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00:04Mr Franklin
00:07Mr Franklin
00:20Hello
00:21Mr Franklin
00:24Mr Franklin
00:27Mr Franklin
00:58Mr Franklin
01:00Mr Franklin
01:10Mr Franklin
01:13Mr Franklin
01:19Mr Franklin
01:27Mr Franklin
01:27Sous-titrage Société Radio-Canada
01:58Ta-da!
01:59Oh, is that for me?
02:01Yeah, I believe so.
02:03Unless your scaly friend over there has been using your prime membership to restock his supply of freeze-dried beetles.
02:16Another puzzle?
02:20I'm afraid I have some rather bad news, Patience.
02:25It's about your favourite writer, Harry Franklin.
02:37Sorry, sir, I was...
02:38I can see.
02:39This is the first Sunday I've had often more than a month.
02:42Well, I was on the third tee.
02:44Huh? You were playing golf?
02:49Does the name Harry Franklin mean anything to you?
02:52The crime writer?
02:53Yeah, he's found dead in his flat. Doors bolted from the inside.
02:57Now, look, I want this tied off before it becomes, you know, a thing.
03:01Please, baffled by mystery death of best-selling crime writer?
03:05Exactly.
03:06Have you contacted Parsons?
03:07Yeah, she's been there an hour.
03:27Harry Franklin's dead.
03:31Yeah.
03:33How do you know?
03:34Er, Mr. Gilmore. He told me.
03:36Who the hell told him?
03:37It sounds like a locked room mystery.
03:40No mystery. He killed himself.
03:42Right, but in his book, A Crooked Man, the famous writer appears to have killed himself, and then we find
03:47out...
03:47Do you want to see for yourself?
03:48The...
03:49Yes, yes.
03:51I...
04:29Sorry.
04:31Sorry.
04:33Sorry.
04:33Sorry.
04:34Sous-titrage MFP.
05:04Sous-titrage MFP.
05:41Sous-titrage MFP.
05:44Sous-titrage MFP.
05:55Sous-titrage MFP.
06:35Sous-titrage MFP.
06:38Never came to your office?
06:40Oh, Mr. Franklin never left the building.
06:42He didn't own a computer or a mobile.
06:43We only ever talked on his landline.
06:45You gave him a contract based on a few chats on the phone?
06:47When someone like him offers you their memoirs, you don't say no.
06:51So what about you?
06:52Well, I spoke to him maybe three days ago.
06:55He asked me to post a letter.
06:57Did you happen to notice the address?
06:59I respect the resident's privacy.
07:01Has he had any visitors since?
07:03None that I saw.
07:04And my desk is right by the front door.
07:15Right.
07:16Are you sure?
07:18Is it?
07:18Indeed.
07:19Definitely.
07:19Oh.
07:20Okay.
07:21Yeah.
07:21Thanks for that.
07:23Yep.
07:23Okay.
07:24Bye.
07:24Bye.
07:25That was the lab.
07:28Swabs from the glass show traces of HCN.
07:31Hydrogen cyanide.
07:32You were right.
07:33Yes, I was.
07:35Smells of almonds and Harry's favourite lequeur.
07:39The killer must have known that.
07:40Except we don't think he was killed.
07:42And why are you whispering?
07:44Well, dear, I met Carver certainly if I'm to contradict you, I shouldn't do it publicly.
07:50So, were there traces of HCN in the amaretta bottle?
07:53I have a lot to get home.
08:29Please don't touch anything.
08:37Patience?
08:40Patience?
08:43Patience?
09:06Patience?
09:06What happened?
09:13Is something the matter?
09:15C'est bon.
09:48We'll have to talk about it.
10:03To make the correct patterns, the player must be able to see things from multiple perspectives.
10:10Patience.
10:14I got carried away at a crime scene and I touched something that I shouldn't have.
10:20Oh dear.
10:22Now Detective Bea won't want me as her investigative assistant.
10:28We all made mistakes.
10:58Oh no.
11:00Nineteen minutes late.
11:01I didn't think we'd be seeing you today.
11:03Were there traces of HCN found in the Amaretta bottle?
11:06Or were there traces of HCN found in any receptacle in the flat?
11:09Slow down.
11:10Were there traces of HCN found in a receptacle that could have been thrown out the window of his apartment?
11:16I'll check with friends here, is it okay?
