It Started with a Murder...

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:00:06. > :00:16.Her face still haunts the justice system. Her murder didn't just lead

:00:16. > :00:20.

:00:20. > :00:26.to the wrong men being jailed. up! We've been going through that

:00:26. > :00:31.murder for frigging 23 years. Where's that justice? It exposed

:00:31. > :00:35.allegations of corruption and incompetence in South Wales police.

:00:35. > :00:42.A witness who lied breaks her 24 year silence. It was not my fault

:00:42. > :00:46.the police it was down to them. Evidence disappeared and a case

:00:46. > :00:56.collapses. This whole thing stinks - somebody somewhere knows the

:00:56. > :00:58.

:00:58. > :01:00.The biggest trial of former police officers ever seen in Britain has

:01:00. > :01:09.collapsed. The eight officers were charged with colluding to pervert

:01:09. > :01:15.the course of justice in a murder inquiry." Aquitted of all charges

:01:15. > :01:18.after nearly even years under investigation. I'm elated. At last

:01:18. > :01:22.I feel I been vindicated I done nothing wrong on this enquiry and I

:01:22. > :01:24.told that to the investigating team from the day I was arrested.

:01:24. > :01:28.emerged vital prosecution documents had been destroyed and the judge

:01:28. > :01:30.ruled the men could not now receive a fair trial. I am pleased correct

:01:30. > :01:37.verdicts been reached. The last six years have been harrowing for

:01:37. > :01:44.myself and my family. The �30 million trial was meant to draw a

:01:44. > :01:49.line under a notorious miscarriage of justice. Police branded this man

:01:49. > :01:55.a murdering pimp they got it wrong. Blatant, blatant. They took my

:01:55. > :02:01.liberties away blatantly. I was innocent. This woman helped frame

:02:01. > :02:04.him tonight for the first time she reveals why. I knew it was wrong to

:02:04. > :02:14.tell lies but I am trying to make the public understand that what

:02:14. > :02:16.

:02:16. > :02:26.happened it wasn't my doing. case ended in chaos - raising even

:02:26. > :02:29.

:02:29. > :02:31.It was 24 years ago that I first reported on this murder. This is

:02:31. > :02:36.where the story starts - in Cardiff's docklands. Lynette was

:02:36. > :02:39.working as prostitute. She was killed and mutilated in a flat

:02:39. > :02:49.where she'd taken a punter, Jeffrey Gafoor. He got away with murder for

:02:49. > :02:49.

:02:49. > :02:52.15 years. But he set off a chain of events which would destroy other

:02:52. > :02:55.innocent lives and continue costing us the public tens of millions of

:02:55. > :02:58.pounds, and at the heart of it lay major questions about police

:02:58. > :03:08.corruption, cover ups and incompetence which could cost the

:03:08. > :03:09.

:03:09. > :03:17.In 1988 Lynette was 20, and taking deadly risks with strangers.

:03:17. > :03:20.Jeffrey Gafoor stabbed her more than 50 times in a row over �30. At

:03:20. > :03:30.first South Wales Police said they were looking for a white man seen

:03:30. > :03:31.

:03:31. > :03:37.outside the flat. A woman noticed a man in a doorway he appeared to

:03:37. > :03:40.have blood on his hands. He must be the prime suspect. Mumbling,

:03:40. > :03:50.incoherent and I gather he was crying at times too, blood on his

:03:50. > :03:53.hands. He certainly is a person who we must speak to at this time.

:03:53. > :03:55.10 months later five black men petty criminals from the docks,

:03:55. > :03:58.were arrested and charged with Lynette's murder. They were

:03:58. > :04:04.Lynette's boyfriend Stephen Miller, Yusef Abdullahi, Tony Parris, and

:04:04. > :04:14.cousins Ronnie Actie and John Actie. They became known as the Cardiff

:04:14. > :04:20.

:04:20. > :04:23.Five. They all denied it, but were implicated by witnesses who nearly

:04:23. > :04:30.20-years on, admitted lying. They said they'd been forced to by South

:04:30. > :04:33.Wales police officers. Ronnie Actie was first to be cleared after

:04:33. > :04:36.nearly two years on remand. person or persons who killed

:04:36. > :04:42.Lynette White is still out walking the streets. Next day, John Actie

:04:42. > :04:48.was also found not guilty. But the other three were convicted and

:04:48. > :04:51.sentenced to life imprisonment. Stephen Miller has a low IQ. He was

:04:51. > :04:53.said to have been "brainwashed" by police into lying. After 18

:04:53. > :05:03.interviews over four days, he claimed he'd seen Yusef Abdulahi

:05:03. > :05:10.

