- 12 minutes ago
Murdered or Missing - Season 1 Episode 1
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00:27Gracias por ver el video
00:30Gracias por ver el video
01:22Gracias por ver el video
02:29The showin case is chilling, savage and shocking
02:33And I've reported cases for over 40 years
02:37It's beyond belief that they went to those lengths
02:41Just for pure greed
03:09I was very excited because
03:11I was going to see Nancy after nine years
03:14And it was like a family reunion after a long time
03:35When I was trying to get hold of Nancy
03:37I was trying to get hold of Mom and Neil
03:39Nobody was here
03:43So, you know, I thought something's not right
03:47Ron Kovirma was becoming particularly concerned
03:52He kept messaging the police and trying to raise it at a higher level
03:56And it got to the point where Hounslow Missing Persons Department took the case on
04:02And they would make some sort of general local inquiries
04:05Regarding any sort of missing person that was brought to the police's attention
04:08And most of those were resolved pretty quickly
04:10So, you had Amajit Chohan, his young wife, Nancy
04:18They had two young boys, Devinda and Ravinda
04:21And Nancy's mother, Charanjit Kaur, had been visiting the family because of the new baby
04:28So, she was in the UK visiting the family
04:30And she had also gone missing
04:34In the UK, it's quite common for people to go missing
04:38But the fact that five individuals up and vanished
04:43That in itself is quite a rarity
04:51Hounslow Police Station, their missing persons unit
04:54Went to visit the Chohan family home
05:01And the local officers had peered through the windows
05:05Knocked on the doors
05:09As far as they can see
05:10The house wasn't in disarray
05:12Hadn't been disturbed
05:13There was certainly no forced entry
05:16The neighbours hadn't seen anything until ward
05:18So, the local officers, they couldn't see any signs of concern
05:24For the police, they have their hands full
05:26It's fair to say, on major crimes
05:28And, of course, they have to investigate missing persons
05:32But a phone call, particularly from New Zealand
05:34Is not going to press the buttons to launch a major inquiry
05:37It is understandable from the police point of view in those circumstances
05:40But, the fact is, a family had gone missing
05:44For no reason and without explanation
06:02I'm the national director of an organisation called the Monitoring Group
06:07Established to help individuals and communities suffering racism
06:11Policing issues, sexual domestic violence and hate crimes
06:16It was really about forcing the police to investigate things properly
06:23The only thing that was available for us was to put pressure on the police
06:26Either through media or through campaigning
06:29Or through taking up cases which became significant
06:33I remember exactly when I met Anka Verma
06:37He came to our office in March 2003
06:41He'd arrived in this country a week before
06:44From New Zealand on a single ticket
06:47To find out what had happened to Nancy, Amarjeet
06:49And the mother and the two kids
06:54He showed me Amarjeet's photograph with Nancy
07:02When I saw the photograph, I said to him
07:05I actually remember this family
07:07Because I saw them at a restaurant not far from our office
07:11Actually, 100 yards away
07:13I remember a very beautiful young woman
07:15With a sari and the two kids
07:17One running around and an older woman sitting at a table
07:23One of the moments that you register
07:25Because it is, it's, it's canny
07:31Anka and Nancy were very, very, very close to each other
07:35They spoke on a daily basis
07:36They'd been married on the same day
07:38He'd gone off to New Zealand with his wife
07:41And she'd come to England
07:45Nancy started working for Amarjeet Johan as his secretary
07:50He fell in love with her
07:52And she fell in love with him
07:54Despite the age difference of 20-odd years
08:05Anka said to me that he had spoken
08:08To his sister on her telephone
08:11On Valentine's Day, 2003
08:16He then rang her the next day
08:21But nobody answered the phone
08:22And everything went bad
08:24He kept on trying for another week
08:28Anka believed something was suspicious
08:31Then he rang Hanslow Police Station
08:34Which is a local police station in the area that they lived
08:36And they said they'd done the inquiry
08:40And he started feeling that the police weren't doing enough
08:45He seemed lost
08:47And he seemed as if nobody was listening to him
08:50And he'd travelled all this way
08:52And he was desperate to get somebody to take him seriously
08:56And I think that's why he came to us
09:00I thought, whole family going?