11:19Okay.
11:21And I wanted to say sorry as well.
11:25This is everything that I could find on Harry Franklin.
11:28I was up most of the night, so I used red pen because I felt like the right colour for
11:32those questions.
11:36That's very helpful, thank you.
11:46Can you believe it?
11:48More than 90 comments.
11:50Most of them think he was murdered.
11:51He was.
11:53Patience is questioned how the cyanide got into Harry Franklin's glass if he killed himself.
11:57There was no traces of the poison in the Amaretta bottle or in any receptacle found in his flat other
12:03than in his glass.
12:04Well, he's a crime writer. He threw it out of the window to confuse us.
12:09Uniform searched the vicinity.
12:11Well, somebody put it in her left.
12:12But the door was bolted from the inside.
12:14Well, maybe he showed them out.
12:15The poison's too fast acting, and besides, the caretaker was adamant, no visitors.
12:20So he kept it in the glass until the right moment?
12:23It would have evaporated.
12:26Sounds like a locked room mystery.
12:38If we can't account for how Harry got the cyanide into his own drink, then we have to assume some
12:44form of third party involvement.
12:46Let's pull in CCTV images from outside the flat.
12:49Everybody's favourite job.
12:50I know.
12:51You're so good at it.
12:52See who came and went, when and why.
12:55Did you follow up on the paperwork we found at Harry's flat?
12:57Yeah, the bank's offshore, and they won't play ball without a court order.
13:01What a surprise. Let's get one.
13:03We did dig this out, though.
13:05Two months ago, Harry opens his first domestic account in 20 years.
13:09Completely different to bank.
13:10That six-figure deposit paid in by Pardona Publishing the very same day for his memoirs, presumably.
13:16Except there was nothing resembling memoirs or notes from memoirs in the gubbins we found in his flat.
13:21Maybe he just hadn't started.
13:22Or maybe somebody cleared it all out. We know some of his papers are missing.
13:26Dear Lottie, thank you for your reply to my letter. Where's the reply? The Sockos didn't find it.
13:31So, who has interest in preventing the memoirs from being published?
13:35What about his ex-publisher?
13:39Erm...
13:40Pippa Juno. Halfpenny Publishing. It's practically a one-woman operation.
13:44Who's just watched her pot of gold walk out the door?
13:46We should call her in for a chat.
13:49Harry's a creature of habit. Same offshore bank account for 20 years. I want to know why change it now.
13:58The customers get a kindly toy.
14:03He paid a tidy sum for his memoirs.
14:06That was just the advance.
14:08Reckon they were going to be worth it.
14:11Look, his books have sold 18 million copies.
14:14They bring thousands of people to York each year. Haven't you heard of the Fortnum Mystery Weekends?
14:20Can I see them? These fabulous memoirs?
14:23He hadn't delivered anything.
14:24Oh.
14:25Well, there's nothing in his flat.
14:28Reckon he was playing you?
14:30No. Absolutely not.
14:32No immediate family. No real friends. Barely leaves the house.
14:36Doesn't sound like much of a life to write about.
14:39There was going to be a section on the fire that almost killed him.
14:43Plus, he promised to reveal that the public and the literary world would find absolutely explosive.
14:51Writers retreat.
14:52The fire that destroyed me.
14:54My life as a ghost.
14:56Unmasked at last.
14:58They've been researching for months.
14:59Must be evidence of that.
15:00Barely a shred.
15:07I'm trying to identify these people with Harry.
15:14I have no idea who the woman is, but that is Edmund Lennox.
15:19It's one of our star writers.
15:22It's gone a bit greyer since then.
15:25Hmm.
15:46Better day?
15:49Er, yeah.
15:51Yeah.
15:51Yeah.
15:51You fancy some lemonade?
15:52It's homemade.
15:54Er, okay.
16:01There you go.
16:02Thank you.
16:25Patience, we're just about-
16:26There are seven types of locked room mystery.
16:28Including the ice arrow in which the murder weapon disappears.
16:31Are we on the fort on a mystery weekend?
16:33We're just on our way to-
16:34The killer mixed cyanide and water and put it in the ice cube tray.
16:38And then Harry Franklin put the frozen cube into his drink.
16:42That's brilliant.
16:43Can you get onto Parsons?
16:44Tell her to test the ice tray.
16:45And what about the interview with Juno?
