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Salisbury Poisonings: The Untold Story - Season 1 Episode 1 -
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00:08Police emergency.
00:09Can I get the police officers and an ambulance to the Multing Street?
00:13OK, what's happened?
00:15There are two people on the bench.
00:17He is very upset, but not saying anything.
00:20And she looks semi-conscious.
00:22OK, what town is this in?
00:24This is in Salisbury.
00:25Anything there?
00:29We need urgent medical help.
00:37We were the first police officers at the scene.
00:43The first thing I saw was a white female, aged in her 30s.
00:50She looked like she was fitting.
00:51You know, she had gritted teeth.
00:54She had a lot of saliva coming out of her mouth.
00:58I noticed a male in his 60s on the bench.
01:04Sat upright with his hands sort of here.
01:08And he was rigid.
01:10His pupils were tiny.
01:12They were like pinpricks.
01:14I was thinking, what's happened?
01:16Who are these people?
01:18I checked his trouser pocket and located a wallet that had a driving license.
01:23His name was Sergei Skripal.
01:28But at the time, I had absolutely no idea about who he really was.
01:34Or what that meant.
01:36He ran out of his path.
01:39I used to testify even though he didn't get tired simulation.
01:41I have seen himself floating on his path.
01:41What was if he murdered he was extoll-marked?
01:48But sadly, he picked his recurrence a professional baseline.
01:56It might have been good.
01:56Never existed until he was hacked.
02:00But I couldn't really do it.
02:03Let me try again.
02:04He decided that he failed again until his ministry.
02:1312 now the aftermath of the beast from the east and storm emma is taking its toll still in many
02:19parts of the uk we're on to the big thor but it's been affecting the idea is to raise 1
02:25.5
02:26million pounds to buy a second mri scanner for salisbury district hospital and help us explain
02:32a little bit more about the campaign i still can't quite believe that this could happen in sleepy
02:46salisbury and little did i know how that day would end up panning out i was at home having sunday
02:58lunch and i got a phone call from my registrar he said steve we've got two overdose patients coming
03:07in would you mind coming in to give me a hand so i got my car and drove to the
03:12hospital
03:18on a bad day if the cows are crossing the farm that can take 25 minutes on a good day
03:2415 minutes
03:30i got there just as these two patients came in
03:36they'd been inconstant they'd been vomiting their clothes were in a hell of a state
03:43she was the more and well of the two she was unconscious she had a very very low heart rate
03:49of the order of 30 to 40. she was sweating profusely her breathing was being carried out for her
03:57it was absolutely apparent she needed to go to intensive care pretty quickly
04:05the other patient was unconscious but he was exhibiting a very very strange posture
04:10that i i'd never seen before he was sitting up like a statue
04:17i was beginning to question whether or not this was possibly something other than a drug overdose
04:24if they'd come from a house my first thought would have been carbon monoxide poisoning
04:29but the story had been that they'd be found on this park bench in the open air
04:34something had happened to them and we just didn't know but i thought she continues to deteriorate
04:41she's going to die in the next few hours
04:50but then one of the police constables that had come in with the ambulance crew googled sergey skripal
04:58and that's when all the alarm bells started to go off there were articles about him saying he was
05:08arrested in russia for spying for british intelligence he was effectively a british double agent
05:17and here he was now apparently living in salisbury
05:22and that's when i realized that actually there could be far more to this than first met the eye
05:29this might be a state-sponsored poisoning attempt
05:35because russia's never really moved away from their cultural practices
05:51these are vladimir putin's first steps on the international diplomatic stage
05:55since assuming the huge powers and challenges of the russian president's
05:59the uk's poised to become russia's largest foreign investor
06:02with vp and shell agreeing major deals to open up the world's biggest gas
06:31the world's biggest
06:36is
07:01As the senior detective and officer in charge that night,
07:05I still feel responsibility for what happened.
07:08And it's an undeniable fact that Salisbury changed me.
07:13But it helps me to be able to talk about it.
07:20So I was sat at home with my wife.
07:24We were watching a crime drama.
07:26It was the second part, so it's the exciting bit,
07:29when my phone rang.
07:31And I knew that that wasn't going to be a good news call,
07:35because he wouldn't phone at half nine on a Sunday night
07:37unless something bad had happened.
07:40And he said, there is something unusual, Ben.
07:43He said, and you won't believe it.
07:44And I said, go on.
07:46And he said, the dad is a Russian spy.
07:50And I was like, OK, I'm going into work then.
