Body of Evidence

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0:00:02 > 0:00:04# It's all right It's OK

0:00:04 > 0:00:05# Doesn't really matter if you're old and grey

0:00:05 > 0:00:08# It's all right I say it's OK

0:00:08 > 0:00:11# Listen to what I say

0:00:11 > 0:00:13# It's all right, doing fine

0:00:13 > 0:00:16# Doesn't really matter if the sun don't shine

0:00:16 > 0:00:19# It's all right I say it's OK

0:00:19 > 0:00:22# We're gettin' to the end of the day. #

0:00:26 > 0:00:27A couple of weeks ago,

0:00:27 > 0:00:31you were moaning that the workload was too heavy without Jack.

0:00:31 > 0:00:33We're not saying we don't need someone.

0:00:33 > 0:00:35It's just who that someone is.

0:00:35 > 0:00:38- What's wrong with Steve? - Nothing, nothing. He's a nice bloke.

0:00:38 > 0:00:40He just needs calming down a bit.

0:00:40 > 0:00:43- We didn't get a say in it. - No, you didn't.

0:00:43 > 0:00:46- Well, then.- Well, then, what?

0:00:46 > 0:00:50Finding a replacement for Jack was my decision and mine alone, Brian.

0:00:50 > 0:00:53- But it's a new member of the family. - No, it's a new member of the team.

0:00:53 > 0:00:56He's a good detective and that's all that matters.

0:00:56 > 0:00:57- Hey!- Oh, speak of the devil.

0:00:57 > 0:01:01- Hello, Steve.- I hear they found a body?- Apparently so, yeah.

0:01:01 > 0:01:04- But we don't do dead bodies. - Don't we?- Not fresh ones.

0:01:04 > 0:01:06Who said it was a fresh one, Gerry?

0:01:06 > 0:01:08- ALL:- Morning. - Settling in all right?

0:01:08 > 0:01:10Oh, yeah, I think they're settling in fine, yeah.

0:01:10 > 0:01:12Hey, where's my coffee?

0:01:14 > 0:01:18- Well, he just shouldn't be here.- I don't know, he don't look very well.

0:01:18 > 0:01:21No, I mean, he's not one of ours. Our bodies are all accounted for. We're very careful.

0:01:21 > 0:01:27When someone donates themselves to medical science, they deserve a certain level of respect.

0:01:27 > 0:01:30- And this young man? - He's been dissected by students and he shouldn't have been.

0:01:30 > 0:01:32- Why not?- The paperwork's all wrong.

0:01:32 > 0:01:35Sorry, we've been called in to sort out a clerical error?

0:01:35 > 0:01:39No, you don't understand. The system says this is Christopher Smith from Haringey.

0:01:39 > 0:01:41This is the where we were supposed to send his remains.

0:01:41 > 0:01:43You send the bodies back after they've been...?

0:01:43 > 0:01:48The ashes. We cremate the bodies and send the ashes back to the family, if there is one.

0:01:48 > 0:01:53One reason people donate themselves is there's no-one to come to the funeral or make arrangements.

0:01:53 > 0:01:56That's why I take a bit of care with them. Someone should.

0:01:56 > 0:02:00- Anyway, Christopher Smith from Haringey?- Doesn't exist.

0:02:00 > 0:02:02Name, the address, the next of kin - all fake.

0:02:02 > 0:02:05- And how could that happen? - I've no idea.

0:02:05 > 0:02:06System's all computerised,

0:02:06 > 0:02:10so someone would have had to get into the system and create a file for him.

0:02:10 > 0:02:13Though how they did that...

0:02:13 > 0:02:14You know, if I hadn't checked,

0:02:14 > 0:02:18he'd have ended up at the crematorium and then we'd have had no idea who he really was.

0:02:18 > 0:02:21So how did the body get in here and who admitted him?

0:02:21 > 0:02:23I would have admitted him and, if the paperwork was in order,

0:02:23 > 0:02:25I would have put him in the fridge.

0:02:25 > 0:02:28- His real name was Martin Longthorn. - How do we know that?

0:02:28 > 0:02:32He was on the Missing Persons register and we've confirmed it with DNA.

0:02:32 > 0:02:34You should know that he was one of us.

0:02:34 > 0:02:39- What, a copper?- Yeah. He worked in admin for the Met's specialist crime directorate.

0:02:39 > 0:02:43He'd been there for over ten years, barely missed a day's work.

0:02:43 > 0:02:46Then, a year ago, he went out for the evening and never came back.

0:02:46 > 0:02:49So how long has he been here? And how long has he been dead?

0:02:49 > 0:02:54Well, if the files are right, he's been here about a year.

0:02:54 > 0:02:56- Yeah, forensics agree. - So not long after he went missing?

0:02:56 > 0:03:01He's still a new body as far as UCOS is concerned. It's a suspicious death, sir. We can't touch it.

0:03:01 > 0:03:04Actually, there was nothing suspicious about the death itself.

0:03:04 > 0:03:06Catastrophic subarachnoid haemorrhage.

0:03:06 > 0:03:10This is Professor Blake, head of undergraduate medical education.

0:03:10 > 0:03:15The only positive aspect to all this is that Mr Longthorn has been given an extensive postmortem.

0:03:15 > 0:03:18My students have examined all his major organs in detail.

0:03:18 > 0:03:22The heart and liver were fine, the lungs showed a little damage,

0:03:22 > 0:03:24probably due to childhood asthma,

0:03:24 > 0:03:27but the cause of death, beyond any doubt,

0:03:27 > 0:03:30was a sudden and catastrophic subarachnoid haemorrhage.

0:03:30 > 0:03:33- Brain bleed?- Most likely caused by a pre-existing aneurysm.

0:03:33 > 0:03:37Could have been there for some time. May or may not have been diagnosed.

0:03:37 > 0:03:38It wouldn't have made any difference.

0:03:38 > 0:03:40Given the location, it was inoperable.

0:03:40 > 0:03:42So he just dropped dead?

0:03:42 > 0:03:45It would have been sudden, extremely painful,

0:03:45 > 0:03:47and nobody could have done anything about it.

0:03:47 > 0:03:50So, if he wasn't murdered, why would anyone feel the need to cover up his death

0:03:50 > 0:03:53by smuggling the body in here under a false name?

0:03:53 > 0:03:56Well, that's what I'd like to know.

0:03:56 > 0:04:01Well, it's obviously a special one, sir, unless you're going to come out on all our cases from now on?

0:04:01 > 0:04:03Martin Longthorn had a high security clearance.

0:04:03 > 0:04:06- I thought you said he worked in admin?- He did.

0:04:06 > 0:04:10However, he had access to information about officers working deep cover assignments.

0:04:10 > 0:04:14- You're kidding.- Obviously there was an awful lot of concern when he went missing originally,

0:04:14 > 0:04:17but the Missing Persons team couldn't find anything untoward,

0:04:17 > 0:04:19and our own internal investigation

0:04:19 > 0:04:23assured us that none of the information that Martin had access to was compromised.

0:04:23 > 0:04:26But now he's turned up here, under a false name.

0:04:26 > 0:04:28Yeah. And alarm bells are ringing all over again.

0:04:28 > 0:04:30So, who reported him missing?

0:04:30 > 0:04:32His mum Moira called it in.

0:04:32 > 0:04:36He lived with her, but she wasn't the last person to see him alive.

0:04:36 > 0:04:41He'd gone out that evening to a pub - The Reliance in Chalk Farm.

0:04:41 > 0:04:44Uniforms flashed his picture around,

0:04:44 > 0:04:48and they discovered he'd been with a local, Catherine Green.

0:04:48 > 0:04:50She said they'd just had a drink together

0:04:50 > 0:04:52and then went their separate ways.

0:04:52 > 0:04:54Do we have an address for Miss Green?

0:04:54 > 0:04:59Yeah, there's a workplace, an FE college library in Holloway.

0:04:59 > 0:05:03All right, I'll speak to her. Steve, Gerry, you take the mum.

0:05:03 > 0:05:06- How much does she know? - You'll have to go gently.

0:05:06 > 0:05:07What about me?

0:05:09 > 0:05:12I'll take you to the funeral directors' entrance.

0:05:12 > 0:05:15Obviously, they're usually picking up, not delivering.

0:05:15 > 0:05:17- But you do take deliveries?- Mm.

0:05:17 > 0:05:19How does it actually happen, then?

0:05:19 > 0:05:22How do you donate your body to medical science?

0:05:22 > 0:05:24Well, it's not so much to medical science, actually.

0:05:24 > 0:05:26You donate yourself to a medical school.

0:05:26 > 0:05:28We have a specific consent form.

0:05:28 > 0:05:32- Obviously, you have to fill it in before you pass.- Well, obviously.

0:05:32 > 0:05:35- Why would somebody do that? - People have lots of reasons.

0:05:35 > 0:05:37Like I said, if there's no close family,

0:05:37 > 0:05:40but mostly it's because they want to help others after they die.

0:05:40 > 0:05:43So, every now and then we get a call,

0:05:43 > 0:05:46and then we get a delivery from a funeral director.

0:05:46 > 0:05:47By the back door.

0:05:47 > 0:05:49Well, it's really not good for patient confidence

0:05:49 > 0:05:52to have hearses pulling up alongside ambulances.

0:05:52 > 0:05:54It's something you never really think about.

0:05:54 > 0:05:59Hospitals are supposed to be about preserving the living, not the dead.

0:05:59 > 0:06:02Well, a lot of people end their journeys here.

0:06:05 > 0:06:07Shall we?

0:06:09 > 0:06:11How long have you worked at the hospital?

0:06:11 > 0:06:14Um, best part of 15 years.

0:06:14 > 0:06:15And always in the morgue?

