Episode 11 Fugitives


Episode 11

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Transcript


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-Come on!

-On the run...

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-Get back here!

-..and over here.

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Hands out now. Hands out!

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When foreign criminals flee their home countries,

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many hide out in the UK.

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-Give me your hands.

-But if they think they're safe, they're wrong.

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They know they're wanted.

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A lot of these people are waiting for that knock on the door.

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But the traffic in fugitives isn't all one way.

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Across Europe, there are hundreds of British criminals

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also trying to escape justice,

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..from the sun-drenched Costas, where the villains seek a life of luxury...

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..to the busy streets of the Dutch capital,

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where many continue their life of crime.

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We join the crack teams hunting them down.

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When you take the risk to come to Amsterdam as a criminal,

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there's a high chance that we catch you.

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When it comes to justice, borders are no barrier.

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You're under arrest under the Extradition Act 2003.

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This is how the police take down the fugitives.

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Police officer!

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Both at home and abroad.

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If you're thinking of running, don't.

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We will find you.

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We will bring you back.

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On today's programme,

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police are sure they've caught a drug dealer

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in this chance encounter.

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He's not so convinced.

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-Is that you?

-No.

-Who are you?

-Damian.

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-Have you got any ID with you, Damian?

-Yeah.

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It's not, that's you, that is.

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In east London, the Metropolitan Police's extradition team

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are on the hunt for a man with a history of domestic violence.

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Caused a really serious injury in one particular assault.

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It's alleged that he's burnt her with a cigarette stub.

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And how intelligence from the National Crime Agency

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led to the dramatic arrest of this card-playing criminal

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in a Spanish bar.

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Once we knew what league he was playing in,

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what games he was playing in,

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we could work out where he was going to be and at what time.

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London, home to more than 8.5 million people.

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It's also home to the specialist unit whose work it is

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to arrest foreign criminals on the run in the capital.

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Around 40% of the population of London come from other countries.

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Officers from the extradition unit

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capture over 500 foreign fugitives each year.

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But many more are hiding out amongst the city's law-abiding citizens.

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Police, can you open the door, please?

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It's up to the detectives of the extradition unit

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to find those who are wanted by police forces abroad.

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Trying to find people in London

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is searching for a needle in a haystack.

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We have to go and try and find these people

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and it means going from address to address

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and getting up very early in all weathers

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but that's the nature of the work.

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On this early January morning,

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Detective Sergeant Pete Rance and his team

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are looking for a fugitive who describes himself as an evangelist.

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But Lanre Louis Dasaolu has been convicted for fraud in Germany

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and the police there want him back.

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He's basically taken money

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for something that was to be shipped and hasn't shipped it.

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He's arranged for a bus to be shipped and it hasn't been done.

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The second offence, he's used somebody else's credit card

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to pay for a flight

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from Stansted to Stuttgart.

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Dasaolu has almost two years to serve in a German prison

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for fraudulently taking money to ship cars, a lorry

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and a bus to Nigeria, the Gambia and Sierra Leone.

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We're looking for

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all sorts of people for all sorts of offences.

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Those people were from all sorts of backgrounds, all sorts of races,

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all sorts of ethnic backgrounds.

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There is no... There is no...

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..sort of standard face for a fugitive.

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The detectives have discovered that this unusual fugitive

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is due to speak at a religious event in the capital.

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The intelligence that he's in the UK is fairly strong,

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a suggestion that he's going to be involved in a sermon

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or a preaching service at the end of the month.

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We'd rather

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arrest him at his home address

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than impact on a community event like that.

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So, that's the reason for coming here

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at a relatively early hour of the day

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to try and locate him and arrest him.

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Although intelligence has linked this address to the wanted man,

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Pete knows that fugitives often move around to avoid being caught.

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It's the police. Could you open the door, please, madam?

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Thank you.

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-What happened?

-Nothing happened. I'm really sorry to trouble you.

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Detective Sergeant Pete Rance from the Met Police.

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I just need to know who lives here. At this address.

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-Is it possible I can come in and speak to you?

-Yes.

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Thank you very much. I've got a colleague with me, is that OK?

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-Yeah.

-But after a brief chat with the woman inside,

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the team realise they won't be arresting the Bible-loving fraudster today.

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-Take care. Bye-bye.

-Bye.

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So, we've gone in, established their identities,

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we saw she was quite happy for us to come in and speak to her.

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And the fella we're looking for is not there, so we've left it at that.

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We'll move on to our next inquiry now.

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They won't be giving up.

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But the hunt for Dasaolu will have to wait for fresh intelligence.

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And with hundreds of wanted men and women at large in the capital,

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there's no time to waste for this team of detectives.

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Later, Pete searches for a man wanted by Belgian police

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for particularly nasty domestic violence offences.

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He's burnt her with a cigarette stub,

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so it gives you a flavour of the type of violence

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that was being used against this lady.

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For British fugitives on the run,

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the Costa Blanca, packed with tourists,

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is an ideal place to hide from the law.

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In the seaside resort of Calpe, 40 miles north of Alicante,

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pubs and cafes welcome British customers with open arms.

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In one popular bar, as night fell on a September evening in 2014,

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a group of British expats were meeting up for a card game.

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One of the players really was using his poker face.

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He was trying to ask for another beer.

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So, I told him, "This is serious stuff, so stop drinking."

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The man gambling with his freedom was cocaine smuggler Robert Knight.

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He'd fled to Spain to escape a long stint in a British jail

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six years earlier.

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Knight was part of an organised gang of smugglers based in Birmingham.