:05:10. > :05:14.How you can sit there and say that you been in that room seeing that

:05:14. > :05:18.girl there in state she was in and you supposed to have had all this

:05:18. > :05:21.wonderful care for her seeing her damn head hang off and her arms cut

:05:21. > :05:29.and stabbed to death and you sit there and tell us you know nothing

:05:29. > :05:38.at all about it? Nothing at all about it? I wasn't there. I wasn't

:05:38. > :05:43.there. How you, I don't know how you can sit there. I felt like I

:05:43. > :05:46.was being tortured. Not physically tortured, mentally. Four years

:05:46. > :05:48.later the court of appeal quashed the convictions and condemned the

:05:48. > :05:54.police officers' conduct during Stephen Miller's interview as

:05:54. > :05:57.bullying, oppressive and the worst example of police excesses. I was

:05:57. > :06:01.treated rotten. I had no rights whatsoever. They lied to me. They

:06:01. > :06:11.put me through sheer hell. I feel it in my heart. I know what people

:06:11. > :06:14.

:06:14. > :06:18.feel like when they been wrongly accused. These two have been

:06:18. > :06:24.through what I have been through. I admitted to something I knew

:06:24. > :06:27.nothing about. Since then Stephen Miller has moved to London and kept

:06:27. > :06:30.out of the media spotlight. But he agreed to tell me about the life

:06:30. > :06:34.shared with Lynette. And about how his false confession began a living

:06:34. > :06:41.nightmare. One minute I'm on the streets next minute I'm charged

:06:41. > :06:46.with murder of my partner. You bring in the nice guys who soften

:06:46. > :06:56.me and I say no, no, no, then bring in guys going to rough me up. All

:06:56. > :06:58.mind games. They broke me down, slowly but surely. The court

:06:58. > :07:05.accepted that the convictions were unsafe. No police officers have

:07:05. > :07:08.ever been convicted of any wrongdoing. For Stephen Miller,

:07:08. > :07:14.freedom didn't end the accusations - he'd been labelled a murdering

:07:14. > :07:24.pimp. I know I am not no pimp. I used to go out with Lynette. She

:07:24. > :07:27.done what she done. I met her when she was doing it. I tried to stop

:07:27. > :07:31.her going down that road but you can't change a person if they don't

:07:32. > :07:35.want to be changed. Lynette lived in a violent, chaotic world as a

:07:35. > :07:43.street prostitute. She and Stephen Miller were drug users and he was a

:07:43. > :07:53.dealer. I used to be like a Delboy character. I did odd jobs here or

:07:53. > :07:53.

:07:53. > :08:00.there. I used to sell weed, lived off my weed money. Lynette, she

:08:00. > :08:05.used to give me money, like I used to give her money. Did you love

:08:05. > :08:09.her? Yes I did love her definitely without a doubt without a doubt.

:08:09. > :08:18.There was a future - we did talk about marriage at some stage but

:08:18. > :08:21.that was way down. She had so many things she wanted to do.

:08:21. > :08:24.Lynette never got the chance. Last summer at the start of the trial in

:08:24. > :08:27.Swansea the prosecution said "corrupt officers" had conspired to

:08:27. > :08:33.jail innocent men. The officers - now retired - all denied any

:08:33. > :08:36.wrongdoing. They were said to have put pressure on vulnerable

:08:36. > :08:38.witnesses including Mark Grommek, who lived in the flat above the

:08:38. > :08:41.murder scene, and two prostitutes Leanne Vilday and Angela Psaila.

:08:41. > :08:47.The three eventually admitted telling a pack of lies. They said

:08:47. > :08:54.they'd been bullied into it. They'd helped set the scene for one of

:08:54. > :08:59.Britain's most notorious miscarriages of justice. Till now,

:08:59. > :09:02.Angela Psaila has refused to speak publicly about the lies she told. I

:09:02. > :09:11.want the world to know from my point of view what happened in them

:09:11. > :09:21.days. It was not my fault. The police, basically it's down to them.

:09:21. > :09:26.

