Episode 3

Download Subtitles

Transcript

0:00:02 > 0:00:04- He has stolen my son! - 'But I warn you,'

0:00:04 > 0:00:06Hill will come for his retribution.

0:00:06 > 0:00:10My absolute right as a father is to be questioned.

0:00:10 > 0:00:11Avenge it.

0:00:11 > 0:00:14I propose to apply at Chancery for the custody of my son.

0:00:14 > 0:00:17I ask you to plead my case.

0:00:17 > 0:00:19Do you want the child because I do not!

0:00:19 > 0:00:20But she does,

0:00:20 > 0:00:22and my one contentment is in her pain.

0:00:22 > 0:00:24Am I now to be employed here?

0:00:24 > 0:00:26You are apprenticed.

0:00:26 > 0:00:27It is gaol fever.

0:00:27 > 0:00:30Will I die from it?

0:01:13 > 0:01:15CHAINS CLANK

0:01:15 > 0:01:16CRYING

0:01:18 > 0:01:19SCREAMING

0:01:25 > 0:01:27CRIES CONTINUE

0:01:37 > 0:01:38SHE SCREAMS

0:01:41 > 0:01:43Please, no!

0:01:43 > 0:01:46SCREAMS AND CRIES CONTINUE

0:01:49 > 0:01:51Proceed.

0:01:51 > 0:01:53SCREAMS

0:02:03 > 0:02:05The blue, I think.

0:02:06 > 0:02:08No, no, the green.

0:02:10 > 0:02:12The green?

0:02:12 > 0:02:13Which?

0:02:13 > 0:02:14Green.

0:02:14 > 0:02:15That's no help.

0:02:15 > 0:02:18- Blue?- You're no help at all!

0:02:20 > 0:02:21And the masculine eye of the court

0:02:21 > 0:02:23must be pleased today.

0:02:24 > 0:02:25The green.

0:02:25 > 0:02:27But not excited, no.

0:02:27 > 0:02:30No, men move swiftly on

0:02:30 > 0:02:33from excitement to condemnation. Do you not think?

0:02:33 > 0:02:35Hypocrisy forming no obstacle.

0:02:35 > 0:02:37You cannot be angry.

0:02:37 > 0:02:38Then give me hope.

0:02:38 > 0:02:41You cannot, you...

0:02:41 > 0:02:45Your case is a battle of ideas. Perhaps Mr Southouse is right.

0:02:47 > 0:02:51The time has come to acknowledge a woman's right to her child.

0:02:56 > 0:02:59We are presented with the case of

0:02:59 > 0:03:03a sweet, young, free-born female tortured by the vicious

0:03:03 > 0:03:05Governor General of a slave-colony.

0:03:05 > 0:03:08Naturally, the story is everywhere.

0:03:08 > 0:03:10Torture in Trinidad!" It's a sensation.

0:03:10 > 0:03:12As no doubt intended by the prosecutor.

0:03:12 > 0:03:14You are distracted?

0:03:14 > 0:03:17Forgive me.

0:03:17 > 0:03:20Mr James Fullerton, acting on the female's behalf,

0:03:20 > 0:03:22- has paid for everything.- Why?

0:03:22 > 0:03:24High principles...a radical.

0:03:27 > 0:03:32So naturally he wants Garrow and must endure Southouse to get him.

0:03:32 > 0:03:35Southouse is content. What do you say?

0:03:35 > 0:03:37The case has substance in your...

0:03:37 > 0:03:41This importunate young person is connected to you?

0:03:41 > 0:03:45Ah, did I not say? No. George, pay your respects.

0:03:45 > 0:03:48George Pinnock, sir. You, of course, are known to all.

0:03:48 > 0:03:50The garrulous Mr Garrow. With admiration.

0:03:50 > 0:03:54Shift yourself, boy. I will have private word with the garrulous Mr Garrow.

0:03:58 > 0:04:01Mr Fullerton's prosecution would be a fine opportunity,

0:04:01 > 0:04:05an opportunity to open the conditions in our colonies to public examination.

0:04:05 > 0:04:08- I believe they are not generally... - A word of caution, if you will.

0:04:08 > 0:04:11- Of course.- Our government is deep in this affair.

0:04:11 > 0:04:15It touches closely upon the personal interests of several of its members.

0:04:15 > 0:04:18Who enjoy their own properties in the West Indies, no doubt.

0:04:18 > 0:04:21They cannot now prevent the prosecution, too late for that,

0:04:21 > 0:04:25but they can hinder it, and perhaps grievously.

0:04:25 > 0:04:27Is that so? Mr Fullerton attends upon us?

0:04:27 > 0:04:31Upon you. George, my chambers.

0:04:31 > 0:04:34I attend upon your distraction at the Court of Chancery.

0:04:36 > 0:04:38Mr Southouse?

0:04:38 > 0:04:40Almost late, what is it?

0:04:41 > 0:04:44Have you considered the consequences for Sarah herself?

0:04:44 > 0:04:46What if she loses?

0:04:46 > 0:04:48You must be in better heart, Will.

0:04:48 > 0:04:51Being late will not help her case.

0:05:20 > 0:05:22BABY CRIES

0:05:33 > 0:05:36Mr Silvester, I remind you our ground here is to establish

0:05:36 > 0:05:38the husband's cruelty to the son.

0:05:38 > 0:05:41Samuel, you do not know me.

0:05:41 > 0:05:43All rise.

0:05:49 > 0:05:54You live in an irregular household with Mr William Garrow,

0:05:54 > 0:05:58in an adulterous liaison?

0:05:58 > 0:06:01Which did not begin until Sir Arthur

0:06:01 > 0:06:02cast me out of his house.

0:06:02 > 0:06:04You are nevertheless an object

0:06:04 > 0:06:06of moral repugnance.

0:06:06 > 0:06:09A contaminated woman,

0:06:09 > 0:06:14yet you presume to bring action against your aggrieved husband?

0:06:14 > 0:06:16Solely in the matter of my son.

0:06:16 > 0:06:20Which you found upon defamation of Sir Arthur's character.

0:06:23 > 0:06:26Mr Fullerton, Mr Southouse has informed me

0:06:26 > 0:06:29that you act for Miss Calderon as prosecutor. Why?

0:06:29 > 0:06:30Principle.

0:06:30 > 0:06:34- Which particular one? - Tyrants make enemies amongst lovers of freedom.

0:06:34 > 0:06:36I have hopes that you may be such.