08:02I started to think, could it really be a Russian spy living in Wiltshire?
08:07Because our systems were saying there wasn't one.
08:10But the Southwest Counter-Terrorist Intelligence Unit
08:14can check systems that may not be available to us locally.
08:19And they came back that night and said that there wasn't a Russian spy.
08:26And, of course, that wasn't true.
08:30But the approach I took was to work on the assumption that he was.
08:35So I phoned Nick Bailey, who was the sergeant on duty that afternoon,
08:41to search Sergei's home address,
08:44because there could be another casualty.
09:00When we got to the house,
09:03Nick and myself put on protective clothing,
09:07primarily to protect the scene from us.
09:09We had the white suits that you've probably seen on TV.
09:13We had goggles, face masks and overshoes.
09:18When we got to the front door,
09:20Nick and I were stood next to each other.
09:24And I asked Nick to check the handle.
09:27So he gave it a good yank.
09:31We opened it and went in.
09:38It was very cold outside.
09:40The central heating was turned right up.
09:43And immediately our goggles steamed up.
09:47So, whilst it's not, you know, best practice,
09:50the reality was the only way around that
09:51was to keep raising and lowering our goggles
09:54and wipe our foreheads.
09:57And, of course, wearing gloves.
10:03In the kitchen, there was evidence that they'd been cooking some sort of pasta dish.
10:09That was interesting, because had it been the pasta that had been poisoned.
10:14When we got to his study, we came across various pieces of sort of military memorabilia.
10:22So that perhaps corroborated that he'd been in the Russian army.
10:28But, thankfully, there was no-one in there, which is the most important thing.
10:33And at the end of it, we went back to Salisbury Police Station.
10:39Round about five o'clock-ish in the morning,
10:41a different officer who'd been on scene duty,
10:45guarding Sergei's house,
10:47came into the police station
10:49and said that he wasn't feeling well.
10:51And one of his eyes was pinpricked,
10:53and one of his eyes was fully dilated.
10:58I got that sinking feeling.
11:01None of this is right.
11:02This is all very, very wrong.
11:13It is clear for everyone that, in spite of the differences that existed before,
11:19today we need to act jointly.
11:24Lovely noise.
11:32A state of emergency has been declared in Georgia
11:34after opposition supporters seized control of parliament
11:37in what appears to be a coup.
11:39The Georgians made it very clear they'd simply had enough
11:42of the wily old statesman's misrule and corruption.
11:49You're standing bill.
11:50You're standing bill.
11:52You're standing bill.
11:53You're standing bill.
11:53You're standing bill.
11:53Viktor Yushchenko gave the speech.
11:55Ukraine, he said, is now a democratic society.
12:26BIRDS CHIRP
12:50You could look back with hindsight and say, well, this was all obvious.
12:54We should have been prepared for it.
12:55The reality was we weren't prepared enough.
12:58He was on nobody's radar as a potential threat.
13:01I mean, clearly Wiltshire Police and counterterrorism policing didn't even know he existed and lived there.
13:07But I remember everything about that day in minute detail.
13:15When I walk into the office on the fifth floor of New Scotland Yard, Southwest Counterterrorism Intelligence Unit, on the
13:22phone,
13:22they explained that we have an ex-Russian colonel, considered traitor and spy, who's in a coma in Salisbury Hospital
13:31alongside his daughter, and they're not expected to survive.
13:37So I'm thinking, this happened the day before.
13:41This is clearly a job for counterterrorism policing.
13:44You're a bit late to the party.
13:48At this point, nobody knows what it is.
13:50A doctor in the hospital said, it looks like some kind of chemical poisoning.
13:56But he's an ex-Russian intelligence officer, and anyone who has been problematic for Russia will be on Putin's hit
14:04list.
14:13By his own public statements, traitors should sleep with one eye open.
14:18So the public will be going, don't be ridiculous.
14:20It's obvious the Russians did it.
14:21You can't think like that.
14:23The minute you think like that, you start dismissing every other line of inquiry, and that's fatal for a senior
14:28investigating officer.
14:29But this doesn't look right, so we need to react to that.
14:4410,000 people work in counterterrorism policing.
14:47And we have a cadre of highly trained people who are able to mobilize very quickly.
14:53And a billion-pound intelligence machine with some of the most sophisticated capabilities in the world.
14:59My concern was, we were all unbelievably knackered.
15:06We'd been through so much in 2017.
15:21In that year, we deal with five terrorist attacks.
15:27Westminster, London Bridge, Manchester Arena.