09:04It's very strange
09:07And what we decided was to get the most senior police officer we could
09:11From Scotland Yard
09:14In 2003, 21st of March
09:16I was first informed about the Chohan family
09:21They'd been missing for a couple of weeks
09:26I knew Suresh Grover from many other inquiries
09:30Where he had helped people from certain communities
09:33That had had their loved ones either murdered or were missing
09:53Police formed a cordon around the demonstrators
09:56But couldn't stop the violence
10:21The first report stated that we'd failed Stephen Lawrence
10:27We failed the Lawrence family
10:29And that the Metropolitan Police were institutionally racist
10:34It says the investigation was marred by a combination of professional incompetence
10:38And a failure of leadership by senior officers
10:41This was such a damaging blow to the Met's reputation
10:44And crime was escalating at unacceptable levels across London
10:48But the Met must have felt pressure every single day
10:53Londoners wanted to see action from the Met
10:56In tackling rising crime
10:58Tackling rising violent crime
11:00And particularly crime involving victims from ethnic minorities
11:05What we've learned is that these people are liars
11:08They're racist
11:09They're violent
11:10And they have no respect for black people at all
11:14That's what we've learned
11:26Do you now accept that there may have been a racial problem
11:30In the way the police handled that inquiry?
11:33I accept the possibility that there was at the very least unintentional racism
11:40Within some of the ways that we operate
11:47It was after the report we restructured murder investigations for London
11:53And in December 2001
11:56I was appointed the first chief police officer
12:00To solely be responsible for overseeing all murder investigations for London
12:05It was tough times
12:08Not only were we called institutionally racist
12:12We were also told we were not very good at our job
12:15We were good
12:16And we worked hard
12:17No police officer goes in to work and investigate a murder
12:21Or any crime
12:22Wanting to fail
12:23He started one of the first high-profile race monitoring groups in the country
12:29And acted as the coordinator of the Stephen Lawrence campaign for six years
12:34You do get more pressure from some families and some representatives than others
12:39I knew from the outset that Mr. Grover was somebody who would not take no for an answer
12:46He would expect us to look under every stone and do everything we possibly could
13:04We decided that we would appoint a senior investigating officer Norman McKinley and his team
13:09They undertook inquiries together with local police into the missing person inquiry
13:15We were on the homicide and serious crime command
13:17So whilst we took mostly murder cases
13:20We also did take high-risk missing persons investigation
13:23That were beyond the sort of limited resources and capabilities of a local police station
13:33As part of our investigation
13:35Obviously one of the most important things would be to actually force entry into the house
13:46There was evidence that people had been living there and eating and drinking
13:51But there were no people there
13:55There was half unmade breakfast
13:58So there was egg and toast coming out of the toaster
14:01And there were toys everywhere
14:06The washing machine was half full
14:08Maybe it looked like it was being empty
14:09It looked like a family had left in a hurry
14:13It was as if they'd got up and just walked out and left everything on the table
14:19Then, you know, we go through Nancy's stuff
14:23And we find her diary
14:25And what we discovered, or what Onka told me when we looked at the diary
14:30Was she speaks about her love for the children
14:37That's the best thing that's happened to them
14:39That she wants the mother there when the children are born
14:44I think the mother comes when the first is born
14:46And obviously comes when the second child is born
14:54Onka started getting worried because his mother's Sikh Bible
14:58The grandson was still at home
15:04And she never left anyway without it
15:07Police and families say there are no obvious problems
15:10Which could have driven them to leave of their own accord
15:13To hear nothing is extremely unusual and out of character
15:17I'm very worried
15:18I'm concerned about the safety
15:21Mrs Kerr's prayer book being left behind
15:24Especially with her son insisting how important it was to her