0:06:36 > 0:06:39I believe you were chairman of The Trinidad Commission,

0:06:39 > 0:06:43the civilian authority that replaced General Picton in governance of the island.

0:06:43 > 0:06:48As the first civilian commissioner, I inherited a veritable hell of General Picton's making.

0:06:48 > 0:06:52George, has Mr Southouse provided the specific terms of the indictment?

0:06:52 > 0:06:54I have it here.

0:06:54 > 0:06:56"That General Picton unlawfully..."

0:06:56 > 0:07:00"Unmercifully and cruelly did cause his man Vallot to inflict

0:07:00 > 0:07:04"torture upon on the body of the servant woman Luisa Calderon.

0:07:04 > 0:07:09"And thereby did beat, bruise, wound and ill-treat her

0:07:09 > 0:07:11"so that her life was greatly despaired of."

0:07:11 > 0:07:14Do you understand that in British law torture is but a misdemeanour?

0:07:14 > 0:07:20I do. But this case will allow us to expose all of Picton's many crimes.

0:07:20 > 0:07:21Mr Garrow,

0:07:21 > 0:07:25I heard talk of the Governor's jail the first day that I landed on the island.

0:07:25 > 0:07:26And what did you find?

0:07:26 > 0:07:29A place of nightmare.

0:07:29 > 0:07:34Filth, immorality, torment and promiscuous death.

0:07:34 > 0:07:36You mentioned many crimes, sir?

0:07:36 > 0:07:39How can you attest to this when you were not there?

0:07:39 > 0:07:43Mr Fullerton's provided much vivid documentary evidence.

0:07:43 > 0:07:46And an equally vivid witness.

0:07:47 > 0:07:50We travelled to France and then Italy

0:07:50 > 0:07:53- but always attended by gossip... - "We", Sir Arthur?

0:07:53 > 0:07:55Lady Henrietta Armistead and myself.

0:07:55 > 0:07:57The boy was with his nurse in England.

0:07:57 > 0:07:59DOOR OPENS

0:08:02 > 0:08:03Abandoned by his parent.

0:08:05 > 0:08:07And is it true that the child was separated

0:08:07 > 0:08:10from his mother, Lady Sarah, when he was at wet nurse?

0:08:10 > 0:08:12Another was found.

0:08:12 > 0:08:15Yes, but not the child's mother!

0:08:15 > 0:08:18All's one in the matter of milk, I believe!

0:08:18 > 0:08:20GASPS AND CHATTER

0:08:20 > 0:08:24There have been reports of much drunkenness on your part,

0:08:24 > 0:08:28fits of uncontrollable rage.

0:08:28 > 0:08:32Often, sir, in the immediate presence of your son.

0:08:32 > 0:08:36What say you to these charges of ill conduct?

0:08:36 > 0:08:37True.

0:08:37 > 0:08:42But who amongst us might not succumb to the provocation I endured?

0:08:42 > 0:08:44The criminal usurpation of my marriage, my...

0:08:44 > 0:08:47cruel, unjust exile from society?

0:08:47 > 0:08:52Yet I believe the innocence of my son has worked to

0:08:52 > 0:08:56bring out the better part of his father's nature.

0:08:56 > 0:08:58Decency has not prevented you from bringing this child

0:08:58 > 0:09:02of innocence into contact with a person with whom you have

0:09:02 > 0:09:05formed a vicious connection?

0:09:05 > 0:09:07Only the mother's adultery is material.

0:09:07 > 0:09:10- That cannot be just! - This will not help.

0:09:10 > 0:09:12It cannot!

0:09:12 > 0:09:15A father has the absolute right of full possession of his child.

0:09:16 > 0:09:18My Lord!

0:09:18 > 0:09:22Sir Arthur speaks as if motherhood were not a legitimate aim in its own self.

0:09:22 > 0:09:25By your conduct you have forfeited any rights a mother has...

0:09:25 > 0:09:30Does not the carrying of a child, the pangs of birth, the feeding,

0:09:30 > 0:09:35the constant care, confer a status greater than

0:09:35 > 0:09:36receptacle of a father's issue?

0:09:43 > 0:09:48It is, of course, true that a man's love for his son may be deep,

0:09:48 > 0:09:50when it is present.

0:09:50 > 0:09:52Oh, you shame yourself, madam!

0:09:52 > 0:09:56But this man's affection for Samuel is not a shadow of mine, his mother!

0:09:56 > 0:09:58Do I not have claim, in part at least,

0:09:58 > 0:10:02to the child I laboured long to bring into the world?

0:10:02 > 0:10:04- You abandoned him!- You lie!

0:10:04 > 0:10:06You stole him from me!

0:10:08 > 0:10:13Beside the point, madam, irrelevant to the law, m'lord.

0:10:13 > 0:10:16I have heard enough. Thank you, gentlemen.

0:10:27 > 0:10:28KNOCK ON DOOR

0:10:28 > 0:10:30Mr Garrow...

0:10:30 > 0:10:34May I present to you Senor Pedro Vallot.

0:10:34 > 0:10:36He was Picton's man in Port of Spain jail

0:10:36 > 0:10:39and the executor of that evil man's crimes.

0:10:40 > 0:10:43You kept a sorry jail, sir, but compendious records.

0:10:43 > 0:10:46The general required them.

0:10:46 > 0:10:48And what have you been paid to say, sir?

0:10:48 > 0:10:50The truth.

0:10:50 > 0:10:53Mind you do, all of it, but nothing else.

0:10:53 > 0:10:56What did the general pay you?

0:10:56 > 0:10:59The rate for each thing was fixed.

0:10:59 > 0:11:02So much for this. So much for that.

0:11:02 > 0:11:06What legal authority did you have for your thises and thats?

0:11:06 > 0:11:08I mean what law, sir?

0:11:08 > 0:11:12What General Picton said.

0:11:12 > 0:11:17Picton was as bloody a tyrant as any in ancient Rome.

0:11:17 > 0:11:19Help me to bring him down.

0:11:19 > 0:11:24First I will see Miss Calderon, it is, after all, her case. Where is the lady?

0:11:24 > 0:11:26Miss Calderon will meet us at The Boar's Head,

0:11:26 > 0:11:28in 15 minutes.

0:11:30 > 0:11:32ECHOING VOICES AND LAUGHTER

0:11:51 > 0:11:52BABY CRIES

0:11:58 > 0:12:02Madam, you and your friends come here to display

0:12:02 > 0:12:07and gawp like it were a Drury Lane entertainment.

