19/07/2016

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:00:08. > :00:14.This morning, an exclusive report on the Isle of Wight Five.

:00:15. > :00:17.A group of men convicted of smuggling ?53 million

:00:18. > :00:27.But could new evidence suggest they're innocent?

:00:28. > :00:32.This chart would have been really important to the jury in reaching a

:00:33. > :00:36.conviction because what it purports to show is the fishing vessel coming

:00:37. > :00:41.across the track of the container vessel as it moved up the English

:00:42. > :00:43.Channel, and that, the police insisted, showed that it was

:00:44. > :00:44.possible for drugs to have been transferred from the container

:00:45. > :00:47.vessel onto the fishing vessel. We'll bring you that full report

:00:48. > :00:49.in the next few minutes. Plus, an exclusive interview

:00:50. > :00:52.with a 45-year-old father of two from Yorkshire who's banned

:00:53. > :01:08.from having sex unless he gives This has been devastating for people

:01:09. > :01:13.around me. The first thing that happened was my children won't speak

:01:14. > :01:15.to me now. They've deleted me from Facebook, they don't live in the UK.

:01:16. > :01:18.John O'Neill has had a sexual risk order imposed on him.

:01:19. > :01:20.He tells us he's not a dangerous man.

:01:21. > :01:22.We'll bring you that first and in-depth interview just

:01:23. > :01:33.And state-sponsored doping on an unprecedented scale.

:01:34. > :01:40.The Moscow laboratory operated for the protection of doped Russian

:01:41. > :01:41.athletes within a state directed system.

:01:42. > :01:44.The International Olympic Committee is meeting today to decide

:01:45. > :01:46.whether the entire Russian team should be banned from

:01:47. > :02:03.We'll talk to athletes who say they absolutely should be banned.

:02:04. > :02:09.Throughout the programme we'll bring you the latest breaking news

:02:10. > :02:11.and developing stories and, as always, really keen to hear

:02:12. > :02:13.from you on all the stories we're talking about.

:02:14. > :02:15.Do get in touch in the usual ways -

:02:16. > :02:19.If you text, you will be charged at the standard network rate.

:02:20. > :02:22.MPs have overwhelmingly approved the renewal of the Trident

:02:23. > :02:28.in favour - due in no small part to the fact that more

:02:29. > :02:32.than half of Labour MPs voted for the deterrent, and

:02:33. > :02:36.From Westminster, our political correspondent Tom Bateman

:02:37. > :02:42.A vote on the future of Britain's nuclear fleet.

:02:43. > :02:54.The result was never really in question.

:02:55. > :02:57.A decisive win for the government, backing a new generation of nuclear

:02:58. > :03:03.People put politics aside and marched to the lobbies in

:03:04. > :03:12.Defence is the first job of government.

:03:13. > :03:15.But the vote exposed deep divisions within the Labour Party.

:03:16. > :03:19.140 of its MPs voted with the government.

:03:20. > :03:22.Their leader Jeremy Corbyn, a lifelong campaigner for

:03:23. > :03:30.nuclear disarmament, opposed the motion.

:03:31. > :03:31.The plan to replace this ageing nuclear

:03:32. > :03:36.fleet was also opposed by the

:03:37. > :03:37.Scottish National Party, who say its continuing stationing

:03:38. > :03:39.on the River Clyde could speed moves towards

:03:40. > :03:43.MPs have been filing out of here after a decisive vote

:03:44. > :03:47.What it has also done is expose the deep divisions currently

:03:48. > :03:51.That is convenient for a brand-new Prime Minister trying to

:03:52. > :03:53.demonstrate unity in her party after the turmoil

:03:54. > :04:01.The Prime Minister will hold her first cabinet meeting this morning.

:04:02. > :04:04.Last night's Commons win is likely to give her a boost, but many

:04:05. > :04:11.Our political guru Norman Smith is in Westminster.

:04:12. > :04:18.Another illustration of the deep divisions within Labour. How

:04:19. > :04:21.damaging is this one? Extraordinary because in normal times you would

:04:22. > :04:24.think if you are a labour leader and more than half of your MPs vote

:04:25. > :04:28.against you, this morning you will be scrabbling around picking up the

:04:29. > :04:32.pieces, calling emergency meetings, getting on the blower to Rebels,

:04:33. > :04:36.desperately trying to shore up your position. That is not what is

:04:37. > :04:40.happening. Anything, Mr Corbyn's team seem pretty relaxed. You

:04:41. > :04:45.scratch your head and think, why is this? The answer is that they take

:04:46. > :04:48.the view that Mr Corbyn's opposition to nuclear weapons is actually

:04:49. > :04:51.hugely popular amongst many ordinary Labour Party members. They say

:04:52. > :04:57.that's why you got his huge mandate in the first place to become Labour

:04:58. > :05:01.leader but they also calculate that in the looming contest to choose a

:05:02. > :05:06.new Labour leader, not only does it differentiate himself from his

:05:07. > :05:10.potential challengers, Owen Smith and Angela Eagle, who backed

:05:11. > :05:14.Trident, but more than that it plays to his narrative as being the dye

:05:15. > :05:19.who is going to stand up to the old fusty establishment Parliamentary

:05:20. > :05:25.party, the true radical, the grassroots favourite. In other

:05:26. > :05:30.words, the vote last night, although it was a huge setback, you would

:05:31. > :05:33.think, on the face of it, actually Mr Corbyn's people think it will

:05:34. > :05:34.play extraordinarily well for him in the forthcoming leadership contest.

:05:35. > :05:37.Thank you, Norman, for the moment. Now over to the BBC

:05:38. > :05:45.Newsroom for a summary Thank you and good morning.

:05:46. > :05:49.A hand-painted flag of so-called Islamic State has been found at the

:05:50. > :05:54.home of the 17-year-old Afghan refugee who attacked several people

:05:55. > :05:57.with an axe and a knife on a train in Germany. The teenager was shot

:05:58. > :06:02.dead by police in the attack near the southern city of word spoke. Two

:06:03. > :06:05.those injured are in a critical condition. The teenager who claimed

:06:06. > :06:07.asylum after travelling to Germany as an unaccompanied Minor had been

:06:08. > :06:10.living with a foster family. The Russian Olympic committee has

:06:11. > :06:13.issued a statement in the last hour saying it stands against doping -

:06:14. > :06:15.and the fate of honest athletes shouldn't depend

:06:16. > :06:17.on unproven accusations. It comes as the International

:06:18. > :06:22.Olympic Committee prepares to decide whether or not to ban all Russian

:06:23. > :06:25.athletes from the Games in Rio. Russia is accused of operating

:06:26. > :06:28.a state-sponsored doping programme for four years across the "vast

:06:29. > :06:30.majority" of summer The country's track-and-field

:06:31. > :06:32.team is already banned It's been a raucous start

:06:33. > :06:38.to the Republican convention that will confirm Donald Trump

:06:39. > :06:40.as the party's There were rowdy scenes when a group

:06:41. > :06:44.of delegates were refused permission to register their

:06:45. > :06:46.opposition to Mr Trump. Later a series of his supporters,

:06:47. > :06:50.including former Mayor of New York Rudy Guiliani,

:06:51. > :06:53.made speeches on the theme of the convention,

:06:54. > :06:55.Make America Safe Again. Mr Trump introduced a speech

:06:56. > :07:08.by his wife, Melania. If you want someone to fight for you

:07:09. > :07:19.and your country, I can assure you, he's at the guy. He will never ever

:07:20. > :07:24.give up and, most importantly, he will never ever let you down.

:07:25. > :07:27.A legal charity says there's evidence of a miscarriage of justice

:07:28. > :07:29.in the drug-smuggling convictions of a group of fishermen

:07:30. > :07:32.In an exclusive report, our programme investigates

:07:33. > :07:37.who were sentenced to up to 24 years in jail for a plot involving nearly

:07:38. > :07:40.We've found changed stories and damaged evidence.

:07:41. > :07:45.A man who has to give police 24 hours' notice before having sex

:07:46. > :07:48.with a woman for the first time has told this programme

:07:49. > :07:52.45-year-old John O'Neill has been placed on a sexual risk order

:07:53. > :07:55.after being found not guilty of rape.

:07:56. > :07:57.But North Yorkshire Police applied for the order after the court

:07:58. > :08:00.was told he had a fascination with rape fantasies and was

:08:01. > :08:07.You can hear that exclusive interview with us later in the show.

:08:08. > :08:09.Los Angeles police are investigating after a Playboy model publicly

:08:10. > :08:14.shared a photograph of another woman naked in a gym changing room.

:08:15. > :08:18.Captioned "if I can't unsee this then you can't either", Dani Mathers

:08:19. > :08:21.posted the image beside one of herself covering her

:08:22. > :08:26.She later apologised, saying she thought the Snapchat post

:08:27. > :08:30.It's illegal in California to share a person's naked image

:08:31. > :08:43.She's also come in for a major social media backlash.

:08:44. > :08:46.Later in the programme we'll bring you that exclusive interview

:08:47. > :08:49.with a man who has been ordered to give police 24 hour

:08:50. > :08:52.notice before any sexual activity with a new partner.

:08:53. > :08:57.He says that includes even kissing. That is just after 9:30am.

:08:58. > :09:08.We will start with an update on the vacant England manager post it up in

:09:09. > :09:12.the last few minutes, the BBC can confirm that the Hull manager Steve

:09:13. > :09:17.Bruce had an interview for the position with the FA panel

:09:18. > :09:21.yesterday. Sunderland manager Sam Allardyce also held talks last week.

:09:22. > :09:23.More on that throughout the day as we get it.

:09:24. > :09:26.Chris Froome can enjoy today's rest day at the Tour de France,

:09:27. > :09:28.with his lead of nearly two minutes still intact.

:09:29. > :09:30.Peter Sagan won yesterday's stage in the Swiss capital Berne,

:09:31. > :09:33.but two-time winner Froome crossed the line in 13th to maintain his

:09:34. > :09:38.There are now four days of racing before the final stage

:09:39. > :09:41.Froome is the race favourite, but isn't taking

:09:42. > :10:00.Other teams have said they're going to attack next week in the Alps, at

:10:01. > :10:05.this week in the Alps, sorry. And I expect they will do. So to say that

:10:06. > :10:08.the two's won, and I don't have any rivals, that's rubbish.

:10:09. > :10:10.James Anderson, Ben Stokes and Adil Rashid have all been added

:10:11. > :10:13.to the England squad for the second test against Pakistan,

:10:14. > :10:16.Anderson missed the opening test defeat at Lord's

:10:17. > :10:19.because he was injured, but is expected to return at Old Trafford -

:10:20. > :10:23.The Lancashire bowler's recall comes after he was knocked off the top

:10:24. > :10:26.of the test bowling rankings by Yasir Shah - what a game

:10:27. > :10:31.he had in the first match, taking ten wickets.

:10:32. > :10:33.Fresh from his Wimbledon heroics just nine days ago,

:10:34. > :10:36.Andy Murray has decided not to defend his Rogers Cup title

:10:37. > :10:41.Murray has not played since beating Milos Raonic to clinch the title

:10:42. > :10:43.for the second time, and watched as Great Britain

:10:44. > :10:45.won their Davis Cup tie against Serbia in

:10:46. > :10:53.Murray will train in Majorca before defending his Olympic

:10:54. > :11:01.Now, despite failing to make a single appearance at Euro 2016,

:11:02. > :11:04.Northern Ireland striker Will Grigg has earned his place among the best

:11:05. > :11:12.He's even received as many votes as France midfielder

:11:13. > :11:25.Not taking anything away from his footballing ability but it may have

:11:26. > :11:26.had more to do with a song sung by fans throughout the tournament.

:11:27. > :11:29.The Will Grigg's On Fire song was sung by all fans,

:11:30. > :11:44.Will Greg Others on fire. Sonny your defence is terrified Sonny will

:11:45. > :11:52.Greg's on fire. No thank you. I've heard enough of

:11:53. > :12:00.it. It was one of the most

:12:01. > :12:02.audacious drugs smuggling ?53 million worth of cocaine

:12:03. > :12:06.was dropped off the side of a giant container ship

:12:07. > :12:09.in the English Channel and apparently picked up on a stormy

:12:10. > :12:13.night by a group of fishermen They were convicted and given stiff

:12:14. > :12:22.sentences, up to 24 years Now a new legal charity that

:12:23. > :12:25.specialises in miscarriage of justice cases thinks it's

:12:26. > :12:28.uncovered new evidence that proves the men could not have

:12:29. > :12:32.committed the crime. Our reporter Jim Reed has been

:12:33. > :12:46.following their story. Now here's the shipping forecast

:12:47. > :12:56.issued by the Met Office at 0015 today, Saturday, the 29th of May. 24

:12:57. > :13:02.years in prison? What? ! What do we do now? The area forecasts for the

:13:03. > :13:08.next 24 hours... Humber, Thames, Dover... 24 years as a lifetime. How

:13:09. > :13:12.do you expect Jamie's children to get their head around a centre

:13:13. > :13:18.fightback? The sentence their father was given was longer than the lives

:13:19. > :13:24.that they'd lived. A group of fishermen from the Isle of Wight,

:13:25. > :13:28.all now serving long sentences for one of the largest, most audacious

:13:29. > :13:35.drug plots in British history. The case against them, a quarter of a

:13:36. > :13:39.tonne of cocaine was hit in an acute container ship once way to Holland.

:13:40. > :13:42.The drugs were dumped in the English Channel for the men to pick up in

:13:43. > :13:48.their fishing boats in the middle of the night. They sailed back to these

:13:49. > :13:55.cliffs and tied the sacks to a boy to collect later or for someone else

:13:56. > :13:59.to pick up. Hello. Hello, darling. You all right? Yes, good, good,

:14:00. > :14:05.good, we're OK. The men involved have left behind wives and

:14:06. > :14:12.girlfriends, sons and daughters. Speak to you in a bit. Love you.

:14:13. > :14:15.Hello. Jonathan, convicted of organising the plot, is serving 24

:14:16. > :14:20.years in a high security prison. They literally came to the door in

:14:21. > :14:24.the morning, asked me and the children to stay here said, "We need

:14:25. > :14:27.to speak to your husband," took him into the front room and asked a

:14:28. > :14:32.range of questions and they said we needed my husband to answer

:14:33. > :14:39.questions in connection with a serious crime. "Yeah, OK, whatever,

:14:40. > :14:44.this is mad. Are we awake? " When you found out what he was being

:14:45. > :14:49.accused of an charged with, what was your reaction? Oh, it's ridiculous.