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Back in early 2008, West Midlands Police were on their trail.

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They knew the criminals had imported two million cigarettes

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and large quantities of drugs worth almost £1 million into the UK.

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We had intelligence in relation to all the members

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of this organised crime group.

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He was the one with the contacts,

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he was the one facilitating drugs.

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Knight and his gang had devised a clever way of getting drugs

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past airport security and into the UK.

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Cocaine was coming in library books from South America

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and I think we recovered seven kilos of cocaine.

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The more we investigated,

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the more we realised that Rob Knight was the one that was

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really making sure that everybody knew what they were doing,

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he was making sure that contacts abroad were paid,

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and it was massively important to us to find him and arrest him.

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Undercover officers spent weeks watching Knight's every move,

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photographing him outside the shop used to store his contraband.

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Then they seized a shipment of cocaine worth £300,000 at Heathrow.

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It was time to make an arrest.

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But the move came too late.

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We went to his place of work and we must have missed him

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by about literally two minutes.

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We know that he left literally as a police vehicle was pulling up.

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Inside the shop,

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they found half a million pounds' worth of illegal tobacco.

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We found two million cigarettes.

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They were bringing it in floor tiling rolls,

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which were hollow in the middle.

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But there was no sign of Robert Knight,

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the brains behind the huge smuggling racket.

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It seemed he could have fled to Spain.

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We thought he was in the region of Estepona in Spain.

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We knew that he had been seen there by different people

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who'd put reports in.

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And we knew from previous intelligence

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he knew that area and because of the expat community there,

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he could fit in there without really showing out.

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For five years, Knight evaded capture.

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Then in 2013, police appealed for the public's help.

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Number seven tonight is Robert Mark Knight.

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In Spain too,

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a Crimestoppers campaign on the Costas reminded holiday-makers

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that the drug and tobacco smuggler

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was one of the UK's most wanted fugitives.

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But would the new appeal lead to the information

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police needed to find him?

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It was unfinished business for us.

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And we know that every time we'd make inquiries

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with his family and friends,

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they were literally gloating that you'll never get hold of him,

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he's left the country.

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And they were sort of proud of the fact that he had avoided justice.

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Spain has been a hiding place for British fugitives for decades.

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Our story of the hour tonight is about criminals

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who seem to be getting away scot-free,

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beyond our reach, in sunny Spain.

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So, how did this Costa Del Crime come about?

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Roy Ramm is a former commander of specialist operations

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at New Scotland Yard.

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There had been an extradition treaty in place for donkey's years

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and in 1978, that collapsed. It fell apart.

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There was no way to get somebody back from Spain

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who was wanted in the UK.

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By the early 1980s, notorious gangsters like Robert Chatwin,

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a well-known jewel thief, were taking advantage of the situation,

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knowing they were untouchable.

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The reason I came to Spain was that

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firstly, it's quite a pleasant, warm country,

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secondly, it's the nearest country to England

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with no extradition treaty.

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Spain became a refuge for criminals,

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an absolute haven for serious and organised criminals.

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There are reported to be more than 50 wanted criminals

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living safely in Spain, mostly on the Costa Del Sol.

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Many of them have invested in big business and big villas there.

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It was very frustrating for particularly the detectives

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at New Scotland Yard to see people who were really suspected

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to have been involved in really major crimes

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spending hundreds of thousands of pounds

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and they could buy the villas,

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they could buy the fast cars, the Ferraris.

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It was sex and drugs and rock and roll, writ large for UK villains.

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The people that should have been standing trial in the Crown Courts

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and at the Old Bailey

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really sticking two fingers up to the coppers.

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We were also concerned for the perception.

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We didn't want the public in Europe

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to think that our biggest export to Spain was serious criminals.

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That perception soon spread.

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When a Spanish newspaper highlighted just how many British criminals

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were hiding out on the Costa Del Sol,

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politicians were put under pressure to re-establish the treaty

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and bring those fugitives back home.

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How much of a priority has it been in the last few months

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or years to get this treaty re-established?

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It is a question of striking a balance

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between the requirements of British law, the freedom of British people

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and the requirements of Spanish law.

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There was no extradition in place but we didn't give up,

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so there were all kinds of attempts made with the help of government

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to try and get these people back.

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So, when passports were expiring,

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we were kind of making sure that they had to come back to the UK

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to renew their passports.

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Then, in 1985, there was a breakthrough.

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From today, criminals on the run from Britain

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will no longer be safe in Spain.

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Ministers from both countries have signed a new extradition treaty

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which should stop Spain being used as a safe and often luxurious haven.

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When the treaty was re-established,

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we were kind of hopeful that that was it,

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that a switch was going to be flicked and we could get them back,

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but it wasn't like that.

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In fact, it would take many more years of negotiation

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before an effective partnership

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between British and Spanish police forces could take effect,

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finally ending the fugitives' free-for-all.

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Today, forces across Europe work closely together

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in the fight to bring those who flee across borders to justice.

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DS Pete Rance and his colleague DC Jamie Darby

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are out on the road in south-west London,

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serving extradition warrants.

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The role is to find fugitives that are wanted in overseas countries

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for crimes they're either accused of or convicted of.

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Their next target tonight

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is a man convicted of domestic violence offences in Belgium.

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He's caused a really serious injury.

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And reading the warrant,

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it's alleged

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that it's systematic abuse over a period of six years

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between 2002 and 2008.

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In one particular assault,

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it's alleged that he's burnt her with a cigarette stub.

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So, that gives you a flavour of the type of violence

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that was being, or alleged to have been, used against this lady.