15:34Then, Finsbury Park.
15:38And Parsons Green.
15:44Over a thousand were physically or mentally damaged for life.
15:48And 36 people were murdered on my watch.
15:51And you feel incredibly responsible.
15:55So, I was thinking, if it's Russia, Salisbury might escalate into something.
16:02Huge.
16:03Wiltshire Police are the smallest force in the country.
16:07How are they going to cope with this?
16:08They're not.
16:09They're going to need help.
16:10We know we're going to be under the microscope of a prime minister.
16:14You know you're potentially going to be under international scrutiny and the glare of publicity.
16:19There's nothing more stressful than that.
16:21We've got two people who are gravely ill.
16:23You're wondering whether this is going to turn into a murder.
16:26So, all of that's going through your head.
16:31Where are we going to be capable of pivoting towards this new threat?
16:36In the face of what looks like a hostile act of war.
17:24What can you tell me about what happens here at Porton Down?
17:29And there is no other facility in the United Kingdom that's capable of doing the things that we can do
17:32here.
17:33And some of those I can't talk about.
17:36But what I can say is that here at the Defence Science and Technology Laboratories,
17:42we handle and create the most hazardous and dangerous materials that are known
17:50in order to protect people if those materials are used against them.
18:02I got a telephone call.
18:04There are two individuals who are very unwell in Salisbury.
18:08They weren't responding in the expected way to the treatments that they had been given.
18:26There are countries that have developed chemicals and poisons as weapons.
18:34Clearly, the United Kingdom stopped that some considerable time ago.
18:39But some countries kept developing.
18:42And Russia is believed to be one of those countries.
18:46I started to think we need to get hold of blood samples to do tests.
18:52To work out whether or not there are any highly hazardous pathogens or highly poisonous chemicals in the blood.
19:00And to get that information into the hands of the doctors to try to save life.
19:05But I remember thinking, is this the tip of a very large iceberg?
19:22The President of the United States.
19:29Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia, and Slovenia.
19:47These seven nations were captives to an empire.
19:53They endured bitter tyranny.
19:55They struggled for independence.
20:24The first line of my job description was the first line of my job description.
20:27is to improve and protect the house of my population.
20:30I've worked on pandemic flus, done food poisoning a few times.
20:36Never eat the pate, would be my advice.
20:39It's always the pate.
20:42But I still grapple with the fact that this happened.
20:48You realise how close to the surface it actually still is.
20:55You bury things, don't you?
21:04I was driving into work, got a phone call to say that two people had been taken poorly.
21:12All I was told was that their health presentation was critical and we needed to have a strategic
21:19meeting at the headquarters.
21:23As soon as I walked in the room I knew it certainly isn't going to be a normal Monday.
21:31There were so many organisations in there, police are there, the fire service are there, the
21:37ambulance, the military.
21:39We've got scientists, the hospital, the council, people from government.
21:44The fact that that group had come together so vastly so quickly makes you think, well, what
21:51is this?
21:53The hospital shared with us how poorly Sergei and Yulia were.
21:57However, the police showed us the parts of town that were cordoned off, so where the bench
22:02was and Sergei's home, which is a little cul-de-sac.
22:08My job as the director of public health was to try and understand where was the exposure
22:14and how many people could potentially have been exposed.
22:17But not knowing what the contaminant is makes it harder to put out that burning bridge.
22:26How do we identify these individuals and get to them before it spreads and more people
22:33become poorly from this?
22:50Some news coming in to us from Salisbury District Hospital, which says it's currently dealing
22:57with a major incident involving some casualties, fewer than ten, but a number of casualties,
23:03they're saying.
23:04And a small part of the accident and emergency department, they're absolutely...
23:10The police turned up.
23:14Everyone was asking, you know, why there aren't police with submachine guns outside the ICU?
23:20Everything was being checked and searched.
23:23And it was all over the news that a major incident declared at Salisbury.
23:32There were these individuals in level four hazmat suits dealing with the park bench decontaminating
23:39it.
23:41And some of the nursing staff coming on shift, you know, some of their family members said
23:45things like, well, will you be wearing one of those when you get to work?
23:48And no, they won't be.
23:51They were just wearing single-use gloves and a little plastic pinafore.
23:56And that's it.
24:02We are spending the whole time beside the patient supporting all these failing organ systems, supporting
24:08the breathing, supporting the circulation, supporting the kidneys, preventing them from
24:12having seizures, trying to keep these patients alive.
24:17I was aware that we might be at risk because any contamination was now likely to be in the
24:24intensive care unit.