0:12:07 > 0:12:11Vastly less amusing since you and your friend come here

0:12:11 > 0:12:13to scowl and sermonise.

0:12:13 > 0:12:19I came for my son. And I have lost him.

0:12:24 > 0:12:27Come away...come!

0:12:35 > 0:12:38HUBBUB OF CONVERSATION

0:12:51 > 0:12:53Where is the old man? Mr Sootyhouse?

0:12:53 > 0:12:56He's on other business.

0:12:56 > 0:12:59Mr Fullerton, who is this child?

0:12:59 > 0:13:01Your elder...I believe.

0:13:01 > 0:13:05But without the experience in your walk of life that I have in mine,

0:13:05 > 0:13:06I collect.

0:13:06 > 0:13:09Nevertheless, I'm your Mr Sootyhouse today.

0:13:09 > 0:13:11Mr Garrow...

0:13:11 > 0:13:14may I present to you Miss Luisa Calderon.

0:13:14 > 0:13:18Miss Calderon. I see that you have a prodigious talent for theatre.

0:13:18 > 0:13:23Beware of it becoming too high in The Bailey. Juries have a way to detect artifice and punish it.

0:13:23 > 0:13:25Do they also have a way of punishing a great wrong?

0:13:27 > 0:13:29Please.

0:13:35 > 0:13:37Miss Calderon,

0:13:37 > 0:13:40I believe that you were kept in the Port of Spain gaol,

0:13:40 > 0:13:42accused of the theft of £500 from your master.

0:13:42 > 0:13:45And that you refused to confess.

0:13:45 > 0:13:47I was innocent.

0:13:47 > 0:13:50So General Picton had you put to the torture?

0:13:52 > 0:13:54Twice.

0:13:54 > 0:13:57And yet still you did not oblige with a confession. Why so?

0:13:57 > 0:14:02Can you not conceive of the possibility that a poor person,

0:14:02 > 0:14:05a person of colour, perhaps,

0:14:05 > 0:14:09was not a criminal if a rich, white man says she was?

0:14:09 > 0:14:10Easily, I see it every day.

0:14:10 > 0:14:15Picton could not conceive of that. He used me most cruelly

0:14:15 > 0:14:16and I want him paid out!

0:14:18 > 0:14:19Dare you stand up for me,

0:14:19 > 0:14:22Mr Garrow?

0:14:22 > 0:14:26General Picton stood up for me on the occasion of giving me these!

0:14:26 > 0:14:30Taking pleasure in the infliction,

0:14:30 > 0:14:32great pleasure.

0:14:35 > 0:14:37I do stand up for you...

0:14:37 > 0:14:39at the Bailey.

0:14:45 > 0:14:46Mr Garrow?

0:14:46 > 0:14:50- Yes?- My Lord Melville requires your presence.

0:15:01 > 0:15:03Follow me, sir.

0:15:07 > 0:15:09Forgive the delay, Mr Garrow,

0:15:09 > 0:15:12official business eats my time quite away.

0:15:12 > 0:15:15- A glass with me, sir? - No, thank you.

0:15:20 > 0:15:24It must seem to you that our enmity is implacable,

0:15:24 > 0:15:27but it need not be so.

0:15:27 > 0:15:32We appear on the opposing sides in so many matters, sir.

0:15:32 > 0:15:34Oh, sides! A side is a surface.

0:15:34 > 0:15:39The real engine of our state turns at a much deeper level.

0:15:39 > 0:15:41Do you begin to see that yet?

0:15:41 > 0:15:45I confess, I am at a loss to see anything clearly here, sir.

0:15:45 > 0:15:50I requested that you attend on me in the matter of Luisa Calderon.

0:15:50 > 0:15:54I ask you, in the King's name,

0:15:54 > 0:15:58to keep it to the lady, that is to keep it narrow,

0:15:58 > 0:16:01to that one case, and to avoid all consideration

0:16:01 > 0:16:04of those wider issues

0:16:04 > 0:16:07regarding our rule in the West Indies. Mr Garrow?

0:16:09 > 0:16:11Yes...

0:16:11 > 0:16:16Your thoughts will be with the Court of Chancery, with Lady Sarah

0:16:16 > 0:16:17and Sir Arthur Hill.

0:16:17 > 0:16:23That gentleman holds the key to your future happiness, Mr Garrow,

0:16:23 > 0:16:27and that gentleman does my bidding.

0:16:27 > 0:16:30Melville wills, Hill acts.

0:16:31 > 0:16:33What do you intend?

0:16:33 > 0:16:38I will use my influence with Hill, and you know how great that is,

0:16:38 > 0:16:41to get him to give over Samuel into your charge.

0:16:41 > 0:16:45So Melville wills and Garrow acts?

0:16:45 > 0:16:50In consistency with his desire, his duty and his honour.

0:16:52 > 0:16:57I perceive here some shabby offer, some sly, underhanded, political manoeuvre

0:16:57 > 0:16:58and I do not like it.

0:16:58 > 0:16:59Careful, not too rash.

0:16:59 > 0:17:04May I just say that my honour is in no-one's hands but my own.

0:17:04 > 0:17:07I beg to be excused.

0:17:08 > 0:17:13Hurry, Lady Sarah will, no doubt, have need of comfort.

0:17:14 > 0:17:20You do not know that Hill has won his case. He's pleased.

0:17:20 > 0:17:22Not as pleased as you, my lord.

0:17:22 > 0:17:27Every man reaches a point in his life when he must compromise,

0:17:27 > 0:17:28or fail.

0:17:28 > 0:17:31Is that how you became what you are, sir?

0:17:31 > 0:17:34You may one day hope to do the same.

0:17:34 > 0:17:37You have it in you, I believe.

0:18:23 > 0:18:24What can I do?

0:18:25 > 0:18:27Nothing.

0:18:41 > 0:18:45Sir Arthur. Would you grant me a moment?

0:18:45 > 0:18:46Pray continue.

0:18:46 > 0:18:50I am here as Lady Sarah's friend

0:18:50 > 0:18:53to ask that you show mercy.

0:18:53 > 0:18:54Ask.

0:18:54 > 0:18:56Beg.

0:18:56 > 0:18:58How?

0:18:58 > 0:19:00Give the lady her son.

0:19:04 > 0:19:05No.

0:19:05 > 0:19:07I think not.