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Pete and Jamie scope out the neighbourhood,

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trying to work out if the fugitive is in before knocking on the door.

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Hello, sorry to trouble you. From the police.

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Just need to know who lives at this address. It's probably...

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-No speak English.

-No speak English, OK.

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Hello, we just need to know who lives at this address.

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What's your family name?

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Never absolutely certain when you turn up

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that people are either going to be in

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or indeed that they haven't moved on.

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So, it's about approaching it, making an approach,

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speaking to the people inside,

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and trying to ascertain who does live there.

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Sorry to trouble you. OK, thank you. Bye-bye.

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The family confirm to Pete that this is the home

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of the man they're after.

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He's gone to the shops. He'll be back in half an hour.

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They've just missed him by a matter of minutes.

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The detectives are left with little choice

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but to wait and see if he comes back.

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She obviously knows the police have been round now.

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If he is waiting for the knock on the door

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and she knows he's waiting for the knock on the door, for this...

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for this matter, some years ago now in Belgium,

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then it's likely she's going to call him

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and tell him that the police have been to the address.

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Hopefully, when we've spoken to her and her sons,

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we've been suitably sort of vague, for want of a better description,

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to not raise the alarm that we're there to arrest him.

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Just as they're about to give up and leave,

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a man comes up and knocks on Pete's window.

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Let me just park up. We'll come and talk to you, don't worry.

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This is our man.

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That's how your luck can go.

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I tell you what, come and sit in the back of the car.

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Jump on there. Have you got some ID, have you?

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-Yes, yes.

-I'm Jamie Darby.

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I'm a DC from the extradition unit up at New Scotland Yard.

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Unfortunately for you,

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you're under arrest under a European Arrest Warrant for Belgium,

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-for an alleged assault, OK?

-You're not in trouble in the UK.

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-No, sir.

-No problem here.

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But there's a warrant been issued in Belgium

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and Belgium have asked us to execute the warrant,

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-it's a European Arrest Warrant.

-Yes, but I...

-So, listen.

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So, you have to go to court in London.

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The man protests that his family life is now a happy one.

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But that won't wash when he hasn't finished doing time

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for the domestic violence offences in his past.

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As the officers escort him into his flat to collect his passport,

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Pete's French comes in handy.

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..laisse un message...

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-Tu peux telephoner Charlie dans la voiture.

-Merci.

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My phone is going to die.

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-OK.

-He already come back...

-Are you going to leave your phone here?

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Il ne va pas a l'ecole demain. Tu l'amenes avec toi.

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Don't go to the school tomorrow.

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After saying goodbye to his wife and children,

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the fugitive is taken into custody.

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It sums up what police work can be like.

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You know, you think you've missed it.

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I was completely prepared to come away from that address,

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and, you know, regroup and have a look at it for another day,

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and the next thing you know,

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he's knocking on the window of the car, offering himself up.

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So, it's completely like that, you know.

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One day... One day, you get a bit of luck and other days,

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you could sit there for hours and he wouldn't come back

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and it's just par for the course, really.

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Every November, 26 police forces across the UK

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take part in a week-long operation,

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aimed at tackling foreign offenders on Britain's roads.

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Yeah, that's copied...

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Stopping and searching vehicles registered abroad

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and checking that foreign workers have the appropriate permits

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is part of the work.

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Madam, what nationality are you?

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But the operation also focuses on tracking down men and women

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on the run after committing crimes abroad.

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This week, PCs Danny Evans and Karl Lacey are in Worcestershire

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and they have a long list of fugitives to find.

0:19:010:19:04

First up is Przemyslaw Wojciechowski.

0:19:060:19:09

The 33-year-old drug dealer has already been sentenced

0:19:090:19:13

to two years in prison back in Poland.

0:19:130:19:15

When was the offence?

0:19:150:19:17

It's been about seven... It's been a while ago.

0:19:190:19:21

How long's he been in the country?

0:19:210:19:23

Quite a while.

0:19:230:19:24

Just looking at a bit of history

0:19:250:19:27

we've got with this gentleman from this warrant,

0:19:270:19:29

that we've received from Poland,

0:19:290:19:32

the drug supply has been over a year or so, in 2006, 2007,

0:19:320:19:38

at least sort of eight to ten separate offences of drug supply

0:19:380:19:43

over that period of time, so obviously, that's why the offence

0:19:430:19:48

is so severe, that he's been sought after.

0:19:480:19:50

The team have an address for the man.

0:19:500:19:53

They're aiming to sneak up on it, so he doesn't see them coming.

0:19:530:19:56

A plainclothes officer leads them to the right flat.

0:19:570:20:00

The drug dealer has a two-year prison sentence

0:20:060:20:09

waiting for him back in Poland.

0:20:090:20:11

PC Matt Britton is first to approach the door.

0:20:110:20:14

-Hello.

-Hello.

-It's the police.

0:20:240:20:25

Can we just come and have a quick chat with you?

0:20:250:20:27

-It's nothing to worry about.

-Yeah.

-Are you here alone today?

0:20:270:20:30

-No, with my partner.

-What's your partner's name?

0:20:300:20:33

-Przemy.

-Przemy, right, is his...?

0:20:330:20:36

What's his last name?

0:20:360:20:39

Wojciechowski.

0:20:390:20:41

Is he here now, is he?

0:20:410:20:42

He's at the shop at the moment but he's coming here.

0:20:420:20:46

-He's coming back?

-Yeah.

-Ah, right. OK.

0:20:460:20:49

Wojciechowski does live here but has popped out to the local supermarket.