15:28Really made the police start to wonder
15:30Something more sinister had gone on
15:35Your detective senses are really starting to be raised now
15:41It was as if they had just literally vanished in an instant
15:50It was decided immediately to put it onto HOMES
15:54HOMES stands for Home Office Large Major Inquiry
15:58So Operation Walton was started by Norman McKinley and his team
16:03We had to have an open mind as to what happened
16:07At the least they were missing people
16:09And could have just gone off as a family on holiday
16:12And at the worst, the worst has befallen them
16:15And they've been murdered
16:16Whether that be within the family
16:19Or by people that knew them
16:21Or by people that were strangers to them
16:26Victimology is really important
16:27You need to know as much about the victim
16:29Who they are
16:30How do they live
16:31Where do they work
16:33Who do they work with
16:34Who do they see
16:34Who do they socialise with
16:38You can pretty much rule out any involvement whatsoever
16:41With Nancy Chohan
16:42A young mum
16:43Looking after her two young boys
16:47Aha
16:49Dave
16:51Hello
16:54And Charanjit Kaur
16:56Her mother
16:57Who's just recently come over to visit from India
16:59So it's really focusing on Amarjit Chohan
17:12Amarjit, he was a businessman
17:14He owned our import-export company
17:16Not far from Heathrow Airport
17:18Which is a company called Ciber Freight
17:20Which is an importation business for fruit and vegetables
17:26It was technically classed as a bonded warehouse
17:28Which meant that they were responsible for monitoring all of the imports that came into their warehouse
17:36Apparently he was a very likeable person
17:38Very likeable boss
17:40Almost the life and soul of the party
17:44One of our initial lines of inquiry progressed around Ciber Freight
17:49We dived in and had a look at where it was
17:53We found out it was struggling
17:57He had difficulty paying his staff over that Christmas in 2002 into 2003
18:03We then discovered a story
18:06We then discovered a story that Amarjit Chohan had sold his business and had taken his family back to India
18:12We also found out the day before there was last contact with him
18:16He had a business meeting near Stonehenge
18:19Amarjit told his wife that he was going to that meeting
18:22And in her daily chats with Anka the brother off in New Zealand
18:27Said that Amarjit's going off to a meeting because someone is going to buy into the company
18:33Amarjit Chohan had on the face of it an idyllic life
18:36But in fact there was a darker side to him
18:38Do it properly, Gardner
18:42Very nice
18:43He had been in trouble with the law in the past
18:46And may not have been quite as squeaky clean as you might think
18:52He was a well-known wheeler-dealer
18:56He ran an import-export business which gave him access to potential criminality
19:03He was a chancer
19:04He was a risk-taker
19:06And sometimes these risks did not pay off
19:09And he was charged, convicted and imprisoned
19:14And put behind bars
19:17He had been sentenced to four years imprisonment for tax evasion
19:27There's a number of different working hypotheses that you have to go on
19:31Because the family were missing
19:36Has he got on the wrong side of someone through business?
19:39Could this be some form of marital dispute?
19:44There was Amarjit, mid-40s
19:47Father of two young kids
19:48Struggling business
19:49Criminal past
19:53And whilst Chohan was one of the missing people
19:56You have to bear in mind that their disappearance may be ultimately linked to something that he has done
20:03We have had many cases where mainly the father would murder his partner and the children
20:10In the name of so-called honour killings
20:12Because they dishonoured them
20:23Culturally speaking in the Indian subcontinents
20:26Getting in trouble with the law enforcement
20:29Ending up in prison tends to be quite shameful
20:31For Amarjit, this is something that would have played extensively on his mind
20:34Or that shame and humiliation that he's caused to his family members
20:39We had to have that open mind as well
20:41You couldn't close anything off
20:49When the members of staff at Ciba are telling the inquiry team
20:54That Amarjit Chohan has sold his business
20:57That's obviously a major line of inquiry
21:00That we started to pursue
21:01And find out what are the details of this sale
21:05Who has he sold it to?