:14:50. > :14:57.What? ! It's just a stupid mistake and he'll be home, which they told

:14:58. > :15:01.Flynn. "Don't cry, be brave, that will be home tonight". They even

:15:02. > :15:05.told John went he emptied his pockets to keep ?40 in its pocket so

:15:06. > :15:11.he could get home that might. But he didn't come home? Didn't come home,

:15:12. > :15:15.hasn't been home since January 2011. The facts of this case are murky to

:15:16. > :15:19.say the least. Stories have changed, evidence has been damaged. The five

:15:20. > :15:25.men have always said they were innocent. That new defence team is

:15:26. > :15:29.now planning a fresh appeal. We've spent six months looking in detail

:15:30. > :15:30.at the evidence, obtaining exclusive footage, never shown in public

:15:31. > :15:42.before. A Bank Holiday weekend six years

:15:43. > :15:46.ago, in mid-afternoon a fishing boat, the Galwad, left on what the

:15:47. > :15:50.crew claim was a routine trip. When he went out on the 29th, it was

:15:51. > :15:55.rough weather. Jamie always fished mid-channel. A lot of the smaller in

:15:56. > :16:00.shore boats couldn't get out that deep so obviously it was a good area

:16:01. > :16:05.because it wasn't over fished. Nikki Green is the sister of Jamie Green.

:16:06. > :16:08.45 years old with three children and no serious criminal record, he was

:16:09. > :16:14.the man in charge, the skipper of the boat. Why would he go out in

:16:15. > :16:19.conditions like that? Jamie, the weather was forecast to blow until

:16:20. > :16:23.about midnight, midnight 1am in the morning and then it would have

:16:24. > :16:27.dropped off. That time would have been his travelling time to where he

:16:28. > :16:30.would work. So the fact that it was particularly bad weather at that

:16:31. > :16:34.point wouldn't have bothered him too much because he would have been out

:16:35. > :16:37.on-the-spot when the weather improved and been able to get

:16:38. > :16:41.straight to work. So it wasn't unusual then for him to go out in

:16:42. > :16:49.those conditions? No. No. No. Not at all. That night, a major drug search

:16:50. > :16:56.was taking place in the channel. The full details of Operation Disorient

:16:57. > :17:00.have never been made public, but it involves surveillance planes, a

:17:01. > :17:05.patrol ship and police look-outs along the coast. Intelligence came

:17:06. > :17:09.in that cocaine was being smuggled on huge container ships from South

:17:10. > :17:15.America. It appears this vessel, was one of a number being watched that

:17:16. > :17:19.night. At some point, both cargo ship and fishing boats came close

:17:20. > :17:26.together. The Galwad continued, sailing past fresh water bay. The

:17:27. > :17:30.next day, a member of the public spotted 11 water proof sacks tangled

:17:31. > :17:42.around a buoy in the same bay. Each packed with a pure form of cocaine.

:17:43. > :17:45.Today, the Galwad is rusting away in a boat yard in Cowes, the police

:17:46. > :17:49.said the drugs were picked up by this fishing boat and dropped off in

:17:50. > :17:52.the bay to be collected later. What we're looking for on board today is

:17:53. > :17:57.just anything that might have been missed when the police searched the

:17:58. > :18:01.vessel... For years the lawyer Emily Bolton had been living in the US

:18:02. > :18:05.working with inmates on Death Row. I'm looking at documents and I'm

:18:06. > :18:09.taking photographs of what remains of the electrical equipment on

:18:10. > :18:13.board. Now she set up the first charity of its kind in Britain

:18:14. > :18:16.specialising in miscarriage of justice investigations. I think the

:18:17. > :18:20.police really thought the drugs were down that hole there. What is what?

:18:21. > :18:25.That's the tank. If you would like to peer over the edge, you will see

:18:26. > :18:31.that that is full of water. It is used to keep lobsters alive before

:18:32. > :18:36.they make their way to your plate of the Fire Brigade came into Yarmouth

:18:37. > :18:39.Harbour and stuck pumps down there and someone was brave enough to

:18:40. > :18:43.climb down the ladder and start looking for signs of drugs being

:18:44. > :18:48.stored down there and they found absolutely nothing. Presumably if

:18:49. > :18:51.the drugs were stored in watertight bags, which in this case they were,

:18:52. > :18:57.it is not surprising they found no trace of the actual cocaine itself?

:18:58. > :19:01.You say that the drugs were packed in watertight bags. Actually they

:19:02. > :19:04.weren't because several of the bags when they opened them, they then

:19:05. > :19:08.ripped open the plastic containers and got into the cocaine, the

:19:09. > :19:14.cocaine was damp. You could expect on any vessel that this had carried

:19:15. > :19:19.the bags some leakage, some weak cocaine soup and that's why they

:19:20. > :19:23.went over the boat with a fine tooth comb, in this case an itemiser, a

:19:24. > :19:26.device that detects traces of drugs. It is not that they were just

:19:27. > :19:31.looking for a big pile of cocaine, they were looking for a trace and so

:19:32. > :19:34.they used the itemiser to see if they could find that cocaine soup

:19:35. > :19:38.and they didn't find any. At the time the Galwad was in the channel a

:19:39. > :19:42.series of calls were made to the satellite phone on the boat. The

:19:43. > :19:46.prosecution said these were evidence that someone on shore was

:19:47. > :19:49.co-ordinating the drugs drop. The defence said the timing was a

:19:50. > :19:52.coincidence and someone was checking on the health of one of the

:19:53. > :19:59.fishermen, a migrant from Eastern Europe. 38-year-old Daniel Payne was

:20:00. > :20:08.one of the men on board the fishing boat that night. Is serving 18 years

:20:09. > :20:12.in Surrey. It is not in his nature to do that sort of thing. He has no

:20:13. > :20:15.need to do that sort of thing. He was happy with his partner. He was

:20:16. > :20:22.happy doing his fishing. He had a job. In the building industry and so

:20:23. > :20:26.on. And when that sort of tailed off a bit, he went on odd jobs with the

:20:27. > :20:32.skipper of the boat and that's what it was. It was just a one off

:20:33. > :20:38.fishing trip. Just to get some money. And when you think the last

:20:39. > :20:43.time his position coming back through there would have been that

:20:44. > :20:51.night, I guess? Yeah. The last time he came in, yeah. Daniel's family

:20:52. > :20:54.say he was visited by officers from the Serious Organised Crime Agency,

:20:55. > :20:59.and offered a deal to stay out of prison. Two officers came into the

:21:00. > :21:05.remand prison where he was and basically offered him immunity if he

:21:06. > :21:09.implicated the skipper of the boat in this case if you like. Of course,

:21:10. > :21:12.Daniel couldn't do that because there was nothing to implicate him

:21:13. > :21:19.with. He couldn't take up the offer. No, he couldn't take up the offer

:21:20. > :21:22.because there was nothing to give. Emily Bolton meanwhile has been

:21:23. > :21:28.trying to unpick the case against the men. At her charity's office in

:21:29. > :21:32.London, she has new evidence which, she says, is their best hope of

:21:33. > :21:35.getting an appeal. Well, this chart would have been really important to

:21:36. > :21:39.the jury in reaching a conviction because what it purports to show

:21:40. > :21:42.here is the fishing vessel coming across the track of the container

:21:43. > :21:45.vessel as it moved up the English Channel and that, the police

:21:46. > :21:48.insisted, showed that it was possible for drugs to have been

:21:49. > :21:53.transferred from the container vessel on to the fishing vessel.

:21:54. > :22:00.The case against the fishing boat was based in large part on this

:22:01. > :22:04.navigational data. The container ship, was travelling from Brazil to

:22:05. > :22:09.the Netherlands and she arrived in the English Channel, the fishing

:22:10. > :22:12.boat was just setting off from its home Port of Yarmouth. It made its

:22:13. > :22:18.way around the Needles heading south. We've plotted the exact

:22:19. > :22:23.course of both ships using navigational data from their on

:22:24. > :22:26.board computers. By midnight, the fishing boat was in deep water in

:22:27. > :22:31.the middle of the channel. At the same time, the container ship, was

:22:32. > :22:40.moving at 19 knots towards the European mainland. Then the key

:22:41. > :22:51.moment in the prosecution's case, the container ships moves east and

:22:52. > :22:55.the Galwad across her wake. They took photographs of the...

:22:56. > :23:00.Emily has commissioned an expert review. She says it shows the

:23:01. > :23:04.prosecution got it wrong, leaving out key plot points and using

:23:05. > :23:08.damaged data. The prosecution just drew a line between two points and

:23:09. > :23:13.asserted that's where the container ship was, what we've got now is the

:23:14. > :23:18.GPS digital data from the fishing vessel and the underlying digital

:23:19. > :23:21.data for the container ship and we've had an expert look at those

:23:22. > :23:25.and draw a far more precise map of what actually happened that night.

:23:26. > :23:30.If true, it would mean the paths of the boats were never closer than 100

:23:31. > :23:34.meters from each other. The container ship was actually heading

:23:35. > :23:38.further south than was presented to the jury at trial. That blows the

:23:39. > :23:43.prosecution case right out of the water. 100 meters isn't that far.

:23:44. > :23:48.Would it not have been possible for the drugs to be thrown off the side

:23:49. > :23:53.and then float towards, float 100 meters towards the fishing boat?

:23:54. > :24:01.That's the question we had and we took that question to Plymouth

:24:02. > :24:07.Marine Lab and they worked out any objects jet zaned into the sea. As

:24:08. > :24:11.for the cargo boat, it sailed on to the Netherlands, a few days later,

:24:12. > :24:18.it did dock in the UK and was searched. No trace of drugs was

:24:19. > :24:29.found as no one on the Orian was ever arrested. The fishing boat

:24:30. > :24:34.meanwhile took 18 hours to sail back to the Isle of Wight, it was never

:24:35. > :24:40.stopped or boarded. It scired around the south of the island fishing near

:24:41. > :24:43.fresh water bay. The area along the coast where it came back into would

:24:44. > :24:47.have been off his normal route. Not unusual. As I understand it, I think

:24:48. > :24:51.they decided to do some mackerel fishing on the way in. By the time

:24:52. > :24:55.the Galwad returned to its home port, it was being watched. This

:24:56. > :24:59.surveillance footage shows it sailing into the harbour and this,

:25:00. > :25:03.taken by officers on the ground, shows the men coming ashore. The

:25:04. > :25:07.skipper, Jamie Green drives off in the white van. The men went their

:25:08. > :25:13.separate ways, but returned to Yarmouth that evening. It was at

:25:14. > :25:18.this point, three were arrested, all for conspiracy to import cocaine. I

:25:19. > :25:23.was working in the restaurant here where we are now. Somebody told me

:25:24. > :25:25.there was a kerfuffle on the quay involving Jamie and then somebody

:25:26. > :25:30.came in and told me that he been arrested and taken to the mainland

:25:31. > :25:38.later that evening. What was your reaction? A mistake. You know, the

:25:39. > :25:44.police would realise they made a mistake and everything would be OK.

:25:45. > :25:48.The next morning a member of the public spotted 11 sports bags

:25:49. > :25:57.tangled round a buoy in fresh water bay. He called the police. This is

:25:58. > :26:03.number two. Written on the bottom on the bag is Montana Wind. Each sack

:26:04. > :26:08.was packed with high purity cocaine. It is here we get to a key piece of

:26:09. > :26:11.evidence against the five men. Crucial to the convictions. It is

:26:12. > :26:16.the only piece of direct evidence against the men, but the problem

:26:17. > :26:20.with it is it keeps changing. As the fishing boat, the Galwad, was

:26:21. > :26:24.sailing back along the bay, two Hampshire Police officers were

:26:25. > :26:28.stationed on the cliffs keeping look-out as part of Operation

:26:29. > :26:33.Disorient. In the original police log, they recorded someone through

:26:34. > :26:37.six or seven items over board at intervals from the boat. The

:26:38. > :26:41.fishermen say they may have chucked away bags full of old bait around

:26:42. > :26:45.this time. The next day after the drugs were found, those look-outs

:26:46. > :26:50.changed the official log as they are allowed to do. In the new version,

:26:51. > :26:53.there were ten to 12 items, the size of a hold-all tied together in a

:26:54. > :26:58.leub followed by a red floating buoy. But isn't it the case that if

:26:59. > :27:01.you're witnessing something like this, people might not get the

:27:02. > :27:05.details right every single time? Well, these are officers who are

:27:06. > :27:09.trained goat the details right every single time and we are not talking

:27:10. > :27:11.about small details, we are talking about big changes, about the

:27:12. > :27:16.descriptions of what they saw and also where they saw it from. If you

:27:17. > :27:20.look at the surveillance footage, the aerial surveillance where they

:27:21. > :27:25.had a plane up here looking down on the drugs, the first thing you will

:27:26. > :27:29.see is there a long, windy, white rope floating on the surface of the

:27:30. > :27:34.sea here and the sea is a dark grey colour and that rope really stands

:27:35. > :27:37.out. If these two Hampshire officers were up here on the cliff looking

:27:38. > :27:42.out, the first thing they would have described was the rope and they

:27:43. > :27:47.don't mention it. So what possible reason, if any, could the look-outs

:27:48. > :27:52.have to change what they saw? The new defence team can only speculate.

:27:53. > :27:56.One claim, the men were in custody at that point and more time was

:27:57. > :27:59.needed to question them. They needed something to hold them while they

:28:00. > :28:03.continued their investigation because up until that point they

:28:04. > :28:08.found no evidence. They continued to find no evidence and that left them

:28:09. > :28:11.in a pickle, but I think that the reason they embellished that

:28:12. > :28:15.evidence was to extend the custody time limits and continue their

:28:16. > :28:18.investigation. The two police look-outs later gave different

:28:19. > :28:22.details of what happened that day. But both were adamant they had seen

:28:23. > :28:28.ten to 12 sax thrown off the fishing boat along with a buoy. They said

:28:29. > :28:32.after they called in the first log entry they had seen extra bags

:28:33. > :28:36.thrown off the boat so the second version was the full picture. The

:28:37. > :28:41.independent Police Watchdog looked into the case and though it found

:28:42. > :28:46.inconsistencies in their evidence, there was not enough to show they

:28:47. > :28:50.fabricated the account. Hampshire Police say they have no on going

:28:51. > :28:57.complaints related to this investigation. At trial, the five

:28:58. > :29:04.men were convicted by majority verdict and sentenced to a total of

:29:05. > :29:06.104 years in prison. The Serious Organised Crime Agency said the

:29:07. > :29:12.operation had stopped a huge amount of cocaine from reaching the streets

:29:13. > :29:17.of the UK. For some people, are just going to think it is too much of a

:29:18. > :29:23.coinsquence that this fishing boat was in the wrong place at the wrong

:29:24. > :29:26.time, twice over. Your question assumes two things, one of which is

:29:27. > :29:31.there were drugs on the Orian, that's never been proven. It appears

:29:32. > :29:34.to us that Operation Disorient really needed to get a result and

:29:35. > :29:37.they started focussing on the fishing boat and from then on

:29:38. > :29:42.interpreted all the evidence that came before them as pointing to

:29:43. > :29:47.guilt. And meanwhile they ignored or didn't even seek other evidence that

:29:48. > :29:52.points in the opposite direction. The new evidence shown in the film

:29:53. > :29:56.has been passed to the Criminal Cases Review Commission who will now

:29:57. > :30:00.decide if the five men can launch a fresh appeal. The National Crime

:30:01. > :30:05.Agency says it can not comment while that investigation is ongoing.