0:19:10 > 0:19:14Sir Arthur, all decent men will condemn you for this.

0:19:14 > 0:19:16Oh, indeed, will they now?

0:19:16 > 0:19:18And who is this who speaks for all decent men...

0:19:18 > 0:19:22oh, it's craggy old Mr Southouse, the Bailey furniture.

0:19:22 > 0:19:24An old man of little importance.

0:19:24 > 0:19:27Whose opinion of me is of no consequence at all.

0:19:27 > 0:19:28I cannot deny it.

0:19:31 > 0:19:32What?

0:19:32 > 0:19:35Will you not take the hand of this old man,

0:19:35 > 0:19:37the Bailey furniture?

0:19:37 > 0:19:39Who acknowledges your victory.

0:19:42 > 0:19:46I wish you joy of your triumph. I hope in the future

0:19:46 > 0:19:52you may reflect upon this moment with much feeling.

0:20:04 > 0:20:05KNOCK AT DOOR

0:20:25 > 0:20:26How is she?

0:20:26 > 0:20:29Utterly destroyed.

0:20:29 > 0:20:32I do not know what more I could have done.

0:20:32 > 0:20:35Maybe you think I did too much?

0:20:35 > 0:20:36Encouraged her too far?

0:20:36 > 0:20:40All you have ever been, Mr Southouse, is her good friend, and mine.

0:20:40 > 0:20:42Please, stay back...

0:20:44 > 0:20:47I abhor promiscuous demonstrations of affection.

0:20:50 > 0:20:54In time, she will take comfort from having exerted her powers to the limit.

0:20:54 > 0:20:58That will be a very small comfort indeed, if she does not get her son.

0:20:58 > 0:21:01Hill will never give him up.

0:21:03 > 0:21:07It will be best if I watch her alone, Mr Southouse.

0:21:07 > 0:21:11Good night, Mr Southouse. We thank you for your kindnesses.

0:21:11 > 0:21:12Good night.

0:21:38 > 0:21:39Will?

0:21:39 > 0:21:43Surely Lady Sarah has more need of you tonight?

0:21:43 > 0:21:47- This will keep till the morning. - She prefers to be alone.

0:21:47 > 0:21:50The hurt will ease in time.

0:21:53 > 0:21:57All hurts do. Even the deepest.

0:21:59 > 0:22:01We have ordered the prison papers, Will.

0:22:02 > 0:22:05And what a depraved tyranny it reveals.

0:22:05 > 0:22:09There are records for everything.

0:22:09 > 0:22:11I cannot use this...

0:22:12 > 0:22:16..or this, or this. The papers are disorderly, Mr Pinnock.

0:22:16 > 0:22:18No, there is much evidence here!

0:22:18 > 0:22:21Not to Miss Calderon. She is the case in hand.

0:22:21 > 0:22:23And part of the matter only.

0:22:23 > 0:22:26If we haven't Calderon, then we have nothing.

0:22:27 > 0:22:28Gently, Will.

0:22:30 > 0:22:32Fullerton's thoughts have gone before us.

0:22:32 > 0:22:34Everything is ready.

0:22:34 > 0:22:36- And the papers are here. - See, our plans are laid!

0:22:39 > 0:22:42It has been a hard, hard day.

0:22:42 > 0:22:44Go home to your lady.

0:22:44 > 0:22:46Find a way to comfort her.

0:22:50 > 0:22:51Hmm.

0:22:52 > 0:22:54There is but one way to do that.

0:23:20 > 0:23:23Before you speak, I wish to apologise.

0:23:24 > 0:23:26I was...

0:23:28 > 0:23:30Samuel did not know me...

0:23:30 > 0:23:31Will.

0:23:31 > 0:23:33He's so young.

0:23:33 > 0:23:36No, he did not know me, and now he never will.

0:23:37 > 0:23:40Well, there is yet hope.

0:23:40 > 0:23:43- There is no hope. There is none! - Listen... Listen to me!

0:23:43 > 0:23:46Today I attended upon my Lord Melville at his most particular request.

0:23:46 > 0:23:51- What can Melville want from you? - The government fear our use of the Picton trial

0:23:51 > 0:23:54to expose the true conditions of our colonies to public view.

0:23:54 > 0:23:58Powerful personal interests are at work against that.

0:23:58 > 0:24:02If I oblige them by keeping my argument narrow, to Calderon...

0:24:04 > 0:24:06You are promised Samuel.

0:24:10 > 0:24:15You would become Melville's creature entirely. You cannot.

0:24:15 > 0:24:16How can I not?

0:24:16 > 0:24:18I do not permit it.

0:24:18 > 0:24:21The decision is mine and mine alone and I have made it.

0:24:21 > 0:24:25Nothing in my life can take precedence

0:24:25 > 0:24:30over your interest in a matter so very close to your heart.

0:24:30 > 0:24:31Will...

0:24:31 > 0:24:32I am resolved.

0:24:37 > 0:24:39Thank you.

0:25:26 > 0:25:30My very best compliments, Madam.

0:25:32 > 0:25:35I am glad to see you, I will not say looking well...

0:25:35 > 0:25:37but looking better.

0:25:52 > 0:25:53General Picton.

0:25:53 > 0:25:56Indeed, Miss Calderon. Today you are before me again.

0:25:56 > 0:25:59You may not talk to our witness!

0:25:59 > 0:26:00Don't piss yourself this time.

0:26:00 > 0:26:03Come away, Miss Calderon.

0:26:05 > 0:26:07Good day to you, Mr Garrow.

0:26:15 > 0:26:18So, Melville, will he serve?

0:26:18 > 0:26:20If not provoked.

0:26:25 > 0:26:27Will?

0:26:28 > 0:26:31What's this? What have you done?

0:26:35 > 0:26:37Mr Southouse!

0:26:43 > 0:26:45Go in.

0:26:45 > 0:26:46Do your duty...

0:26:50 > 0:26:51Remember it...

0:26:51 > 0:26:54We will look to him.

0:26:55 > 0:26:56George...

0:27:14 > 0:27:15< Mr Garrow?

0:27:23 > 0:27:27Gentlemen, here you shall hear a thing almost beyond credence.

0:27:27 > 0:27:31That the governor of our colonial dependency Trinidad

0:27:31 > 0:27:39has abused the situation to which he was raised, and disgraced the country to which he belongs

0:27:39 > 0:27:45by inflicting torture on a young woman merely to gratify his tyrannical disposition.