21:08We were introduced to a guy called Kenneth Regan
21:14Who was purporting to be the new owner of Ciba Freight
21:18And he was showing us various documents
21:21Signed by Amarjit Chohan about the sale of the business
21:24Kenneth Regan was basically telling us
21:28That he had facilitated a deal with some Dutch businessmen
21:33And Amarjit Chohan had sold the business
21:35For a substantial amount of cash
21:37And Regan, he had been installed as the new owner
21:42People were genuinely quite happy for Amarjit
21:47He'd literally sort of pulled off the deal of a lifetime
21:50And, you know, they were all pretty much saying to a person
21:52You know, don't worry
21:53He hasn't really gone missing
21:55He's just done what he always said he was going to do
21:57He's gone back to India
22:00But when we get Kenneth Regan's full details
22:03And dig into who he is and what he was
22:06We see that he's got a very checkered pass
22:14He was a major criminal
22:16Someone who had associations with
22:18The highest level of criminality in London
22:24He'd been involved in mass fake passport production
22:27And had been involved in the large-scale importation
22:31Of drugs into the UK
22:33And had served quite a substantial prison sentence
22:38He had been sort of known
22:40In what he would probably consider his criminal heyday
22:42As Captain Cash
22:43And was known to drive around in a Mercedes
22:46With wads of cash in the back of the car
22:49He was arrested after being apprehended
22:52With 30 kilos of heroin and large sums of money
22:56Which is obviously how he financed his lifestyle
22:59I think he probably considered himself quite a flash character
23:04We started to dig deeper
23:06And find that actually Regan and Chohan
23:10Had actually met in prison
23:16So there was a connection
23:18That linked them together
23:23Prison as an institution
23:25Tends to serve as a university for criminals
23:29Often you find inmates' networks
23:31Spend time
23:32Get to know each other
23:33Reminisce about the past
23:35But also talk about the future
23:37Amagip had a freight company
23:40Something that Regan can relate to
23:42Because he himself also once upon a time
23:44Had a freight company that he used
23:46As a legitimate front
23:48In order to bring his drugs in
23:49From different parts of the world
23:52When Regan left prison
23:53He was essentially broke
23:54He had no money
23:56He had very limited social networks and ties
23:58And this forced him to live with his dad
24:03And this would have been somewhat humiliating
24:05For Regan as an individual
24:06Who once upon a time had large sums of money
24:09That had a very strong social lifestyle
24:12Lived a very particular playboy kind of life
24:15Now all of a sudden living with his father
24:19He needed a job
24:20Like almost like an honest citizen
24:22So he reignited his previous friendship from behind bars
24:29Amagip hires Regan as a driver in his haulage company
24:33They continued this relationship that started from prison
24:39Amagip wasn't a hardened criminal
24:41This is an individual who made a few shortcuts
24:44Made a few mistakes
24:46Ended up in prison
24:47And he felt as though that
24:49Not only did he deserve a second chance
24:51But also those around him
24:53Including Regan
24:59The whole of the people working at Siba Freight
25:01Were backing up Regan's plausibility
25:07Regan had been involved in import-export in a previous life
25:10He had knowledge of it
25:13If Amagip Chohan wanted to leave the country in a hurry
25:18Why not hand it over to him?
25:20He was certainly somebody who was trusted by Amagip
25:26And somebody who Amagip was trusting to take the business forward
25:34A couple of weeks had passed now of our investigation
25:37And still really the only person that was telling us anything
25:43About what had happened to Amagip Chohan was Kenneth Regan
25:48He was speaking to us
25:49And was giving us information
25:52We were also introduced to a lady called Belinda Bruin
25:55Who was a close associate of Kenneth Regan's
26:02Belinda Bruin was a socialite
26:04She was close friends with Paula Yates
26:06Who was once married to Bob Geldof
26:10And would often keep company with celebrities and high-profile individuals
26:17Belinda Bruin was a PR executive
26:19And she brought in a real streak of glamour
26:24Into the shady underworld of this case
26:28Kenneth Regan
26:30He'd met Belinda Bruin years before he went to prison
26:34In Harvey Nichols in London
26:36When he threw a lot of money at her at the bar
26:39And immediately Regan was infatuated and besotted by Bruin
26:44He would often treat her with luxurious gifts
26:48He purchased a Cartier watch for her
26:50He purchased jewellery for her
26:54Even though it would be very difficult to comprehend
26:58An individual like Bruin
27:00Would be linked to a romantic relationship
27:03With an individual like Regan
27:15Every time someone new came into the investigation
27:18Obviously you have to do quite an extensive background investigation
27:22So Belinda had recently moved from London