:30:06. > :30:09.And if you want to share that film you can find it on our programme

:30:10. > :30:12.After 10.30am, we'll speak to the daughter of one

:30:13. > :30:22.of the men convicted in that drug smuggling plot.

:30:23. > :30:28.Still to come... This man has to give police 24 hours' notice before

:30:29. > :30:33.having sex with a new partner because he is subject to a sexual

:30:34. > :30:37.risk order. We'll bring you an exclusive interview with John

:30:38. > :30:41.O'Neill in the next few minutes. And should this woman have

:30:42. > :30:49.co-presented Channel 4 News during coverage of the niece Laurie attack?

:30:50. > :30:56.-- the niece Laurie attack. Son columnist Kelvin MacKenzie says she

:30:57. > :30:59.shouldn't have. Here is Annita McVeigh in the BBC

:31:00. > :31:04.newsroom with a summary of today's news.

:31:05. > :31:10.MPs voted overwhelmingly overnight to approve a renewal of the nuclear

:31:11. > :31:13.weapons system. More than half of Labour MPs voted for the deterrent

:31:14. > :31:22.and against their leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

:31:23. > :31:23.A hand-painted flag of the terror group so-called

:31:24. > :31:27.at the home of a 17-year-old Afghan refugee who attacked several

:31:28. > :31:30.people with an axe and a knife on a train in Germany.

:31:31. > :31:33.The teenager was shot dead by police during the attack near the southern

:31:34. > :31:36.Two of those injured are in a critical condition.

:31:37. > :31:39.The teenager, who had claimed asylum after travelling to Germany

:31:40. > :31:43.as an unaccompanied minor, had been living with a foster family.

:31:44. > :31:48.Theresa May is holding her first cabinet meeting as Prime Minister

:31:49. > :31:52.this morning. The members of her new team began arriving at ten Downing

:31:53. > :31:55.St about half an hour ago. Misses me is expected to set out her

:31:56. > :31:59.priorities, including leaving the EU, during the meeting, head of

:32:00. > :32:04.visits to Germany and France later in the week. -- Mrs May.

:32:05. > :32:07.It's been a raucous start to the Republican convention that

:32:08. > :32:08.will confirm Donald Trump as the party's

:32:09. > :32:12.There were rowdy scenes when a group of delegates were refused permission

:32:13. > :32:14.to register their opposition to Mr Trump.

:32:15. > :32:16.Later Mr Trump introduced his wife, Melania, and through the night

:32:17. > :32:18.a series of his supporters, including former Mayor

:32:19. > :32:21.of New York Rudy Guiliani, who made tub-thumping speeches

:32:22. > :32:26.The Russian Olympic committee has declared this morning that

:32:27. > :32:28.it stands against doping - but that the fate of honest

:32:29. > :32:30.athletes shouldn't depend on unproven accusations.

:32:31. > :32:32.It comes as the International Olympic Committee prepares to decide

:32:33. > :32:36.whether or not to ban all Russian athletes from the Games in Rio.

:32:37. > :32:39.Russia is accused of operating a state-sponsored doping programme

:32:40. > :32:42.for four years across the "vast majority" of summer

:32:43. > :32:47.The country's track-and-field team is already banned

:32:48. > :32:57.Los Angeles police are investigating after a Playboy model publicly

:32:58. > :33:00.shared a photograph of another woman naked in a gym changing room.

:33:01. > :33:03.Captioned "if I can't unsee this then you can't either", Dani Mathers

:33:04. > :33:06.posted the image beside one of herself covering her

:33:07. > :33:10.She later apologised, saying she thought the Snapchat post

:33:11. > :33:15.It's illegal in California to share a person's naked image

:33:16. > :33:21.She's also come in for a major social media backlash.

:33:22. > :33:25.That's a summary of the latest BBC News - more at ten.

:33:26. > :33:28.Jessica has the sport headlines now.

:33:29. > :33:31.The BBC's had it confirmed in the last half an hour that Hull

:33:32. > :33:34.boss Steve Bruce had an interview for the vacant England

:33:35. > :33:47.Sunderland boss Sam Allardyce also held talks last week.

:33:48. > :33:54.Peter Sadam won yesterday's Tour de France stage in the Swiss capital,

:33:55. > :33:57.but Chris Froome crossed the line in 13th to minting his grip on the

:33:58. > :34:03.yellow jersey. He has a lead of nearly two minutes.

:34:04. > :34:05.James Anderson, Ben Stokes and Adil Rashid have all been added

:34:06. > :34:08.to the England squad for the second test against Pakistan,

:34:09. > :34:11.Anderson missed the opening test defeat at Lord's

:34:12. > :34:14.because he was injured, but is expected to return at Old Trafford -

:34:15. > :34:17.Andy Murray has decided not to defend his Rogers Cup title

:34:18. > :34:21.The world number two has not played since beating Milos Raonic

:34:22. > :34:25.for the second time, and watched as Great Britain

:34:26. > :34:26.won their Davis Cup tie against Serbia in

:34:27. > :34:30.Murray will train in Majorca before defending his Olympic

:34:31. > :34:36.More sport at ten o'clock. Thank you very much. Norman is in

:34:37. > :34:43.Downing Street, where Theresa May is holding her first Cabinet meeting of

:34:44. > :34:46.senior government ministers. They have all be on their best

:34:47. > :34:51.behaviour this morning. They all arrived well ahead of 9:30am, they

:34:52. > :34:54.all trooped in, didn't really say anything. Even Boris Johnson didn't

:34:55. > :34:57.pose too much on the doorstep, so they all piled on and I guess they

:34:58. > :35:01.now have to scramble to see where they are around that big table,

:35:02. > :35:06.because that will tell them what the pecking order is, where they are in

:35:07. > :35:09.the new May government, how close they are to Mrs Mayall whether

:35:10. > :35:16.they've been booted down to the end of the table. As for business, we

:35:17. > :35:19.are told Mrs May wants to say to her ministers, we can't allow this

:35:20. > :35:23.government to be totally defined by the issue of Brexit. She wants

:35:24. > :35:28.social justice, she says, to be a part of the government agenda.

:35:29. > :35:30.Remember when she was on the steps of Downing Street after becoming

:35:31. > :35:34.Prime Minister, she talked a lot about how it was going to be a

:35:35. > :35:37.government for working people, not the privileged few, so that will be

:35:38. > :35:43.her message this morning. But there's no getting away from it,

:35:44. > :35:46.Brexit is the big deal. I don't know if you can cast your eyes down

:35:47. > :35:51.towards the end of Downing Street. There is a big building, which is

:35:52. > :35:55.number nine Downing St. That is going to be the new Brexit

:35:56. > :35:59.department, so that is where David Davis, the new Brexit minister is

:36:00. > :36:01.going to be based and that's where civil servants are going to be and

:36:02. > :36:06.that's where all the hard graft is going to have to be done about

:36:07. > :36:10.getting us out of the EU. There had been a view that he would be bobbed

:36:11. > :36:16.off to the old department for energy and climate change down the road

:36:17. > :36:19.along Whitehall. The fact that he's in Downing Street suggests to me

:36:20. > :36:22.that Brexit is absolutely going to be at the heart of this government

:36:23. > :36:28.but is it also an indication that Mrs May wants to keep tabs on what

:36:29. > :36:33.is going on, so the David Davis is within easy hailing distance? One

:36:34. > :36:39.other thing to support that theory, she's appointed one of her key

:36:40. > :36:43.allies, Alan Duncan, a experienced Conservative MP, as Boris Johnson's

:36:44. > :36:47.number two in the Foreign Office, basically as the minister for Boris,

:36:48. > :36:51.to keep an eye on him, to make sure he behaves. So you get the sense

:36:52. > :36:55.that Mrs May is just trying to make sure she's got an absolute grip on

:36:56. > :36:59.everything and in particular on Brexit. And I wonder, Norman, how

:37:00. > :37:03.seriously you think Theresa May as Prime Minister is going to take the

:37:04. > :37:08.input of the Cabinet. Tony Blair became famous for his discussions

:37:09. > :37:12.with his closest aides on the sofa, David Cameron had his trusted former

:37:13. > :37:15.school pals and Notting Hill colleagues, didn't he? I think it is

:37:16. > :37:21.going to be read different because as we know, she's pretty much

:37:22. > :37:24.disbanded the old Cameroon Notting Hill set. They've been cast to the

:37:25. > :37:28.winds. Oliver Letwin, one of those key figures, today announced he

:37:29. > :37:31.wouldn't be standing at the next election. You think they've gone

:37:32. > :37:33.back to their cafes and Notting Hill and think it is game over because

:37:34. > :37:38.Theresa May seems to be planning a very different style of government.

:37:39. > :37:41.In terms of listening and involving other departments, I suspect the

:37:42. > :37:45.concern of other departments might be not so much whether she is in

:37:46. > :37:49.listening mode but that she might be fingers in Piedt mode because she's

:37:50. > :37:58.one of those politicians who likes to get involved in the nitty-gritty,

:37:59. > :38:01.to have a complete grasp of what's going on, so I suspect there may be

:38:02. > :38:03.some nervousness that Mrs May as Prime Minister might be quite

:38:04. > :38:05.interventionist in what other departments are doing and, above

:38:06. > :38:06.all, what is going on in those Brexit departments. Thank you very

:38:07. > :38:15.much, Norman. This morning, an exclusive interview

:38:16. > :38:18.with a man who has to give police 24 hours' notice before

:38:19. > :38:20.having sex with a woman 45-year-old John O'Neill has been

:38:21. > :38:24.placed on a sexual risk order after being found

:38:25. > :38:25.not guilty of rape. After being cleared,

:38:26. > :38:27.the judge took the unusual step of describing him

:38:28. > :38:29.as "a very dangerous individual". During his trial a fascination

:38:30. > :38:32.with sado-masochism was raised, It prompted North Yorkshire Police

:38:33. > :38:37.to apply for the order, which means he has to tell police the name,

:38:38. > :38:41.address and date of birth of any woman he wants to have any form

:38:42. > :38:43.of sexual activity with - including kissing -

:38:44. > :38:48.24 hours in advance. Mr O'Neill, an IT consultant,

:38:49. > :38:53.describes it as a "living hell". He's due back in court next month

:38:54. > :38:55.to learn if the restriction on his sex life will be dropped

:38:56. > :38:59.or made into a full order He's been speaking exclusively

:39:00. > :39:20.to us this morning. First of all, thank you very much

:39:21. > :39:24.for talking to us. We really appreciate your time. Why have you

:39:25. > :39:30.had this sexual risk order served upon you? This is the mystery that

:39:31. > :39:40.me and my lawyers have been trying to figure out. We were amazed that

:39:41. > :39:45.the police maybe application after a unanimous acquittal of the only

:39:46. > :39:49.crime I've ever been accused of. We think it is sour grapes. They lost

:39:50. > :39:57.in court. They didn't just lose, they were humiliated in court for

:39:58. > :40:00.having utterly failed to do any detective work. But it must have

:40:01. > :40:08.been explained to you when it was served upon you why. What did they

:40:09. > :40:15.tell you? The reasons are... To get an SRO, you need an act of a sexual

:40:16. > :40:22.nature which necessitates the risk order. The act on which they rely

:40:23. > :40:29.are scratching and biting during sex. Consensual sex? Yes. If that

:40:30. > :40:34.necessitates a sexual risk order, they're going to have to be writing

:40:35. > :40:37.an awful lot of sexual risk orders. I would suspect the majority of the

:40:38. > :40:44.population is going to be subject to a sexual risk order. The real reason

:40:45. > :40:50.is, they lost the trial and they're misusing this new set of laws to

:40:51. > :40:57.effectively put me on a retrial for rape after an acquittal, because it

:40:58. > :41:01.is the same evidence, it is the same witnesses, it is just a retrial in

:41:02. > :41:06.miniature. Have you had sex with anyone since this order was imposed

:41:07. > :41:10.upon you? No. If you break the order, breach the order, by having

:41:11. > :41:15.sex with someone without telling the police first, what could happen to

:41:16. > :41:21.you? If I breach any part of the order, not just the 24 hour notice

:41:22. > :41:26.part, I will potentially go to prison for five years and,

:41:27. > :41:32.regardless of what the breaches, I am actually accused of a breach, but

:41:33. > :41:36.regardless of what the breach is, I become a convicted sex offender,

:41:37. > :41:40.even if the breach wasn't a sexual act. So, for instance, the breach

:41:41. > :41:50.I'm accused of is refusing to hand over my PIN number to my iPhone.

:41:51. > :41:54.That act will get me five years in jail and makes me a convicted sex

:41:55. > :42:01.offender. It's obscene, it's ridiculous. First of all, SROs can't

:42:02. > :42:06.have obligations. By prohibitive orders. I've been obliged unlawfully

:42:07. > :42:14.by this order to provide information to the police. I sought legal advice

:42:15. > :42:17.with my lawyers, who checked with other lawyers, we made absolutely

:42:18. > :42:22.sure this wouldn't be a breach and after I got back advice, I'm

:42:23. > :42:28.accused. I was thrown in jail, charged and on the 19th of August, I

:42:29. > :42:34.will have a trial and if I lose, for that act, I become a convicted sex

:42:35. > :42:37.offender. It is utterly ridiculous. If you were to disclose to the

:42:38. > :42:40.police that you were going to have sex with someone 24 hours later,

:42:41. > :42:48.what information would you have to give them? I have to give name,

:42:49. > :42:52.address and date of birth. Of? Of any woman that I intend to have any

:42:53. > :42:58.sexual contact with. It is broader than just having sex. What does it

:42:59. > :43:03.include? It's ridiculous. Sexual conversation would be included.