0:27:47 > 0:27:52Luisa Calderon was a domestic in the house of Pedro Ruiz.

0:27:52 > 0:27:56A quantity of money was stolen, and as night follows day,

0:27:56 > 0:28:00suspicion was cast upon the convenient servant girl.

0:28:00 > 0:28:04But she most inconveniently and steadfastly maintained her innocence

0:28:04 > 0:28:08until at length the examining magistrate considered his present powers were at an end,

0:28:08 > 0:28:12and resorted to General Picton to supply the deficiency.

0:28:13 > 0:28:15General Picton obliged.

0:28:17 > 0:28:20Here is his authority, written in his own hand,

0:28:20 > 0:28:22in the language of the island.

0:28:24 > 0:28:27"Appliquez la question a Luisa Calderon."

0:28:27 > 0:28:29"Inflict the torture on Luisa Calderon."

0:28:29 > 0:28:32Who let us be clear, is a British subject.

0:28:33 > 0:28:35My Lord, I call Luisa Calderon.

0:29:09 > 0:29:12You must rest, sir.

0:29:13 > 0:29:14Too late.

0:29:14 > 0:29:17HE WHEEZES

0:29:19 > 0:29:22My life, in days...

0:29:22 > 0:29:26mind first, body next,

0:29:26 > 0:29:27then...

0:29:30 > 0:29:32It's all one.

0:29:36 > 0:29:42Miss Calderon, for how many days did you refuse to confess to the crime of which you were accused?

0:29:42 > 0:29:4311.

0:29:43 > 0:29:45COURTROOM MURMURS

0:29:45 > 0:29:47And what then happened?

0:29:47 > 0:29:49The jailer, Vallot...

0:29:50 > 0:29:53..put his hand upon me.

0:29:53 > 0:29:55I mean, I was put to the torture.

0:29:55 > 0:29:56COURTROOM GASPS

0:29:56 > 0:30:00Pray describe to the court what then happened to you.

0:30:00 > 0:30:05The wrist of my right hand was bound to a rope

0:30:05 > 0:30:07connected to a pulley.

0:30:07 > 0:30:10My left hand tied to my right ankle.

0:30:10 > 0:30:12Will I show you?

0:30:12 > 0:30:14My Lord?

0:30:14 > 0:30:16Very well.

0:30:23 > 0:30:24Like so.

0:30:26 > 0:30:28I was raised into the air.

0:30:28 > 0:30:33Suspended, and my foot lowered on to the spike.

0:30:33 > 0:30:37Spike? By spike you mean...

0:30:37 > 0:30:38picket?

0:30:38 > 0:30:39One like this?

0:30:43 > 0:30:46Miss Calderon,

0:30:46 > 0:30:50for how long were you tortured, that is to say,

0:30:50 > 0:30:52how long was each session of torture?

0:30:53 > 0:30:58I have been told it was more than an hour.

0:30:58 > 0:31:01And did General Picton spectate upon the torture that he devised?

0:31:01 > 0:31:03He did!

0:31:03 > 0:31:05And when you were put upon the picket the next day?

0:31:05 > 0:31:10Again... Every single minute of my torment.

0:31:10 > 0:31:13Until I was again insensible.

0:31:13 > 0:31:15Did you confess?

0:31:15 > 0:31:16Never!

0:31:16 > 0:31:20Yet you were held for eight months, without trial.

0:31:21 > 0:31:26Pray describe to the court the conditions in...that prison chamber.

0:31:32 > 0:31:33They are...

0:31:43 > 0:31:45..beyond description.

0:31:47 > 0:31:50And yet there you stayed, in fetters,

0:31:50 > 0:31:53daily to witness the place of torture,

0:31:53 > 0:31:55expecting it to be resumed at any moment.

0:31:55 > 0:31:57And still you did not confess?

0:31:57 > 0:31:59I did not.

0:31:59 > 0:32:03With my Lord's permission, I would ask Miss Calderon to show the jury

0:32:03 > 0:32:07the lasting effects of the torture and the confinement.

0:32:21 > 0:32:23COURTROOM GASPS

0:32:36 > 0:32:37Thank you.

0:32:43 > 0:32:45Have you seen Mr Vallot?

0:32:45 > 0:32:46No, sorry.

0:32:48 > 0:32:51Now... "Miss" Calderon.

0:32:52 > 0:32:56You have said that you were a domestic in the house of Ruiz.

0:32:56 > 0:32:58Did you not live in a state of prostitution with him?

0:32:58 > 0:33:00COURTROOM GASPS

0:33:00 > 0:33:01Speak true now.

0:33:01 > 0:33:04I was promised marriage!

0:33:04 > 0:33:09During your imprisonment, is it not also true that you shared the last favour,

0:33:09 > 0:33:15or perhaps in your case, the first of favours, with the jailer Vallot?

0:33:16 > 0:33:17Under oath now!

0:33:23 > 0:33:24Yes.

0:33:24 > 0:33:29Was this to increase your comforts during imprisonment?

0:33:29 > 0:33:33It was not mere comfort... it was survival!

0:33:33 > 0:33:37So you are a prostitute, are you not?

0:33:39 > 0:33:41Men have always...

0:33:41 > 0:33:45What...have they always done?

0:33:47 > 0:33:49Liked me.

0:33:49 > 0:33:51COURTROOM MURMURS

0:33:51 > 0:33:52Liked me.

0:33:53 > 0:33:58This is all I've had. No education...

0:34:00 > 0:34:04No fine suit of clothes, no silver tongue.

0:34:04 > 0:34:06An elaborate yes.

0:34:06 > 0:34:10You laid with Ruiz at the same time as indulging

0:34:10 > 0:34:15in a criminal intercourse with the negro Gonzalez,

0:34:15 > 0:34:19with whom of course you also lay, and who stole the money?

0:34:19 > 0:34:22I did not know he stole the money.

0:34:22 > 0:34:23So you admit the man?

0:34:25 > 0:34:27Is it not the truth, "Miss" Calderon...

0:34:28 > 0:34:33..that you are a whore, a thief and a liar?

0:34:33 > 0:34:38Is it possible that we are to take the word of such a person

0:34:38 > 0:34:41against the word of a distinguished servant of the crown?

0:34:41 > 0:34:43Hear, hear. >

0:34:46 > 0:34:47Miss Calderon...

0:34:47 > 0:34:50Miss Calderon?