27:26To a really nice sort of remote farmhouse
27:29In Tiverton, in Devon
27:35She had some horses
27:37Two children who were at a private school
27:40So she needed significant income to maintain that lifestyle
27:48Because Kenneth Regan had a criminal past
27:50He couldn't be a company director
27:52And as Belinda went on to tell us
27:55That he'd always really liked her
27:56And wanted to help her out
28:00There's a point when Regan approaches Belinda Bruin
28:03And offers her a position at Ciber Freights
28:06Initially he says to her
28:07There's a starting salary of £50,000
28:09And that you can work hours that are based on your needs
28:13And therefore you can be accommodated
28:14To which she rejected initially
28:16And then he increased the salary to £70,000
28:18And said to her
28:20This is a guaranteed money
28:23On top of that you can potentially get bonuses
28:25Based on performance
28:26That in itself is an extremely attractive proposition
28:30For a person that's financially struggling
28:34Kenneth Regan explained that he had been installed
28:37As the new owner
28:39And Belinda Bruin was installed as the company director
28:43Presentable and respectable face of Ciber Freight
28:46That's the story we were being told
28:50Of course Belinda was a key witness
28:57Quite out of the blue
28:58A letter was received at Ciber Freight
29:00Posted from France
29:02Signed by Amitri Chohan
29:04Saying that he'd literally sold the business
29:06Taken his family off to France
29:07And was planning to then move on to India
29:11He also wrote a letter to the employees at Ciber Freight
29:14With his home address on the top
29:17Saying I would first like to explain my actions
29:19Which must appear strange
29:22I've got myself into a major problem
29:23And see no way of returning
29:25I am being chased for £3 million
29:30I have had myself threatened and my family
29:33Unless I repay a huge amount of money
29:35I'm totally afraid at this present time
29:37To talk to anyone
29:39He mentions Nancy being desperate to speak to her family
29:42But him preventing her from doing so
29:46Nancy is driving me crazy
29:47Always trying to call her family
29:49It's too dangerous at present
29:55Obviously then detectives
29:57They undertook the forensic examination of those letters
30:01Postmarks
30:02All of that was done
30:05It was actually his signature on the bottom
30:07So that the people who knew him well
30:09People in the council
30:10Who looked at his signature on a day in day out basis
30:13They could see that he'd been signed by him
30:17When you look at it
30:19Purely as a letter
30:20It completely supports what Reagan's been saying
30:23All along
30:26He's saying I'm abroad
30:27Got problems back in the UK
30:29I'm not coming back
30:30And you've got a new boss
30:31His name's Kenneth Reagan
30:34I can recall now meeting with Norman McKinley
30:38All I'm looking at his words were
30:41But I'm not buying it boss
30:43I don't buy it
30:45It's something not right
30:46At this moment in time
30:48Amadjit Chohan
30:49Is telling the police
30:51That yes they have gone away
30:53They haven't disappeared
30:54The only person at this stage
30:55Who's saying they've disappeared
30:57Is Onca Verma
30:59One thing I couldn't figure out
31:01That how would a family disappear
31:04How can they just disappear
31:07Without telling me
31:11If you're travelling
31:13And you're leaving
31:14Why would you leave in a hurry
31:16That's a suspicious sign
31:19Right
31:19And okay so they're on the run
31:22They trust the brother
31:23Why wouldn't they be in contact with the brother
31:26And say look
31:27That this is what I'm thinking of
31:30And they need their passports
31:33And Nancy had told Onca
31:36That the passports were the home office
31:38You have to have those passports to travel
31:44So yeah we're thinking
31:45Well hold on
31:46How's he in France
31:48You know his passport's in the passport office
31:51Onca then rang his father
31:53Who's still in India
31:55And in fact Mrs. God was due back in India
31:59Because she's had teachers
32:00She had limited vacation period
32:02And she'd never arrived
32:04So he became even more suspicious
32:07We also knew that Onca
32:09Found his mother's return ticket in India
32:13If they'd gone to India
32:14Then she would have used her return ticket
32:24Suresh assisted Onca in some depth
32:26In being persistent
32:27And really pushing for
32:28Where are we now
32:31Regularly saying
32:32Look you're not doing enough
32:35They're missing what you're doing about it
32:38Where are they
32:40The biggest challenge is forcing the authorities
32:43To take it seriously
32:46The contract between the police and the citizen is
32:48You are there to investigate
32:50I'm not really interested in how they feel
32:53In my capacity as a director of the monitoring group
32:56When somebody walks in my office
32:57You go all out
32:59Because human life is precious
33:09Detectives deny any complacency
33:11In their investigation
33:12Either in the search
33:13Or for suspects in their disappearance
33:18Now the Met Police was under a microscope