24:26And I kept checking my pulse to see if it was slow.
24:31Desperately, desperately wanted to know what issue they'd been poisoned with.
24:36And wondering, if somebody's done this deliberately, are they going to do this somewhere else?
24:41They can do this in central London.
24:57We have a breaking story tonight.
25:00Former Russian spies in a critical condition in hospital in Salisbury, along with a woman
25:04in her 30s.
25:07Shut up, what on earth is going on in Salisbury?
25:09The BBC was told that one of those is a 66-year-old man called Sergei Skirpel.
25:15Counter-terrorism police in Britain are handling this case, yet they're not yet calling it terrorism
25:20or an assassination attempt.
25:21Instead, they say it's unusual circumstances.
25:28As it became clear that this was a really serious instance, I started to worry about whether or not I
25:36was going to get ill or whether or not I was contagious.
25:41And I hadn't had much sleep, so I probably wasn't thinking straight.
25:45My wife and my daughter had gone out to school.
25:47Later that day, they were going to come home.
25:49And I didn't know if they were safe to come home.
25:53I phoned Nick Bailey, the sergeant who searched Sergei's home address with me and said,
26:01How are you feeling?
26:01And he went, Oh, I feel awful.
26:06As the day went on, Nick became increasingly poorly and started to hallucinate and ended up in intensive care.
26:17We didn't know whether or not he was going to survive.
26:24I drove down to see my family who live the next county along.
26:28And my sister had just had a baby.
26:30Her daughter was only two months old.
26:32She was tiny.
26:35I was holding the baby when I got a call saying,
26:39Come back in, bring all of your kit, everything that you touched.
26:43And I thought, there's a contamination issue and I'm holding a two month old baby.
26:48My heart dropped and I felt sick.
26:50Panic set him.
26:51I felt sick.
27:04I felt sick.
27:07I felt sick.
27:10I felt sick.
27:16I felt sick.
27:18I felt sick.
27:18I felt sick.
27:19I felt sick.
27:21I felt sick.
27:21I felt sick.
27:22Now that's who they are, where they come from, but it's also everyone they've known,
27:28everyone they've talked to, who they've been communicating with, where they've been, because
27:33at some point the person who's tried to kill them will cross with that point and the motive
27:38will become apparent.
27:41And the two billion pound intelligence machine that sits behind you when you're doing an
27:46investigation gives you access to everything that's ever been known in British history
27:51about Sergei Skripal and his family.
27:58We've discovered that the background history on Sergei is very unusual.
28:04Ex-colonel inside a high-level military covert intelligence unit called the GRU, which is
28:13deployed by the Russians overseas to conduct covert operations.
28:19That unit would not operate without the sanction of the highest levels of the Russian government,
28:26to the very top.
28:30He was considered a traitor by Russia, arrested and imprisoned in Russia.
28:40And then eventually traded in a spy swap.
28:44And he decided to live in Salisbury.
28:47It's very John McCarrie.
28:52We found out his neighbours had become close friends.
28:55He'd lived there for years.
28:56So his neighbours were able to say, well, he's disclosed to us that, you know, his military
29:00and his diplomatic background, and he talked about, well, and Putin knows who I am.
29:11So he wasn't shy about talking about his history, which might be considered a security lapse for
29:18somebody of his experience.
29:21Very little is known about Yulia other than that she was his daughter.
29:25But friends helped Sergei collect Yulia from the airport the day before.
29:29So finding out what plane she was on meant we could then start tracking Yulia's movements
29:34all the way back to Russia.
29:37We were trying to keep as open-minded as possible.
29:42Because we have two people in a coma who can't tell us anything.
30:02I was sitting in the office at Newsnight.
30:05The editor of the day walked over and said, have you seen this story about Salisbury and
30:11Sergei Skripal, and I was very shocked.
30:18Because I'm the only journalist who's ever actually met him.
30:23So when the Sergei Skripal spy swap happened, I was naturally really curious.
30:30I wanted to interview him to try and understand as much as I could about espionage between Russia
30:37and the West, and to see was he willing to talk about the circumstances of how he started
30:43working for Great Britain.
30:50I discovered that Skripal was on the electoral register in Salisbury.
30:57So it was a summer's day, and I'd driven down from London to his home.
31:03I'm always aware my phone may be tracked, so I put my phone on airplane mode.
31:13He came to the door.
31:15I commented on the fact that there was no CCTV camera or anything like that.
31:20But he had rejected surveillance technology around his house.