16:47Patience can observe.
16:58When did you last speak to him?
17:00A month ago.
17:02What did you talk about?
17:03A new contract.
17:05Er, Harry had killed off Fortnum.
17:08I thought of a way to bring him back.
17:10How did he react?
17:12He was evasive.
17:14Then I found out he'd signed a deal with Pardonna.
17:16And when did you last see him?
17:19In person.
17:20Maybe a year ago.
17:21After he sent me the final Fortnum manuscript, I came to try and dissuade him.
17:25CCTV has you visiting his flat last Saturday.
17:29After waiting for the caretaker to leave.
17:31I knocked.
17:32Got no reply.
17:33You looked pretty angry.
17:34Did I?
17:39Fortnum was your golden goose.
17:40In my office, I've got the typescript of the first Fortnum novel.
17:44Harry's first draft.
17:46Overblown.
17:47Pretentious.
17:48A mess.
17:49Every other publisher had rejected it, but I saw a clever plot.
17:51Cut it to the bone.
17:52Sent it back to him.
17:53Said I'd publish it, but only in this form.
17:56He agreed.
17:57Six months later, it's a bestseller.
18:00I made him.
18:02I put up with his refusal to promote his work.
18:05His typescripts.
18:06His rudeness.
18:06And then out of the blue, I'm history.
18:11I'll tell you why I didn't want to be seen.
18:13If Harry had opened that door and treated me in that bloody condescending offhand way of his, I don't know
18:18what it would have done.
18:37Patients?
18:43Yes?
18:49Where are you?
18:52Uh, I'm...
18:53Nobody actually comes in here.
19:01Do you want to come out?
19:03No, I don't.
19:05Shall we shout through the crate then?
19:09No.
19:15Do not touch anything.
19:17Okay?
19:31Why are you here?
19:33You were right about the, um, ice cubes.
19:37How would you feel about talking to Baxter, making your role with us official?
19:42Um, I found them.
19:44The people in the photograph.
19:48The fire claimed the life of Lisa Newman, 23.
19:52Harry Franklin, 24.
19:54Was taken to hospital with second degree burns.
19:57A second man, Edmund Lennox, 24.
20:00Also attended but was later released.
20:03Aldous Tate, who owns the cabin that was destroyed in the fire and runs a sundown writer's retreat, said he
20:08was devastated by Miss Newman's death.
20:11Yeah. So, it's the instant report that Harry Franklin requested a copy of two weeks ago.
20:16To help research his memoirs?
20:19Yeah.
20:20He also requested access to Lisa Newman's post-mortem.
20:24I mean, the findings were inconclusive, but...
20:27It could have been started deliberately.
20:29Possibly.
20:32But Dona could put us in touch with the other man in the photo, Edmund Lennox.
20:44It must have been a shock, Mr Lennox.
20:48That's an understatement.
20:50I've known Harry since we were 17.
20:53You both have the same model.
20:55Uh, yeah. Dared each other to buy those with our student grants.
21:00Um, commit to being a writer.
21:03Harry loved the Clatter of the Keys, wrote all his novels on it, and mine just sat there glaring at
21:09me, telling me not to give up.
21:10You were never tempted?
21:12To write detective fiction.
21:14God, no.
21:16My ambitions lay on a higher plane.
21:20Tell me about Lisa Newman.
21:24Lisa, um...
21:26What can I say?
21:28Her death shattered Harry.
21:31Turned him into a recluse.
21:33And a writer.
21:34Although it would be another five years before he created Fortnum.
21:39Was this taken at the retreat?
21:44Yes.
21:46Aldous Tate took it.
21:48The creep.
21:49Why'd you call him that?
21:51Uh, Harry told me that he, uh, Aldous, tried it on with Lisa.
21:55She found him a bit scary.
21:58Did Lisa have a twin sister?
22:02I believe she did.
22:04Yes.
22:05Uh, leave that, please.
22:08If you must handle my books.
22:10Here.
22:13Have one of these.
22:19When did you last visit Harry?
22:21Uh, must have been a while back.
22:25Um...
22:25Are you treating his death as suspicious?
22:27Did you know he was writing a memoir?
22:28I didn't.
22:29No.
22:30Uh, but I'm not surprised.
22:32I mean, every writer cranks one out eventually.
22:35If they lived long enough.
22:43Oh, you bought a copy?
22:44A gift.
22:46He insisted on signing it.
22:47Well, we've got a gift for you too, and I think you're gonna like this one.
22:51But first, bad news, Will.
22:55There is another entrance to the apartment block, ma'am, via the car park, but it's not covered by CCTV.
23:00Right.
23:00Now, the good.
23:04Facial recognition picked him up.
23:11Convicted of assault, 2015.
23:14Aldous Tate.
23:15Yeah.
23:16He's featured in the news coverage about the fire.
23:18Ran the Sand Inn writers' retreat, owned the log cabin that burned down, killing Lisa Newman, scarring Harry Franklin for
23:23life.
23:24And the PNC says Tate assaulted the boyfriend of a student that accused him of sexual harassment.
23:30A bunch of other women came forward, and the university had to fire him.
23:33Lennox said Tate made unwanted advances towards Lisa Newman as well.
23:38And patients dug out the original fire report, could have been started on purpose.
23:42I checked Harry Franklin's phone records.
23:44He'd called Aldous Tate four times in the past two weeks.
24:26Hello.
24:27Hiya.
24:28We're looking for Aldous Tate.
24:30He's around somewhere.
24:32You're his daughter.
24:33I'm his wife.
24:36Excuse me.
24:37It's really popular.
24:39Are you Aldous Tate?
24:40Well, do you what?
24:41You're welcome.
24:42I'm the other one.
34:34On ne peut pas être extrême. On ne peut pas penser à l'absolute.
34:39Tout est tout ou rien.
34:41Oui.
34:44Le père était un police officier, Patience.
34:47Et il a un des décorations.
34:50C'est un peu à vivre.
35:04C'est parti.
35:18C'est parti.
35:23C'est parti.
35:32Bonjour.
35:33Bonjour.
35:53C'est parti.
35:59Almonds?
36:00Cyanide.
36:04Found it in the boot.
36:07Looks like an ounce.
36:11From Harry Franklin's lost memoirs.
36:24I can't believe we had Harry Franklin's killer in custody.
36:28And we let him go.
36:29The cause of death for Tate, sir, is exactly the same MO as used to kill Harry Franklin.
36:34Hydrogen cyanide.
36:36The forensics don't indicate any third party involvement.
36:39CCTV places Tate at the scene of the murder on the day that Harry died.
36:43We've got to assume that he stole the notes for Harry's memoirs that we found in the car.
36:48Asked Tate to visit.
36:50Said I needed help to research what really happened with the fire.
36:53He the minded payment.
36:54£2,000 agreed.
36:56Worth it to see his face when I tell him I know he killed Lisa.
37:00This sounds like supposition.
37:02I digitised Lisa Newman's post-mortem images.
37:05The same ones Harry Franklin requested as part of his research.
37:10Now this is not a heat-related lesion.
37:14This is a stubborn.
37:16Look at the clean line.
37:18Well, why wasn't it noticed at the time?
37:19Well, modern topographical techniques can pick it up, but not in the 90s.
37:25Alright, so you've given me a possible motive for Tate murdering Harry Franklin.
37:30To stop him exposing him for the murder of Lisa Newman 20 plus years ago.
37:35But what was Tate's motive for killing himself?
37:38He had the notes. Harry was dead.
37:41The memoirs aren't going to see the light of day.
37:48Care to honour us with an insight?
37:51Not until I've shown these to a colleague in criminal records, sir.
38:04Yeah, this was typed by the same person who wrote the dear Lottie letter.
38:08On the same typewriter it would appear.
38:11Are you sure?
38:12Yeah.
38:14Good.
38:15What you're looking at is the letter Harry sent to Lottie requesting information about her sister Lisa just before he
38:21was killed.
38:23Now, look at this.
38:29Well, this was typed by a completely different person.
38:34On a different machine.
38:38Well, it's the one that was used to type the Faulkner manuscripts we looked at.
38:42I'm...
38:43I'm certain of it.
38:47It's one of the pages of Harry's notes we found in Tate's car.
38:50But Edmund Lennox wrote them.
38:52We've got them.
38:54Thanks to you.
39:06You wrote the Fortnum novels, Edmund.
39:09Do you have proof of that?
39:10We can prove Harry Franklin didn't.
39:12We had an expert analyze the pages of the first Faulkner manuscript.
39:16Shouldn't be too difficult to match them to the Olivetti typewriter on your client's desk.
39:21I'd call it typing, not writing, but yes.
39:26Faulkner was my creation.
39:31So what?
39:32But you despise crime fiction.
39:34Samuel Johnson almost said only a fool would write crime fiction for anything other than money.
39:40You certainly made plenty of that.
39:41For the tape, I'm showing a letter from the Tortuga National Bank in the Cayman Islands.
39:48Dated October 2004.
39:50An offshore account, open and closed by you, but in the name of Edmund Lennox and Harry Franklin.
39:55We've got a court order, Edmund.
39:58You paid Harry an awful lot of money.
40:04For research.
40:06For the tape, we are showing three items.
40:09A letter typed by Harry Franklin to Lisa Newman's sister.
40:13A page from the typescript of the first Fortnum novel.
40:19In notes.
40:21For Harry Franklin's memoir.
40:23Recovered from Aldous Tate's car.
40:27Because of the burns to his left hand when Harry typed, the keys on the left side of the typewriter
40:31made a weaker indentation than those on the right.
40:34Harry's letter to Lottie is very distinct from the notes found in Tate's car.
40:39This was typed by Harry.
40:41These were typed by you.
40:45You didn't pay him for research.
40:47It was blood money paid out of guilt.
40:51Harry was my friend.
40:55He suffered.
40:59You have no idea.
41:02The burns, the loss of the girl he loved.
41:06He did what I could to support him.
41:15I'm sure you tried to convince yourself of that over the years, but then you discover Harry's writing a memoir.
41:22I told you, I had no idea.
41:24You're lying, Edmund.
41:26We spoke again to Kelvin Fitzwater.
41:30He told you, over dinner, that Pardona had signed Harry, about Harry's research and the explosive reveal.
41:40You realised he was going to tell the world that you'd murdered his girlfriend.
41:47That's utter nonsense.
41:50We spoke to Lisa's sister.
41:53It wasn't Tate she was scared of, it was you.
41:57Lisa Newman died from a knife wound.
42:01You set fire to the cabin to cover your tracks.
42:05You staged Harry's death to look like a suicide.
42:08When that unravelled, you tried to frame Tate.
42:11Lured him with the promise of money.
42:12Poisoned him.
42:13Left Harry's notes in his car.
42:15Except they weren't Harry's notes.
42:16You made them up.
42:27The success I had with Adam's Island I took to be a sign.
42:34I no longer had to expend my talent on Fortnum.
42:42Paid Harry reparations enough.
42:47Then I found out he's not only cashing in on the fame I'd given him.
42:53But he's about to expose me.
43:00So you killed Harry Franklin.
43:09I had no choice.
43:11And Aldous Tate.
43:12Oh no.
43:13No loss.
43:14And Lisa Newman.
43:19A crème passionnelle.
43:24When she told me that she preferred Harry, I had a moment of blind, black, fathomless rage.
43:45Interview suspended, 1740.
43:52This is a letter from Harry Franklin.
43:54That Paterna Publishing found in their post room this morning.
43:58The explosive reveal he was planning.
44:02He didn't write the Fortnum novels.
44:04He blamed Aldous Tate for Lisa's death, not you.
44:27You had no reason to kill him.
44:29You had no reason to kill him.
44:39And he did smack him loving his neck, and they killed him, but you won't lose him...
44:58And that's not the save.
45:00Just give him permission to death.
45:00He wasn't the father and� no one everytime going to kill him.
45:07It looked like a stick in the albo przeg admit.
45:12C'est un puzzle box
45:13C'est facile à ouvrir
45:22Je ne sais pas, je n'ai jamais essayé
45:25Vous avez un puzzle qui n'est pas solved
45:31Qui est Mathilde Hendricks ?
45:39C'est ma mère
45:42C'est la seule chose qu'elle n'a pas pris avec elle avant qu'elle s'en est
45:52C'est-à -dire qu'elle n'a jamais essayé
45:53J'ai jamais essayé d'en contact avec elle ?
45:57Pourquoi je ne veux pas faire ça ?
46:00C'est-à -dire qu'elle n'a jamais essayé
46:32C'est-à -dire qu'elle n'a jamais essayé
46:36C'est-à -dire qu'elle n'a jamais essayé
46:40C'est-à -dire qu'elle n'a jamais essayé
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