41it's beginning to look really suspicious anyone looking at this situation it's going to start
38:48throwing suspicion on vera and on the rosenbergs are they loyal what's going on here it's opening a
38:56pandora's box had it been known by the soe that vera had handed over money to get aryan passports
39:05from the abwehr it would have put vera under serious suspicion of being a double agent
39:14instead vera keeps her family story a closely guarded secret and when the british security services
39:23publish mrd foot's history of the soe vera has all mention of her romanian family roots erased
39:34but despite the security services best attempts to cover up the story of the lost women spies
39:42it's a story that just won't go away
39:49after creating controversy with her book double webs gene overton fuller starts researching a new book
39:57this time about henry derikor's relationship not with the nazis but with mi6
40:04the book is called the checkered spy and it claims derikor wasn't just a double agent but that he was
40:14spying
40:14on the soe on the orders of mi6 derikor was mi6's mole at the heart of the soe monitoring everything
40:26they were doing as mi6 believed that the soe were incompetent
40:35the suggestion is that members of the british security services knew that the women vera trained
40:42like nor inayat khan
40:48like violette sabo
40:51like odette sansam were being sent into the hands of a known double agent
41:00but henry derikor never sees the day that the book is published
41:32so bad it is that
41:40so bad it is that
41:41the grief
41:41it has been a while
41:44how are you
41:47good thanks
41:49bucks
41:49you
41:51see the news
41:54derikor's disappeared in the far east
41:57the plane he was flying carrying a cargo load of gold
42:01I think the cause of the crash was fuel starvation.
42:07No. No, I haven't seen it.
42:10What does that mean?
42:15Any survivors?
42:17No.
42:18And they can't find Derricore's body.
42:24Wasn't Vera close to that man from the SAS?
42:27Yes. The sort of thing they're good at.
42:30Giving people a helping hand into the grave.
42:35I wouldn't know.
42:38Vera and I don't speak.
42:42I think she works for the UN now.
42:46Well, if you hear anything.
42:51All that Derricore business
42:53was very unfortunate for everyone.
43:04It's best that he's gone.
43:06Dead men don't talk.
43:14Vera Atkins retires to the south coast of Britain,
43:18moving to Winchelsea.
43:20She has a steady but discreet stream of visitors,
43:25including Tanya Szabo,
43:27the daughter of agent Violette Szabo.
43:42I received the George Cross for Mother.
43:46I received the George Cross for Mother.
43:50Odette Samson was the first ever woman to receive that.
43:58The French also gave Mother the Croix de Guerre.
44:03That was good of them.
44:09And Noor received both medals too.
44:15There's a memorial now at Dachau.
44:24And now you received your CBE.
44:28Finally.
44:29They took their time, didn't they?
44:33Are you looking forward to the ceremony?
44:39We'll see, won't we?
44:47I'll leave this here.
44:56I always drove them down to the aerodromes.
45:00It always seemed to be a summer's day.
45:04I saw them off.
45:08When the war ended and when they didn't come back,
45:11I went looking for them all.
45:15Missing, presumed dead.
45:21It's such a terrible epitaph for anyone.
45:29Can't believe my time has finally come.
45:32Been such a whirlwind.
45:36And yet the adventure's just about to start.
45:40Remember what they've taught you, Noor.
45:44Yes, Miss Atkins.
45:50There.
45:51You're clean.
45:56You're so smart, Miss Atkins.
45:59You always were the nicest things.
46:04Here.
46:06It's yours.
46:10May it bring you luck.
46:18Thank you, Miss Atkins.
46:20Are you ready?
46:25Yes, Miss Atkins.
46:28Very good.
46:50Yes, Miss Atkins.
46:51Very good.
47:15Thank you, Miss Atkins.
47:17You are welcome.
47:46For more information visit www.fema.org
47:59For more information visit www.fema.org
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