0:06:15 > 0:06:19Of course. It was just paperwork and big fridges when I started.

0:06:19 > 0:06:21Then they started computerising things.

0:06:21 > 0:06:25Never seem to have got it quite right, but I make sure I'm up to speed.

0:06:25 > 0:06:27- You do right. - I know what people think.

0:06:27 > 0:06:31It's just a morgue, no more harm to be done here. But it's important that things are right.

0:06:31 > 0:06:33Yeah, of course it is.

0:06:33 > 0:06:36They may just be bodies to the doctors and medical students,

0:06:36 > 0:06:38but to me they're my responsibility.

0:06:38 > 0:06:42And when the med students have finished with them, I think we owe them a bit of dignity.

0:06:42 > 0:06:45Is there any other way in to the department?

0:06:49 > 0:06:52Gerry, er, maybe you should take the lead on this one,

0:06:52 > 0:06:54me being the new boy and everything, eh?

0:06:54 > 0:06:56If you want. OK.

0:06:57 > 0:06:59Just come through, then.

0:06:59 > 0:07:00Thank you.

0:07:02 > 0:07:04When you say you have news about Martin,

0:07:04 > 0:07:06it's not good news, is it?

0:07:06 > 0:07:09No, I'm afraid it isn't, Mrs Longthorn.

0:07:09 > 0:07:11You best sit down, Mrs Longthorn.

0:07:18 > 0:07:20It's been a year with no word, so...

0:07:21 > 0:07:24I've prepared myself for the worst. Just say it.

0:07:24 > 0:07:26We found Martin's body.

0:07:32 > 0:07:33How? I mean...

0:07:33 > 0:07:35SHE SIGHS

0:07:35 > 0:07:37You know what I mean.

0:07:37 > 0:07:39We don't think there was any foul play.

0:07:39 > 0:07:42Martin had a brain haemorrhage.

0:07:43 > 0:07:45I see.

0:07:46 > 0:07:47Well, no, I don't, really.

0:07:47 > 0:07:50Didn't anyone take him to hospital?

0:07:50 > 0:07:53Erm, yes. Yeah, they did eventually, yes.

0:07:55 > 0:07:56I want to see him.

0:07:56 > 0:07:58I want to see my boy.

0:07:58 > 0:08:00We really don't think that's a good idea.

0:08:00 > 0:08:02If you don't take me, I'll bloody walk.

0:08:02 > 0:08:04I don't doubt it, Moira,

0:08:04 > 0:08:07but I think you should hear what we've got to say to you first.

0:08:10 > 0:08:14This is the only other way in, and look...

0:08:14 > 0:08:16Ah! How long do you keep the recordings?

0:08:16 > 0:08:1912 months. Do you want copies?

0:08:19 > 0:08:20Yes, please.

0:08:20 > 0:08:24So, if me or the other morgue administrators don't recognise you, you don't get in.

0:08:24 > 0:08:28So, how many people have the code for this place?

0:08:28 > 0:08:30Myself and the other administrators, medical examiners,

0:08:30 > 0:08:32some members of the teaching faculty,

0:08:32 > 0:08:36usually from the anatomy department, and medical students, of course.

0:08:36 > 0:08:40Anybody else has to be buzzed in, signed in and supervised at all times.

0:08:40 > 0:08:44So, whoever brought the body in either knew the code or knew someone who knew it?

0:08:44 > 0:08:46Mm. Exactly.

0:08:46 > 0:08:52Or else...they just watched somebody else type it in.

0:08:58 > 0:09:02Can they do that, just get a body out?

0:09:02 > 0:09:05Oh, yeah. They're all assigned their own cadavers

0:09:05 > 0:09:07and they can do extra study and dissection

0:09:07 > 0:09:11whenever they have time, providing the proper supervision is available.

0:09:11 > 0:09:14- They're just kids.- First years.

0:09:14 > 0:09:17- And do they get up to any hijinks? - Hijinks?

0:09:17 > 0:09:21Well, medical students have a bit of a reputation, don't they?

0:09:21 > 0:09:24They never offer to give somebody a hand?

0:09:24 > 0:09:26Or literally put a foot in the door?

0:09:26 > 0:09:28No, no, no, no. That just doesn't happen.

0:09:28 > 0:09:30- It doesn't? Really?- Really.

0:09:30 > 0:09:33Do you know what it takes to get into a medical school these days,

0:09:33 > 0:09:35let alone one as prestigious as this?

0:09:35 > 0:09:38They have to stay focused once they get here, and, believe me,

0:09:38 > 0:09:41Professor Blake wouldn't stand for anything like that.

0:09:44 > 0:09:46There you go.

0:09:46 > 0:09:47Thanks.

0:09:47 > 0:09:50The students didn't know. They thought he'd consented to...

0:09:50 > 0:09:51What have they done to him?

0:09:51 > 0:09:55The important thing to remember is he wouldn't have felt or known anything.

0:09:55 > 0:09:57But we're not going to lie to you, Moira.

0:09:57 > 0:09:59He's a bit of mess.

0:09:59 > 0:10:02You wouldn't want to remember him that way.

0:10:02 > 0:10:05You want to remember him like this.

0:10:05 > 0:10:08He was such a good boy, he really was.

0:10:09 > 0:10:10SHE SIGHS

0:10:10 > 0:10:12I mean, we had our ups and downs, you know.

0:10:12 > 0:10:15Well, of course. Mums and sons, isn't it.

0:10:15 > 0:10:17And it wasn't easy for him, having me as a mum.

0:10:17 > 0:10:19I'm sure that's not true.

0:10:19 > 0:10:23He was still a little boy when they told me I'd got MS.

0:10:23 > 0:10:26He had to get his head around what that meant.

0:10:26 > 0:10:28For the future.

0:10:28 > 0:10:30Still, Martin coped with it better than his father did.

0:10:30 > 0:10:33- Yeah, where is Martin's father? - God knows.

0:10:33 > 0:10:36He just walked out. Said he couldn't cope.

0:10:36 > 0:10:38And he left you to look after Martin on your own?

0:10:38 > 0:10:40No, Martin had to do the looking-after.

0:10:40 > 0:10:43He was my carer, really.

0:10:43 > 0:10:46I'm not saying he never complained but, you know, we managed.

0:10:46 > 0:10:48Sounds like a good lad.

0:10:50 > 0:10:52When he went missing...

0:10:56 > 0:10:59..I did wonder...if, um...

0:11:01 > 0:11:04..if he'd had enough of running after me,

0:11:04 > 0:11:06and had done what his dad did.

0:11:06 > 0:11:09And I wouldn't have blamed him,

0:11:09 > 0:11:11but I-I should have known better.

0:11:11 > 0:11:13Martin always wanted to help people.

0:11:13 > 0:11:16He tried to join your lot, you know, and be a policeman.

0:11:16 > 0:11:17Why didn't he?

0:11:19 > 0:11:21Failed the medical. His asthma.

0:11:21 > 0:11:23Yeah, but he did come and work with us.

0:11:23 > 0:11:26Oh, yeah, yeah. No, he loved his job. He really did.

0:11:27 > 0:11:31He said he...liked to feel he was doing his bit.

0:11:31 > 0:11:36Moira, do you know anything about this girl he was meeting on the evening that he disappeared?

0:11:36 > 0:11:40No. I didn't know anything until the police asked me

0:11:40 > 0:11:42about somebody called Catherine.

0:11:42 > 0:11:45He told me he was going to see a film that night.

0:11:45 > 0:11:48Well, sons don't tell mums everything, do they?

0:11:48 > 0:11:51Don't you think we know that?

0:11:54 > 0:11:58It was an internet date, through an online agency.

0:11:58 > 0:12:01Their computers match you up, put you in touch,

0:12:01 > 0:12:04and you go for a drink and see what happens.

0:12:04 > 0:12:05And what did happen?

0:12:05 > 0:12:11Well, I thought it was going pretty well but he deployed his parachute.

0:12:11 > 0:12:15- Parachute?- You know, the emergency phone call.

0:12:15 > 0:12:19Heading out on a first date and you don't know how it's going to go,

0:12:19 > 0:12:22so you get someone to call you 40 minutes in,

0:12:22 > 0:12:25and if it's going well you say, "Sorry, mate, I can't talk now."

0:12:25 > 0:12:30And if it's going badly, you pretend there's been an emergency and you have to leave immediately.

0:12:30 > 0:12:33A work thing in this particular case.

0:12:33 > 0:12:36Some kind of work emergency only he could fix.

0:12:37 > 0:12:40He was just trying to spare my feelings I suppose,

0:12:40 > 0:12:42which is something, isn't it?

0:12:42 > 0:12:44Well, maybe it was genuine.

0:12:45 > 0:12:47Why, what did he say exactly?

0:12:49 > 0:12:52Oh, I can't honestly remember.

0:12:52 > 0:12:54Something had come up at work.

0:12:54 > 0:12:58I didn't like to ask because I thought he was lying.

0:12:59 > 0:13:03He was nice enough to walk me back to the tube station.

0:13:03 > 0:13:04And then?

0:13:05 > 0:13:07I got a kiss.

0:13:09 > 0:13:11- On the forehead.- Ah.

0:13:11 > 0:13:16And that was the last I saw of him, or expected to see of him.

0:13:16 > 0:13:18I was hardly surprised when he didn't call,

0:13:18 > 0:13:23although I didn't expect the police to turn up looking for him.

0:13:24 > 0:13:27- Not my best date. - I don't know. I've had worse.

0:13:33 > 0:13:35Martin spent half his life in here,

0:13:35 > 0:13:38up until all hours, tapping away on that computer.

0:13:38 > 0:13:42Yeah? Was he in to anything specific, do you know?