0:20:490:20:54

You know, if this guy wanted to get away from us...

0:20:540:20:56

..quite easily, a phone call could have gone in

0:20:580:21:00

when Matt and Jim were at the premises, by his partner,

0:21:000:21:03

to say, "Don't come back, the police are here."

0:21:030:21:06

-Did he walk to the shop?

-No.

0:21:060:21:08

-Did he go in his car?

-Yes.

-Right, OK. When will he be back?

0:21:080:21:11

-Soon.

-Soon.

0:21:110:21:13

OK. What car?

0:21:130:21:15

-What car has he got?

-It's a Mazda3.

0:21:150:21:17

Do you know the number plate?

0:21:170:21:19

While Matt waits with Wojciechowski's partner,

0:21:190:21:21

Sgt Dean Carswell and the plainclothes police officer set off

0:21:210:21:26

towards the supermarket in an attempt to intercept him.

0:21:260:21:30

But a chance encounter saves them a journey.

0:21:300:21:33

Sir, just have a quick word.

0:21:330:21:34

-Is that you?

-No.

-Who are you?

0:21:360:21:38

-Damian.

-Damian.

-Have you got any ID with you, Damian?

-Yeah.

0:21:380:21:42

-It's not, that's you, that is.

-That's me, yeah.

0:21:420:21:46

Just stand there a second for me.

0:21:460:21:47

He's just gone to the shop to get a loaf of bread,

0:21:510:21:54

which is something he probably does every morning,

0:21:540:21:56

and he's been met by us in the corridor.

0:21:560:22:00

Have you got anything in your pockets that you shouldn't have?

0:22:000:22:02

-No, no.

-Any knives, any weapons?

-No.

-Anything else?

0:22:020:22:05

-Put your hands to the side.

-Let me take your bread off you.

0:22:050:22:07

-Yeah.

-I'm not going to eat it.

0:22:070:22:09

'We were all called round.'

0:22:090:22:10

I came round, identified the male from the warrant,

0:22:100:22:14

asked him his name, and again,

0:22:140:22:15

he was arrested immediately for the warrant.

0:22:150:22:17

-He's been searched.

-OK, you're under arrest

0:22:170:22:20

under the Extradition Act 2003.

0:22:200:22:22

You do not have to say anything

0:22:220:22:23

but anything you do say may be given in evidence.

0:22:230:22:26

-Can you confirm your name for me?

-Yeah, that's the name.

0:22:270:22:30

-Your name, can you tell me, please?

-Wojciechowski.

0:22:300:22:32

-My missus knows about it, yes?

-Yeah.

-OK. So, thank you.

0:22:320:22:37

-Yes.

-I understand it's a bit of a shock, OK?

-Yeah.

0:22:370:22:40

He was quite chatty up until that point.

0:22:420:22:44

I think he mentioned something about the fact

0:22:440:22:46

that he knew this was coming.

0:22:460:22:48

OK, you've got everything you need, sir?

0:22:480:22:50

Can I say goodbye to my girlfriend?

0:22:520:22:54

That's it? Please?

0:22:540:22:56

-Just you wait here. We'll bring her down, OK?

-Yeah.

0:22:580:23:00

It wasn't until he saw his daughter,

0:23:020:23:04

I think it really hit home, didn't it? He got emotional, he got upset.

0:23:040:23:08

His time on the run over,

0:23:100:23:13

Wojciechowski realises that his failure to face up

0:23:130:23:16

to his criminal past now means his family will be left on their own.

0:23:160:23:20

It's only right when somebody's getting arrested and possibly

0:23:220:23:25

sent back to their country to serve a long sentence

0:23:250:23:28

that they're allowed to say goodbye to their loved ones.

0:23:280:23:30

-The thing is...

-Yeah.

-..it's going to get dealt with now, isn't it?

0:23:320:23:35

-You don't have to hide any more.

-Yeah, exactly.

-OK.

0:23:350:23:38

I know it's not any good at the moment.

0:23:390:23:41

As you've seen from his reaction, he's known about this for a while.

0:23:440:23:47

And his time has come today.

0:23:470:23:49

His own admission, he said he should have sorted it out

0:23:500:23:52

a while ago and he hasn't. But, yeah, it's been a bit of a shock

0:23:520:23:55

that we've arrived at his address today.

0:23:550:23:57

-This is a copy of the extradition notice.

-Yeah.

0:23:570:24:00

This is a copy of the warrant against you.

0:24:000:24:03

-It's in both English and Polish.

-Yeah, OK.

0:24:030:24:06

You get to keep that, but that's for you there.

0:24:060:24:09

-Hold on to that because that's for you to keep, all right?

-OK.

0:24:090:24:11

Wojciechowski's past as a dealer in amphetamines back in Poland

0:24:110:24:15

has finally caught up with him.

0:24:150:24:18

He'll be taken to London for his extradition hearing.

0:24:180:24:20

He's put himself in that situation.

0:24:230:24:25

You know, this has happened for a while

0:24:250:24:27

and he's known that he could have got it sorted out a long time ago.

0:24:270:24:30

The only blessing is maybe that he can get it dealt with now

0:24:300:24:32

and before his daughter is old enough to find out what's going on.

0:24:320:24:36

Maybe won't remember any of this at all.

0:24:360:24:38

For decades, the Spanish seaside

0:24:450:24:47

has been a haven for British criminals on the run.

0:24:470:24:50

30 years ago, the first extradition treaty

0:24:500:24:53

between the UK and Spain was agreed.