31:30He didn't really want to give an interview, didn't want to cause trouble for his family.
31:37At the same time, he kind of wanted people to know his story.
31:43So I got my notebook out, and I started to write.
31:57Sergei told me that in the mid-1990s, he was posted as a colonel in Russian military intelligence,
32:05first to Malta, and then to Madrid, where his job was recruiting spies
32:12and trying to get them to produce meaningful intelligence.
32:19But little did he realize, at the same time, MI6 had been looking at him
32:25as a possible asset for British intelligence.
32:33The pitch happened in a park.
32:37Sergei was quite amused about how nervous the MI6 guy looked
32:44when, finally, he'd popped the question.
32:49And Sergei said, yes, he agreed to work for British intelligence for money.
32:58So the first thing that Sergei did was to create a large picture
33:03on several joined-up pieces of paper, an entire organogram
33:08of the Russian military intelligence organization,
33:12along with the names of all the principal bosses.
33:17And he also told them that they had their own moles working for Russian intelligence.
33:26So this thing landed like an absolute bombshell.
33:31But, clearly, in Russian eyes, this was treachery.
33:35So, sitting in the office, I thought,
33:39oh, my God, this guy and his daughter are now going to die.
33:54Tonight's main news, it's been revealed that the former Russian agent,
33:57Alexander Litvinenko, who died last night,
33:59had traces of radioactive polonium-210 in his body.
34:03Tonight's searches are ongoing at the hotel and the restaurant
34:06where Mr. Litvinenko visited before his death.
34:12But whoever it was who killed him had access to the materials,
34:16had the expertise to carry it out,
34:18and, more tellingly, the stealth to do it without leaving an immediate trace.
34:25The death of a human being is always a tragedy.
34:29And...
34:31I bring my relatives to my friends,
34:34Mr. Litvinenko, his family.
35:03I got a phone call,
35:05and I recall listening to what the person on the telephone was telling me and
35:15my blood simply ran cold. He said the blood results from Sergei and Yulia
35:23showed the presence of a nerve agent
35:28but because of the sensitivity they wouldn't tell me the name down the
35:33telephone. So a person in an emergency response vehicle came to tell me it was
35:41Novichok.
35:47I knew what we were going to have to deal with had simply escalated.
35:57Novichok is one of the most potent and toxic poisons that there is. The minimum lethal
36:06dose, you're talking a grain of sand, it's very sticky. Imagine a very liquidy honey and
36:15in fact you cannot get it off of most materials. It's difficult to detect because it doesn't
36:22produce a vapour. To be able to make it requires a lot of knowledge and a highly skilled chemist
36:30and it's associated with Russia.
36:35I couldn't understand how somebody could be so reckless as to use something that hazardous
36:43in an urban population. Where has it come from? Is there any more out there? I was in a situation
36:52that I have never been in on a scale that I was not ready for.
37:11To try and stop it from spreading one of the key things you have to do is understand where
37:16Sergei and Yulia have been.
37:18Counter-terrorism police had started to map where they'd gone using CCTV. So from that original
37:27scene where Sergei and Yulia were first found on the bench, we could work out where Sergei
37:34had parked his car. We know from there they've taken a walk around the park. We know that they've
37:42visited a pond. We know they then walk to a pub and we know that they've stayed there for
37:48a drink. They then walk to a restaurant where they eat. We know what table they've sat at.
37:59We know what time they leave. And from there we know they've become poorly on the bench.
38:09But up until they're on the bench, they're well. So they could have become contaminated at
38:16any point. We know Salisbury Town filled up quite a lot on Sunday afternoon. So if they
38:25were contaminated for the whole of this walk around, how many people around them are at
38:30risk. You know, you think about the people that have been in the restaurant at the same
38:36time. But then as we were working through the timeline, one of the places that was shared
38:44with us was the river. And there was an image on CCTV of Sergei and Yulia feeding ducks.
38:57But the CCTV also shows Sergei showing bread with children who were then feeding the ducks. So
39:08have they been affected? We'd have to get the children checked. But how do we find them? Of
39:17course, we knew what the substance was and how dangerous it was. The fact that it was a synthetic
39:24chemical. So, you know, you do think, you know, how, how can anybody survive it? So you are worried.
39:31And there's just the recklessness of it. You know, how does it happen? And how does it happen
39:38here? And it's just a sense of disbelief. We need to shut down or contain those other areas. So no
39:51further people are exposed. But where the risks were and what needed to be responded to was shifting
39:56all the time, almost hourly. We'd been in that room in this sort of bubble, I suppose. And I remember
40:11getting home and my husband was sat in the lounge and he had the news on. It was extraordinary the
40:18way the
40:18news was coming through and this very sort of fragmented half-facts. That's all people had at that point.