:43:04. > :43:09.Kissing is included. It is so sweeping, it's ridiculous. It is so

:43:10. > :43:15.badly worded. I could breach this order by accident. How? If I have a

:43:16. > :43:21.sexual conversation, the police could come along and say, "Right,

:43:22. > :43:27.that's sexual contact". And with the PIN number, me and my lawyers had

:43:28. > :43:31.100% consensus that this wasn't a breach. I was arrested anyway. You

:43:32. > :43:36.can get arrested by accident with these orders. Except part of the

:43:37. > :43:45.restrictions are on mobile phone use and internet use. And that's the

:43:46. > :43:48.most damaging part of this. You have reported the 24 hour at sex

:43:49. > :43:51.noticed... That headline grabbing part I understand that is what the

:43:52. > :43:54.bill want to read about but that's not the most damaging part from my

:43:55. > :44:03.point of view. The most damaging part is the making available on

:44:04. > :44:07.request clause any communications device that I use. Effectively that

:44:08. > :44:12.means, if I don't own the device and carry it with me 24 hours a day, I

:44:13. > :44:15.can't use it. You can see how you would breach the order by not giving

:44:16. > :44:19.the police your mobile phone PIN number because they need to be able

:44:20. > :44:24.to access it. At SROs are only supposed to be prohibitive, they are

:44:25. > :44:27.not allowed to require me to do anything. But if there are

:44:28. > :44:30.conditions attached, you know what the conditions are and it's up to

:44:31. > :44:34.you whether to breach them not. That's one of the conditions, mobile

:44:35. > :44:37.phone restrictions. They didn't actually say that at the time of the

:44:38. > :44:41.breach, the wedding was changed thereafter. At the time of the

:44:42. > :44:47.alleged breach, it didn't say I had to provide that. It does now but as

:44:48. > :44:51.I say, it is an obligation, which is unlawful. You are not supposed to be

:44:52. > :44:54.able to do this with an SRO. If you were to provide the police with a

:44:55. > :44:59.woman's name, address and date of birth, what would they do with that

:45:00. > :45:05.information? In theory, there is a disclosure document and what they do

:45:06. > :45:09.is, they will go around and say," this person is subject to something

:45:10. > :45:14.called a sexual risk order, he is considered to be potentially

:45:15. > :45:18.dangerous," and then they ask that want to sign a form and leave and

:45:19. > :45:23.that's it. So can you imagine the horror of that? You've just met

:45:24. > :45:26.someone and you are at the point where you are deciding whether to

:45:27. > :45:29.date and then that happens. Convicted criminals don't get these

:45:30. > :45:38.types of orders. It's obscene. The reason that the police may tell

:45:39. > :45:43.a potential partner of yours that you are dangerous because the judge

:45:44. > :45:48.at the end of your second trial when you were acquitted said although

:45:49. > :45:51.this has has been acquitted, it is my judgment that he is a very

:45:52. > :45:56.dangerous man? Two things, we don't know what he was referring to. It

:45:57. > :46:02.was clear during the trial that he, like a lot of people, just didn't

:46:03. > :46:07.understand S and M at all. Tell us about the nature of the

:46:08. > :46:10.conversations you had with medical professionals, conversations which

:46:11. > :46:20.emerged during your trial? Yeah, I told one of my GPs about a partner

:46:21. > :46:26.that I had and she completely misunderstood. The medical

:46:27. > :46:32.professional? Yes. In what way? She didn't contextualise any of the acts

:46:33. > :46:39.as S and M or in anyway consensual and she missed out large portions of

:46:40. > :46:42.what I'd said. So you had talked about consensual sexual activity and

:46:43. > :46:48.talked about safe words? I made that crystal clear. Had you also talked

:46:49. > :46:55.about rape fantasies? Yeah, exactly and I said this was role-play rape.

:46:56. > :46:58.She just wrote down rape. She didn't say anything about role-play and

:46:59. > :47:02.initially didn't say anything about safe words. Just explain to our

:47:03. > :47:07.audience what safe words are about? If you don't know what a safe word

:47:08. > :47:13.is, OK, if you're engaging in some kind of S and M activity you use a

:47:14. > :47:18.safe word which is a neutral word to indicate that you want your partner

:47:19. > :47:22.to stop. So green for instance would be a common safe word. And that

:47:23. > :47:26.means stop because obviously if you are enacting a role-play rape, no

:47:27. > :47:35.doesn't mean no. Stop doesn't mean stop. So you need this neutral word

:47:36. > :47:39.or sometimes it is a snap fingers for instance if you're gagged or

:47:40. > :47:43.hooded or something. So safe word isn't always a word. So those

:47:44. > :47:48.conversations emerged during your trial and you believe that may have

:47:49. > :47:52.led the judge in part to describe you as a dangerous man despite the

:47:53. > :47:56.acquittal? I can only assume that. We don't know because the judge was

:47:57. > :48:02.not specific at all about what he meant. We don't know what the judge

:48:03. > :48:06.meant, but we do know because of the original trial that nobody that read

:48:07. > :48:11.those medical notes thought it was S and M, not one person read that

:48:12. > :48:15.document and thought there was anything consensual because there

:48:16. > :48:21.was not a single shred of context in that document. It simply said,

:48:22. > :48:27."Rape." Are you a dangerous man? No. In no respect, no. I have been

:48:28. > :48:32.accused of precisely one crime in my entire 45 years and I was

:48:33. > :48:37.unanimously acquitted. Last Thursday, your identity was

:48:38. > :48:44.revealed. What impact has that had upon you? Well, this has been

:48:45. > :48:54.devastating for people around me. The first thing that happened was

:48:55. > :49:03.my... My children won't speak to me now. They've deleted me from

:49:04. > :49:09.Facebook. One of my friends has been threatened with being fired just

:49:10. > :49:14.because she knows me. We've had journalists offering money to female

:49:15. > :49:21.friends to say that I've done something to them and the worse the

:49:22. > :49:29.claim they make, the more money they're offered. It's, on a personal

:49:30. > :49:35.level, it is devastating, absolutely devastating. Have you tried to get

:49:36. > :49:41.in touch with your children? I spoke to their mother and we think the

:49:42. > :49:45.best thing to do is just let the shock die down for a while. Why do

:49:46. > :49:49.you think they have deleted you on Facebook? How horrific must this be?

:49:50. > :50:06.Seeing your father and his sexual orientations

:50:07. > :50:13.spread across the internet, awful. Awful. You mentioned the further

:50:14. > :50:16.hearing in August which will decide whether the sexual risk order will

:50:17. > :50:20.be dropped or extended for a period of time. How do you try and get one

:50:21. > :50:25.of these orders overturned? Well, the interim orders are very, very

:50:26. > :50:30.easy to get. So the standard evidence... The standard order that

:50:31. > :50:33.you're on? The standard of evidence is very low, you have a chat with a

:50:34. > :50:37.magistrate and if there is any scary comments at all, they issue the

:50:38. > :50:41.order. But you are supposed to have the full hearing within a few weeks

:50:42. > :50:46.thereafter, that has not happened in my case. It will happen in August.

:50:47. > :50:50.It will happen in August. How do you get that order removed? Effectively,

:50:51. > :50:56.we are going to have the rape trial in miniature again. In a

:50:57. > :51:00.Magistrates' Court again? In a Magistrates' Court, it is the same

:51:01. > :51:06.witnesses, it is a repeat of the rape trial. So how will you try and

:51:07. > :51:11.get it overturned? We're in a position now there is no presumed

:51:12. > :51:16.innocence, I have to prove my innocence. It is that ridiculous.

:51:17. > :51:21.After I have already been acquitted, I still effectively stand accused of

:51:22. > :51:23.exactly the same thing, but in a Magistrates' Court which does not

:51:24. > :51:29.afford you the same opportunity for a defence. It was half day. If that.

:51:30. > :51:34.Whereas trial took five days to unpick. It is a very complicated

:51:35. > :51:41.case. So what could you do, promise to be sell bait for the rest of your

:51:42. > :51:45.life? Well, that presumes some kind of guilt. Why should I make that

:51:46. > :51:50.promise, that presumes some manner of gill. The only time you have a

:51:51. > :51:54.presumption of innocence if there is a jury. The system does not presume

:51:55. > :51:59.innocence, the system presumes guilt. The system, the courts, they

:52:00. > :52:03.all presume guilt, but the new laws are effectively allowing the lower

:52:04. > :52:10.courts and the maj straights court to try very serious crimes by

:52:11. > :52:13.pretending that it is not a retrial. These laws are dangerous, extremely

:52:14. > :52:17.dangerous and they allow the police to ignore a verdict. Thank you very

:52:18. > :52:19.much for talking to us. Thank you. Thank you for your time. You're

:52:20. > :52:32.welcome. We will talk to an ex-lawyer and

:52:33. > :52:38.Police and Crime Commissioner for Northumbria about sexual risk

:52:39. > :52:41.orders. Grace says even if he can't tell people his fannies, women

:52:42. > :52:46.interacting should be made aware. He will suffer more if he ends up in

:52:47. > :52:53.prison because he loses control. This tweet, "If you are innocent

:52:54. > :52:59.then a sexual risk order is an affront to civil liberties." Jeremy

:53:00. > :53:07.says, "I'm gobsmacked by this 24-hour sex notice case. It is craze

:53:08. > :53:15.crisis." Leo says SRO s are just one of the laws our so-called safe pair

:53:16. > :53:19.of hands Prime Minister, oh bonkers, sexual risk orders are one of the

:53:20. > :53:22.bonkers law our Prime Minister has brought in as the Home Secretary."

:53:23. > :53:30.Ann says, "This sounds like the police state. Britain." A couple

:53:31. > :53:34.more as well. Ian, "I could understand the restrictions if he

:53:35. > :53:39.was a convicted sex offender, but he was found not guilty. It doesn't

:53:40. > :53:43.make sense." Ann says, "If he was that dangerous, why wasn't he locked

:53:44. > :53:45.up? The order doesn't seem to make sense." We will discuss that more in

:53:46. > :53:49.the next hour of the programme. The International Olympic

:53:50. > :53:51.Committee is meeting today to decide whether the entire

:53:52. > :53:53.Russian team should be banned from the upcoming

:53:54. > :53:55.Olympic Games next month. We'll talk to athletes who say

:53:56. > :53:58.they should be banned Let's get the latest weather

:53:59. > :54:13.update with Stav Danaos. Are we officially in a heatwave? The

:54:14. > :54:18.official definition of a heatwave is four or five consecutive days of

:54:19. > :54:22.heat and consecutive hot nights. No reprice from the heat which prompts

:54:23. > :54:27.authorities to issue the heat warning. So we have got a brief

:54:28. > :54:30.heatwave at the moment and today we are seeing the peak of the heat as

:54:31. > :54:36.things will be cooling down afterwards. Lots of gorgeous Weather

:54:37. > :54:40.Watcher pictures coming in of that beautiful blue sky. The reason for

:54:41. > :54:44.it, the heat, source has been across Spain and France and this area of

:54:45. > :54:48.high pressure has been pumping it northwards across the UK and it is

:54:49. > :54:52.today like I mentioned we will see a pack of this short-lived heatwave.

:54:53. > :54:56.Temperatures maybe the mid- maybe higher, 35 Celsius across parts of

:54:57. > :54:59.the Midlands. So a very hot afternoon in store, seeing

:55:00. > :55:03.temperatures around the mid-20 Celsius across the South East.

:55:04. > :55:12.Through the afternoon, the high 20s, the low 30s, widely, we could see

:55:13. > :55:16.34, 35 Celsius between London and in towards the Perthshire area. Maybe

:55:17. > :55:19.30 Celsius across Scottish Borders and in the south. Hot and sunny for

:55:20. > :55:23.Northern Ireland and the heat pumping north in towards Northern

:55:24. > :55:26.Scotland. We could see 20 Celsius for Lerwick. A hot and sunny

:55:27. > :55:30.afternoon and humid too. But that means one thing as we head on in

:55:31. > :55:34.towards this evening and overnight, an area of low pressure means we

:55:35. > :55:39.will see thunderstorms developing. Northern and West Wales and Northern

:55:40. > :55:46.Ireland and severe ones, north-west England in towards Scotland by the

:55:47. > :55:51.end of the night. Large hail. Temperatures will be very hot and

:55:52. > :55:55.sticky. A very uncomfortable night to come. Wednesday, a thundery start

:55:56. > :55:59.to the day across Northern Ireland and parts of north-west Wales,

:56:00. > :56:02.north-west eng gln and Southern Scotland, severe thunderstorms

:56:03. > :56:12.possible, frequent lightening, torrential rain. Then we see another

:56:13. > :56:15.cluster of thunderstorms develop. Elsewhere, there will be sunshine

:56:16. > :56:18.around. A cooler fresher feel to Scotland and Northern Ireland. Still

:56:19. > :56:22.warm for England and Wales, but the heatwave, the second day of the

:56:23. > :56:25.heatwave continues in towards East Anglia and the South East of

:56:26. > :56:33.England. By Thursday though, the hot air would have been pushed off into

:56:34. > :56:36.the near Continent and we start to see the Atlantic air pushing in.

:56:37. > :56:40.Temperatures returning to near normal I should say for the time of

:56:41. > :56:44.year. Temperatures in the north and the west the high teens Celsius and

:56:45. > :56:48.the low 20 Celsius across the south and the east and with it will come a

:56:49. > :56:53.few showers, but some sunshine. After this brief, very hot snap, it

:56:54. > :56:58.looks like temperatures returning to near normal by the end of the week.

:56:59. > :57:06.Good morning. It is Tuesday. It is just before 10am. This morning, an

:57:07. > :57:10.exclusive report on the Isle of Wight five. A group of fishermen

:57:11. > :57:15.convicted of smuggling ?53 million worth of cocaine. But could new

:57:16. > :57:19.evidence suggest they're innocent? Well, this chart would have been

:57:20. > :57:24.really report to the jury in reaching a conviction. What it

:57:25. > :57:27.purports to show is the fishing vessel coming across the track of

:57:28. > :57:30.the container vessel as it moved up the English Channel and that the

:57:31. > :57:33.police insisted showed that it was possible for drugs to have been

:57:34. > :57:37.transferred from the container vessel on to the fishing vessel.

:57:38. > :57:41.We will talk to the daughter of one of the men convicted and to the

:57:42. > :57:45.lawyer you saw there representing them. Plus, in the last hour, we

:57:46. > :57:49.brought you an exclusive interview with a 45-year-old father of two

:57:50. > :57:53.from Yorkshire who is banned from having sex unless he gives the

:57:54. > :58:00.police 24 hours notice. Are you a dangerous man? No. In no respect,

:58:01. > :58:04.no. I have been accused of precisely one crime in my entire 45 years and

:58:05. > :58:09.I was unanimously acquitted. Before 11am, we will find out more about

:58:10. > :58:15.the sexual risk orders. So many of you getting in touch about the

:58:16. > :58:20.interview. This comment on whatsapp, "Bravo for the interview with John

:58:21. > :58:25.O'Neill. Hopefully this goes some way to repairing his life and

:58:26. > :58:31.reputation. Sad to see an innocent man treated worse than a criminal."

:58:32. > :58:36.Good morning. Welcome to the programme. It is time for the news

:58:37. > :58:43.and here with a summary is Anita. Good morning. MPs have voted to

:58:44. > :58:48.approve the renewal of the Trident nuclear weapon system. There was a

:58:49. > :58:52.majority of 355 in favour after more than half of Labour voters voted for

:58:53. > :58:58.the deterrent and against their leader Jeremy Corbyn. During the

:58:59. > :59:04.debate one Labour MP called his stance jewel Nile. A hand painted

:59:05. > :59:08.flag of Islamic State has been found at the home of a 17-year-old Afghan

:59:09. > :59:12.refugee who attacked several people with an axe and a knife on a train

:59:13. > :59:17.in Germany. The teengeary was shot dead by police during the attack.

:59:18. > :59:21.Two of those injured are in a critical condition. The teenager who

:59:22. > :59:26.had claimed asylum after travelling to Germany had been living with a

:59:27. > :59:31.foster family. IS is claiming it was behind the attack.

:59:32. > :59:34.Theresa May is holding her first Cabinet meeting as Prime Minister.