0:24:530:24:56

But it didn't solve the problem.

0:24:560:24:58

There's about a quarter of a million Brits in Spain.

0:24:590:25:01

There are an awful lot of English pubs, English bars,

0:25:010:25:04

you don't have to speak Spanish to live comfortably on the Costa.

0:25:040:25:08

The issue continued to be a massive source of frustration

0:25:080:25:12

for British authorities.

0:25:120:25:14

We're talking about an average of a year to get someone extradited,

0:25:140:25:17

which obviously causes havoc,

0:25:170:25:19

not only to the victims and those who have suffered

0:25:190:25:23

but also in terms of operating the judicial system.

0:25:230:25:26

With both politicians and police struggling to get any results,

0:25:260:25:31

help came from an unexpected source. The media.

0:25:310:25:35

I take my hat off to people like Roger Cook and other journalists

0:25:350:25:39

who went down to the Costa and exposed this criminal lifestyle,

0:25:390:25:42

because they got a fairly hostile reception.

0:25:420:25:45

Mr Roger Cook!

0:25:450:25:46

But what they did with their reports and with their documentaries

0:25:480:25:52

was to bring this issue right to Westminster

0:25:520:25:55

on the doorstep of the politicians and it was an embarrassment.

0:25:550:26:00

The British politicians were seeing what was going on down there

0:26:000:26:03

and I think it added impetus to their efforts to try

0:26:030:26:06

and re-establish diplomatic relationships

0:26:060:26:09

and get a mechanism to get these people back.

0:26:090:26:11

The media spotlight and award-winning journalism

0:26:110:26:14

may have been enough to persuade some criminals to head for home.

0:26:140:26:18

For others, it was the discovery that Spain's sun, sea and sand

0:26:180:26:23

couldn't replace family and friends.

0:26:230:26:25

You know, living away from the UK, when your home, your family,

0:26:250:26:29

your lifestyle's here is not as easy as it seems.

0:26:290:26:33

Some of the criminals who had been fugitives in Spain

0:26:330:26:37

actually came back under their own steam, eventually.

0:26:370:26:40

Then in 2001,

0:26:400:26:42

a treaty was signed which meant whether they wanted to or not,

0:26:420:26:45

criminals on the Costas would be coming home.

0:26:450:26:48

The point of all this is to plug the legal loopholes

0:26:500:26:52

and to reduce the time it takes to extradite suspects

0:26:520:26:56

to as little as three weeks.

0:26:560:26:58

But even with the treaty in place,

0:26:590:27:01

Costa Del Crime's long history means Spain remains

0:27:010:27:05

a favourite destination for criminals on the run.

0:27:050:27:08

It's still sunny and warm and a pleasant place to be.

0:27:080:27:12

There are still a lot of expat Brits around.

0:27:120:27:15

And of course, there are criminal opportunities there.

0:27:150:27:18

Yes, extradition is now possible but there is also a kind of a network,

0:27:180:27:22

a structure on the Costa, that they can hide away in for some time.

0:27:220:27:27

So, the Costa still attracts British fugitives.

0:27:270:27:30

One of those criminals was notorious cocaine smuggler Robert Knight.

0:27:380:27:43

He fled the UK in April 2008,

0:27:430:27:47

swapping his life as the mastermind behind a gang of drug smugglers

0:27:470:27:51

for a life on the run.

0:27:510:27:52

When he fled the country,

0:27:550:27:56

the National Crime Agency joined in the search.

0:27:560:28:00

With Rob Knight, we thought pretty early on

0:28:000:28:02

that he was going to be in Spain.

0:28:020:28:04

He had quite a lot of links out in Spain.

0:28:040:28:06

So, we initially started looking in that area.

0:28:060:28:09

He was on the run for a number of years in the end,

0:28:100:28:13

which can often be the case.

0:28:130:28:14

Even though you secure a European Arrest Warrant,

0:28:140:28:16

it doesn't mean we arrest people instantly.

0:28:160:28:18

But it doesn't mean we stop looking either.

0:28:180:28:21

So, for Rob Knight, he had links to Dubai, to Thailand, to South Africa,

0:28:210:28:25

and obviously, every one of those links

0:28:250:28:27

has to be looked into and investigated.

0:28:270:28:29

But even after all that,

0:28:290:28:30

even when we looked with these other countries, considered other options,

0:28:300:28:34

it all came back to pointing back towards Spain.

0:28:340:28:36

A fresh appeal at home and abroad in 2013 threw up new leads.

0:28:380:28:43

We had quite good intelligence as to around a specific location

0:28:460:28:50

where you started to get a feeling and suggestions

0:28:500:28:52

that he was around the Benidorm area,

0:28:520:28:54

that he was perhaps frequenting bars around there

0:28:540:28:56

and that his face was known

0:28:560:28:58

and we were getting intelligence that he was there.

0:28:580:29:00

So, we could obviously start to focus in on that.

0:29:000:29:03

So, the process would be once we had an idea of where he was,

0:29:030:29:06

we would feed that in to the Spanish

0:29:060:29:08

and then they would look to progress the intelligence.

0:29:080:29:11

With the European Arrest Warrant now in place,

0:29:110:29:14

the Spanish national police's fugitive unit could join the search.

0:29:140:29:19

They followed up on information linking Knight to Benidorm,

0:29:190:29:23

a popular haunt for Brits on the run.

0:29:230:29:26

They come to Benidorm for bars, they play cards here,

0:29:260:29:29

just watch football on television, and things like that.

0:29:290:29:32

We thought Robert Knight was living here in Benidorm,

0:29:320:29:35

so we spent here about two weeks.