:09:26. > :09:29.I was given no choice, nothing. 1988 Angela Psaila, like Lynette

:09:29. > :09:36.worked as a street prostitute, picking up punters in the docks

:09:36. > :09:46.area of the city. At that point of my life it was survival. Working

:09:46. > :09:49.

:09:49. > :09:52.the streets, getting a bit of money for food. It was hard, every time

:09:52. > :09:56.you went out you just didn't know if you were going to be alive at

:09:56. > :10:04.the end of the night. It wasn't easy. I didn't want to do what I

:10:04. > :10:08.was doing but I had no choice had to do it. Like Stephen Miller,

:10:08. > :10:10.Angela Psaila has a low IQ. She says police warned her unless she

:10:10. > :10:20.testified against him and the others she could be charged with

:10:20. > :10:24.

:10:24. > :10:27.murder. She says she was terrified. I was under a lot of pressure from

:10:27. > :10:35.police was tremendous amount of pressure. Lot of shouting and

:10:35. > :10:44.pointing - they told me point blank I was there. I was very afraid,

:10:44. > :10:52.very afraid you know? The police were not playing games. I have no

:10:52. > :11:01.doubt in my mind that they would have charged me with murder.

:11:01. > :11:08.and the others stayed silent as the miscarriage of justice unfolded.

:11:08. > :11:12.What went through your mind? Did you feel guilty about it? I felt

:11:12. > :11:22.bad at what was happening but at the end of the day it was totally

:11:22. > :11:26.

:11:26. > :11:28.out of my hands. Nothing I could do, nothing. This was the amount of

:11:28. > :11:34.pressure they were putting on people. We couldn't you know

:11:34. > :11:44.couldn't do anything. You just, you just feel like an animal as if in

:11:44. > :11:47.big cage and no matter which way you look you can't get out. In 2003,

:11:47. > :11:50.their lies caught up with them. I was in court to watch Jeffrey

:11:50. > :11:56.Gafoor plead guilty to Lynette's murder. He's been caught by

:11:56. > :11:59.detectives using new DNA technology. Gafoor was a lone killer who had

:11:59. > :12:07.slipped back into normal life. He was working as a security guard

:12:07. > :12:11.when police finally identified him. He hasn't got no feelings about us

:12:11. > :12:18.doesn't feel sorry for us who took his place in prison. When he's the

:12:18. > :12:27.one who has done wrong. I think the best place for him in prison. No

:12:27. > :12:30.doubts about that. Her family say Lynette wanted to be loved and one

:12:30. > :12:37.day, be a mum. But Gafoor ensured that she would be remembered for

:12:37. > :12:41.what she did rather than who she really was. Everybody knows that

:12:41. > :12:45.she was on the game but you don't say it 24/7. It gets old. It's

:12:45. > :12:49.disgraceful. They should be ashamed of themselves. She was a very quiet

:12:49. > :12:52.person kept herself to herself. She liked videos, she liked to have the

:12:52. > :13:02.occasional drink, she liked smoking her cigarettes and all the things a

:13:02. > :13:06.

:13:06. > :13:12.20 year old does. Gafoor's guilt meant the South Wales Police were

:13:12. > :13:15.no longer hunting Lynette's killer. They began an investigation into

:13:15. > :13:18.their own officers - the ones who'd got it so wrong sending innocent

:13:18. > :13:28.men to prison. It also meant the witnesses who'd lied about what

:13:28. > :13:28.

:13:28. > :13:31.happened in Lynette's flat were guilty of perjury. In 2008, Angela

:13:31. > :13:41.Pasila was sentenced to 18 months in jail, along with former

:13:41. > :13:49.

:13:49. > :13:52.prostitute Leanne Vilday and Mark Grommek. He had been threatened. He

:13:52. > :13:54.was threatened that he'd be arrested and sent to prison

:13:54. > :13:57.possibility charged with conspiracy to murder or been involved in that

:13:57. > :14:07.it overbore his will. He went along with what he understood police

:14:07. > :14:09.

:14:09. > :14:14.Mark Grommek was represented by David Bullbridge QC at his trial.