40:28It was at that moment that I thought, wow, the whole world is talking about this. God, this is enormous.
40:53When Horton Dan come back, I'm saying it's called Novichok and it was designed by Russia. That's the point,
41:01I think, where everyone thought, oh, my God. This is a chemical nerve agent developed for military
41:07purposes by a state. That hadn't happened on European soil since World War II. What do you do?
41:19Cobra is held in a top secret environment in a bunker underground with a lot of security to get into
41:25it. No electronics. All the papers are classified. You don't take anything out of the room. Clearly,
41:32what you're trying to avoid is your enemies eavesdropping on your conversations. And in that meeting will be
41:39the heads of the intelligence agencies, the most serious level of military, all the most senior
41:45ministers. And the prime minister will be looking at me for answers. Because it's an existential crisis
41:51for a government. And they are desperate for you to solve it for them and make sure nothing else happens.
41:58This is the attempted murder of two Russian citizens on English soil. And you have British citizens as
42:04collateral damage. That's a hot act. That's not a Cold War act. It's not spying. It's a terrorist act
42:11by a government. The pressure was, when are we going to declare the Russians responsible?
42:20Novichok was developed by the Russians in the 1980s. No one else developed it.
42:27That doesn't mean, therefore, it must have been Russia who deployed the Novichok. It's just a very,
42:32very strong hypothesis.
42:38And for a prime minister of the country to get that wrong, when the US president, the five eyes countries,
42:45the European Union, every Western ally, they're looking at you for an answer about what's happened,
42:51would have been a terrible mistake. And no one wants to tip into a hot wall. And that was the
43:00fundamental tension. You want me to confirm something that I can't 100% confirm.
43:07Prime Minister, it's your decision about how you want to say what you want to say in public.
43:31Prime Minister, it is now clear that Mr Skripal and his daughter were poisoned with a military-grade
43:41nerve agent of a type developed by Russia, known as Novichok. The government has concluded that it is highly
43:49likely that Russia was responsible for the act against Sergei and Yulia Skripal.
43:55Either this was a direct act by the Russian state against our country, or the Russian government lost control
44:02and allowed it to get into the hands of others. We must now stand ready to take much more extensive
44:09measures.
44:10Should there be no credible response, we will conclude that this action amounts to an unlawful
44:16use of force by the Russian state against the United Kingdom.
44:20I commend this statement to the House.
44:25She said it was a Novichok agent, but everyone was talking about it. It just seemed such a wild thing
44:31to think of.
44:32You know, this should be happening in Washington or London or Paris, not Salisbury.
44:39And I suppose I did think if we're not careful, they might come back and try and finish the job.
44:45Cramps. Novichok. And like probably most people, I had no idea what Novichok was at the time.
44:51You know, immediately start trying to Google it and search it and just find out what it was that we
44:56were dealing with.
44:57And I think like everyone in Wiltshire, it's kind of like, you know, where next? What's going to happen next?
45:02It's a very dramatic statement. I think somebody described you could hear a pin drop in the house.
45:07At the time it felt like a, well, potential declaration of war.
45:15Put up or shut up.
45:17If you can't prove to us that this isn't down to you, then there may be something else coming.
45:34We start to build up this picture, viewing locations in granular detail.
45:40And then we have a eureka moment. They were walking in military formation.
45:47And then all of a sudden, Russian media started to appear in Salisbury, which raised anxiety.
45:56What are they here to see? What are they reporting back?
46:01I get a phone call from the Ministry of Defence.
46:05Ches, yeah, we've got this, we've got this problem.
46:09And I remember being in shock.
46:11The hairs go up in the back of your neck.
46:13We are all being activated.
46:20And support for issues raised can be found online at channel4.com slash support.
46:25And the story continues next Wednesday at nine o'clock.
46:29Thanks tonight, undergoing his own culinary operation,
46:32Gordon's stepping into a brisket nightmare in secret service.
46:43And was the opportunity to fight back its heavenly calendar at night if you figure outwhat of the way as
46:43well.
46:43Jesus Yep.
46:44We'll see you next time.
46:44But here are three stalks and people Brusselsspot based ever.
46:45Great坐,úsculox, Virginia and wife.
46:46But here føs as well.
46:48The Island movement went through them,
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