:59:35. > :59:37.Mrs May is expected to set out her priorities including leaving the EU

:59:38. > :59:40.during the meeting ahead of visits it Germany and France later in the

:59:41. > :59:44.week. It has been a raucous start to the

:59:45. > :59:47.Republican Convention that will confirm Donald Trump as the party's

:59:48. > :59:52.presidential candidate. There were rowdy scenes when a group of

:59:53. > :59:54.delegates were refused permission to register their opposition to Mr

:59:55. > :00:00.Trumpment later, he inte viewed his wife and through the night a series

:00:01. > :00:01.of his supporters including former Mayor of New York, made speeches on

:00:02. > :00:03.safety and security. It's time to make

:00:04. > :00:05.America safe again. What happened to "There's no

:00:06. > :00:20.black America, there's no white America,

:00:21. > :00:25.there is just America"? A legal charity says there's

:00:26. > :00:35.evidence of a miscarriage of justice in the drug-smuggling convictions

:00:36. > :00:37.of a group of fishermen In an exclusive report,

:00:38. > :00:40.this programme investigates who were sentenced to up to 24 years

:00:41. > :00:45.in jail for a plot involving nearly We've found changed stories

:00:46. > :00:50.and damaged evidence. A man who has to give police 24

:00:51. > :00:53.hours' notice before having sex with a woman for the first time

:00:54. > :00:56.has told this programme 45-year-old John O'Neill has been

:00:57. > :01:00.placed on a sexual risk order after being found

:01:01. > :01:03.not guilty of rape. But North Yorkshire Police applied

:01:04. > :01:06.for the order after the court was told he had a fascination

:01:07. > :01:10.with rape fantasies and was "a very He's given this programme

:01:11. > :01:24.an exclusive interview. I have to give name, address and

:01:25. > :01:28.date of birth. Of? Of any woman that I intend to have any sexual contact

:01:29. > :01:33.with, it's broader than just having sex. What does it include? It's

:01:34. > :01:40.ridiculous. Sexual conversation would be included. Kissing is

:01:41. > :01:43.included. It's so sweeping, it's ridiculous. It's so badly worded, I

:01:44. > :01:46.could breach this order by accident. Los Angeles police are investigating

:01:47. > :01:49.after a Playboy model publicly shared a photograph of another woman

:01:50. > :01:51.naked in a gym changing room. Captioned "if I can't unsee this

:01:52. > :01:55.then you can't either", Dani Mathers posted the image beside one

:01:56. > :01:57.of herself covering her She later apologised,

:01:58. > :02:01.saying she thought the Snapchat post It's illegal in California to share

:02:02. > :02:07.a person's naked image She's also come in for a major

:02:08. > :02:13.social media backlash. That's a summary of the latest BBC

:02:14. > :02:18.News - more at 10.30. Do get in touch with us

:02:19. > :02:20.throughout the morning - If you text, you will be charged

:02:21. > :02:25.at the standard network rate. The BBC's had it confirmed

:02:26. > :02:31.in the last hour that Hull boss Steve Bruce had an interview

:02:32. > :02:34.for the vacant England Sunderland boss Sam Allardyce also

:02:35. > :02:43.held talks last week. More on that throughout

:02:44. > :02:46.the day as we get it. Chris Froome can enjoy today's rest

:02:47. > :02:49.day at the Tour de France, with his lead of nearly two

:02:50. > :02:52.minutes still intact. Peter Sagan won yesterday's stage

:02:53. > :02:55.in the Swiss capital Berne, but two-time winner Froome crossed

:02:56. > :02:58.the line in 13th to maintain his There are now four days of racing

:02:59. > :03:03.before the final stage Froome is the race favourite,

:03:04. > :03:07.but isn't taking Other teams have said

:03:08. > :03:15.they're going to attack next week in the Alps,

:03:16. > :03:19.this week in the Alps, sorry. So to say that the Tour's won,

:03:20. > :03:30.and I don't have any James Anderson, Ben Stokes

:03:31. > :03:34.and Adil Rashid have all been added to the England squad for the second

:03:35. > :03:36.test against Pakistan, Anderson missed the opening

:03:37. > :03:41.test defeat at Lord's because he was injured, but is

:03:42. > :03:44.expected to return at Old Trafford - The Lancashire bowler's recall comes

:03:45. > :03:52.after he was knocked off the top of the test bowling rankings

:03:53. > :03:55.by Yasir Shah - what a game he had in the first match,

:03:56. > :04:00.taking ten wickets. Fresh from his Wimbledon

:04:01. > :04:02.heroics just nine days ago, Andy Murray has decided not

:04:03. > :04:04.to defend his Rogers Cup title Murray has not played since beating

:04:05. > :04:12.Milos Raonic to clinch the title for the second time,

:04:13. > :04:14.and watched as Great Britain won their Davis Cup tie

:04:15. > :04:16.against Serbia in Murray will train in Majorca before

:04:17. > :04:20.defending his Olympic What about Northern Ireland

:04:21. > :04:27.striker Will Grigg? He's earned his place among

:04:28. > :04:30.the best players in Europe. And did it without making a single

:04:31. > :04:35.appearance at Euro 2016! In a vote by journalists,

:04:36. > :04:37.he received as many votes as France's famed

:04:38. > :04:41.midfielder Paul Pogba. Not taking anything away

:04:42. > :04:45.from Grigg's ability, but maybe it had more to do

:04:46. > :04:48.with a song that was sung in his honour by fans

:04:49. > :04:50.throughout the tournament. It's called Will Grigg's On Fire,

:04:51. > :05:03.and even his team mates had a go. # Will Grigg's on fire

:05:04. > :05:09.# Your defences terrified # Will Grigg's on fire

:05:10. > :05:22.# Your defence is terrified # Will Grigg's on fire

:05:23. > :05:29.# Your defence is terrified #. No, thank you. I've heard enough of

:05:30. > :05:30.it. You can see why they are professional footballers and not

:05:31. > :05:40.professional singers! Welcome to the programme. So many of

:05:41. > :05:46.you are getting in touch about the man who has had a sexual risk order

:05:47. > :05:50.imposed on him after he was acquitted of rape. He described the

:05:51. > :05:53.devastating impact this has had on his life, including the fact that

:05:54. > :05:58.his two children now don't speak to him. They live abroad and have

:05:59. > :06:02.deleted from Facebook. This tweet from Mark, "I am trying to work out

:06:03. > :06:06.how such a court order is even police double". A very good

:06:07. > :06:10.question, which we will ask a Police and Crime Commissioner. This tweet

:06:11. > :06:15.from Mary, "Regardless of what this man may do in the future, if he was

:06:16. > :06:19.found not guilty, why put in place this order? Also his identity should

:06:20. > :06:25.be protected". Janet says, "I cannot believe what is happening to this

:06:26. > :06:29.man". Steve says, "This is a joke. A bloke into S has to tell the

:06:30. > :06:34.police when he is going to have sex? It's like a police state". Amy says,

:06:35. > :06:40."I agree with the order that been imposed. The end of his trial said

:06:41. > :06:43.he was dangerous". And this tweet, "The fact that this man is having to

:06:44. > :06:48.defend himself on national TV is amazing". More on that later. We'll

:06:49. > :06:55.talk to a Police and Crime Commissioner for Northumbria. , also

:06:56. > :07:00.a former lawyer. Next on the programme, state-sponsored doping on

:07:01. > :07:04.an unprecedented scale. -- scale. The IOC is meeting today to discuss

:07:05. > :07:11.whether the entire Russian team should be banned from the games next

:07:12. > :07:15.month. It is after Russia was found to have planned doping across 30

:07:16. > :07:19.sports from late 2011, including the build-up to London 2012 and white

:07:20. > :07:24.through the Saatchi 2014 winter games. Here's how they did it.

:07:25. > :07:28.It was a huge and audacious programme of deception, involving

:07:29. > :07:31.everyone from Russia's sports ministry to the FSB security

:07:32. > :07:36.service, formerly known as the KGB. The goal was to make you samples

:07:37. > :07:45.that tested positive for drugs disappear. From late 2011 to 2015.

:07:46. > :07:48.It was in order to improve Russia's sporting performance to drop the man

:07:49. > :07:53.involved in Wada's investigation called this the disappearing

:07:54. > :08:00.positive methodology but when that wasn't enough to hide doping, such

:08:01. > :08:03.as at the Olympics in Sochi, a more elaborate plan was carried out.

:08:04. > :08:08.Before competing at the games, athletes would give clean you're in

:08:09. > :08:13.samples, when performance enhancing drugs were not a system. These

:08:14. > :08:15.samples would be stored in the freezer by Russian authorities,

:08:16. > :08:20.allowing athletes to resume doping in the run-up to the games. While at

:08:21. > :08:24.the games, the Russian competitors would give you running samples in

:08:25. > :08:29.the usual way, watched by an independent doping control officer.

:08:30. > :08:35.Those samples were then smuggled out of the laboratory at night through

:08:36. > :08:40.mouse holes between rooms, literally a hollow. They were taken away by

:08:41. > :08:46.agents working for the FSB who were disguised as sewer engineers. The

:08:47. > :08:50.samples were removed in a manner which didn't break the seal,

:08:51. > :08:56.allowing the contaminated sample of you're in to be replaced with the

:08:57. > :09:01.previously frozen clean sample which, in one final piece of

:09:02. > :09:06.espionage was passed back to the lab to be tested. The report found 580

:09:07. > :09:10.positive tests were covered up across 30 different sports, but that

:09:11. > :09:17.it is probable Professor McLaren had only skimmed the surface of doping

:09:18. > :09:22.cases. The Russian ministry of sport directed, controlled and oversaw the

:09:23. > :09:27.manipulation of athletes' results, through sample swapping and the act

:09:28. > :09:37.of participation and assistance of the FSB, CSP and both Moscow and

:09:38. > :09:40.Sochi laboratories. I think that athletes going to the Olympics and

:09:41. > :09:43.number of sports, they need to know they are competing on a level

:09:44. > :09:46.playing field so if they were competing against somebody in a

:09:47. > :09:49.Russian Olympic best, there was always going to be that shadow of a

:09:50. > :09:55.doubt, whether they are competing cleanly. So I think the IOC does

:09:56. > :10:03.need to stand very firm on this. There are few nations to have won

:10:04. > :10:06.more medals than Russia. The IOC's decision later today will determine

:10:07. > :10:11.whether it can add to the tally in Rio. So should all Russian athletes

:10:12. > :10:13.automatically be banned from Rio? Regardless of whether they were

:10:14. > :10:17.known to dive bomber? Yesterday we had some of Britain's's greatest

:10:18. > :10:21.Olympic and Paralympic athletes on the programme. This is what they

:10:22. > :10:25.told... It is a huge decision. I don't envy the man that has to make

:10:26. > :10:30.that final call but there has to be a line drawn at some stage. Should

:10:31. > :10:37.the clean ones be banned? Yeah, ban them. They're tainted by the state

:10:38. > :10:41.programme, so it's almost like you have to get rid of everybody because

:10:42. > :10:43.you don't know who is not cheating so everyone is guilty by

:10:44. > :10:47.association. You've got to draw the line somewhere and I think because

:10:48. > :10:50.the Russians have proved what they are doing now, they that Chile

:10:51. > :10:56.proved that the laboratories and things like that, and it's like a

:10:57. > :11:01.drug feed. I think if you are going to just tap in and say, you are

:11:02. > :11:04.going to be banned but not you, I think it is there now. The evidence

:11:05. > :11:11.is there and I just think there should be a total ban in the sense

:11:12. > :11:14.of everybody and set that example, set that standard, because you've

:11:15. > :11:18.got to do that because how else are you going to try? It's so many

:11:19. > :11:22.different sports. We have a couple of boxes who also failed. The bad

:11:23. > :11:28.thing for these athletes, what they don't realise, is that these drugs

:11:29. > :11:32.are really bad for you long-term. They're really destroying their

:11:33. > :11:36.bodies, taking it, to get this unfair advantage. I don't understand

:11:37. > :11:40.the logic at all. Let's speak to John Brewer, a professor of sports

:11:41. > :11:44.science at Saint Mary's University and also a board member of UK

:11:45. > :11:49.Anti-Doping. He is talking to us today in a personal capacity. Good

:11:50. > :11:52.morning to you. Your reaction to the Canadian lawyer report yesterday? I

:11:53. > :11:55.think it is a very sad day for sport and it shows that there are real

:11:56. > :11:58.issues within Russia that need to be addressed and there are some very

:11:59. > :12:02.tough and difficult decisions that the authorities will need to take

:12:03. > :12:05.with regard to Russia's observation in the other big games. Before we

:12:06. > :12:11.talk about that immense decision that they have to take, what struck

:12:12. > :12:16.you most about the scale and depth of the cheating going on in Russia?

:12:17. > :12:20.It is shock as much as anything. For some time we've had an indication

:12:21. > :12:24.that there was fairly systemic doping going on within Russia that

:12:25. > :12:28.clearly has caused major issues and we've been addressing the issues

:12:29. > :12:31.with regard to the athletes. I think what it also shows is that

:12:32. > :12:35.regardless of the outcome of this decision, there is a real need now

:12:36. > :12:41.to work with the Russians on the Russian authorities to rehabilitate

:12:42. > :12:44.them and to install a system within Russia that is one that all of us

:12:45. > :12:48.involved in sport throughout the world want to see because if we just

:12:49. > :12:51.ostracise them and kick them into touch altogether, things will only

:12:52. > :12:55.get worse, so there is now a really big job of work to do, which is to

:12:56. > :13:00.work with the Russians, with the athletes, the coaches and the

:13:01. > :13:03.authorities to make sure going forward we have a system that is

:13:04. > :13:08.clean within Russia and the rest of the world. Is there any

:13:09. > :13:12.responsibility on Wada, the world anti-doping agency, on whose watch

:13:13. > :13:16.this was going on? In some ways very some encouragement that this has

:13:17. > :13:20.been exposed so I think there will be some retrospective looking at

:13:21. > :13:23.decisions that were taken. I was the governing body of British skiing and

:13:24. > :13:26.snowboarding during the Sochi Olympics, where a lot of the

:13:27. > :13:31.evidence is suggesting that there were adverse practices going on. We

:13:32. > :13:33.had athletes who were deprived of medals or deprived of medal winning

:13:34. > :13:36.opportunities because retrospectively we see that they may

:13:37. > :13:41.well have been Russians involved and ( as is. So I think the most

:13:42. > :13:46.important thing is that we have to protect the right for athletes to

:13:47. > :13:49.compete clean. At our university we have around 12 athletes associated

:13:50. > :13:53.with the University who will be competing at the Rio Olympics and

:13:54. > :13:56.they want to know that when they line up on the start line or the

:13:57. > :14:00.swimming pool that they are competing against others who are

:14:01. > :14:05.clean. And people watching around the world want to know that. What

:14:06. > :14:10.about clean Russian athletes? Should they be allowed to compete or at

:14:11. > :14:18.least to be able to show to the IOC, here are all my you're in samples,

:14:19. > :14:21.there is no issue here. There is evidence to suggest they are clean

:14:22. > :14:26.but we have seen a precedent where we've seen relay teams where there

:14:27. > :14:30.has been four athletes competing in the relay, one athlete has tested

:14:31. > :14:32.positive and unfortunately for the other three they've been stripped of

:14:33. > :14:37.their medals and it may well be that there is a tough price to pay for

:14:38. > :14:41.those within the Russian system, athletes who we know our band, who

:14:42. > :14:46.are unable to compete in the London external of wrongdoing of others. If

:14:47. > :14:48.the IOC do come to that decision and may not be today, it may be after

:14:49. > :14:54.they've allowed any potentially clean athletes to put evidence

:14:55. > :14:59.forward, would that be the right decision, if they ban all Russian

:15:00. > :15:02.athletes from competing at Rio? I would emphasise again that I is

:15:03. > :15:08.speaking personally. My view is that the evidence suggests that because I

:15:09. > :15:11.know as a scientist you've taken drugs, you still have a long-term

:15:12. > :15:14.benefit from those drugs, so even if you've stopped now and you go out

:15:15. > :15:18.and compete in a few weeks, I would not be surprised if the whole of the

:15:19. > :15:21.Russian squad were banned and I suspect that for the long-term

:15:22. > :15:27.integrity of sport, that may well be the correct decision to take. You

:15:28. > :15:33.will note that President Putin and the Kremlin are saying that this is

:15:34. > :15:36.about politics, this is political interference, and they've issued a

:15:37. > :15:39.statement this morning, "We stand against doping".