0:29:350:29:37

We found out that he had been identified by the local police here,

0:29:370:29:41

driving a motorcycle.

0:29:410:29:43

At that time, he was using a false identity.

0:29:430:29:45

Armed with the knowledge that Robert Knight

0:29:470:29:49

was using someone else's name,

0:29:490:29:51

Olga and her UK colleagues were hopeful of an arrest.

0:29:510:29:55

He was on a false passport,

0:29:560:29:58

so he may have been able to move around European countries

0:29:580:30:01

on that passport.

0:30:010:30:02

But the main intelligence that we were getting

0:30:020:30:05

was that he was settled in Spain,

0:30:050:30:07

that he visited certain bars,

0:30:070:30:10

he was happy there because of the expat community

0:30:100:30:12

and he fitted in pretty nicely there.

0:30:120:30:15

But despite information that Knight had been in Benidorm,

0:30:150:30:19

by the time Olga arrived there to arrest him,

0:30:190:30:21

he seemed to have disappeared.

0:30:210:30:24

Two guys told us, "OK, we recognise him, he was here,

0:30:240:30:27

"but he left this place, like, two months ago."

0:30:270:30:31

Or something like that.

0:30:310:30:33

Picking up the trail again proved difficult.

0:30:330:30:36

It took a few months to actually nail down exactly

0:30:370:30:40

where we thought he was in Alicante.

0:30:400:30:42

But thanks to some excellent work from the Spanish,

0:30:420:30:45

they did eventually secure one bar where we became pretty sure

0:30:450:30:48

that he frequented there quite regularly.

0:30:480:30:50

Olga then received a useful lead

0:30:520:30:54

that would help her team spot Knight.

0:30:540:30:57

They told us he was riding a bicycle.

0:30:580:31:00

It was like a black bicycle with white wheels.

0:31:000:31:04

So, it was kind of a weird bicycle.

0:31:040:31:06

It's not the normal bicycle.

0:31:060:31:08

And back at the National Crime Agency,

0:31:100:31:12

officers also received some new information.

0:31:120:31:15

An intelligence source in Spain told them that Knight

0:31:150:31:18

was now a keen player on the Costa's poker circuit.

0:31:180:31:22

The fact that he was playing poker was great.

0:31:220:31:24

It gave us an idea that he was on a certain circuit,

0:31:240:31:26

that he would be cropping up in potentially certain bars.

0:31:260:31:29

But it wasn't just that. It was that once we knew what league

0:31:290:31:32

he was playing in, what games he was playing in,

0:31:320:31:34

we could work out where he was going to be and at what time.

0:31:340:31:37

It was a big breakthrough.

0:31:380:31:39

Now police knew about Knight's gaming habits,

0:31:390:31:42

it seemed the chips were finally down

0:31:420:31:44

for one of the UK's most wanted fugitives.

0:31:440:31:47

In south-west London,

0:31:530:31:55

DS Pete Rance and DC Jamie Darby have arrested a man

0:31:550:31:59

wanted by Belgian police.

0:31:590:32:02

-Jump on there. You've got some ID, have you?

-Yes, yes.

0:32:020:32:05

He fled the country part way through a prison sentence

0:32:080:32:11

-for assaulting his wife.

-Understood.

0:32:110:32:13

-You're not in trouble in the UK.

-No, sir.

0:32:130:32:16

But there's a warrant been issued in Belgium and Belgium have asked us

0:32:160:32:20

to execute the warrant, it's a European Arrest Warrant.

0:32:200:32:22

-Yeah, but...

-OK, so, listen, so you have to go to court in London.

0:32:220:32:25

If Pete doesn't get his man in front of a judge as soon as possible,

0:32:250:32:29

the case could be thrown out.

0:32:290:32:31

They need to take him to Westminster Magistrates' Court

0:32:320:32:35

first thing in the morning

0:32:350:32:36

because it's the only court in England and Wales

0:32:360:32:39

that deals with extradition requests.

0:32:390:32:41

But first, he must be processed at a police station.

0:32:430:32:46

Pete takes him to Charing Cross.

0:32:460:32:48

Charing Cross is a central London police station.

0:32:510:32:55

It works for us because it's very close to the court

0:32:550:32:59

where the people that are going to be taken in extradition proceedings.

0:32:590:33:04

The police want to take your fingerprints,

0:33:040:33:06

photograph and a DNA sample.

0:33:060:33:08

OK, once the samples are taken,

0:33:080:33:10

they can be used for crime investigation purposes

0:33:100:33:12

and to check your identity.

0:33:120:33:14

Take your glasses off for me, please? Cheers.

0:33:140:33:17

Look straight at the camera. Yeah, yeah.

0:33:170:33:19

Jamie and his colleague DC Dave Salmon

0:33:210:33:24

check the arrested man into custody.

0:33:240:33:26

Thank you very much.

0:33:270:33:28

Gathering DNA and adding it to the database

0:33:290:33:32

is an important part of the process.

0:33:320:33:35

We do this with every extradition prisoner.

0:33:350:33:38

It'll be on file

0:33:380:33:40

and it can be compared against the database as well,

0:33:400:33:43

just in case they've been committing other crimes here.

0:33:430:33:47

-Just relax when I roll them, OK? Just relax.

-All right.

0:33:490:33:53

Cooperation between European police forces

0:33:530:33:55

and the sharing of this kind of information across borders

0:33:550:33:59

is key to tracking down men and women on the run.

0:33:590:34:03

My job is to ascertain that he was the person that was wanted.