0:13:42 > 0:13:43I haven't got the foggiest.

0:13:43 > 0:13:46He kept trying to get me to have a go, but I didn't fancy it much.

0:13:46 > 0:13:49Especially not after the headaches it gave him.

0:13:49 > 0:13:52Horrible they were, like migraines or something.

0:13:52 > 0:13:56- Did he ever see a doctor about that? - No. I kept telling him he should go.

0:13:56 > 0:13:59Is that what they were, then, that thing in his head?

0:13:59 > 0:14:00The aneurysm? Definitely.

0:14:02 > 0:14:05If he... And if he had gone to the doctor...?

0:14:05 > 0:14:07If I'd, you know, made more of a point of it?

0:14:07 > 0:14:09No, no, no, no.

0:14:09 > 0:14:13You see with Martin, where it was meant they couldn't have done anything about it.

0:14:14 > 0:14:19He said he could speak to people all over the world on that thing without having to leave the house.

0:14:19 > 0:14:20Well, he was right.

0:14:20 > 0:14:23But I wanted him to leave the house, though, get out,

0:14:23 > 0:14:25meet real people, not computer ones.

0:14:25 > 0:14:29All he ever did was go to work, come home and go on that thing.

0:14:29 > 0:14:31Yeah, but was he was happy?

0:14:33 > 0:14:35Well, he said he was.

0:14:35 > 0:14:36But?

0:14:38 > 0:14:41About a year and a half ago,

0:14:41 > 0:14:43he went for another job,

0:14:43 > 0:14:46still in the police. He wanted to join the e-crimes unit.

0:14:46 > 0:14:50The computer boys? Sounds like he would have been perfect.

0:14:50 > 0:14:51Well, he thought so.

0:14:51 > 0:14:54And he got through to the final interview but...

0:14:56 > 0:14:58..I collapsed that morning,

0:14:58 > 0:15:00out there in the hallway.

0:15:00 > 0:15:03One of the neighbours found me and called an ambulance.

0:15:03 > 0:15:05Martin should have gone to that interview.

0:15:05 > 0:15:08I mean, he knew it's what I would have wanted,

0:15:08 > 0:15:11but he dropped everything and came to the hospital instead.

0:15:11 > 0:15:12And that was that.

0:15:14 > 0:15:16Moira, would you mind if we took Martin's laptop with us,

0:15:16 > 0:15:19just to help with the investigation?

0:15:19 > 0:15:22Well, the last lot took the computer, the Missing Persons team.

0:15:22 > 0:15:25They reckon they didn't find anything.

0:15:25 > 0:15:27Yeah, but Missing Persons don't have what we have.

0:15:29 > 0:15:31Ohhh!

0:15:31 > 0:15:32What?

0:15:32 > 0:15:35This laptop - it's a UNIX-based operating system.

0:15:35 > 0:15:37- Meaning?- Meaning he doesn't know how to work it.

0:15:37 > 0:15:41- Oh, and you do?- Why don't we get some of the e-crimes boys down?

0:15:41 > 0:15:46- God, no, thanks!- Is that a bad idea? - Oh, I can't stand them hanging around, talking gibberish,

0:15:46 > 0:15:49treating us like we're moronic dinosaurs cos we're not on Facebook.

0:15:49 > 0:15:52- I'm on Facebook.- Of course you are.

0:15:57 > 0:16:02Right, then. This is the CCTV footage from the morgue on the evening

0:16:02 > 0:16:04that Martin Longthorn disappeared.

0:16:04 > 0:16:06Now, here's the first problem.

0:16:06 > 0:16:08God! How dumb is that?

0:16:08 > 0:16:12Exactly. The camera's pointing directly at the keypad,

0:16:12 > 0:16:15so if you can access the security system by computer,

0:16:15 > 0:16:18you can just watch somebody key the numbers in.

0:16:18 > 0:16:20Assuming someone did have access.

0:16:20 > 0:16:23Which they obviously did. Because look at this.

0:16:24 > 0:16:26Now, this is from early in the morning.

0:16:26 > 0:16:28Now, keep your eye on the clock.

0:16:28 > 0:16:31- Oh!- There. - What was that, like 20 minutes?

0:16:31 > 0:16:34- 22 and a half.- It's just gone.

0:16:34 > 0:16:39It's been erased from the hard drive, and the same section is missing from all the cameras, inside and out.

0:16:39 > 0:16:41Well, who could do that?

0:16:41 > 0:16:45Well, there's about 120 staff and students who have physical access to the morgue,

0:16:45 > 0:16:48but the hospital are very security-conscious,

0:16:48 > 0:16:50and I spoke to Professor Blake,

0:16:50 > 0:16:53and he says that there's a systems password

0:16:53 > 0:16:56that you need to get into the computer to get to the CCTV.

0:16:56 > 0:16:58And that password's changed every day.

0:16:58 > 0:17:00At least that narrows it down a bit.

0:17:00 > 0:17:05Yeah, but there must be some record of who could access the system and delete the footage.

0:17:05 > 0:17:08I, um, think they were probably smart enough not to leave a trace.

0:17:08 > 0:17:12- Er, Xander Levine. Detective Superintendent Pullman?- Yeah.

0:17:12 > 0:17:14Xander Levine, e-crime. From e-crime.

0:17:14 > 0:17:16Oh, hi. Hi.

0:17:16 > 0:17:18- There's a laptop?- Yeah. Brian?

0:17:18 > 0:17:20Xander?

0:17:20 > 0:17:22- Yes?- Is that your real name?

0:17:22 > 0:17:24Yes.

0:17:24 > 0:17:25I'll, er...

0:17:26 > 0:17:28All right if I...

0:17:28 > 0:17:30- No!- Not there, no! - That's Jack's desk.

0:17:30 > 0:17:34Er, tell you what. Steve, why don't you put your stuff up here?

0:17:34 > 0:17:36Er, oh, no, hey. I'm fine where I am for now.

0:17:36 > 0:17:40Xander, come over. I'll make a bit of space for you here.

0:17:40 > 0:17:41Pop it down there.

0:17:41 > 0:17:43So we've got 22 and a half minutes missing

0:17:43 > 0:17:47which is probably very likely when the body was placed in the morgue.

0:17:47 > 0:17:52So what we need to do is find the names of all the people who had passwords to that system

0:17:52 > 0:17:54to see if there's any connection to Martin Longthorn.

0:17:54 > 0:17:56Martin Longthorn?

0:17:56 > 0:17:57What?

0:17:57 > 0:18:00Sorry. This laptop belonged to Martin Longthorn?

0:18:00 > 0:18:02- Did you know him? - Yeah. Not well.

0:18:02 > 0:18:05He tried out for a job in e-crimes but something happened

0:18:05 > 0:18:07and he couldn't make the last interview.

0:18:07 > 0:18:11- Yeah, his mother was very ill. - He took me out for coffee a few times, I gave him some pointers.

0:18:11 > 0:18:12He went missing, didn't he?

0:18:12 > 0:18:16Yeah, his body's just been discovered in a morgue, under a false name.

0:18:16 > 0:18:17But why would anyone...?

0:18:17 > 0:18:19Sorry, that's what you're doing.

0:18:19 > 0:18:22- When did you last speak to him? - He took me out for lunch in a cafe,

0:18:22 > 0:18:25maybe a week after the last interview was supposed to take place,

0:18:25 > 0:18:27as a sort of a thank-you for helping him.

0:18:27 > 0:18:30That was a couple of months before he went missing. How did he seem?

0:18:30 > 0:18:34- Pretty upset.- Can you remember anything else you talked about?

0:18:35 > 0:18:37The Roguenet group, probably.

0:18:37 > 0:18:39Roguenet, what's that?

0:18:39 > 0:18:42Online group, political activists.

0:18:42 > 0:18:47They attack the computer systems of banks, insurance companies, that kind of thing.

0:18:47 > 0:18:49What was Martin's interest?

0:18:49 > 0:18:51Just curious, I think. That's why he wanted to join e-crime.

0:18:51 > 0:18:56He was interested in what makes the members of Roguenet tick and how they do what they do.

0:18:56 > 0:18:58Right, I've got some work to do,

0:18:58 > 0:19:04but you're welcome to stick around for a couple of hours and see if you can turn up anything on that laptop.

0:19:04 > 0:19:07- What you got there?- Oh, I picked up a sandwich at the hospital.

0:19:07 > 0:19:09It was either that or fried chicken again.

0:19:09 > 0:19:11Steve, you're in London. We have cuisine.

0:19:11 > 0:19:14Hey, it's not all deep-fried Mars bars in Glasgow, you know?

0:19:14 > 0:19:17Get off! All Scottish food's based on a dare.

0:19:17 > 0:19:19Hey, that's fighting talk, pal.

0:19:19 > 0:19:22- Here, I tell you what, why don't we go out to dinner?- What, you buying?

0:19:22 > 0:19:25- Behave yourself, it's not a date! Jump in.- Fair dos.

0:19:40 > 0:19:42I think I've found something.

0:19:42 > 0:19:46There's very little on here of any use, but I wanted to be thorough,

0:19:46 > 0:19:48so I dug around in a few places

0:19:48 > 0:19:54where internet history and login details can be cached without being referenced in the main registry.

0:19:54 > 0:19:58OK. It doesn't really... It wouldn't help you to understand that.

0:19:58 > 0:20:00What did you find?

0:20:00 > 0:20:02Hawksmoor 17.

0:20:04 > 0:20:06I'm sorry. I have no idea what that means.

0:20:06 > 0:20:08The Roguenet group.

0:20:08 > 0:20:11You're saying that Hawksmoor 17 is one of them?

0:20:11 > 0:20:14He cropped up on a few of the forums they use a little over a year ago.