:15:40. > :15:44.It is easy to say the words, the evidence maybe something different

:15:45. > :15:47.and I will come back to the point I made earlier, we have to protect the

:15:48. > :15:50.right of our athletes to compete in a clean environment and I have seen

:15:51. > :15:54.the dedication and hard work that so many of our athletes across a range

:15:55. > :15:58.of sports put into compete at the highest level for their country at

:15:59. > :16:01.an Olympic Games. And they have to have the assurance that they are in

:16:02. > :16:06.an environment that is as clean as possible. I think it would be naive

:16:07. > :16:09.to say that it will be totally clean, but when we see evidence that

:16:10. > :16:12.would suggest they are in an environment where athletes they are

:16:13. > :16:16.up against may have previously doped and reaped the benefits of that or

:16:17. > :16:20.perhaps have been doping up until recently then I think we have to

:16:21. > :16:26.take tough and indeed difficult decisions. This tweet, "Russian

:16:27. > :16:31.doping is a disgrace and zero tolerance should be the attitude."

:16:32. > :16:35.Davis says, "Continued contempt from the Russians, not just in sport, but

:16:36. > :16:42.in its general attitude towards rules. We need it make an example of

:16:43. > :16:46.them." Bruce says, "Russia should be permanently removed from the IOC, if

:16:47. > :16:53.Russian athletes aren't good enough, they should be under a different

:16:54. > :17:01.flag." Another one from Sandra, "We love bashing the Russians, it is not

:17:02. > :17:06.as if we don't have drug cheats in our own back yard." We need to make

:17:07. > :17:11.sure that we work with them to put the right practises and the right

:17:12. > :17:15.regime in place. Do you think if it was a life ban, that would be the

:17:16. > :17:18.ultimate deterrent? I think you are talking about a life ban for

:17:19. > :17:21.individual athletes of the tweet there was suggesting that the

:17:22. > :17:25.Russians should be banned for a long period of time. I think we have

:17:26. > :17:29.moved a long way to the extension of the ban for an athlete who tests

:17:30. > :17:33.positive to make it four years and lifetime for a second offence,

:17:34. > :17:38.that's a positive step. Most importantly, as a sports scientist,

:17:39. > :17:42.I am encouraged about the advances in science that enable us to test

:17:43. > :17:46.samples, eight, tense years afterwards. It is amazing, but even

:17:47. > :17:50.with the advances in science, the cheats are always a step ahead?

:17:51. > :17:54.That's why we need too to keep investing in the science. If we

:17:55. > :17:59.throw our hands up and say we will never win, things are only going to

:18:00. > :18:03.get worse. It is important we fund the anti doping agencies and fund

:18:04. > :18:07.the scientific research. Despite their failures? Or the fact that we

:18:08. > :18:12.are picking up cheats I would suggest is in a sense a positive

:18:13. > :18:15.news and we are, I think, in a situation now where anybody who win

:18:16. > :18:21.as medal, who has in the past cheated and taken a banned substance

:18:22. > :18:26.cannot sleep lightly and can always look over their shoulder and suspect

:18:27. > :18:29.they might get a test that strips that medal from them five or ten

:18:30. > :18:37.years down the line. I am encouraged about the world we are moving into.

:18:38. > :18:41.Thank you. This 45-year-old father of two is

:18:42. > :18:48.banned from having sex unless he gives the police 24 hours notice.

:18:49. > :18:53.Those are the terms of a sexual risk order imposed on him.

:18:54. > :18:56.MPs have voted by a margin of four to one to renew the Trident

:18:57. > :19:03.60% of Labour MPs voted in favour of Trident

:19:04. > :19:08.We'll look at what this means for Labour in just a moment,

:19:09. > :19:19.Trident is the name of the UK's nuclear weapons system. The system

:19:20. > :19:23.is made up of four sur Marines, 58 Trident nuclear missiles and a

:19:24. > :19:26.stockpile of over 200 nuclear warheads. Trident miss iletion

:19:27. > :19:34.carried on the submarines are 18 times more powerful than the bomb

:19:35. > :19:40.than drop on Hiroshima. The submarines were built between 1986

:19:41. > :19:46.and 1999. They are old and need replacing. Doing that will cost ?31

:19:47. > :19:53.billion over 35 years. That's about 0.2% of total Government spending.

:19:54. > :19:58.Protesters argue keeping nuclear weapons costs too much money.

:19:59. > :20:04.Keeping nuclear warheads could lead to accidents and they say it makes

:20:05. > :20:08.the UK more unsafe. Those in favour of Trident think it

:20:09. > :20:14.makes us safer because it is a deterrent.

:20:15. > :20:15.Nine countries have nuclear weapons including Russia, Pakistan, and

:20:16. > :20:26.North Korea. We can talk now to Ryan Ramsey

:20:27. > :20:29.a former Submarine Commander in the Navy's attack fleet

:20:30. > :20:33.who trained others to captain the Trident submarines

:20:34. > :20:35.and Rear Admiral John Gower, a former assistant chief of defence

:20:36. > :20:46.staff for nuclear deployment. Welcome both of you. Ryan Ramsay,

:20:47. > :20:50.you completed underwater training missions on Trident submarines.

:20:51. > :20:56.Describe for our audience the submarine? It is a huge vessel. It

:20:57. > :21:02.is impressive technology wise. And it is impressive piece of equipment

:21:03. > :21:06.that's taken out to sea providing the deterrents that the UK needs.

:21:07. > :21:13.More importantly as the crews that operate it, so keeping that going

:21:14. > :21:16.24/7, 365 requires highly skilled operators, people who can make

:21:17. > :21:19.decisions and people who can lead and people who can follow and they

:21:20. > :21:23.do that effectively. Tell us about the responsibility you feel on

:21:24. > :21:27.taking a nuclear powered submarine to sea? It is a huge responsibility

:21:28. > :21:33.of taking any warship or submarine to sea. It is about achieving

:21:34. > :21:35.political effect. It is about achieving strategic effect, but

:21:36. > :21:39.importantly, it is about bringing your crews home safely as well. So

:21:40. > :21:44.taking your crews off in the nobbling that you might go to war --

:21:45. > :21:47.knowledge that you might go to war is a huge responsibility, but it is

:21:48. > :21:53.a prif leubleg and one I enjoyed. Much of the time though, life must

:21:54. > :21:59.ablittle mundane on a submarine? I describe it as 60% of boredom,

:22:00. > :22:04.mundane, day-to-day stuff and then 40% of adrenalin rush and actually

:22:05. > :22:09.managing it your team to be able to do that on a ballistic missile

:22:10. > :22:15.submarine for up to 90 to 100 days is a huge challenge and for some of

:22:16. > :22:19.the attack submarines that go on deployments of 300 days that's a

:22:20. > :22:23.huge challenge for the leadership team. I think you spent nearly a yor

:22:24. > :22:29.at one stage under the ocean. How do you deal with that? Days roll into

:22:30. > :22:33.days, but the tasking that attack submarines have varies a lot so

:22:34. > :22:37.there is always a new challenge. By focussing on the near term with a

:22:38. > :22:45.longer term focus on making sure you bring the submarine back after 386

:22:46. > :22:50.days away that keeps you focussed. We think nine countries have nuclear

:22:51. > :23:02.weapons. As a deterrent, does Trident work? Yes, I mean the

:23:03. > :23:08.deterrent worked fielded by ourselves, France and United States,

:23:09. > :23:14.we haven't had a nuclear weapon used in anger since 9th August 1945. And

:23:15. > :23:19.so to say that the deterrent doesn't work isn't correct, it works every

:23:20. > :23:23.day. Sorry, yes? I have messages from viewers saying what use is

:23:24. > :23:31.Trident when we have lorries being used as weapons these days? Well,

:23:32. > :23:37.Trident has never and is never meant to deter terrorism or other threats

:23:38. > :23:40.that are not nuclear. Trident is there to assure and guarantee the

:23:41. > :23:44.security of the United Kingdom and her allies through the Nato alliance

:23:45. > :23:48.against the most extreme of threats. Either direct attack with nuclear

:23:49. > :23:57.weapons or the use of nuclear weapons to coerce and certainly the

:23:58. > :24:00.behaviour of Russia over Ukraine and her blatant nuclear saibor rattling

:24:01. > :24:07.over the last two years has shown that this threat is not some relic

:24:08. > :24:12.of a bygone era. This is here today, but there is no case made for

:24:13. > :24:18.Trident to prevent against terrorism and therefore, to say it doesn't

:24:19. > :24:25.prevent against terrorism to get rid of it is fa she shoulds. Trident did

:24:26. > :24:32.not stop Russia going into Ukraine? No, but that was not a nuclear

:24:33. > :24:38.threat. It is not panacea against all things, but it is a panacea

:24:39. > :24:43.against Russia using nuclear weapons. Ryan Ramsay you were

:24:44. > :24:46.captain of a number of attacked submarines. What is the difference

:24:47. > :24:50.between those and the Trident programme? I was the captain of one

:24:51. > :24:55.nuclear attack sub marred rern. The difference is the size. The

:24:56. > :24:58.ballistic missile submarine is five times larger than the attack

:24:59. > :25:03.submarine. The tasking is different as well. So the attack submarine is

:25:04. > :25:10.about intelligence gathering, almost a first line of defence for the

:25:11. > :25:22.United Kingdom and using tomorrow owe hawk missiles when required.

:25:23. > :25:28.Adding to the first line by deterrence itself. Ryan Ramsay and

:25:29. > :25:32.you heard from Rather Admiral John Gower.

:25:33. > :25:35.A hand-painted flag of so-called Islamic State has been found

:25:36. > :25:37.in the room of a teenage Afghan asylum seeker who attacked

:25:38. > :25:39.passengers on a train in Germany with an axe.

:25:40. > :25:43.Our correspondent Damien McGuinness is in Berlin.

:25:44. > :25:51.Tell us more about what happened last night. Well, it was quite a

:25:52. > :25:55.horrific attack for those on the train Victoria. Apparently what

:25:56. > :26:02.happened is the young man was-weeks-olding an axe and a knife

:26:03. > :26:04.-- wielding an axe and a knife and started attacking passengers

:26:05. > :26:08.viciously particularly a Chinese family who were travelling on the

:26:09. > :26:11.train. He attacked people in the stomach and on the head with the axe

:26:12. > :26:17.and then one of the passengers pull the emergency chord, the train

:26:18. > :26:23.ground to a halt and the attacker fled the scene as it happens, there

:26:24. > :26:27.was a special Commando armed unit of German police nearby. They chased

:26:28. > :26:35.after the perpetrator. They tracked him down. In the conflict that

:26:36. > :26:39.ensued the attacker tried to attack the police officers who then shot

:26:40. > :26:44.him dead. So the situation right now is that five people in total were

:26:45. > :26:48.injured. Four of them seriously and two of them are still in a critical

:26:49. > :26:52.condition. So it is a very serious attack, indeed, but the real

:26:53. > :26:57.question is what's the motivation behind the attack because this young

:26:58. > :27:02.man was a 17-year-old Afghan who had come here as an asylum seeker two

:27:03. > :27:05.years ago to Germany, what his motivation was is going to have a

:27:06. > :27:08.big impact as to what that means for wider society as a whole here in

:27:09. > :27:14.Germany. Now that the flag has been found, what are people saying about

:27:15. > :27:18.that? Well, of course, now police are investigating whether this is in

:27:19. > :27:21.fact an Islamist extremist attack and so-called Islamic State has

:27:22. > :27:27.claimed responsibility for the attack. They say that this young man

:27:28. > :27:33.was in fact one of their followers. Police are treating all of this with

:27:34. > :27:39.some caution including claims by one eyewitness that the man shouted out,

:27:40. > :27:43."Allah is great." In Arabic as he carried out the attack. Police can't

:27:44. > :27:51.confirm that's true, but they are treating it now as a potential

:27:52. > :27:56.Islamist extremist attack and the reason why problematic, it will

:27:57. > :27:59.increase fears about potential lone wolf attacks and particularly in

:28:00. > :28:03.neighbouring France we have had a couple of extreme terror attacks

:28:04. > :28:06.over the past year. Germany is already nervous that something

:28:07. > :28:12.similar could happen. It is problem attic because of the migrant crisis.

:28:13. > :28:17.In 2015 Germany took in more than one million migrants and refugees

:28:18. > :28:20.that was very controversial. Many people here supported Angela

:28:21. > :28:23.Merkel's stance on refugees, but many people objected to it. It

:28:24. > :28:26.really divided the country. Since the beginning of the year, numbers

:28:27. > :28:31.have gone down. So that has meant that actually that debate seems to

:28:32. > :28:36.have calmed somewhat, but the attack last night has really sparked off

:28:37. > :28:39.that debate and shown that the division in society over Angela

:28:40. > :28:43.Merkel's stance on refugees is still very much there.

:28:44. > :28:46.Thank you very much, Damien McGuinness in Berlin.

:28:47. > :28:49.A group of fishermen and colleagues

:28:50. > :28:51.convicted of smuggling ?53 million worth of cocaine.

:28:52. > :28:53.Could new evidence suggest they're innocent?