:14:14. > :14:18.That pressure built on Mr Grommek over weeks, and then months. His

:14:18. > :14:22.case was that he had been taken into custody and not been formally

:14:22. > :14:29.arrested. But he was taken to the police station on a number of

:14:29. > :14:32.occasions from his place of work, and had been interviewed not on

:14:32. > :14:37.record. There were no tape recordings of what had happened to

:14:37. > :14:41.him. At did they warned him not to change his story? They made it

:14:41. > :14:46.plain that the account he had given, which accorded with what they

:14:46. > :14:51.believed, was one they wanted him to stay with. When he went to court,

:14:51. > :14:55.that was the account they expected him to give. The perjury trial

:14:55. > :15:00.exposed not just the lies of witnesses, but the tactics used by

:15:00. > :15:07.police to get the result they wanted. In the trial for perjury,

:15:07. > :15:11.the prosecution conceded in court before the judge that they accepted

:15:11. > :15:16.everything that he said had happened to him. The judge said he

:15:16. > :15:20.and the other two were vulnerable individuals who had been seriously

:15:20. > :15:26.hounded, bullied, threatened, abused and manipulated by the

:15:26. > :15:31.police. You are a Queen's Counsel with many

:15:31. > :15:37.years of experience. You are a judge as well. Have you ever come

:15:37. > :15:42.up against this level of depression? Not this type of

:15:42. > :15:47.oppression. To date, no officers have been convicted of any

:15:47. > :15:54.wrongdoing. Leanne Vilday and Angela Psaila new

:15:54. > :16:01.Lynette and Stephen Miller from the streets. I hated those girls for

:16:01. > :16:05.years. But hate doesn't get you nowhere. It just needs your way. If

:16:05. > :16:13.I saw them and they came through this door now, I would not shake

:16:13. > :16:16.their hands, but I would understand where they were coming from. Leanne

:16:16. > :16:20.Vilday has a new identity and did not want to be interviewed. Her

:16:20. > :16:25.barrister says she had hoped that one day, the whole truth would come

:16:25. > :16:31.out. She pleaded guilty in the expectation that there would be a

:16:31. > :16:35.rigorous and successful prosecution of those who had placed her in the

:16:35. > :16:38.position, as the prosecution accepted, of giving false evidence

:16:38. > :16:44.against the Cardiff Three. That is not to excuse the false evidence

:16:44. > :16:47.she gave, but she gave it in extraordinary circumstances.

:16:47. > :16:54.said police threatened that if she refused to give what was a false

:16:54. > :16:59.account, her young son would be taken into care. She was held, in

:16:59. > :17:03.essence, as a sort of hostage in police premises in South Wales

:17:03. > :17:10.until she had finished giving evidence. The degree of complicity

:17:10. > :17:15.that she was persuaded into included an assertion not only that

:17:15. > :17:20.she was present at teatime of the murder of Lynette White, but that

:17:20. > :17:28.after Lynette White was dead, she committed an act using a knife that

:17:28. > :17:32.made her forever complicit and that risk of being prosecuted for murder.

:17:33. > :17:37.Now that the South police corruption case has collapsed,

:17:37. > :17:45.Leanne Vilday, Angela Psaila and Mark Grommek will be demanding

:17:45. > :17:50.another day in court. I believe the collapse of the Swansea case may

:17:50. > :17:55.mean that a new appeal can be mounted for Leanne Vilday in which

:17:55. > :18:01.she can go to the Court of Appeal and say, although I was guilty of

:18:01. > :18:08.what I did, given what has happened, it was unfair for my trial to take

:18:08. > :18:11.place. Therefore, I should have my conviction quashed. But whatever

:18:11. > :18:20.the outcome, for Angela Psaila, there will never be any escaping

:18:20. > :18:30.the lies she told. My mental health is not in good nick. What happened

:18:30. > :18:32.

:18:32. > :18:42.has destroyed my life. If I apply for jobs, they recognise the name.

:18:42. > :18:42.

:18:42. > :18:46.As soon as they see the name. Life is hard now. It is very hard.

:18:46. > :18:49.corruption trial collapsed when the judge was told that evidence had

:18:49. > :18:55.been shredded by police investigating their former

:18:55. > :18:59.colleagues. A few weeks later, when that evidence turned up intact, the

:18:59. > :19:03.force and the judicial system had embarrassing questions to answer.

:19:03. > :19:09.Stephen Miller and his solicitor are demanding a public inquiry into

:19:09. > :19:15.the collapse of the case against the former police officers. Someone

:19:16. > :19:22.has got the balls in the office to say the inquiry will be a public

:19:22. > :19:27.inquiry. You know what I mean? Nothing. That is what hurts me.