0:20:14 > 0:20:17Very active for a while, talking to some of the key players,

0:20:17 > 0:20:19Jake Bentley among them.

0:20:19 > 0:20:22Jake was a leading light in Roguenet,

0:20:22 > 0:20:24called himself Major Mayhem.

0:20:24 > 0:20:27He's in prison here, awaiting an extradition hearing.

0:20:27 > 0:20:30The Americans want to try him for a denial of service attack

0:20:30 > 0:20:33against a Wall Street brokerage that cost them over 100m.

0:20:33 > 0:20:37- And Hawksmoor 17 is a friend of his? - Or an accomplice. We were never able to track him down.

0:20:37 > 0:20:40- But Martin Longthorn did?- No.

0:20:40 > 0:20:44This is a secure login ID for a forum held in the Ukraine

0:20:44 > 0:20:45by some of the Russian hacker gangs.

0:20:45 > 0:20:48The ID is cached in this computer's memory

0:20:48 > 0:20:52because it was needed to allow Hawksmoor 17 access to the site.

0:20:52 > 0:20:54Martin hadn't found Hawksmoor.

0:20:54 > 0:20:56He WAS Hawksmoor.

0:20:59 > 0:21:02No! He wouldn't have been involved in anything like that.

0:21:02 > 0:21:04I told you both, he loved working for the police.

0:21:04 > 0:21:09It must have been very hard on him, missing out on that computer job he'd set his heart on.

0:21:09 > 0:21:11Do you think he wasn't used to getting knockbacks?

0:21:11 > 0:21:14I'm sure he put on a brave face, but...

0:21:14 > 0:21:17He didn't have to put on any face on with me. I'm his mum.

0:21:17 > 0:21:21- Moira...- No. Why don't you just finish picking over my dead son's belongings?

0:21:21 > 0:21:23Then you can get out of my house.

0:21:25 > 0:21:30This doesn't work like any other criminal organisation you might come across in the real world.

0:21:30 > 0:21:32There's no hierarchy, there's no stated aims...

0:21:32 > 0:21:36- They probably don't even know each other.- Absolutely, Mr Lane.

0:21:36 > 0:21:38These individuals are scattered around the world.

0:21:38 > 0:21:43They never meet in real life and it's policy never to reveal their real names to each other.

0:21:43 > 0:21:44So what have they got in common?

0:21:44 > 0:21:48An interest in cracking computer security and a loosely shared set of social ideals.

0:21:48 > 0:21:53According to this, the Roguenet group claimed responsibility

0:21:53 > 0:21:58for crashing the websites of several major newspapers here and in America,

0:21:58 > 0:22:02and for leaking confidential reports from the Ministry Of Defence,

0:22:02 > 0:22:06- the NHS, the Pentagon and the United Nations.- Blimey!

0:22:06 > 0:22:09Surely all these activities require organisation?

0:22:09 > 0:22:12And if there's organisation, there must be a hierarchy.

0:22:12 > 0:22:15None that we can establish, and we've worked on this for three years.

0:22:15 > 0:22:18They talk to each other on various underground forums

0:22:18 > 0:22:21and they seem to form into cells to perform particular tasks.

0:22:21 > 0:22:23Not everyone does everything.

0:22:23 > 0:22:26We're still a long way from understanding how it all works.

0:22:26 > 0:22:29But you managed to catch this guy Jake Bentley.

0:22:29 > 0:22:31More by luck than design.

0:22:31 > 0:22:33We were after someone called Boz,

0:22:33 > 0:22:36who we'd identified as a key UK figure in Roguenet.

0:22:36 > 0:22:39Boz seems to be an activist in the more traditional sense,

0:22:39 > 0:22:43organising anti-corporate activities against UK companies,

0:22:43 > 0:22:47or fighting government initiatives on the NHS, unemployment, that sort of thing.

0:22:47 > 0:22:50We knew Boz was in contact with a someone called Major Mayhem,

0:22:50 > 0:22:55who'd helped coordinate some of the looting in London and Birmingham in 2011.

0:22:55 > 0:22:57We couldn't get close to Boz, he was too cautious,

0:22:57 > 0:23:00but we had some luck in tracking down Major Mayhem

0:23:00 > 0:23:03who turned out to be Jake Bentley, a 20-year-old kid from Leeds.

0:23:03 > 0:23:06And Martin Longthorn was in contact with Jake Bentley?

0:23:06 > 0:23:08- Yes.- And Boz?

0:23:08 > 0:23:10We don't know. It's possible.

0:23:10 > 0:23:12And Martin had access to some very sensitive material,

0:23:12 > 0:23:15not least the identities of undercover officers.

0:23:15 > 0:23:17Roguenet could be sitting on it.

0:23:17 > 0:23:19Saving it for a rainy day, you mean?

0:23:19 > 0:23:23Does putting the lives of serving police officers on the line

0:23:23 > 0:23:26fit the profile of a group of social activists?

0:23:26 > 0:23:29No, not the vast majority of them at least.

0:23:29 > 0:23:32- But there are a few who have no qualms about it.- Boz?

0:23:32 > 0:23:33Boz would be one of those, yeah.

0:23:55 > 0:23:57Major Mayhem, I presume?

0:24:00 > 0:24:03We want to talk to you about Hawksmoor 17.

0:24:03 > 0:24:05- Never heard of him. - Yes, you have.

0:24:05 > 0:24:08You spoke to him on and off for a couple of months

0:24:08 > 0:24:10on one of the Roguenet group forums.

0:24:10 > 0:24:14- The what?- Oh, no, Jake, don't play this game. You're not that guy.

0:24:14 > 0:24:19There's plenty in here who could sit across this table and give us some lip, but not you.

0:24:19 > 0:24:23- No?- Some brick shithouse with love and hate on his knuckles,

0:24:23 > 0:24:26takes a ski-mask and a sawn-off shotgun to work.

0:24:26 > 0:24:30That guy can sit across there and throw out some attitude

0:24:30 > 0:24:34because we can't make his day better or worse than it already is.

0:24:34 > 0:24:36But you're 21 years old, son.

0:24:36 > 0:24:40You've got a poster of Jar Jar Binks on your bedroom wall and,

0:24:40 > 0:24:43up until now, the scariest thing that's ever happened to you

0:24:43 > 0:24:47is watching a bootleg copy of The Blair Witch Project on your own with the lights out.

0:24:47 > 0:24:49STEVE CHUCKLES

0:24:49 > 0:24:51So drop the act, son.

0:24:52 > 0:24:54It's not cutting any ice.

0:24:56 > 0:25:00Hawksmoor's real name was Martin Longthorn. Did you know him?

0:25:01 > 0:25:03In the world? No.

0:25:03 > 0:25:06I talked to him a few times online.

0:25:06 > 0:25:07What about?

0:25:07 > 0:25:10I'm sure your e-crime boys have got the transcripts.

0:25:10 > 0:25:11What did you talk about?

0:25:13 > 0:25:16He reckoned he was a player.

0:25:16 > 0:25:18- Was he?- I don't know. Maybe.

0:25:21 > 0:25:23He jumped through some hoops,

0:25:23 > 0:25:26tests people set, to see how good someone is,

0:25:26 > 0:25:28to see if they're the real thing.

0:25:28 > 0:25:31- Break into a secure system, plant a flag.- A flag?

0:25:31 > 0:25:35A daft picture or a bit of code that makes the system behave a certain way.

0:25:36 > 0:25:41It's like a tag, or signature, so everyone knows you were there.

0:25:41 > 0:25:44- And Martin Longthorn passed these tests, did he?- Yeah.

0:25:44 > 0:25:46Why'd he get in contact with you?

0:25:46 > 0:25:48He was trying to sell something,

0:25:48 > 0:25:50- a file.- What file?

0:25:51 > 0:25:53Information.

0:25:55 > 0:25:59Confidential information he claimed came from a police server.

0:25:59 > 0:26:02And did he show you any proof that he actually had this information?

0:26:02 > 0:26:05No. I didn't push because I wasn't interested.

0:26:05 > 0:26:07I don't have a problem with the police.

0:26:07 > 0:26:10I think you're doing a difficult job as well as you can.

0:26:11 > 0:26:14My targets were the banks, the corporations

0:26:14 > 0:26:16and the governments they've got in their pockets.

0:26:16 > 0:26:20But this-this information would be valuable to somebody, though.

0:26:20 > 0:26:24Yeah! The Russian gangs would bite your hands off cos they can put it up

0:26:24 > 0:26:27for auctions and make a fortune off it, IF it was real.

0:26:28 > 0:26:30I had no use for it.

0:26:35 > 0:26:36Whatever he had...

0:26:38 > 0:26:39..it's worrying you.

0:26:42 > 0:26:44It should.

0:26:44 > 0:26:47- You introduced him to someone. - Yeah, I did.

0:26:48 > 0:26:49I introduced him to Boz.

0:26:54 > 0:26:56You knew Martin Longthorn.

0:26:56 > 0:26:58A little bit.

0:26:58 > 0:27:03But you don't seem surprised that he was this Hawksmoor 17.

0:27:03 > 0:27:04The data doesn't lie.

0:27:04 > 0:27:08No, but there might be more than one version of the truth.

0:27:08 > 0:27:11If you got an impression of him from meeting him in the real world...

0:27:11 > 0:27:16Who people are in real life and who they are online can be two very different things.

0:27:16 > 0:27:18You ever done cybersex?

0:27:18 > 0:27:19I'm sorry?

0:27:19 > 0:27:24Sex chatrooms online. Hook up with a stranger and talk dirty till one of you or both...

0:27:24 > 0:27:25No, I haven't!