0:34:030:34:06

But as a priority, to make sure that that woman and the children

0:34:080:34:12

were safe and free from any potential harm from him now.

0:34:120:34:15

And I was happy that we'd done that,

0:34:150:34:17

that there was no risk to the kids or to her.

0:34:170:34:21

And then it was about arranging for him to go before the court,

0:34:210:34:25

so that the extradition proceedings could commence.

0:34:250:34:28

The man convicted back in 2009 of domestic violence offences

0:34:280:34:33

in Belgium will spend the night in the cells.

0:34:330:34:36

He'll appear before a judge in the morning.

0:34:360:34:38

No day is the same when you're hunting fugitives.

0:34:430:34:47

It's the job of just six National Crime Agency officers

0:34:470:34:51

to look for wanted Brits right around the world.

0:34:510:34:54

It's one of the things I really like about this job

0:34:540:34:57

because no matter how long you do it,

0:34:570:34:58

there's always something new to learn

0:34:580:35:00

and there's always a new, interesting twist in the cases.

0:35:000:35:04

So, one day, maybe you are looking for a robber in Thailand,

0:35:040:35:09

the next day, a murderer in Brazil,

0:35:090:35:12

the next day, a fraudster in France.

0:35:120:35:14

The unexpected can happen at any time,

0:35:140:35:17

as this former UN investigator knows only too well.

0:35:170:35:21

It's extremely dynamic, so you might sit down in the morning,

0:35:210:35:24

have a very clear plan about what it is that you want to do that day

0:35:240:35:27

and then all of a sudden, there is an urgent situation.

0:35:270:35:30

The workload can be heavy at times.

0:35:300:35:33

So, it is one of the challenges, is prioritising

0:35:330:35:36

many different urgent situations

0:35:360:35:37

and deciding which needs your attention right then.

0:35:370:35:40

Warrants are issued for around 170 of the British fugitives

0:35:400:35:44

who flee abroad to escape justice every year.

0:35:440:35:48

Some cases are more memorable than others.

0:35:480:35:51

And Kimberly remembers her first success.

0:35:510:35:54

I threw absolutely everything I could think of into this case.

0:35:540:35:58

And it was one of those, we didn't have a lot on him,

0:35:580:36:00

we didn't really know where he was.

0:36:000:36:02

And he popped up one day in Portugal.

0:36:020:36:05

And I just got a form through saying he'd been arrested.

0:36:050:36:08

For them, just another subject arrested on the EAW.

0:36:080:36:10

For me, a really big deal.

0:36:100:36:12

The agency has to overcome all sorts of barriers

0:36:130:36:16

to capture and extradite criminals back to Britain.

0:36:160:36:19

Geography, time and language are just a few.

0:36:200:36:23

So, any victory is celebrated by the team.

0:36:230:36:27

We absolutely share in each other's wins,

0:36:270:36:29

because we work so closely together and we help in each other's cases.

0:36:290:36:34

And we are involved in each other's work,

0:36:350:36:37

so when someone gets a really good arrest,

0:36:370:36:40

the whole team, you know, celebrates in it.

0:36:400:36:42

Teamwork can also help deal with the setbacks.

0:36:420:36:46

You might have a really good piece of information come in

0:36:460:36:49

that one of our fugitives is going to be in a location

0:36:490:36:52

at a specific time,

0:36:520:36:53

so you will get the foreign law enforcement set up, ready to go,

0:36:530:36:57

and they might slip the net.

0:36:570:36:58

Or perhaps they didn't travel when you thought that they were going to.

0:36:580:37:01

And it very much feels like a missed opportunity.

0:37:010:37:04

But to be honest, that just spurs you

0:37:040:37:06

to try even harder the next time.

0:37:060:37:07

So, although it can be disappointing

0:37:070:37:10

and it can feel like a little bit of a low,

0:37:100:37:11

it really just motivates us to try even harder the next time.

0:37:110:37:15

In 2014, Olga Lizana, head of the Spanish police's fugitive unit,

0:37:210:37:26

was on the hunt for British criminal Robert Knight.

0:37:260:37:29

Six years earlier,

0:37:300:37:32

he avoided arrest in Birmingham when police closed the net

0:37:320:37:35

on his drug-smuggling gang.

0:37:350:37:37

The more we investigated,

0:37:380:37:39

the more we realised that Rob Knight was the one with the contacts,

0:37:390:37:43

he was the one to facilitate the drugs,

0:37:430:37:45

and he was the one that sort of glued the whole operation together.

0:37:450:37:48

After new appeals and months of painstaking research,

0:37:490:37:53

police were close to capturing the fugitive.

0:37:530:37:55

There will always be one piece of intelligence

0:37:570:37:59

that sort of helps take us over the line.

0:37:590:38:01

For us in the case of Robert Knight,

0:38:010:38:02

it was the fact that he played poker so much

0:38:020:38:04

and that he was so heavily involved in it.

0:38:040:38:06

We got some information about the bar, Saffy's Bar in Calpe.

0:38:070:38:10

They told us "British people play poker here,"

0:38:120:38:15

I think it was every Thursday or something like that.

0:38:150:38:17

So, we move over there.

0:38:170:38:19

Over the past few months,

0:38:190:38:21

Olga had discovered that Robert Knight

0:38:210:38:24

was a keen poker player who rode a distinctive bicycle.

0:38:240:38:27

We didn't see him getting into the bar.

0:38:270:38:30

The first thing we saw was a bicycle outside.

0:38:300:38:33

We decided to wait a little bit to see what was going on.