:28:54. > :28:55.We'll talk to the daughter of one of the men convicted

:28:56. > :29:08.This father of two is banned from having sex unless he gives the

:29:09. > :29:12.police 24 hours notice because of a sexual risk order that has been

:29:13. > :29:16.imposed upon him. We'll talk about the orders in much more detail and

:29:17. > :29:20.whether they have a role to play in protecting people. This e-mail from

:29:21. > :29:24.Michael, "What has become of our justice system when a guy acquitted

:29:25. > :29:29.of rape is open to further punishment for a crime at the didn't

:29:30. > :29:33.commit and is now on TV having his entire personal private sexual life

:29:34. > :29:38.opened up. The rule is ridiculous. The man is innocent. He should be

:29:39. > :29:43.able to live his life freely without this attention." This tweet, "This

:29:44. > :29:47.is fascinating. I had no idea things like this could happen in this

:29:48. > :29:52.country." Susan said, "I disagreed with this order at first, but he

:29:53. > :29:59.openly admits rape fantasies so prevention is sensible." Jan says,

:30:00. > :30:03."Just because he is into S and M, it doesn't make him a rapist. He is

:30:04. > :30:07.guilty of enjoying sexual pleasure like 99% of all human beings."

:30:08. > :30:11.Graham says, "The judge surely wouldn't describe him as a dangerous

:30:12. > :30:17.man if it were not a fair assessment of his character based on the

:30:18. > :30:20.evidence put before the court." This text says, "I'm disgusted by the way

:30:21. > :30:25.this man has been treated. We truly are living in a police state. Have

:30:26. > :30:28.the police got nothing better to do ie catching criminals?"

:30:29. > :30:32.Here's Annita in the BBC Newsroom with a summary of today's news.

:30:33. > :30:36.A hand-painted flag of the terror group so-called

:30:37. > :30:40.at the home of a 17-year-old Afghan refugee who attacked several

:30:41. > :30:43.people with an axe and a knife on a train in Germany.

:30:44. > :30:46.The teenager was shot dead by police during the attack near the southern

:30:47. > :30:49.Two of those injured are in a critical condition.

:30:50. > :30:52.The teenager, who had claimed asylum after travelling to Germany

:30:53. > :30:54.as an unaccompanied minor, had been living with a foster family.

:30:55. > :31:02.IS is now claiming it was behind the attack.

:31:03. > :31:05.MPs have voted overwhelmingly to approve a renewal of the Trident

:31:06. > :31:08.There was a majority of 355 in favour, after more

:31:09. > :31:11.than half of Labour MPs voted for the deterrent and against their

:31:12. > :31:15.During the debate, one Labour MP called his stance "juvenile

:31:16. > :31:21.Theresa May is holding her first cabinet meeting

:31:22. > :31:25.Mrs May is expected to set out her priorities,

:31:26. > :31:28.including leaving the EU, during the meeting, ahead

:31:29. > :31:31.of visits to Germany and France later in the week.

:31:32. > :31:34.It's been a raucous start to the Republican convention that

:31:35. > :31:35.will confirm Donald Trump as the party's

:31:36. > :31:47.There were claims that part of a keynote speech by Donald Trump's

:31:48. > :31:51.wife Melania was strikingly similar to Michelle Obama was both speech

:31:52. > :31:55.eight years ago. Mrs Trump, who was born in Slovenia, said she has as

:31:56. > :31:57.little help as possible to write the speech, which stressed family

:31:58. > :32:19.values. A legal charity says there's

:32:20. > :32:21.evidence of a miscarriage of justice in the drug-smuggling convictions

:32:22. > :32:24.of a group of fishermen In an exclusive report our programme

:32:25. > :32:28.investigates the case of the men, who were sentenced to up to 24 years

:32:29. > :32:31.in jail for a plot involving nearly We've found changed stories -

:32:32. > :32:35.and damaged evidence. The Russian Olympic committee has

:32:36. > :32:37.declared this morning that it stands against doping -

:32:38. > :32:40.but that the fate of honest athletes shouldn't depend

:32:41. > :32:41.on unproven accusations. It comes as the International

:32:42. > :32:44.Olympic Committee prepares to decide whether or not to ban ALL Russian

:32:45. > :32:47.athletes from the games in Rio. Russia is accused of operating

:32:48. > :32:49.a state-sponsored doping programme for four years across the "vast

:32:50. > :32:51.majority" of summer The country's track-and-field

:32:52. > :32:54.team is already banned Join me for BBC Newsroom

:32:55. > :32:59.Live at 11 o'clock. Jessica has the morning's

:33:00. > :33:00.sport headlines now. The BBC's had it confirmed

:33:01. > :33:03.this morning that Hull boss Steve Bruce had an interview

:33:04. > :33:05.for the vacant England Sunderland boss Sam Allardyce also

:33:06. > :33:09.held talks last week. More on that as we have a. Hi have

:33:10. > :33:16.it. Peter Sagan won yesterday's

:33:17. > :33:18.Tour de France stage But two-time winner Chris Froome

:33:19. > :33:21.crossed the line in 13th to maintain his grip on the leader's

:33:22. > :33:24.yellow jersey, and has a lead James Anderson, Ben Stokes

:33:25. > :33:28.and Adil Rashid have all been added to the England squad for the second

:33:29. > :33:30.test against Pakistan, Anderson missed the opening

:33:31. > :33:35.test defeat at Lord's because he was injured, but is

:33:36. > :33:38.expected to return at Old Trafford - Andy Murray has decided not

:33:39. > :33:42.to defend his Rogers Cup title The world number two hasn't played

:33:43. > :33:46.since beating Milos Raonic to win the Wimbledon title

:33:47. > :33:48.for the second time. Murray will train in Majorca before

:33:49. > :33:59.defending his Olympic Updates on all those stories

:34:00. > :34:00.throughout the morning on the BBC News Channel.

:34:01. > :34:03.Five years ago, a group of family men from the Isle of Wight

:34:04. > :34:06.were given a combined prison sentence of 104 years

:34:07. > :34:09.for masterminding a ?53 million cocaine smuggling operation.

:34:10. > :34:13.But this programme has obtained new evidence which suggests

:34:14. > :34:18.Our reporter Jim Reed has spent six months following the story.

:34:19. > :34:20.We bought you his full report an hour ago - here's

:34:21. > :34:36.A bad recovered and brought the police station. It was one of the

:34:37. > :34:41.largest drug plots of the decade. In 2010, a quarter of a tonne of

:34:42. > :34:44.cocaine was found in the sea off the Isle of white. The police said it

:34:45. > :34:51.had been left there, wrapped around a boy, by a fishing boat which had

:34:52. > :34:54.picked it up from a container ship in the English Channel. The only

:34:55. > :34:58.thing of interest we could see were a couple of canisters floating in

:34:59. > :35:02.the water. At the bags were spotted by a member of the public and these

:35:03. > :35:10.five men were arrested and convicted. Hello, darling. Most were

:35:11. > :35:15.local fishermen with families and most serious criminal records. Sue's

:35:16. > :35:20.husband Jonathan was said to be the organiser of the plot. He is now

:35:21. > :35:24.serving 24 years in a high security prison in the Midlands. When you

:35:25. > :35:29.find out what he was being accused of and charged with, what was your

:35:30. > :35:37.reaction? It was ridiculous. What? It's just a stupid mistake and he'll

:35:38. > :35:43.be home. But he never came home? Hasn't been home since the 18th of

:35:44. > :35:47.January 2011. A hi-tech search of the men's boat after they were

:35:48. > :35:50.arrested could find no trace of the cocaine. All five still maintain

:35:51. > :35:56.they are innocent, five years after their trial. I wanted to tell you

:35:57. > :36:00.where I've got to... They are now being represented by the first

:36:01. > :36:03.charity of its kind in Britain, specialising in miscarriage of

:36:04. > :36:06.Justice investigations. This chart would have been really important to

:36:07. > :36:11.the jury in reaching a conviction because what liberal ports to show

:36:12. > :36:17.is the kissing vessel -- fishing vessel coming across the track. The

:36:18. > :36:20.police insisted that showed it was possible for drugs to have been

:36:21. > :36:26.transferred from the container vessel onto the fishing vessel. At

:36:27. > :36:30.the charity has now commissioned expert review of this data. Emily

:36:31. > :36:34.Bolton claims it shows the prosecution got it wrong, leaving

:36:35. > :36:37.out key plot points and using faulty information. If true, it would mean

:36:38. > :36:41.the pass of the boats were never closer than 100 metres from each

:36:42. > :36:47.other. A container ship was actually heading further south. The fishing

:36:48. > :36:50.vessel never intercepted with the trap of the container ship and there

:36:51. > :36:53.for good not have collected the drugs from the sea in the way that

:36:54. > :36:58.the police insisted they must've done. The charity claims its work

:36:59. > :37:02.also proves the drugs could not have been dropped off by the fishing boat

:37:03. > :37:04.in the bay, as the water there is too shallow and the tide would have

:37:05. > :37:11.taken the drugs in the opposite direction. That new evidence has

:37:12. > :37:14.formed part of a submission to the criminal cases review commission,

:37:15. > :37:18.which must now decide if the men will get a new appeal. The National

:37:19. > :37:21.Crime Agency, which led the drugs operation in the channel, said it

:37:22. > :37:24.can't comment while less investigation is ongoing.

:37:25. > :37:27.Let's speak now to Maisy Green, whose father Jamie Green

:37:28. > :37:29.was convicted of conspiracy to import cocaine and sentenced

:37:30. > :37:37.And also to Emily Bolton, who you saw in the film and who has taken

:37:38. > :37:43.on the case and runs the Centre for Criminal Appeals.

:37:44. > :37:49.Good morning, both of you. Thank you for coming on the programme. Emily

:37:50. > :37:52.Bolton, why are you convinced that the prosecution got the plot points

:37:53. > :37:56.of both the fishing boat and the container ship ran? They got the

:37:57. > :38:01.plot points of the container ship wrong by misinterpreting a piece of

:38:02. > :38:07.data and by missing out... It's join the dots exercise. So really simple?

:38:08. > :38:11.Very basic. They got that wrong and they didn't disclose the information

:38:12. > :38:16.that would have enabled the defence at trial to work out that it was

:38:17. > :38:21.wrong. And the GPS data that you have, that you say shows the correct

:38:22. > :38:25.route of the fishing boat in particular, why is that 100%

:38:26. > :38:30.accurate? The reason that's accurate is that it's a very sophisticated

:38:31. > :38:33.device used for fishermen to be able to do their work, go about their

:38:34. > :38:37.business in the sea, know where they are and come back to their pots and

:38:38. > :38:40.retrieve them, so it's a very accurately circuit,

:38:41. > :38:45.state-of-the-art, and exactly what's needed for lobster fishing, which is

:38:46. > :38:49.how Jamie Green has made living. The two capture police officers that saw

:38:50. > :38:54.someone on a boat throwing stuff off, maybe six or seven items, we

:38:55. > :38:59.now know there were 11 bags of cocaine at that freshwater Bay area,

:39:00. > :39:03.does that really matter whether they saw six or seven or whether it was

:39:04. > :39:07.12? I think more what matters there is the detail that they missed.

:39:08. > :39:10.They're not describing the drugs as they were found and they changed

:39:11. > :39:16.their descriptions to make them match what was actually found. But

:39:17. > :39:19.it doesn't mean, does it, that the five men could have been the ones

:39:20. > :39:23.throwing stuff off the side of the boat which could have been cocaine?

:39:24. > :39:27.It does because if you combine that evidence with the evidence from the

:39:28. > :39:30.mid-channel, we now know that the two boats didn't intersect and they

:39:31. > :39:33.basically could not have picked up the bags at the time the police

:39:34. > :39:36.theorised they were dropped and this is not evidence the jury were able

:39:37. > :39:39.to hear at trial and it's not evidence that has been heard by the

:39:40. > :39:44.Court of Appeal and we want to chance to get this evidence in front

:39:45. > :39:49.of a court as a matter of urgency. Are there any other possible

:39:50. > :39:52.explanations how, if the boats didn't cross paths, that cocaine

:39:53. > :39:58.could have ended up on the five men's fishing boat? We checked the

:39:59. > :40:01.issue of drift and in Jim's PCC bit of information about that. We check

:40:02. > :40:05.whether the banks could have drifted. We have modelling software

:40:06. > :40:09.that enables you to look into these things and that also doesn't work.

:40:10. > :40:14.The bags would have drifted away from the boat, not towards it. There

:40:15. > :40:17.is no way that your GPS digital tracking could have missed about

:40:18. > :40:21.going towards the bags of cocaine to pick them up? The GPS digital track

:40:22. > :40:28.and we have a sour boat, it shows where our boat was and it was not in

:40:29. > :40:32.the place where it would need to be. Where is this case up to in terms of

:40:33. > :40:38.you wanting a Court of Appeal hearing? This case is an emergency.

:40:39. > :40:41.These five men have been imprisoned since 2010 and it is in front of the

:40:42. > :40:48.Kiro cases review commission, the body set up to investigate suspected

:40:49. > :40:52.miscarriages of justice. -- criminal cases review commission. But that

:40:53. > :40:55.body is so underfunded that the cases been an icky of 18 months. We

:40:56. > :40:59.see our charity as being the ambulance, we go out and pick up the

:41:00. > :41:03.casualties of justice and we watch them to hospital but when they get

:41:04. > :41:06.to the Court of Appeal, or the commission can actually do something

:41:07. > :41:10.about their condition, they are told to wait in a queue. It is like these

:41:11. > :41:13.cases, these casualties of justice, are bleeding out on a stretcher in a

:41:14. > :41:18.queue waiting for the urgent treatment they need and that can't

:41:19. > :41:20.persist and if Theresa May is serious about investigating issues

:41:21. > :41:24.with police accountability and with our criminal justice system, we need

:41:25. > :41:27.to see more funding for the institutions that run our appeals

:41:28. > :41:32.process, the commission and the Court of Appeal. Sydney on Facebook,

:41:33. > :41:38.and this is representative of a number of comments, says, the

:41:39. > :41:43.evidence seems... It's just such a coincidence, you know? How are you

:41:44. > :41:46.so clear that these men are innocent? Once you look at the

:41:47. > :41:51.evidence in detail, and the fresh evidence that no court has looked at

:41:52. > :41:54.before that no jury has ever heard, I think Sydney would have his

:41:55. > :41:58.questions answered. It is almost too much detail to go into here but the

:41:59. > :42:02.fresh evidence makes absolutely clear that they could not have

:42:03. > :42:06.picked up those drugs at sea. Maisie, your father was convicted of

:42:07. > :42:11.conspiracy to import drugs and sentenced to 24 years in jail. It

:42:12. > :42:19.was your dad who owned and skippered the boat. Why do you think is

:42:20. > :42:22.innocent? My dad has been a fisherman all his life, it's what

:42:23. > :42:30.he's done, it's what he's always wanted to do, he's never done

:42:31. > :42:33.anything differently. So that's all he's done and why would he do

:42:34. > :42:41.something like this? Why would it happen now? Why, 47 years down the

:42:42. > :42:48.line, why all of a sudden? It's just crazy. It's ridiculous. Because it's

:42:49. > :42:53.a chance to earn a lot of money, potentially, if you don't get

:42:54. > :43:02.caught. My dad's a simple fisherman from the island. We are a close

:43:03. > :43:06.family. We've worked hard together. My grandparents have a seafood

:43:07. > :43:09.restaurant. That is our family life and it is just ridiculous to assume

:43:10. > :43:14.that my dad would do something like this. He's got three kids, me being

:43:15. > :43:21.one of them. His wife was terminally ill. Why would he do something like

:43:22. > :43:25.this, and cause the devastation and impact that it's caused our family?

:43:26. > :43:31.You went to visit him last Saturday in jail. Between the three of you,

:43:32. > :43:36.you go once a week, I think. What would you say your father's state of

:43:37. > :43:40.mind is? He's very frustrated. Obviously, the last year has been a

:43:41. > :43:47.lot worse than previous years with the passing of my mother at the end

:43:48. > :43:51.of last year. He's had, as you can imagine, for anyone to be put in

:43:52. > :43:58.prison, let alone to be put there when he hasn't done anything wrong,

:43:59. > :44:01.for the ongoing suffering of my mum, obviously now she's passed away...

:44:02. > :44:08.It's bad enough for us so I can't imagine what it's like for him in

:44:09. > :44:20.there. Me and my sister have seen a downward spiral in him in the last

:44:21. > :44:24.six months, since my mum's died. We think he is in a more mindful sense

:44:25. > :44:32.with the passing and slowly getting over that with my mum, obviously

:44:33. > :44:36.it's difficult. But I'm not in that position. It is difficult enough for

:44:37. > :44:40.us so I can't imagine what it's like for him. And just countable through

:44:41. > :44:44.moment, I'm coming back to a second. I just want to bring our audience

:44:45. > :44:49.this news from Lincolnshire Police. They say that three people have been

:44:50. > :44:51.killed in a shooting in Spalding. The police statement is as

:44:52. > :44:57.follows... We can confirm that there has been a firearms incident on a

:44:58. > :45:02.road in Spalding in Lincolnshire, in the vicinity of the Castle swimming

:45:03. > :45:06.pool, in which three people have been fatally wounded, including the

:45:07. > :45:08.suspected offender. There is an ongoing police investigation and

:45:09. > :45:12.operation. At this stage we are not looking for anyone else in

:45:13. > :45:15.connection with this. There is no indication that this is a terrorist

:45:16. > :45:19.related incident. Mailshots have been fired by the police. We urge

:45:20. > :45:23.members of the public to stay away from the area at the moment. Any

:45:24. > :45:30.witnesses to the incident you haven't already spoken to officers

:45:31. > :45:33.at the scene are asked to call 101, quoting number 92 of the 19th of

:45:34. > :45:39.July. So Lincolnshire Police say that three people have been killed

:45:40. > :45:42.in a shooting in Spalding, including the suspected offender. Clearly

:45:43. > :45:49.there is an ongoing police operation in the castle swimming pool area.

:45:50. > :45:52.Police say, at this stage, there is no indication to suggest that this

:45:53. > :45:54.is a terrorist related incident. More on this in the next few minutes

:45:55. > :46:06.of the programme. Let's continue our conversation with

:46:07. > :46:13.Maisie Green whose father is in jail. Was your father able to see

:46:14. > :46:17.your mum before she died? He was. He attended the hospice which was on

:46:18. > :46:22.the Isle of Wight a few weeks before my mum passed away. He was supposed

:46:23. > :46:28.to attend for the day. There was some sort of problem with the prison

:46:29. > :46:37.that couldn't book the ferry in time and usual problems with the system

:46:38. > :46:42.so he only got a few hours which was disappointing. We were hoping he

:46:43. > :46:49.would get the day there. He three hours and he had to be taken away.

:46:50. > :46:54.How hopeful are you that this case will be overturned at some point in

:46:55. > :47:00.the future? I am very hopeful and so are the rest of the family with the

:47:01. > :47:05.hard work from Emily and the work that my auntie put into the case. As

:47:06. > :47:12.every month passes it is more hopeful, we are all more hopeful and

:47:13. > :47:18.kind of working towards getting a result from the appeal board and

:47:19. > :47:22.hopefully going from there. I mean, we, as a family, without my mum,

:47:23. > :47:26.could really do with him being out so... As a lawyer, you have seen a

:47:27. > :47:31.lot of cases. Is this a miscarriage of justice? I think this is clearly

:47:32. > :47:37.a miscarriage of justice and what made it doubly so is the delay in

:47:38. > :47:51.getting in rectified. This young woman's father had to give the ulogy

:47:52. > :47:56.at his wife's funeral shackled by a prison guard. The evidence is

:47:57. > :48:00.already there that proves these men are the victim of a miscarriage of

:48:01. > :48:06.justice. The system failed them and is holding them in a queue and

:48:07. > :48:12.keeping the lives of the family members and robbed Jamie of the

:48:13. > :48:13.chance to be with her in her last days.

:48:14. > :48:16.Thank you. Hampshire Police told us it wouldn't

:48:17. > :48:19.be appropriate to comment because the investigation

:48:20. > :48:21.was led by the Serious Organised They did, however, confirm

:48:22. > :48:25.that they have no ongoing complaints The NCA, or National Crime Agency,

:48:26. > :48:31.also told us it wasn't appropriate to comment while the case

:48:32. > :48:33.is before the Criminal If you want to watch

:48:34. > :48:40.the full film or share it, you can find it on our programme

:48:41. > :48:45.page: bbc.co.uk/victoria Hundreds of people have complained

:48:46. > :48:48.to the press regulator about an article by Sun columnist

:48:49. > :48:50.Kelvin Mackenzie who suggested a Channel 4 presenter should not

:48:51. > :48:55.have been allowed to present a report of last week's

:48:56. > :48:58.mass killings in Nice because she is a Muslim

:48:59. > :49:02.who wears the hijab. The reporter is Fatima Manji who has

:49:03. > :49:16.worked at Channel 4 for four years. Good afternoon. At least 84 people

:49:17. > :49:20.have died and dozens are hurt in France after a truck drove through

:49:21. > :49:25.crowds along Nice's packed waterfront. Ten children are among

:49:26. > :49:30.the dead after the driver hit people celebrating Bastille Day along the

:49:31. > :49:33.famous promenade. 15 more children are being treated this hospital.

:49:34. > :49:38.Some with life threatening injuries. Witnesses say the driver swerved

:49:39. > :49:39.from side to side for as much as one mile to kill as many people as

:49:40. > :49:42.possible. Here's an extract from

:49:43. > :49:44.Kelvin Mackenzie's column, Was it appropriate for her to be

:49:45. > :49:49.on camera when there had been yet another shocking

:49:50. > :49:52.slaughter by a Muslim? Was it done to stick one in the eye

:49:53. > :49:55.of the ordinary viewer who looks at the hijab as a sign

:49:56. > :49:58.of the slavery of Muslim women by a male-dominated

:49:59. > :50:07.and clearly violent religion?" We wanted to speak to Kelvin

:50:08. > :50:11.MacKenzie this morning, but he has not returned any of our calls. We

:50:12. > :50:14.wanted to talk to the Sun management, but they said they

:50:15. > :50:16.weren't commenting. Channel 4 said Mr MacKenzie's remarks are offensive

:50:17. > :50:21.and completely unacceptable. You might expect controversy

:50:22. > :50:25.from Donald Trump at the Republican national convention but probably not

:50:26. > :50:29.from his wife Melania. Parts of the her keynote

:50:30. > :50:33.speech were found to bear a striking similarity

:50:34. > :50:43.to the text delivered by Michelle Obama when her husband

:50:44. > :50:45.won the Democratic Party's The passages in question focused

:50:46. > :50:49.on lessons that Melania Trump learned from her parents

:50:50. > :51:01.and her experience as a mother. From my young age my parents

:51:02. > :51:06.impressed on me the same values. You work hard, that your work is your

:51:07. > :51:12.bond. Your word is your bond and you say what you're going to do. You

:51:13. > :51:20.treat people with respect. With dignity and respect. The height of

:51:21. > :51:21.your achievements is the reach of your dreams and your willingness to

:51:22. > :51:25.work hard for them. In an exclusive interview, a man

:51:26. > :51:28.who has to tell police 24 hours in advance of having sex has told

:51:29. > :51:31.this programme his life John O'Neill was cleared of rape

:51:32. > :51:40.last year, but the judge said his fascination with S meant

:51:41. > :51:44.he was still a danger to women and police put him

:51:45. > :51:46.on a sexual risk order. In his first interview,

:51:47. > :51:48.he's been telling us I asked him why he's had this sexual

:51:49. > :52:04.risk order imposed upon him. This is the mystery that me and my

:52:05. > :52:12.lawyers have been trying to figure out. We were amazed that the police

:52:13. > :52:16.had made the application after an acquittal, a unanimous acquittal of

:52:17. > :52:20.the only crime that I have ever been accused of. We think it is sour

:52:21. > :52:27.grapes. They lost in court. They didn't just lose, they were

:52:28. > :52:31.humiliated in court for having utterly failed to do any detective

:52:32. > :52:35.work apparently. But it must have been explained to you when it was

:52:36. > :52:46.served upon you? They had their reasons, but the reasons are to get

:52:47. > :52:52.an SRO you need an act of a sexual nature which necessitates the risk

:52:53. > :52:59.order. Now, the act on which they rely are scratching and biting

:53:00. > :53:04.during sex. Consensual sex? Yes. Now, if that necessitates a sexual

:53:05. > :53:08.risk order they're going to have to be writing an awful lot of sexual

:53:09. > :53:11.risk orders. I would suspect the majority of the population is going

:53:12. > :53:19.to be subject to a sexual risk order. The real reason is they lost

:53:20. > :53:25.at trial and they're using misusing this new set of laws to effectively

:53:26. > :53:29.put me on retrial for rape after an acquittal because it is the same

:53:30. > :53:36.evidence. It is the same witnesses. It is just a retrial in miniature

:53:37. > :53:42.and on the 19th August, I will have a trial, if I lose, for that act, I

:53:43. > :53:46.become a convicted sex offender. It is utterly ridiculous. If you were

:53:47. > :53:49.to disclose to the police that you were going to have sex with someone

:53:50. > :53:56.24 hours later, what information would you have to give them? I have

:53:57. > :54:00.to give name, address, and date of birth. Of... Of any woman that I

:54:01. > :54:07.intend to have any sexual contact with. It is broader than just having

:54:08. > :54:11.sex. What does it include? Oh, it is ridiculous, sexual conversation

:54:12. > :54:19.would be included. Kissing is included. It's so sweeping. It is

:54:20. > :54:22.ridiculous. It is so badly worded I could breach this order by accident

:54:23. > :54:25.and in fact... How? That's effectively. Well, if I have a

:54:26. > :54:30.sexual conversation, the police can come along and say, "Right, that's

:54:31. > :54:36.sexual contact. Jail." Are you a dangerous man? No. In no respect,

:54:37. > :54:39.no. I have been accused of precisely one crime in my entire 45 years and

:54:40. > :54:56.I was unanimously acquitted. Sexual risk orders were introduced

:54:57. > :55:07.in 2014 under the anti-social behaviour crime and policing Act.

:55:08. > :55:11.Northumbria Police Commissioner Vera Baird has been familiar with them

:55:12. > :55:14.since they were introduced and believes they do have a role

:55:15. > :55:15.to play in protecting potential victims.

:55:16. > :55:18.She's a former lawyer, and ex Labour MP and solicitor-general.

:55:19. > :55:23.He has not been convicted. He has not gone to prison. It is a

:55:24. > :55:27.different thing. The judge said that he was a very dangerous man. He

:55:28. > :55:31.clearly has a different point of view. Possibly, we should park his

:55:32. > :55:36.case because there are two sides to every one and consider the position.

:55:37. > :55:40.It is only if it is necessary to make an order to protect some member

:55:41. > :55:45.of the public or the public generally from sexual harm when

:55:46. > :55:49.somebody has already done something of a sexual nature that such an

:55:50. > :55:54.order can be made. That order has to be proven on evidence to a court and

:55:55. > :55:58.it is pre-emptive. A classically, it is likely to be were somebody

:55:59. > :56:04.perhaps, I mean, a typical way of sexually abusing young women is if

:56:05. > :56:09.youngsters are hanging around on the street outside a coughy shop or a

:56:10. > :56:13.take-away or a bar, they can be befriended and they might be taken

:56:14. > :56:18.to parties where there are older men and loads of drink. If something

:56:19. > :56:21.stops, which looks like the inevitable conclusion, sex to follow

:56:22. > :56:25.with underage girl, if something stops t the girls get taken away and

:56:26. > :56:29.put into care, a police raid, whatever, nonetheless, the court

:56:30. > :56:34.might well think it is necessary not to just wait for the next set of

:56:35. > :56:38.girls that are not so lucky, but to make a pre-emptive order stopping

:56:39. > :56:48.men there from doing that stuff again. That's the intention. It is

:56:49. > :56:52.to protect against serious serious sexual harm. It is interesting we

:56:53. > :56:55.had to park the John O'Neill case and you used that example. There is

:56:56. > :57:01.a role for them, briefly, there is a role for them, in this country, when

:57:02. > :57:06.it comes to trying to stop potential crimes? There is a pre-emptive role

:57:07. > :57:10.for them. It has got to be done on evidence. It is a new provision, but

:57:11. > :57:16.it is one in a long line of orders of this kind that can stop people

:57:17. > :57:20.who there is in the court's mind a necessity to stop from taking steps.

:57:21. > :57:23.The police don't have to stand by and wait until the crime is

:57:24. > :57:28.committed if they can prove to the court it is necessary to protect

:57:29. > :57:32.somebody to prevent those steps being taken. Clearly, we don't have

:57:33. > :57:36.a full picture there, are Will have been a contested hearing in court.

:57:37. > :57:40.One, the judge said he was very dangerous, two, he says it was just

:57:41. > :57:44.sour grapes from the police, he can appeal against it if that was the

:57:45. > :57:48.situation. If you park that and consider the consider obviously, it

:57:49. > :57:53.is helpful for the police to manage such people and helpful for us not

:57:54. > :57:57.to have vulnerable people put at risk because no crime has been

:57:58. > :58:00.committed even though somebody may have been two-thirds of the way

:58:01. > :58:03.towards T More on the breaking news that three people have been shot

:58:04. > :58:08.this Lincolnshire. Richard Galpin tell us what you know? The police

:58:09. > :58:14.are saying three people have been killed. Firearms used. The gunman

:58:15. > :58:18.apparently was one of those who has been killed. This was in Spald in

:58:19. > :58:23.Lincolnshire. Near a swimming pool there. One of the key things is that

:58:24. > :58:27.the police are saying that they, there is no indication at the moment

:58:28. > :58:30.that this was a terrorist relatedence dent. And the police

:58:31. > :58:35.themselves did not actually open fire. They're urging members of the

:58:36. > :58:38.public to stay away for the time being. Thank you very much, Richard

:58:39. > :58:41.Galpin reporting. More, of course, throughout the day on BBC News.

:58:42. > :58:46.I'm still worried that, in the time you've been away,

:58:47. > :58:49.you've never resolved that anger, that...

:58:50. > :58:53.that chaos inside you, that need for destruction.