0:27:25 > 0:27:30The point is that the beautiful blonde 25-year-old whose husband's away,

0:27:30 > 0:27:33and wants a good time with no strings attached,

0:27:33 > 0:27:38is probably a group of 18-year-old lads back from the pub having a big laugh at your expense.

0:27:38 > 0:27:39- Right.- Or a gay man.

0:27:39 > 0:27:42- Yeah, point taken. - Or a group of gay men,

0:27:42 > 0:27:44on the beer, tempting you to show your stuff on webcam.

0:27:44 > 0:27:46Can we stop there?

0:27:46 > 0:27:49The point is who Martin was here may not be who he was there.

0:27:49 > 0:27:52Just like whoever brought his body into this place

0:27:52 > 0:27:55could be the last person in the world you'd ever suspect.

0:27:56 > 0:27:58Who is Boz?

0:27:58 > 0:27:59I have no idea.

0:27:59 > 0:28:02And yet you've known him for what, two, three years?

0:28:02 > 0:28:06This is the internet, the cloak of anonymity.

0:28:06 > 0:28:08No-one knows who anyone really is.

0:28:08 > 0:28:10Yeah, but he's, he's a good hacker, this guy,

0:28:10 > 0:28:12like a leading light in this Roguenet.

0:28:12 > 0:28:13I've seen better hackers.

0:28:13 > 0:28:17What marks out Boz...is commitment.

0:28:17 > 0:28:19He really wants to change things,

0:28:19 > 0:28:23and he really believes in the methods of Roguenet.

0:28:23 > 0:28:25Cyber carnage.

0:28:25 > 0:28:29Violent change and upheaval, the destruction of the establishment.

0:28:30 > 0:28:35He wants to bring the banks and the governments that back them to their knees.

0:28:35 > 0:28:36And replace them with what?

0:28:36 > 0:28:40A government of the people for the people.

0:28:40 > 0:28:42He's old-fashioned like that.

0:28:42 > 0:28:47So, if this Hawksmoor 17 approached Boz with a file of sensitive information about the police...

0:28:47 > 0:28:49- Boz would buy it. - And do what with it?

0:28:52 > 0:28:56The most damage possible at the worst possible time.

0:28:57 > 0:29:02There was a story last year from America about a bloke, happily married with kids,

0:29:02 > 0:29:04launching a big online affair with another man.

0:29:04 > 0:29:09Things got pretty heated and they exchanged what you might call intimate pictures of each other,

0:29:09 > 0:29:12without their faces showing, to preserve anonymity.

0:29:12 > 0:29:15The problem came when this guy's wife gets into the computer

0:29:15 > 0:29:18to check her e-mail and accidentally stumbles across these pictures.

0:29:18 > 0:29:20She goes into a tailspin, and tells her mum,

0:29:20 > 0:29:25who takes one look at the pictures and recognises the other fella as her husband.

0:29:25 > 0:29:28So this bloke was having a gay affair online...

0:29:28 > 0:29:30With his own father-in-law.

0:29:30 > 0:29:34Christmas dinner at their house must have been interesting.

0:29:34 > 0:29:37- Oh, Mr Lane?- Hello, Colin. - Sorry to keep you waiting.

0:29:37 > 0:29:40I understand you need access to our system.

0:29:40 > 0:29:43Yes, this is Xander Levine, he's from our e-crime team.

0:29:43 > 0:29:46- Can I borrow a spare terminal? - By all means.

0:29:46 > 0:29:51The access password for the general staff changes weekly, as per our security guidelines.

0:29:51 > 0:29:52The current password is...

0:29:52 > 0:29:55LUH41793ZX.

0:29:55 > 0:29:58That bloke over there has it on a post-it note stuck to his monitor,

0:29:58 > 0:30:01from which we can glean that his home wi-fi key will be

0:30:01 > 0:30:03the manufacturer's default,

0:30:03 > 0:30:06and his domestic computer password is password.

0:30:06 > 0:30:07That man's a security risk.

0:30:07 > 0:30:10Don't let him take anything important home.

0:30:10 > 0:30:13You need admin access to change files and access security settings?

0:30:13 > 0:30:14Yeah, that's right.

0:30:14 > 0:30:17And you said that password changed every day.

0:30:17 > 0:30:18Yeah, it does. Only a few of us have it

0:30:18 > 0:30:22and let me assure you that none of us write it down and stick it anywhere.

0:30:22 > 0:30:25OK, there doesn't seem to be any way for a staff member to

0:30:25 > 0:30:28sneak into the secure system from these directories.

0:30:28 > 0:30:29Can you log me in as admin?

0:30:29 > 0:30:31I promise not to sneak a peak.

0:30:41 > 0:30:43OK. Thank you, Colin.

0:30:43 > 0:30:46- Is that it?- Yep. You should log out while you remember.

0:30:46 > 0:30:49- Nothing there?- I'm sorry we couldn't have been more help.

0:30:49 > 0:30:52- No, that's fine. I got what I needed.- Really?

0:30:52 > 0:30:55Yeah. I know exactly who altered these records.

0:30:56 > 0:31:00Auto-immune diseases are probably the most common chronic conditions

0:31:00 > 0:31:02your patients will present with repeatedly.

0:31:08 > 0:31:11This all happened at what, 2 o'clock in the morning?

0:31:11 > 0:31:122.07.

0:31:12 > 0:31:14What hours do you imagine I work?

0:31:14 > 0:31:16I was at home in bed. My wife can corroborate that.

0:31:16 > 0:31:19The file system and the security system

0:31:19 > 0:31:22were accessed by the computer in your office.

0:31:23 > 0:31:26- My office is locked at night. - And the computer shut down?

0:31:26 > 0:31:30- Yes.- The records were changed and the CCTV images deleted by someone

0:31:30 > 0:31:33who had administrator privileges on the system.

0:31:33 > 0:31:35There are several people with admin access.

0:31:35 > 0:31:37It was your login ID that was used.

0:31:39 > 0:31:41Well, I don't know what to tell you. I was at home in bed.

0:31:41 > 0:31:43Our system is linked to the outside world.

0:31:43 > 0:31:47I'm sure it would be possible for someone to hack into the system.

0:31:47 > 0:31:49- Oddly enough, we did think of that. - Right. And?

0:31:49 > 0:31:52- And that's not what happened. - Well, how can you possibly be sure?

0:31:52 > 0:31:54If whoever it was was smart enough to get in,

0:31:54 > 0:31:57then surely they would have covered their tracks and...

0:31:57 > 0:32:00Your password was used, Professor Blake.

0:32:00 > 0:32:02Excuse me?

0:32:02 > 0:32:07We looked into the possibility that somebody had breached security to get into your system,

0:32:07 > 0:32:12but your system's set up in such a way that that would have been impossible without leaving a trace.

0:32:12 > 0:32:17It's like after a burglary, you can always work out how the thief got into your house.

0:32:17 > 0:32:19This thief had a front door key.

0:32:19 > 0:32:23A password that was changed every day at midnight.

0:32:23 > 0:32:26So, when it was only two hours old,

0:32:26 > 0:32:30it was used to log in with your ID from your terminal,

0:32:30 > 0:32:33which had not been shut down that night.

0:32:33 > 0:32:37Professor Blake, why didn't you turn off our computer when you left the office?

0:32:37 > 0:32:40And who did you give your password to?

0:32:44 > 0:32:46Six years ago,

0:32:46 > 0:32:51the...government announced its intention to restructure

0:32:51 > 0:32:54some of the educational divisions of the NHS.

0:32:54 > 0:32:57To the public, they presented it as a cost-saving exercise.

0:32:57 > 0:33:01The actual implications of the changes would have been pretty dire

0:33:01 > 0:33:03for medical students and teaching facilities.

0:33:05 > 0:33:07I took it upon myself to stand up against the bill.

0:33:07 > 0:33:12I organised a petition, wrote several articles for the medical publications,

0:33:12 > 0:33:14and a number of letters to the broadsheets.

0:33:14 > 0:33:17I felt strongly opposed to what was happening.

0:33:18 > 0:33:20Someone got in touch with me,

0:33:20 > 0:33:22claiming to represent a pressure group

0:33:22 > 0:33:24that could put some weight behind my campaign.

0:33:26 > 0:33:29We exchanged a number of e-mails,

0:33:29 > 0:33:33within which I divulged information that I probably shouldn't have.

0:33:33 > 0:33:35Not privileged information, but sensitive.

0:33:37 > 0:33:42It came out incrementally, and it was only in hindsight that

0:33:42 > 0:33:46I realised this person had rather skilfully extracted it from me.

0:33:46 > 0:33:49And a week after our last correspondence,

0:33:49 > 0:33:53a document was leaked detailing the government's true intentions

0:33:53 > 0:33:56towards the NHS education department.

0:33:56 > 0:33:57It caused a stink.

0:33:57 > 0:34:00The proposal was withdrawn

0:34:00 > 0:34:03and a junior cabinet minister lost his job.

0:34:03 > 0:34:07So the person who contacted you used the information you provided

0:34:07 > 0:34:09to gain access to the document and then leak it.

0:34:09 > 0:34:11Yes.

0:34:11 > 0:34:14I didn't approve of the means, you understand,

0:34:14 > 0:34:19but the end was exactly what I'd hoped for and the best outcome for our department.

0:34:20 > 0:34:22So I'm afraid I kept my mouth shut.

0:34:23 > 0:34:27Then, a year ago, the same person contacted me again.

0:34:28 > 0:34:30This time he made a threat.

0:34:30 > 0:34:33He said he needed me to give him the admin password.

0:34:33 > 0:34:37If I didn't, he would divulge my involvement in the leak.

0:34:37 > 0:34:40That would have been the end of my career.

0:34:40 > 0:34:42He assured me that no-one would be harmed

0:34:42 > 0:34:44by whatever action he was going to take,

0:34:44 > 0:34:47and that nothing illegal would be done in my name.