0:38:340:38:37

We didn't see any people just getting in or out.

0:38:370:38:40

So, we decided to go there and get a drink.

0:38:400:38:43

And sure enough, inside the bar,

0:38:430:38:46

a poker school was just settling in for the evening.

0:38:460:38:49

We have a regular game,

0:38:490:38:51

a friendly game of poker on a Thursday,

0:38:510:38:53

and we were just getting ready for that, really,

0:38:530:38:55

getting all the chips ready and running around for that.

0:38:550:38:58

There was a few people in for the bar.

0:38:580:39:00

Just normal, really.

0:39:000:39:01

We just sat tight.

0:39:010:39:02

We were trying to check if Robert Knight was there or not.

0:39:020:39:06

At the beginning, we were not sure,

0:39:060:39:09

so we were just going in and out to check if it was him or not.

0:39:090:39:13

We were pretty sure, so we decided

0:39:130:39:16

to get into the bar and ask everybody for their documents.

0:39:160:39:19

But even when Olga approached Knight,

0:39:210:39:23

he was still trying to call her bluff.

0:39:230:39:25

When I asked him for the papers,

0:39:260:39:28

he showed me a kind of copy of his passport, but it was not a real one.

0:39:280:39:33

I asked him about his name.

0:39:330:39:35

And he said the name that was on the passport.

0:39:350:39:39

He was not nervous or anything.

0:39:390:39:41

Robert Knight seemed confident his change of appearance

0:39:410:39:45

and fake passport would do the trick,

0:39:450:39:47

even when the odds were stacked against him.

0:39:470:39:51

He thought we were just checking the names or anything,

0:39:510:39:55

so he moved from the table.

0:39:550:39:56

He was asking for another beer, till we just told him,

0:39:560:39:59

"OK, we know you are Robert Knight and you are under arrest."

0:39:590:40:03

But still, it seemed nothing would rattle the one-time drug smuggler.

0:40:030:40:07

He said, "Before you take me, I need to pay me bill."

0:40:070:40:09

So, I was happy, because I'm a Yorkshireman.

0:40:090:40:11

He had a bike outside, chained up, he says, "You can keep the bike."

0:40:110:40:14

I says, "You what?" He says, "You can keep the bike."

0:40:140:40:16

I says, "Why?" He says, "I don't think I'll be back."

0:40:160:40:19

After six years on the run, Knight was finally captured.

0:40:190:40:24

But bizarrely, he didn't seem at all concerned

0:40:240:40:27

that his life as a fugitive had come to an end.

0:40:270:40:29

There is between

0:40:310:40:33

40 and 50 kilometres between Calpe and Alicante,

0:40:330:40:36

we were taking him to the police station in Alicante.

0:40:360:40:39

And he was sleeping in the car.

0:40:390:40:42

To me, it seemed that he was not worried about

0:40:420:40:44

the stuff that was going on.

0:40:440:40:46

He kept saying at the police station that we were wrong,

0:40:460:40:50

"I am another person."

0:40:500:40:52

Robert Knight's bluffing bravado didn't last.

0:40:520:40:55

UK officers were summoned to Alicante to confirm his identity.

0:40:550:41:00

We scrambled pretty quickly to make sure because they were uncertain.

0:41:000:41:04

Obviously, he had forged documents on him and his appearance

0:41:040:41:07

had changed a great deal.

0:41:070:41:09

It felt really good, actually, because when we saw him,

0:41:090:41:11

we arrested him and took him on the airport, he was still denying.

0:41:110:41:15

Firstly, he was still talking to us that he wasn't Rob Knight

0:41:150:41:18

and secondly, he was saying, well, he wasn't on the run.

0:41:180:41:21

He made great pains to say, "Nobody told me I was wanted.

0:41:210:41:24

"I'd been living out there freely."

0:41:240:41:26

In October 2014,

0:41:260:41:28

officers escorted the drug dealer back to the UK to stand trial.

0:41:280:41:33

He didn't realise how much we actually knew about him.

0:41:330:41:36

He didn't realise that we knew how he was writing letters home

0:41:360:41:39

and everything else he was doing.

0:41:390:41:41

For the NCA, it was a great end to six long years of intelligence work.

0:41:410:41:47

The satisfaction of making that phone call

0:41:470:41:50

to the officer in the force who's also lived the case with you,

0:41:500:41:54

being able to make that phone call and say, "We've got them,

0:41:540:41:57

"we've got them arrested, they're in custody,

0:41:570:41:59

"they've got the cuffs on them,"

0:41:590:42:01

that is the best feeling in the job.

0:42:010:42:02

Six years to the day he fled the UK,

0:42:050:42:08

in April 2015, Robert Knight was sentenced to 11 years in prison

0:42:080:42:12

at Birmingham Crown Court for drug smuggling.

0:42:120:42:16

German fraudster and self-proclaimed evangelist Lanre Louis Dasaolu

0:42:160:42:21

was eventually arrested at Heathrow Airport.

0:42:210:42:23

He was extradited back to Germany in November 2016.

0:42:230:42:27

Six months after Met officers arrested the man

0:42:300:42:33

with an outstanding prison sentence to serve for domestic violence,

0:42:330:42:37

the Belgian authorities decided to withdraw the European Arrest Warrant

0:42:370:42:41

they'd issued for him.

0:42:410:42:42

Finally, Przemyslaw Wojciechowski

0:42:450:42:48

was successfully deported back to Poland in June 2016

0:42:480:42:52

to serve the rest of his sentence for supplying drugs.

0:42:520:42:55

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