:19:27. > :19:31.They are effing with people's lives. What Stephen and the others wanted

:19:31. > :19:36.was for the trial process to proceed, the evidence to be tested,

:19:36. > :19:46.and hopefully for the officers to be found guilty. To a large extent,

:19:46. > :19:47.

:19:47. > :19:51.that would have drawn a line in the sand for them. 23 years after

:19:51. > :19:56.Lynette White's murder, there are questions which cut to the core of

:19:56. > :20:00.the legal system. The officers have foreword -- always denied any

:20:00. > :20:02.wrongdoing. The judge said he could not guarantee them a fair trial

:20:02. > :20:07.because of the way evidence had been handled by the police and

:20:07. > :20:17.prosecution. I am delighted that after six-and-a-half years, I can

:20:17. > :20:21.

:20:21. > :20:25.get on with my life. Those eight officers, they are saying that they

:20:25. > :20:28.have been vindicated and that we do not know what they went through for

:20:29. > :20:36.six months. We have been going through that murder for frigging 23

:20:36. > :20:39.years. Where is our justice? director of the Crown Prosecution

:20:40. > :20:44.Service has said he is concerned at the collapse of a trial which has

:20:44. > :20:49.cost millions and is likely to undermine confidence in the justice

:20:49. > :20:54.system's ability to deal with alleged corruption within its ranks.

:20:54. > :20:58.You would think that with such a serious and important trial, the

:20:58. > :21:03.largest one in this jurisdiction's history of this importance against

:21:03. > :21:09.so many police officers, they would have got that aspect of the case

:21:09. > :21:14.right, especially when we were told that they spent �400,000 on a

:21:14. > :21:18.computer so -- system specifically designed to list and deal with

:21:18. > :21:21.disclosure of. Defence barristers wanted access to files containing

:21:21. > :21:27.complaints about the way South Wales Police had handled the

:21:27. > :21:31.corruption investigation. But they could not be found. Nick Dean QC

:21:31. > :21:35.told the court that there were a deliberate acts of destruction of

:21:35. > :21:42.four files, and that the instruction for the destruction of

:21:42. > :21:46.the files had come from a senior officer, Mr Cootes. Detective Chief

:21:46. > :21:49.is Superintendent Chris Cootes led the corruption investigation. Eight

:21:49. > :21:55.weeks after the trial collapsed at a cost of �30 million, the files

:21:55. > :21:59.were found in the possession of South Wales Police. Exactly how

:21:59. > :22:03.Britain's biggest police corruption trial ended is still under

:22:03. > :22:13.investigation. So what happens now? I don't think anything can happen

:22:13. > :22:13.

:22:13. > :22:18.to them now. There is the verdict from the trial. It is impossible to

:22:18. > :22:21.go behind that. According to the process we have, that is an end of

:22:22. > :22:28.it as far as they are concerned, and they have been declared not

:22:28. > :22:33.guilty. The corruption trial was the culmination of a seven-year

:22:33. > :22:37.investigation by South Wales Police. It was supervised by the police

:22:37. > :22:47.watchdog the IPCC. But because the trial collapsed, there are fears

:22:47. > :22:47.

:22:47. > :22:52.that not all the facts about what happened in 1988 will come out.

:22:52. > :22:57.believe that whatever the findings of that inquiry, we need to have

:22:57. > :23:02.them publicly aired, nothing held back, the whole unvarnished truth,

:23:02. > :23:06.if indeed they arrive at the truth. The MP has written to justice

:23:06. > :23:11.minister Ken Clarke and policing minister Nick Herbert, demanding

:23:11. > :23:15.the publication of all the findings. The policing minister should

:23:15. > :23:20.intervene and ensure that the remit, if it is not extended sufficiently,

:23:20. > :23:25.is extended again to ensure that everything, good or bad, sees the

:23:25. > :23:32.light of day. No one from the IPCC wanted to be interviewed about the

:23:32. > :23:36.case. It told us it is considering what, if any information, from the

:23:36. > :23:40.corruption investigation might be published. This whole thing stinks.

:23:40. > :23:46.Somebody somewhere knows the truth of what happened, and they should

:23:46. > :23:51.be brought to book for what happened, not least because people

:23:51. > :23:58.have been sent to jail unfairly and �30 million of public money have

:23:58. > :24:01.been spent on what seems to have been a waste of time. South Wales

:24:01. > :24:07.Police has spent more than �9 million investigating officers who

:24:08. > :24:10.were involved in the original murder inquiry. It has paid out

:24:10. > :24:15.more than �1.5 million in compensation to the Cardiff Five.