0:34:48 > 0:34:50I didn't feel I had any choice.

0:34:50 > 0:34:53After the fact, I didn't even know what had been done,

0:34:53 > 0:34:57until we discovered the misidentified body the other day.

0:34:57 > 0:35:00The name of your contact, please, Professor Blake.

0:35:00 > 0:35:02I never knew a name,

0:35:02 > 0:35:04only a nickname - Boz.

0:35:06 > 0:35:08What happens now?

0:35:08 > 0:35:09I honestly don't know.

0:35:09 > 0:35:12I'll have to contact the CPS and they'll figure out

0:35:12 > 0:35:15if you've committed a crime and whether they want to prosecute it.

0:35:15 > 0:35:19- I realise I've been very stupid. - Unfortunately, there's no law against that.

0:35:23 > 0:35:27I mean he's just got one of the best voices in rock, ever.

0:35:27 > 0:35:29- Absolutely.- And he's a Scotsman.

0:35:30 > 0:35:32Rod the God was born in Highgate.

0:35:32 > 0:35:35Yeah, but culturally, genetically...

0:35:35 > 0:35:37What, just cos he wears a bit of tartan?!

0:35:37 > 0:35:39# You're in my heart

0:35:39 > 0:35:40# You're in my soul

0:35:40 > 0:35:44# You'll be my breath should I grow old

0:35:44 > 0:35:48# You are my lover You're my best friend

0:35:48 > 0:35:50# You're in my soul... #

0:35:50 > 0:35:52Yeah, nobody can resist a bit of Rod, eh.

0:35:52 > 0:35:54That's what I've heard!

0:35:54 > 0:35:56Cheers, mate.

0:35:56 > 0:35:58So, Brian, what's the best gig you've ever been to?

0:35:59 > 0:36:01Oh, I...

0:36:01 > 0:36:04I don't really like all the noise.

0:36:04 > 0:36:06I took Esther to see The Nolans once.

0:36:06 > 0:36:10- Oh, yeah. Did she like it? - Well, we left before the end. She had a headache.

0:36:10 > 0:36:12Why am I not surprised?

0:36:12 > 0:36:14Headache with the Nolans?!

0:36:19 > 0:36:21I'm just popping to the...

0:36:21 > 0:36:22THEY CONTINUE LAUGHING

0:36:22 > 0:36:25The Rolling Stones at Ally Pally.

0:36:25 > 0:36:28All-night gig, and before they recorded Satisfaction.

0:36:28 > 0:36:30Ah, that must have been incredible.

0:36:30 > 0:36:33- Oh, brilliant! Brian, poor old Brian was still there.- Yeah, yeah.

0:36:33 > 0:36:35Keith, Charlie, Mick the lip.

0:36:35 > 0:36:37THEY LAUGH

0:36:37 > 0:36:41THEY GRUNT THE TUNE TO SATISFACTION

0:36:44 > 0:36:47What, so you think you're not welcome?

0:36:47 > 0:36:49Well, what do you think?

0:36:49 > 0:36:52Gerry Standing is a friend of yours,

0:36:52 > 0:36:54and he'll always be a friend,

0:36:54 > 0:36:57no matter who goes in or out of that office. Brian...

0:37:00 > 0:37:02I think Steve's here to stay.

0:37:02 > 0:37:05- What, and you're not getting on with him?- I don't know him.

0:37:05 > 0:37:08Well, how might you get to know him, do you think?

0:37:10 > 0:37:12I think he's more Gerry's kind of person.

0:37:12 > 0:37:15Is this all about somebody taking Jack's place?

0:37:15 > 0:37:18No, no, it's not. Not at all.

0:37:18 > 0:37:20It's just all...changing.

0:37:20 > 0:37:23Don't go on the pattern!

0:37:23 > 0:37:24SHE SIGHS

0:37:24 > 0:37:27New people, new arrangements...

0:37:27 > 0:37:30Change can be good, can't it?

0:37:30 > 0:37:31Since when?

0:37:31 > 0:37:33No!

0:37:35 > 0:37:38Brian, Steve McAndrew has uprooted himself,

0:37:38 > 0:37:41he's come down to London to help UCOS out.

0:37:41 > 0:37:43He doesn't know anybody,

0:37:43 > 0:37:47he's probably feeling like a fish out of water.

0:37:47 > 0:37:50So instead of moping about and sulking

0:37:50 > 0:37:52because Gerry's got a new friend,

0:37:52 > 0:37:55why don't you take a leaf out of Gerry's book

0:37:55 > 0:37:58and try and help Steve to settle in?

0:38:06 > 0:38:11So Martin Longthorn was a hacker with Roguenet.

0:38:11 > 0:38:14Jake Bentley introduced him to Boz,

0:38:14 > 0:38:18who may or may not have bought a list of undercover police officers from him.

0:38:18 > 0:38:20Martin dies of natural causes.

0:38:20 > 0:38:22Why would Boz feel the need to hide his body?

0:38:22 > 0:38:27Maybe there was something about the body itself that Boz was trying to hide.

0:38:28 > 0:38:30Given where the body was hidden,

0:38:30 > 0:38:33and the fact that there wasn't an inch of it that hadn't been

0:38:33 > 0:38:35examined, dissected, and written about,

0:38:35 > 0:38:39why don't I check those student reports, see if there's anything there?

0:38:39 > 0:38:42- Yeah, good idea. - I'm already on to that.

0:38:42 > 0:38:44Anything, Gerry?

0:38:44 > 0:38:49Yeah. There's no porn anywhere on Martin Longthorn's computer.

0:38:49 > 0:38:52- Excuse me?- No, I'm being serious.

0:38:52 > 0:38:54He's a young bloke, he lives with his mum,

0:38:54 > 0:38:57and we know he has an interest in the female of the species.

0:38:57 > 0:38:58Just not female librarians.

0:38:58 > 0:39:02Yeah, I mean, it's weird there isn't a couple of nude photographs on there.

0:39:02 > 0:39:05I mean, in our day, we had to brave the top shelf

0:39:05 > 0:39:08and disapproving newsagents, but now...

0:39:08 > 0:39:11Blimey, you can get an eye full of anything,

0:39:11 > 0:39:14and you don't have to leave the house, and it's free!

0:39:14 > 0:39:18Half the fun of having a mucky book when you were a kid was finding a good place to hide it.

0:39:18 > 0:39:20Under the mattress.

0:39:20 > 0:39:21Behind the radiator.

0:39:21 > 0:39:23Top of the wardrobe.

0:39:23 > 0:39:25Not me, me mate.

0:39:26 > 0:39:30The point is, Sandra, we all collect bits and pieces on our computer.

0:39:30 > 0:39:34There's documents, photographs, videos, music.

0:39:34 > 0:39:37But there's hardly anything on Longthorn's.

0:39:37 > 0:39:41Now, the original investigation said there was nothing suspicious on it,

0:39:41 > 0:39:43but I think they missed what wasn't on it.

0:39:43 > 0:39:47- So where is all this stuff? - On a hard drive somewhere.

0:39:47 > 0:39:49- A cloud.- What?

0:39:49 > 0:39:50Online data storage.

0:39:50 > 0:39:54I remember Martin told me he had trouble renewing his online storage

0:39:54 > 0:39:56because the company wouldn't recognise his new credit card.

0:39:56 > 0:40:00- What was the name of the company? - I think I remember.

0:40:00 > 0:40:02Hey!

0:40:03 > 0:40:05Can I...?

0:40:08 > 0:40:11It was a data haven in the Philippines.

0:40:11 > 0:40:13I remember cos it's off the beaten track,

0:40:13 > 0:40:16not the kind of place most people would use.

0:40:18 > 0:40:20But we don't know the login details.

0:40:20 > 0:40:22Maybe we don't need to.

0:40:22 > 0:40:25- How's that?- Because you send a thief to catch a thief.

0:40:25 > 0:40:29Before I was with e-crime, I was...freelance.

0:40:29 > 0:40:32- You were a hacker? - In the dim and distant past.

0:40:32 > 0:40:37- That date that Martin went on the night he disappeared - did they eat? - No, they just went out for a drink.

0:40:37 > 0:40:41Well, he ate somewhere. There's a report here on stomach contents.

0:40:41 > 0:40:45He had fish, potatoes, kaffir lime leaves, lemongrass and beetle leaves.

0:40:45 > 0:40:49Beetle leaves? Sounds like Thai. And expensive.

0:40:49 > 0:40:51So he bailed on Catherine and went out for dinner?

0:40:51 > 0:40:54- BRIAN:- There's nothing on his credit cards or bank statements.

0:40:54 > 0:40:56Maybe he paid cash. Maybe someone else paid.

0:40:56 > 0:41:00All right, get a list of all the Thai restaurants near to where

0:41:00 > 0:41:02he met Catherine and also near to his house.

0:41:02 > 0:41:04And then look over the past few statements

0:41:04 > 0:41:06because he might have eaten there before.

0:41:06 > 0:41:10Got it! The contents of Martin's online data storage.

0:41:10 > 0:41:12Ah-ha! The porn stash.

0:41:12 > 0:41:14Roguenet. Look at all this lot.

0:41:14 > 0:41:16Blimey, there's hundreds of them.

0:41:19 > 0:41:21Why has he collected all this stuff?

0:41:21 > 0:41:25This is an investigation. He's collecting evidence,

0:41:25 > 0:41:27- against Roguenet.- What do you mean?

0:41:27 > 0:41:29Well, what if our man wasn't a hacker at all?

0:41:29 > 0:41:33He wanted to be a cop, didn't he? But he couldn't because of his asthma,

0:41:33 > 0:41:37and then he missed the e-crime gig because of his mother's illness.