0:34:50 > 0:34:54You say you were induced to go to the house of Ruiz by promise of marriage.

0:34:54 > 0:34:55Why not marriage at once?

0:34:55 > 0:34:58I was too young.

0:34:58 > 0:34:59How old were you?

0:35:01 > 0:35:02Ten years.

0:35:02 > 0:35:04Too young to marry...

0:35:04 > 0:35:07but not too young to be put in the bed of an old man.

0:35:10 > 0:35:11In Trinidad...

0:35:12 > 0:35:16..if a man likes a negress, he buys her from her owner.

0:35:17 > 0:35:20If he likes a mulatta...

0:35:20 > 0:35:23he buys her from her mother. I was sold.

0:35:25 > 0:35:30The word "prostitute" is harsh, I think, for those circumstances, gentlemen.

0:35:31 > 0:35:33Thank you.

0:35:44 > 0:35:45HE WHEEZES

0:35:48 > 0:35:50I must see him...

0:35:50 > 0:35:52Now.

0:36:07 > 0:36:09I swear by Almighty God to tell the truth,

0:36:09 > 0:36:14the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

0:36:14 > 0:36:16Mr Fullerton.

0:36:16 > 0:36:20Is it true that Miss Calderon was kept in the jail for eight months?

0:36:20 > 0:36:22So I was told.

0:36:22 > 0:36:27She was one amongst many in that place of nightmare.

0:36:27 > 0:36:31And you saw the instrument of her torture. Is this it?

0:36:31 > 0:36:33It is.

0:36:33 > 0:36:38It was but a small part of the horrors inflicted in that place.

0:36:40 > 0:36:44As...recorded in the prison documents.

0:36:48 > 0:36:50No more questions, my Lord.

0:36:51 > 0:36:53No, sir!

0:37:03 > 0:37:05Mr Garrow...

0:37:05 > 0:37:08My Lord, grave news of Mr Southouse.

0:37:10 > 0:37:14Mr Silvester, I find the need to consult

0:37:14 > 0:37:17on a matter of Trinidad law.

0:37:20 > 0:37:21Out of my way!

0:37:26 > 0:37:28DOOR OPENS

0:37:33 > 0:37:34He's dying.

0:37:44 > 0:37:46Will.

0:37:46 > 0:37:48Yes, it's William.

0:37:52 > 0:37:56Come to take your leave of an old friend?

0:37:56 > 0:37:58My leave? Certainly not.

0:37:58 > 0:38:01Take heart, Mr Southouse, there is always hope.

0:38:01 > 0:38:03Not always.

0:38:03 > 0:38:07It is gaol fever, Will. He has known for weeks.

0:38:28 > 0:38:29My friend...

0:38:30 > 0:38:32My wise old friend, hmm?

0:38:34 > 0:38:36I cannot begin...

0:38:45 > 0:38:49Do you remember how generous you were, Mr Southouse,

0:38:49 > 0:38:56to that...callow young man so sorely in need of your good wisdom

0:38:56 > 0:38:59and your quiet affection to guide him?

0:39:01 > 0:39:03How liberally you gave it both.

0:39:05 > 0:39:07And how much you are...

0:39:07 > 0:39:09loved for it in return.

0:39:12 > 0:39:13Father...

0:39:17 > 0:39:18My teacher...

0:39:21 > 0:39:23Conscience...

0:39:23 > 0:39:27I hope you have considered me a creditable pupil.

0:39:28 > 0:39:32Most creditable...

0:39:32 > 0:39:34when most...

0:39:34 > 0:39:36most yourself...

0:39:38 > 0:39:40Most proud...

0:39:40 > 0:39:42when you are honest...

0:39:45 > 0:39:49What did they...buy you with?

0:39:51 > 0:39:54With love.

0:39:57 > 0:39:59Water...

0:39:59 > 0:40:00Water, yes.

0:40:10 > 0:40:13Be yourself.

0:40:15 > 0:40:16Promise me.

0:40:18 > 0:40:19Yes.

0:40:19 > 0:40:21Fiat...

0:40:24 > 0:40:26"Fiat justitia ruat caelum."

0:40:26 > 0:40:28Hmm?

0:40:30 > 0:40:33"May justice be done though the heavens fall."

0:40:47 > 0:40:49You will watch him?

0:40:53 > 0:40:54Perhaps he will speak with me again.

0:41:01 > 0:41:03CHATTER AND BUSTLE OF CROWD

0:41:23 > 0:41:25Mr Vallot, you have been a wicked man.

0:41:26 > 0:41:29I only did what I was told.

0:41:29 > 0:41:32Without once speaking out against it.

0:41:35 > 0:41:36But you are fortunate,

0:41:36 > 0:41:40because you still have the opportunity to do so

0:41:40 > 0:41:42and perhaps your God...

0:41:43 > 0:41:45..he might still listen.

0:41:56 > 0:41:57Snake!

0:41:57 > 0:41:59Lackey!

0:42:32 > 0:42:34Life goes on, I see.

0:42:34 > 0:42:37It's a mighty machine, Will.

0:42:37 > 0:42:39It stops for no-one.

0:42:39 > 0:42:41How is your old friend?

0:42:43 > 0:42:44Dying.

0:42:46 > 0:42:49Ah. Sad indeed.

0:42:50 > 0:42:51Will you proceed?

0:42:53 > 0:42:55Are you able?

0:42:55 > 0:42:58I am. As ever.

0:43:08 > 0:43:10You will remember our arrangement?

0:43:21 > 0:43:22Call Vallot!

0:43:23 > 0:43:24Who is that man?

0:43:24 > 0:43:27Pedro Vallot, my Lord.

0:43:27 > 0:43:32Gaoler, executioner and torturer of Trinidad, whom I now call.

0:43:45 > 0:43:46Your son...

0:43:49 > 0:43:50..take him.

0:43:53 > 0:43:58Garrow will be...Garrow.

0:44:32 > 0:44:37Was this, the note written in General Picton's own hand,

0:44:37 > 0:44:41the instrument that gave you authority to examine Luisa Calderon?

0:44:42 > 0:44:43Yes.

0:44:43 > 0:44:45Please read it to the court.

0:44:50 > 0:44:56"Appliquez la question a Luisa Calderon."

0:44:56 > 0:44:59GASPS OF ASTONISHMENT

0:45:03 > 0:45:08And does this describe truly your part in inflicting that agony on that lady?

0:45:08 > 0:45:11It does.

0:45:11 > 0:45:16Miss Calderon has described for two succeeding days

0:45:16 > 0:45:20she was tormented in that same manner until she was insensible.

0:45:20 > 0:45:26- MUTTERING FROM CROWD - At which point you let her down. Is that so?

0:45:27 > 0:45:29God forgive me.

0:45:29 > 0:45:31Please answer the question.

0:45:31 > 0:45:32Please answer the question.

0:45:34 > 0:45:37I administered all the General's punishments.

0:45:37 > 0:45:40And how much were you paid?

0:45:40 > 0:45:41Five shillings.

0:45:43 > 0:45:46Mr Vallot, you are drunk, are you not?

0:45:46 > 0:45:47I am.

0:45:47 > 0:45:49Why?

0:45:51 > 0:45:57It is the only condition in which I can endure what I have done.

0:46:10 > 0:46:14Yes, one must be able to live with what one has done.

0:46:17 > 0:46:22I am obliged to inform you that Mr John Southouse, Attorney, has gone.

0:46:22 > 0:46:26When a good man dies, so much dies with him.

0:46:26 > 0:46:28Not the goodness, I hope.

0:46:28 > 0:46:32We have great need of that in this place.

0:46:32 > 0:46:38We who held him in such respect and regard should demonstrate it now.

0:46:49 > 0:46:51Mr Garrow?

0:47:18 > 0:47:22What other work did the General pay you for, in His Majesty's name?

0:47:22 > 0:47:23Is this relevant?

0:47:23 > 0:47:25Mutilations.

0:47:25 > 0:47:27Of slaves?

0:47:27 > 0:47:34Mostly, though others too. Mulattos. Even whites of the lower sort.

0:47:34 > 0:47:36Ear-cropping, how much for that?

0:47:36 > 0:47:40Five shillings for a slave, seven for a free man.

0:47:40 > 0:47:43Or woman. Lip cropping?

0:47:43 > 0:47:44More.

0:47:44 > 0:47:46- Eyelids?- More still.

0:47:46 > 0:47:49So they could not protect their eyes from the sun and dust?

0:47:49 > 0:47:50So they go blind.

0:47:51 > 0:47:53Castrations?

0:47:53 > 0:47:54Many.

0:47:54 > 0:47:56How many hangings?

0:47:56 > 0:48:00126 at 15 shillings.

0:48:00 > 0:48:03126 at 15 shillings?

0:48:03 > 0:48:07Mostly slaves. Some of those were burned.

0:48:07 > 0:48:1030 shillings for each burning.

0:48:10 > 0:48:1311... No, no...

0:48:13 > 0:48:1613 of burnings.

0:48:16 > 0:48:19And pray describe to the court those dreadful crimes

0:48:19 > 0:48:22which merited those punishments, for dreadful they must have been.

0:48:22 > 0:48:25Walking alone after church.

0:48:25 > 0:48:27Running away.

0:48:28 > 0:48:31Suspicion of plotting rebellion.

0:48:31 > 0:48:34Suspicion of poisoning cattle.

0:48:35 > 0:48:38Suspicion of witchcraft. Suspicion...

0:48:38 > 0:48:42Of anything that wandered into the General's mind at breakfast.

0:48:51 > 0:48:58General Picton, how do you characterise the state of the colony

0:48:58 > 0:49:00when you assumed the governorship?

0:49:00 > 0:49:05Perilous. That territory was but recently acquired by The Crown.

0:49:05 > 0:49:07A campaign in which you served with distinction.

0:49:07 > 0:49:08It has been said.

0:49:08 > 0:49:11What does perilous mean to a man of proven military worth

0:49:11 > 0:49:15and recognised personal valour such as yourself?

0:49:15 > 0:49:19Following the conquest when our navy had retired, French, American

0:49:19 > 0:49:22and Spanish privateers returned in great numbers.

0:49:22 > 0:49:26Not to mention the common pirates that stalked the surrounding waters

0:49:26 > 0:49:31like sea wolves. Raiding our shipping and our shores at will.

0:49:31 > 0:49:32And the island itself?

0:49:32 > 0:49:33In a sorry state.

0:49:33 > 0:49:37A hotbed of crime and sedition amongst the civil population.

0:49:37 > 0:49:41Near-rebellion, inflamed by voodoo witchcraft amongst the blacks.

0:49:41 > 0:49:43Perilous indeed.

0:49:43 > 0:49:46With such poor means and materials at my command,

0:49:46 > 0:49:50an unyielding regime was necessary to restore order.

0:49:50 > 0:49:54You faced an onerous duty, sir. We may wonder how you fared.

0:49:54 > 0:49:56What was the condition of the island

0:49:56 > 0:49:59when you handed over to the civilian authority led by Mr Fullerton,

0:49:59 > 0:50:02a mere three years later?

0:50:02 > 0:50:04Pacified and productive.

0:50:04 > 0:50:09And was everything that brought about this remarkable transformation

0:50:09 > 0:50:11done at your express authority?

0:50:11 > 0:50:14It was and I take full responsibility for all, without reserve.

0:50:14 > 0:50:17Thank you. M'lord.

0:50:21 > 0:50:25You take full responsibility for all measures that Mr Vallot executed?

0:50:25 > 0:50:27Without reserve.

0:50:29 > 0:50:31You are proud of your achievement?

0:50:31 > 0:50:33I believe I have that right.

0:50:33 > 0:50:37Though Fullerton there weeps for it like the proverbial crocodile.

0:50:37 > 0:50:38Proud of torture?

0:50:38 > 0:50:45If you speak of that woman, it was but a slight torture.

0:50:45 > 0:50:47She has exaggerated in play for your entertainment.

0:50:47 > 0:50:49You call the sufferings of that lady slight?

0:50:51 > 0:50:52Which LADY?

0:50:52 > 0:50:57The one that you abused most cruelly, most unmanfully and dishonourably.

0:50:57 > 0:50:59- Dishonourably?- Indeed!

0:51:02 > 0:51:04If she had been a lady, it might be so.

0:51:05 > 0:51:10All I see is hot, brown meat in a white cloth.

0:51:10 > 0:51:12General Picton!

0:51:12 > 0:51:14My Lord, I beg the court's forgiveness.

0:51:14 > 0:51:18General Picton is a simple soldier and moved to rough words

0:51:18 > 0:51:20when his honour is traduced.

0:51:20 > 0:51:22He will watch his words in my court!