:24:15. > :24:19.But we have discovered that the public cost may rise even further.

:24:19. > :24:26.The Force is facing fresh legal action from those who say they were

:24:26. > :24:30."fitted up" and from a number of the officers who denied doing it.

:24:30. > :24:35.After winning his freedom, Ronnie Actie, like the others, wanted to

:24:35. > :24:42.know why he had been framed. they wanted me off the street for

:24:42. > :24:50.the rest of my life, I don't know. I would love to know why. One day,

:24:50. > :24:54.they will come out, the reasons. But he died in 2007, never knowing.

:24:54. > :24:59.And six months before the start of the corruption trial in Swansea,

:24:59. > :25:02.Yusef Abdullahi died of a heart attack. But the other three are

:25:02. > :25:07.planning a new claim for damages against South Wales Police, this

:25:07. > :25:12.time over the collapse of the trial. The purpose of that would be to

:25:12. > :25:15.fold, firstly to hold them to account for what happened and

:25:15. > :25:21.seconded to get compensation for our clients as a result of the

:25:21. > :25:24.additional suffering they have undergone and are continuing to go

:25:24. > :25:30.through because of the trauma they have suffered as a result of the

:25:30. > :25:36.trial collapsed. South Wales police have confirmed that 13 people are

:25:36. > :25:39.now suing the force for damages as a result of the corruption

:25:39. > :25:43.investigation and the collapse trial. We understand that they are

:25:43. > :25:49.nearly all former police officers. The Stephen Miller, there is more

:25:49. > :25:52.than money at stake. I am entitled to the money. I will not turn it

:25:52. > :25:59.away. But if I could have those officers in prison and not the

:25:59. > :26:04.money, I would have the officers in prison, rather than money. It is

:26:04. > :26:10.the principles. That is why we are still fighting the case, the

:26:10. > :26:14.principles of it. Miscarriages of justice had damaged the reputation

:26:14. > :26:20.of South Wales Police for decades. The Darvell Brothers, the Cardiff

:26:20. > :26:26.Newsagent Three, Jonathan Jones, Annette Hewins and Donna Clarke, or

:26:26. > :26:30.wrongly jailed, leaving unsolved murders. The cases remain open and

:26:30. > :26:33.under investigation. Reports into what led to the collapse of the

:26:33. > :26:37.trial are expected in the spring, but there is growing concern that

:26:37. > :26:42.they will not get to the bottom of what really happened, and that

:26:42. > :26:45.could damage the force even further. I do not want the good policemen

:26:45. > :26:51.and women of South Wales to be affected by what has happened in

:26:51. > :27:00.this case. That is why I believe the only way of laying this to rest

:27:00. > :27:05.in a constructive way is by having a full inquiry into all aspects so

:27:05. > :27:11.that the South Wales police can move on without this around their

:27:11. > :27:16.neck. We asked Chief Constable Peter Vaughan for an interview

:27:16. > :27:20.about this case. He said he could not discuss it because of ongoing

:27:20. > :27:25.inquiries, which he supports. No one can tell us how much Lynette's

:27:25. > :27:33.case has cost the public, but legal experts estimate that by the time

:27:33. > :27:37.it is over, it could be more than �100 million. When I first reported

:27:37. > :27:42.the hunt for Lynette's killer in 1988, no one imagined that it would

:27:42. > :27:48.have led to three murder trials, an appeal, a perjury trial and a

:27:48. > :27:54.collapsed corruption case. It has been going on for a very long time,

:27:54. > :28:04.a running sore. Did you think that 24 years on, it would still be

:28:04. > :28:11.continuing? Never. It is a tragedy for all concerned that it is

:28:11. > :28:15.continuing. It must be brought to an end. The Docklands may have

:28:15. > :28:20.changed since Lynette walked the streets. But life for those at the

:28:20. > :28:26.centre of this case remains dominated by what happened then.

:28:26. > :28:31.will never be over for me. People will always judge me for what the

:28:31. > :28:37.police made me do. It is not them being judged at the end of the day,

:28:37. > :28:42.it is me that is being judged. These officers did not kill anybody,