0:41:37 > 0:41:42Well, what if he's trying to prove that he can succeed where e-crime failed?

0:41:43 > 0:41:49Here, look. He's goading Boz with supposed inside information about the police.

0:41:49 > 0:41:52Which presumably he had no intention of actually handing over.

0:41:52 > 0:41:55So at the time of his death, he was actively seeking out Boz.

0:41:55 > 0:41:58And considering what happened, it looks like he succeeded.

0:42:00 > 0:42:04- CATHERINE:- I'm really not sure I can be of any more help.

0:42:04 > 0:42:07It was hardly the longest date of my life,

0:42:07 > 0:42:11and I've already recounted it several times in as much detail as I can remember.

0:42:11 > 0:42:14Actually, it's the phone call we're interested in.

0:42:14 > 0:42:19Yes, he got a call after about 45 minutes of slightly awkward small talk.

0:42:19 > 0:42:23And that was the friend with the bail-out opportunity, you think?

0:42:23 > 0:42:26Yeah. Although I thought it was going pretty well.

0:42:26 > 0:42:29Maybe I'd been on more of those things than he had,

0:42:29 > 0:42:32and I was just judging it in the light of worse experiences.

0:42:32 > 0:42:35He claimed it was a call from work?

0:42:35 > 0:42:40Yeah, although he didn't actually say that. I might have just assumed.

0:42:40 > 0:42:41Anyway, you're the police.

0:42:41 > 0:42:44Can't you trace the call and find out who phoned him?

0:42:44 > 0:42:47Unfortunately it was a prepaid phone that was never recovered.

0:42:47 > 0:42:51If Martin didn't actually say it was a call from work,

0:42:51 > 0:42:53then why did you think that?

0:42:53 > 0:42:57It's the way he answered the phone. He said, "Hello, Boss."

0:42:57 > 0:43:01I think he was playing it a little bit cool because I was there, I suppose.

0:43:01 > 0:43:04- "Hello, Boss." Are you sure it was "boss"?- As opposed to...?

0:43:04 > 0:43:07- Boz.- Well...

0:43:07 > 0:43:12I don't know who or what Boz is, but I suppose they sound the same.

0:43:13 > 0:43:17Martin seems to have latched onto one particular IP address.

0:43:17 > 0:43:21He's tracking it round the web on shopping sites,

0:43:21 > 0:43:23message boards, the works.

0:43:23 > 0:43:25Did he manage to get a location?

0:43:25 > 0:43:26Not that I can see.

0:43:26 > 0:43:29But he was building a profile of the user.

0:43:32 > 0:43:37Why are you using this desk when there's an empty desk over there?

0:43:38 > 0:43:39Well, it's a...

0:43:40 > 0:43:42..bit of a delicate situation.

0:43:44 > 0:43:46Never fancied a desk job!

0:43:52 > 0:43:53Table for two?

0:43:53 > 0:43:56Detective Superintendent Pullman. Are you the owner by any chance?

0:43:56 > 0:43:59- How can I help? - Do you recognise this man?

0:43:59 > 0:44:01Yes. He used to come in here quite often.

0:44:03 > 0:44:05Longthorn, Longthorn...

0:44:05 > 0:44:07Nothing for that night, I'm afraid.

0:44:07 > 0:44:11Doesn't mean he wasn't here, of course, just that he didn't make a reservation

0:44:11 > 0:44:12- Can I take a look?- Mm.

0:44:15 > 0:44:19What about this one? Same evening, a party of ten - Hannah Barker.

0:44:19 > 0:44:22- What about it?- Well, it says "cake" under the booking.

0:44:22 > 0:44:23Does that mean what I think it means?

0:44:23 > 0:44:26It would have been someone's birthday.

0:44:26 > 0:44:29And what do people bring to birthdays, apart from presents.

0:44:29 > 0:44:31- Cards?- Cameras.

0:44:35 > 0:44:38There, there! Is that him?

0:44:38 > 0:44:41Yes, that is him, but you can't see who he's with.

0:44:41 > 0:44:45Hang on a minute, look. The waiter's taking a photo of him

0:44:45 > 0:44:47and whoever he's with on a mobile phone.

0:44:47 > 0:44:49Brian, look. It's tiny. Can you enlarge it?

0:44:49 > 0:44:53Yeah. Send it over to me. I'll see if I can get it clearer.

0:44:57 > 0:45:01Ooh, there's a lot of noise on this picture, but hang on.

0:45:12 > 0:45:15- He's holding someone's hand. - It's a woman.

0:45:15 > 0:45:17So he left Catherine to go and meet another woman.

0:45:17 > 0:45:21Have you just got to where I've got to? Boz is a woman.

0:45:21 > 0:45:24Certainly looks like it. What have you got?

0:45:24 > 0:45:27The IP address Martin was tracking led to a dating site.

0:45:27 > 0:45:30The person whose address it was was logged in as a client.

0:45:30 > 0:45:32So he was doing online dating to try to find Boz.

0:45:32 > 0:45:35- So he had a date with her?- He did.

0:45:35 > 0:45:38Can you get a list of who he saw? We need the one after Catherine.

0:45:38 > 0:45:40- He just had one date.- What?

0:45:40 > 0:45:42He got Boz on the first attempt.

0:45:42 > 0:45:46There was just one date at 8 o'clock that evening.

0:45:58 > 0:46:00Hello, Boz.

0:46:06 > 0:46:08POLICE!

0:46:08 > 0:46:09CLEAR!

0:46:12 > 0:46:14- OFFICER:- Nothing upstairs.

0:46:16 > 0:46:17I think I'm in love.

0:46:19 > 0:46:21I get confused with one!

0:46:21 > 0:46:22Yeah, join the club.

0:46:40 > 0:46:43Russian? Why is it in Russian?

0:46:43 > 0:46:46It's a security system designed by one of the Russian hacker gangs.

0:46:46 > 0:46:49We're seeing more of these. No-one's figured a way around them yet.

0:46:49 > 0:46:52You get three chances to get the password right.

0:46:52 > 0:46:54If not, the software wipes the entire hard drive for good.

0:46:54 > 0:46:56But there must be a back door.

0:46:56 > 0:46:59What if you take the hard drive out of the machine?

0:46:59 > 0:47:02No, the software gets wired into a physical trembler,

0:47:02 > 0:47:06an anti-tampering device that's got an internal battery.

0:47:06 > 0:47:08Even if the machine's turned off,

0:47:08 > 0:47:11any attempt to disconnect the drive triggers the wipe.

0:47:11 > 0:47:12Then we need the password.

0:47:12 > 0:47:16However obscure, it's going to be something meaningful, something personal.

0:47:16 > 0:47:18Yeah, but we don't know anything about Boz.

0:47:18 > 0:47:21No, not Boz. Boz is a fictional creation. Catherine.

0:47:21 > 0:47:23We don't know much about her, do we?

0:47:23 > 0:47:26No, but we've got her online dating profile.

0:47:26 > 0:47:32If she was genuinely looking for a relationship, then she's probably told the truth about herself on here.

0:47:32 > 0:47:33Here we go.

0:47:33 > 0:47:35Right, she's a big reader.

0:47:35 > 0:47:38No surprise there, given her job.

0:47:38 > 0:47:41A Tale Of Two Cities,

0:47:41 > 0:47:43Bleak House,

0:47:43 > 0:47:44The Old Curios...

0:47:44 > 0:47:46That's it!

0:47:46 > 0:47:48- What is?- I'll call you back.

0:47:50 > 0:47:51I should have realised sooner.

0:47:51 > 0:47:53Boz.

0:47:53 > 0:47:56The original pen-name of Charles Dickens.

0:47:56 > 0:47:58I don't know what that has to do with me.

0:47:58 > 0:48:00Oh, come on, Catherine.

0:48:00 > 0:48:03You're a bit of a fan of Charles Dickens, aren't you?

0:48:03 > 0:48:05I don't think I'm the only one.

0:48:05 > 0:48:09And I bet you know a bit about him, I imagine, being a librarian.

0:48:10 > 0:48:12Boz was his pen-name.

0:48:12 > 0:48:16It was taken from a nickname he'd given his younger brother.

0:48:16 > 0:48:21Used to call him Moses, but when he said it in a funny nasal tone,

0:48:21 > 0:48:25it became Boses, which got shortened to Boz.

0:48:28 > 0:48:31His brother's real name was Augustus.

0:48:33 > 0:48:35Thank you.

0:48:35 > 0:48:37Augustus. Are you sure?

0:48:37 > 0:48:39- It got a reaction. - That might not mean...

0:48:39 > 0:48:42She knows we'll look for her password, doesn't she,

0:48:42 > 0:48:43so that's on her mind.

0:48:43 > 0:48:47Augustus ties in with Boz and it got a reaction.

0:48:47 > 0:48:51It's too easy. There's no numbers, no symbols. It's not a hacker's password.

0:48:51 > 0:48:52Just try it.

0:48:52 > 0:48:54- We get three goes.- Yeah, I know.

0:49:00 > 0:49:02BEEPING

0:49:02 > 0:49:04That's not it.

0:49:04 > 0:49:06Is it in Russian?

0:49:06 > 0:49:10I can't access a Cyrillic alphabet from here, so no.

0:49:10 > 0:49:12Her birthday's in August!

0:49:12 > 0:49:16- What does that mean? - What, you don't think that's too much of a coincidence?

0:49:16 > 0:49:20No, I don't. I told you, there needs to be letters and symbols.

0:49:20 > 0:49:22Maybe leet.

0:49:22 > 0:49:23What's leet?

0:49:23 > 0:49:25Hacker language.

0:49:25 > 0:49:28Numbers and symbols instead of letters.