33:20And the media was holding their feet to the flames
33:23About the way that they tackled the investigation
33:28We were always going to be under the spotlight
33:32It felt as if you were getting criticised
33:34More than you were being praised
33:42So I declared the missing person inquiry
33:45As a critical incident
33:48It was making sure that we elevated the position
33:52To just show within the organisation and beyond
33:56That every effort's being done
33:59To try and trace where the family were
34:03We asked Interpol to circulate them as missing
34:07Particularly focusing on Europe and in India
34:10To see if we could find where they were
34:13But nothing was found
34:19As a missing persons investigation
34:21You're looking for proof of life
34:22You're actually looking for credit card usage
34:24Vehicle usage
34:27You're looking for anything that shows
34:30That that person is alive somewhere
34:32At that moment in time
34:34Now ostensibly he was on the run
34:36Ostensibly he was hiding from other people
34:39So maybe, just maybe
34:42He wasn't spending on a credit card
34:45Possibly doing everything by cash
34:47To stay under the radar
34:51And if he's starting to use his credit card
34:53Then first of all
34:54You know the credit card's being used
34:56Yes it could be stolen
34:57Yes it could be used by somebody who knows him
35:00Or it could be used by him
35:02So then you'd go and get CCTV
35:03From the area where the credit card's used
35:05To see if that person using it
35:07Is Amjit Chohan
35:08Or anybody else
35:10So you are looking for proof of life
35:12Even though he's told everybody he's gone away
35:16In this case there wasn't any
35:18Amjit Chohan stopped spending money
35:38I did go to see my Fritz
35:42I spoke to a large number of employees
35:46Look guys we think something suspicious is happening
35:49Do you know anything that you can remember
35:54What Amjit was doing that you think is suspicious
35:59They had explained that they were being told by people in the company
36:05That Amjit owed some taxes
36:08And he was trying to run away for tax evasion
36:11And I just said to them
36:13Why would he take his mother-in-law
36:15Or his children if it was tax evasion
36:19I distinctly remember meeting Kenneth Regan
36:22And another friend of his, Peter Rees
36:26They seemed afraid because the police were involved
36:31And I remember Regan asked me
36:33What are we going to do
36:34And I said we're as determined on this case
36:38As we are on the Stephen Lawrence case
36:40This case isn't going to go away
36:41It's going to attract national attention
36:44And I said we are going to go on television
36:46To do a press conference
36:47And make this into a national issue
36:49And actually people I could see their faces
36:51Became anxious and a bit worried
36:56If anybody has any information about Nancy, kids
37:01My mom, anybody has seen them
37:03Please come forward
37:07Help me to find my family
37:13We are concerned about the safety of the family
37:17And we'd ask for anybody with any information
37:19Regarding the current whereabouts
37:21Or the disappearance
37:22To contact us
37:24One thing that happened
37:26As a result of the press conference
37:28Kenneth Regan rang the Madspotten police
37:31To give more information
37:43From the outset of the investigation
37:45Kenneth Regan was giving the police
37:48Effectively all the information we wanted
37:50He'd been trusted by Amajid
37:53He was giving plausible explanations
37:56He was helping
37:57He was very helpful
37:59We become aware at this point
38:01That Regan has got a criminal associate
38:04Called William Hornsey
38:05William Hornsey has got quite an extensive background
38:09In the production of fake passports
38:12For other criminals
38:15One of Regan's major criminal enterprises
38:18And most lucrative
38:20Was a fake real passport scam
38:24That he was running with Hornsey
38:25In the 1990s
38:28They produced real genuine passports
38:31From the Home Office
38:32But based on false information
38:34Hornsey was said to pay homeless people 50 quid
38:37To get their details
38:38And such passports were then absolute gold dust
38:41For members of the underworld
38:43Or anybody who wanted to disappear very quickly
38:47There comes a point
38:48When Regan explains
38:50That he is still in regular contact with Amajid
38:55Regan starts to tell us
38:57That Chohan has approached him
38:59And Hornsey to see if they can obtain some false passports
39:03For Chohan and his family
39:05If you want to put this to bed once and for all
39:08I can facilitate a meeting with you
39:11With Chohan
39:12We went along with what
39:14Kenneth Regan was telling us
39:18So the investigation team
39:21To use the police parlay
39:22They plotted up
39:23The meeting point in Newport and Wales
39:31Everyone was hoping that Amajid was going to turn up
39:35Bear in mind there was still this story going on about
39:38He's in trouble
39:39He doesn't want to come back
39:40Through the letters
39:41And our only contact with Amajid was Kenneth Regan
39:46Do we arrest him?
39:48I mean he was taken to class as once he's missing
39:52Obviously the investigation wouldn't have just stopped at Chohan
39:55We needed to know that
39:55Not only was Chohan alive and well
39:58But that Nancy, Charanjit, Kaur and the two boys were well
40:01But at least if we had our hands on Chohan
40:04That was a start
40:07But the key at that point with no other potential leads
40:11Was to just get Chohan under our control
40:20We were having regular meetings with the police
40:24Every time there was a significant movement in the investigation
40:29And we knew about the meeting
40:31So I reported back to Ankur
40:36And I could see, you know, the pin dropping in that meeting
40:39Because there was a small light in the end of the tunnel
40:42That he'll find someone
40:47And it's quite a big operation
40:49You know, there were several cars of several officers each
40:54We spent a good day there
40:56Looking out for them on this story fed to us by Kenneth Regan
41:03Regan's in telephone contact saying, you know
41:05I'm trying to get hold of Chohan
41:07He's not picking up the phone
41:11But it didn't occur
41:12The meeting didn't take place
41:15Regan and Hornsey didn't turn up
41:19And Amajid didn't turn up
41:23Your hopes are dashed
41:25Why didn't he turn up?
41:27What's happened?
41:28So it takes us no further forward whatsoever
41:31I think there was a real feeling of
41:33Have we been led a sort of bit of a wild goose chase?
41:36And for what reason?
41:38We hadn't got anywhere with the case really
41:40And sort of almost go back to square one
41:54I was contacted by Dorset police
41:57To say that they discovered a body of an unidentified male
42:01Floating in the sea off Bournemouth
42:04The well-known coastal resort
42:05With suspicious injuries
42:10The suspicion was directed to the fact
42:12That the body had a sort of gag or binding
42:15Around the lower part of the face
42:17And a head injury on top of the head
42:19You don't normally see bodies
42:22Firmly bound round the lower face
42:25With a head injury
42:26Just simply floating in the sea
42:28I was requested to do an autopsy
42:30As soon as possible
42:36Once I came to see the body
42:38It was clear that there was significant decomposition
42:42The outer layer of the skin was starting to slip
42:45And so was the hair
42:47And in fact the skin of the palms
42:50Of the hands and the fingers
42:52Was beginning to slide off
42:53It's a bit like a glove
42:56And it's possible for someone to put on
42:58A latex, a rubber glove
43:00And then put that over their own hand
43:03And then just as with a fingerprint
43:05In a living person
43:07You can roll it onto ink and then paper
43:09And produce a fingerprint image
43:11And that is going to be the main method of identification
43:15Because you can go straight from the body
43:18And its fingerprints
43:19To a record
43:20If there is one
43:21Assuming someone has been fingerprinted in the past
43:24Meanwhile, Kenneth Regan
43:26For days have been saying
43:28He's in contact with Mr Chohan
43:32Suddenly he's gone
43:35We don't know where he is
43:39After a few days
43:40The fingerprint bureau reported
43:43And they said
43:44We have a match
43:47And it was Amadjit Chohan
43:49Hello
43:54So you've got this kind of
43:56Four-way issue that you're looking at
44:01Kenneth Regan missing
44:05The body that washed up
44:06On Bournemouth Beach
44:08Had been gagged
44:10Tortured
44:11He'd been murdered
44:12That was Amadjit
44:15Oncut
44:16Saying where's my family
44:19Where are they
44:21That's the key
44:22Where are they
44:24Had they been murdered as well
44:28And if they had been
44:30Murdered
44:31At that time
44:32Where were they
44:33Where are the bodies
44:37马 Vay nou
44:39Eyes
44:41Maybe
44:56Even
44:57Maybe
44:58Or
45:03Maybe
45:04Maybe
45:04This
45:09Gracias por ver el video.
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