0:51:22 > 0:51:26This lady is a British citizen, entitled to British justice.

0:51:27 > 0:51:29She...

0:51:29 > 0:51:35is a tuppeny-ha'penny mulatta whore who lay with a sambo,

0:51:35 > 0:51:38and helped him steal her white master's gold.

0:51:38 > 0:51:42She was entitled to what she got, and the rope she 'scaped.

0:51:44 > 0:51:49The island was teeming with half-breed criminal scum like her.

0:51:49 > 0:51:53- Harsh measures were needed to keep them in order.- And the Africans?

0:51:53 > 0:51:57There were, are, thousands upon thousands of them.

0:51:57 > 0:52:02Every last manjack and missy inflamed to rebellion by native witchcrafters

0:52:02 > 0:52:05and gentlemen of fashionable radical opinion such as yourself!

0:52:05 > 0:52:07Inflamed perhaps by your measures.

0:52:07 > 0:52:09Windbaggery!

0:52:10 > 0:52:13Do you know what a slave rebellion is like?

0:52:16 > 0:52:21On San Domingo not one white woman 'scaped rape then butchery.

0:52:23 > 0:52:26Babies skewered on pikes and carried as standards.

0:52:26 > 0:52:29Beasts, who must be tamed to strict obedience!

0:52:29 > 0:52:30Which you did?

0:52:32 > 0:52:33Which I did.

0:52:34 > 0:52:37And secured for this country a most profitable possession.

0:52:37 > 0:52:39Does a colony exist solely

0:52:39 > 0:52:42for our convenience, as a source of wealth?

0:52:42 > 0:52:44For what else?

0:52:44 > 0:52:47As a place where the common notions of justice do not apply?

0:52:47 > 0:52:48They cannot apply!

0:52:48 > 0:52:50Where any and all measures are justified

0:52:50 > 0:52:53if they lead to our general enrichment?

0:52:53 > 0:52:54Yes.

0:52:54 > 0:52:58Measures including, I quote further from the compendious

0:52:58 > 0:53:01records of your proud governorship, including...

0:53:01 > 0:53:05"Drowning in sacks like dogs.

0:53:05 > 0:53:09"Crucifying on planks. Burying alive.

0:53:09 > 0:53:12"Flaying with the lash then tossed on dungheaps...

0:53:15 > 0:53:19"..to be devoured alive by worms and insects."

0:53:19 > 0:53:24Six men burned to death, not in your usual humane manner,

0:53:24 > 0:53:26but with sulphur about their heads.

0:53:26 > 0:53:27Yes.

0:53:27 > 0:53:29Forgive me...

0:53:31 > 0:53:36Burning sulphur was placed about their heads as a means of execution?

0:53:40 > 0:53:43And all to pave the streets of Bristol and Liverpool,

0:53:43 > 0:53:47and put the sugar in our cake and the coffee in our cup?

0:53:47 > 0:53:49The record of my period of office...

0:53:49 > 0:53:50Speaks for itself.

0:53:52 > 0:53:56Today, sir, you are in a place where the common notions of justice do apply.

0:53:56 > 0:54:02And are demanded by this lady, for herself, and for all the others

0:54:02 > 0:54:08that you have tormented and murdered with your diabolical brutality.

0:54:10 > 0:54:13The beast in Trinidad, sir, is you.

0:54:15 > 0:54:17It is you who must be tamed.

0:54:23 > 0:54:29Gentlemen of the jury, you will consider your verdict.

0:54:44 > 0:54:47How say you, how do you find the defendant?

0:54:47 > 0:54:49Guilty, my Lord.

0:54:49 > 0:54:51So recorded.

0:54:51 > 0:54:54Damn you, Garrow... and your friends.

0:55:01 > 0:55:06Sentence is set aside until proper consultation

0:55:06 > 0:55:10with the appropriate authorities has been concluded.

0:55:13 > 0:55:15Court shall rise.

0:55:23 > 0:55:25What will his sentence be?

0:55:25 > 0:55:27Most of our government, including Mr Pitt himself,

0:55:27 > 0:55:29have plantations in the West Indies.

0:55:29 > 0:55:31Picton will go free.

0:55:31 > 0:55:34I must find some other means to come at him.

0:55:37 > 0:55:41No-one won here today, madam. But there was a kind of justice.

0:55:48 > 0:55:52What now? Trinidad?

0:55:52 > 0:55:54London.

0:55:54 > 0:55:58It's easier with friends. There's a shop I know...

0:55:58 > 0:55:59There's a shop?

0:55:59 > 0:56:02I tell you Master George, that the manager at Drury Lane

0:56:02 > 0:56:05has indicated the possibility of an offer.

0:56:05 > 0:56:08Then I might expect to see you on the stage?

0:56:08 > 0:56:11And off it, perhaps.

0:56:20 > 0:56:21Madam, please.

0:56:21 > 0:56:23What goes here?

0:56:23 > 0:56:25Madam. please.

0:56:25 > 0:56:30You may go. Lady Henrietta and I have something to discuss.

0:56:30 > 0:56:34Well? Come for more of your husband's property?

0:56:34 > 0:56:35I've come for my son.

0:56:35 > 0:56:42You know you are prevented from him, madam. His father says this.

0:56:42 > 0:56:44The Court of Chancery says this.

0:56:44 > 0:56:46And yet, I will have him still.

0:56:46 > 0:56:49There is a higher court than Chancery, madam.

0:56:49 > 0:56:52I answer to that. So do you.

0:58:17 > 0:58:18CROWD: Fox, Fox!

0:58:18 > 0:58:22It is a murder, Mr Garrow, of a gentleman struck down on voting day.

0:58:22 > 0:58:25Even if Sarah is run to France with the boy, I will pursue her.

0:58:25 > 0:58:27And I will bring an end to this.

0:58:27 > 0:58:29When a man was killed in your unjust war,

0:58:29 > 0:58:32you twisted your efforts so an innocent man would hang.

0:58:32 > 0:58:33Fox, Fox!

0:58:33 > 0:58:34I came to support a man who toils

0:58:34 > 0:58:36because he recognises a fellow innocent.

0:58:36 > 0:58:38Sir, I'm no fist-fighting man.

0:58:38 > 0:58:42But neither am I a man whose obligations can be deflected by blows or threats.

0:59:01 > 0:59:04Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:59:04 > 0:59:06E-mail subtitling@bbc.co.uk