0:49:38 > 0:49:40Got it.

0:49:45 > 0:49:47That's it.

0:49:47 > 0:49:50This is Boz's computer, without a shadow of a doubt.

0:49:50 > 0:49:52- You've got her, Brian.- YES!

0:49:54 > 0:49:56Well done, mate!

0:49:56 > 0:49:58Brilliant!

0:49:58 > 0:50:02I hit him, but it was just a slap, from someone my size.

0:50:02 > 0:50:04I'm not strong.

0:50:04 > 0:50:09He died from a brain haemorrhage, caused by a pre-existing aneurysm.

0:50:09 > 0:50:13It could have happened any time, in his sleep, walking down the road...

0:50:13 > 0:50:16So why don't you just tell us what happened?

0:50:16 > 0:50:20Helping the police with their enquiries? I don't think so.

0:50:22 > 0:50:26Why, because you don't have the courage of your convictions?

0:50:26 > 0:50:27What does that mean?

0:50:27 > 0:50:29Your online persona, Boz -

0:50:29 > 0:50:35that's all about fighting for the little guy against the Establishment.

0:50:35 > 0:50:38Well, Martin Longthorn was a little guy.

0:50:38 > 0:50:39He wanted to be a policeman,

0:50:39 > 0:50:43but he had asthma so he had to settle for an admin job.

0:50:44 > 0:50:50Then he tried to join e-crime and on the day of his last interview,

0:50:50 > 0:50:52his mother, Moira Longthorn, collapsed,

0:50:52 > 0:50:57and he skipped and forfeited that interview

0:50:57 > 0:51:00so he could be with his mother at the hospital.

0:51:00 > 0:51:04Moira has multiple sclerosis. Martin lived with her.

0:51:04 > 0:51:05He was her carer.

0:51:05 > 0:51:08She just wants to know what happened to her son.

0:51:10 > 0:51:12Are you going to deny her that,

0:51:12 > 0:51:16just so you can score a point against the police?

0:51:20 > 0:51:22It was a date.

0:51:22 > 0:51:26As far as I was concerned, it was just a regular date,

0:51:26 > 0:51:29and I wasn't necessarily expecting it to go anywhere,

0:51:29 > 0:51:31although we did seem unusually compatible.

0:51:31 > 0:51:38Of course, I found out later that was because he'd hacked the matching algorithm.

0:51:38 > 0:51:41Anyway, we were getting on well,

0:51:41 > 0:51:46and I still don't know if there was something to that or...if he was faking.

0:51:47 > 0:51:49It doesn't matter now.

0:51:49 > 0:51:52So, from the bar, you went on to dinner.

0:51:52 > 0:51:57Yes. I should have realised something was up when he had the waiter take a picture of us.

0:51:57 > 0:52:01He said we were getting on so well that we should have a picture

0:52:01 > 0:52:03to remind us of the first time we met.

0:52:05 > 0:52:07- My guard was down. I was...- Happy?

0:52:08 > 0:52:12- Stupid.- And then when dinner was over, you went back to your place.

0:52:12 > 0:52:13It wasn't like that.

0:52:13 > 0:52:17I don't care what it was like. I just want to know what happened.

0:52:17 > 0:52:19We went back to my flat.

0:52:21 > 0:52:23I went to the bathroom to freshen up.

0:52:24 > 0:52:28And when I came back downstairs, he was sitting at my computer.

0:52:28 > 0:52:30His whole demeanour was different,

0:52:30 > 0:52:34and he told me what the evening had really been all about -

0:52:34 > 0:52:40establishing my identity, my home address, getting my picture,

0:52:40 > 0:52:42gathering evidence.

0:52:42 > 0:52:43I was furious.

0:52:43 > 0:52:45Because he'd unmasked you?

0:52:45 > 0:52:47Because he'd betrayed me.

0:52:48 > 0:52:51I slapped him across the face as hard as I could.

0:52:51 > 0:52:54But look at me. How much damage could I do?

0:52:57 > 0:53:01But he screamed as if he was suddenly in pain. Then he fell.

0:53:03 > 0:53:05And that was it.

0:53:05 > 0:53:07He was dead.

0:53:07 > 0:53:10And you really thought you'd killed him?

0:53:10 > 0:53:14I didn't know. But I could hardly call 999, could I?

0:53:14 > 0:53:19I didn't know who knew where he was going that night.

0:53:19 > 0:53:25The only way I could keep it all under wraps was to get rid of the body.

0:53:25 > 0:53:27That must have been extremely difficult.

0:53:27 > 0:53:29Yeah, on your own.

0:53:32 > 0:53:36He was collected from my flat by a private ambulance.

0:53:41 > 0:53:44What did they think they were doing, then?

0:53:44 > 0:53:48Transferring the body of someone who had donated himself to medical science.

0:53:48 > 0:53:52No, no, no! There would have to have been records,

0:53:52 > 0:53:54a doctor's certificate, a coroner's report.

0:53:54 > 0:53:56There were records.

0:53:56 > 0:53:58So you hacked more than the morgue?

0:53:58 > 0:54:00A lot more.

0:54:02 > 0:54:06So Martin Longthorn became Christopher Smith from Haringey,

0:54:06 > 0:54:08before he even left your flat.

0:54:10 > 0:54:14So how come there were 20 minutes of CCTV footage missing that night,

0:54:14 > 0:54:17if you were nowhere near the morgue?

0:54:17 > 0:54:20So that no-one could identify the private ambulance

0:54:20 > 0:54:26when it delivered the body and start asking awkward questions about where they'd collected the body from.

0:54:27 > 0:54:30OK.

0:54:30 > 0:54:34Martin Longthorn baited you with a list of undercover police officers.

0:54:34 > 0:54:36What would you have done with the list?

0:54:36 > 0:54:38I don't know.

0:54:38 > 0:54:41You have to realise that, if that list had got out,

0:54:41 > 0:54:44the lives of those officers would have been in danger.

0:54:44 > 0:54:46That's what happens in a war.

0:54:46 > 0:54:48- Oh, we're at war, are we? - Yes, we're at war.

0:54:50 > 0:54:53We're fighting for our civil liberties, for our freedom,

0:54:53 > 0:54:56for fairness against a corrupt,

0:54:56 > 0:55:00self-regarding, patriarchal Establishment

0:55:00 > 0:55:03who are willing to sacrifice every single one of us

0:55:03 > 0:55:06in the pursuit of money and power.

0:55:08 > 0:55:11Very nice speech, Boz. Very rousing.

0:55:11 > 0:55:17You see, I don't think that Boz hit Martin Longthorn because he unmasked her.

0:55:17 > 0:55:21I think Catherine hit him because he betrayed a lonely young woman

0:55:21 > 0:55:23who thought that she'd finally found

0:55:23 > 0:55:26some sort of connection in the real world.

0:55:28 > 0:55:32I think I should only be taken apart by a qualified technician.

0:55:35 > 0:55:39The funeral directors are picking him up from the hospital tomorrow.

0:55:39 > 0:55:41They say they can make him look...

0:55:43 > 0:55:45Well, I gave them a nice photo.

0:55:45 > 0:55:47They know what they're doing.

0:55:49 > 0:55:50I told you I knew my son.

0:55:52 > 0:55:53You did, Moira.

0:56:19 > 0:56:21LAUGHTER

0:56:21 > 0:56:24- Oh, here he is.- Ah, there you are. - What's this?

0:56:24 > 0:56:26I, er, I asked Steve to join us,

0:56:26 > 0:56:28put a face to the name,

0:56:28 > 0:56:31as you're going to be spending a lot of time together.

0:56:31 > 0:56:34Couldn't turn down a bit of home cooking, you know.

0:56:34 > 0:56:39- Right. Well, I'm afraid I've got quite a bit of work so...- Brian!

0:56:39 > 0:56:41Oh, it's all right, Mrs Lane.

0:56:41 > 0:56:43- Don't worry.- Oh, Esther, please.

0:56:43 > 0:56:47Esther. Well, maybe I should just be on my way, if it's not a good time, you know.

0:56:47 > 0:56:50Maybe. I think Gerry's in the pub.

0:56:50 > 0:56:52Brian!

0:56:52 > 0:56:55Look, Brian,

0:56:55 > 0:56:59I never met Jack Halford, you know.

0:56:59 > 0:57:03Heard a lot of good things, obviously, but I never met the man.

0:57:03 > 0:57:06I know you all had a strong attachment to him and I respect that.

0:57:06 > 0:57:10Maybe that's why I haven't been able to take over his desk, I don't know.

0:57:11 > 0:57:14You know, I didn't come down here to make friends.

0:57:14 > 0:57:16I came down here to do a job.

0:57:16 > 0:57:19I can go into the office first thing in the morning,

0:57:19 > 0:57:22go back to my place at night and let that be the end of it.

0:57:24 > 0:57:27But if someone asks me out for a drink, I'll go.

0:57:27 > 0:57:30If somebody is kind enough to offer me dinner in their home...

0:57:33 > 0:57:35I'm not trying to replace Jack Halford,

0:57:35 > 0:57:38I'm not trying to steal your friends.

0:57:38 > 0:57:41- I'm just trying to get along, you know. - STEVE CHUCKLES AWKWARDLY

0:57:41 > 0:57:46Anyway, that's, that's, er, that's me, so, erm, thanks a lot, Esther.

0:57:46 > 0:57:51- Thank you for the flowers. - Oh, you're welcome. Well, goodnight to you both.- Stop.

0:57:52 > 0:57:56Look, now you're here, you might as well have some cottage pie.

0:57:59 > 0:58:01She puts cheese on the top.

0:58:02 > 0:58:03Well...

0:58:05 > 0:58:06OK, then. Thanks.

0:58:40 > 0:58:43Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd