Manhunt (2019) s01e03 Episode Script

Episode 3

1 'My ex Levi Bellfield is familiar with the area and hates women.
'Levi's currently on bail for GBH and the weapon used in the attack was a hammer.
' Oh, God.
Must be break time.
Sarah Knight was run over by a people carrier on May 28th.
One week later Bellfield sold his Previa.
Guilty conscience.
Or a coincidence.
The other day you said, "I don't wanna mess up Amelie the way Surrey did Milly.
" Well, they have messed Milly up.
Where do you think I work, Colin?! Bus stops and bus routes are his hunting ground.
There will be more attacks unless we can find something to bring him in on.
News Of The World just called the press office and they know we're planning an arrest.
They're gonna run the story on Sunday so we have to pick Bellfield up before then.
If we're not ready to arrest him, they can't run it.
We can do a deal.
Are you serious? When you nick Bellfield, take the News Of The World along for the ride.
You all know how important success is this morning.
Watch the adrenaline.
Don't rush.
Don't lose your heads.
Slow and steady really does win the day.
And that applies ten-fold to you two.
Stay back and out of the way.
If you get under our feet or do anything daft to get a photo, you'll be sharing a cell with the suspect.
Clear? Clear.
OK.
Surveillance put Bellfield to bed at 11pm.
He's at home with his partner Laura Marsh.
The children are at a sleepover with Laura's mum.
The street and the back garden are covered.
We're striking ten other locations simultaneously to ensure his mates don't lose any evidence.
Cars in particular.
Then we'll take him down to Heathrow for an interview Then we'll take him down to Heathrow as they're set up for Category As.
Jo and I will lead the advance party to make sure they're good and ready.
DS Griffiths has your vehicle keys, your maps and your briefing notes.
Good luck.
So, we're just waiting on East Hounslow.
What time is it? Ten past five.
'East Hounslow in position.
' Go.
Go.
Go.
Police! Police! Police! Police! Police! Police! This is a warrant to search this property.
Go left! OK.
Go left, I'll go right.
Laura? Laura Marsh? DS Norman Griffiths.
Nothing.
He's not fucking here! He's gotta be here.
He's not in here.
Where's Levi, Laura? I don't know.
Keep them out, for fuck's sake! Get out! We must've missed him, gov.
What? 'His car's here but he's not in the house.
' Impossible.
Surveillance put him to bed at 11 then stayed on site.
I don't know what to say, gov.
It's a cul-de-sac, how can they have missed him? There's a fair few ways out on foot.
Well, someone's driving a fucking Panda car tomorrow! Fuck! Are you sure you don't know where he is, Laura? Laura.
That went in the stereo.
He asked me to turn it down.
Normally, I would've but I said no cos the kids were dancing.
Enjoying themselves.
So he grabbed the stereo and threw it against the wall.
Right over their heads.
Where is he, Laura? That's all I need to know.
'She seems sure he's in the loft.
' OK.
Don't do anything.
We're gonna need help getting up there.
What you thinking, gov? 'I'm thinking he's killed two people by hitting them over the head.
' The TSG can handle this.
I'll make a call.
Anything? Not a peep.
Are we sure he's up there? There's only one way to find out.
Maybe this will bring him out.
What do you think he is, a bloody moth? Right, going up.
Police! Show me your hands.
Huh? I'm just hiding.
All right? I Stay there.
I've got him! Norman? We got him, gov.
What? Did he turn himself in? Not exactly.
I just went up and got him.
Thought it'd save a lot of fucking about.
You're very naughty.
This is Mr Sutton, Levi.
He's the boss.
Fuck you, prick.
Move.
Move.
Levi, News Of The World.
Do you wanna comment at all? Do you want a comment from me? Yeah, yeah.
Wanna ask me something? Get in the car.
In the car.
Superstar, mate.
Front page.
You got enough.
That's it.
Go on, get in there.
Fucking fibreglass is killing me, you know what I mean? Chill the fuck out.
All right, come on.
Fuck off.
We need fresh meat for the interview.
What about his Previa? Blood? DNA? Is there any way we can prove that was the vehicle that ran Sarah Knight over? No.
Just spoke to forensics, no joy.
What about his other cars? Any other people carriers? We're drawing up a list.
Good.
You keep on the vehicles.
Good luck.
And don't forget his wheel clamping mates either.
OK.
We've got him for 72 hours.
Minus medicals, meals, disclosures, legal consultations and beauty sleep.
I need you two to go in there believing that you can come out with something we can use, OK? He'll have an alibi for Amelie so don't waste time challenging that.
But if you can get him to acknowledge that he owns or owned a white Ford Courier van, we're half-way there.
Tread softly, OK? We're just confirming details.
David Smith.
I'm representing Mr Bellfield.
DCI Colin Sutton.
Nice to meet you.
Are you a Spurs fan, Levi? Yeah.
Me too.
That makes three of us.
Don't expect any special treatment, though.
Over here, please, Mr Bellfield.
Just need a few signatures from you.
What's the status of the Volvo now? 'It's parked outside my house.
'You can have the keys, if you like.
' 'You can have the keys, 'Thank you.
' And what about your white Ford Courier van? What? I don't own a Courier.
'You sure about that?' 'Yeah.
' Your mate Roger Fearn says you do.
He means a Peugeot.
I've got a white Peugeot van, yeah.
Oh.
Similar to a Courier.
Yeah.
Roger ain't the sharpest tool in the shed.
That's not you driving that van, then? I don't have a Courier, mate.
Just cleared that one up, haven't we? This is near Twickenham Green.
Staines Road.
No, it's not Staines Road.
It's Hampton Road.
I stand corrected.
Those photos got him talking.
Most loquacious.
JO: 'Know the area pretty well, Levi?' Yep.
I er I used to live in Turing Street.
I used to play pool at the Whitby Arms.
I still do on occasion.
Know this area, Levi? That's Spring Grove Road, innit? In Isleworth.
You know Isleworth? Of course.
Yeah, I'm up there all the time.
Work? Friends? What's the attraction? 'A bit of both.
' 'What about cars? Garages?' What is this? Fucking trick question or something? What is this? Fucking trick question Very straight-forward question.
Bill Wood of Epstone Motors in Isleworth said he sold you a white Courier van.
They're just off Spring Grove Road.
Is he lying, Levi? 'Well, yeah.
Or it's a mistake.
' 'Why would he be mistaken?' I don't know, maybe he ain't got a head for faces.
Come on, Levi.
You've got a very distinctive face.
No-one would forget your mug.
Let's keep it nice and civil, Levi.
'So this This van of yours.
'Have you got it?' 'Very funny question.
' Like I said, Roger is a bit confused about the Courier.
But If I did own one, which I don't.
If I did you couldn't prove it was me in there, could you? Couldn't prove it was anyone.
It's too fucking dark, innit? 'Well, we've got other pictures, Levi.
' Lots of them.
Oh, yeah? Let's see 'em, then.
Bollocks.
We have a day and a half to find something we can hold him on.
Any suggestions? I'm deep in the Marsha file but so far no link to Bellfield or his work as a bouncer and clamper.
Clive, Chris.
I'm still on Sarah Knight, gov.
It's a lot of material.
Yeah, but all we've really got is the coincidence with the Previa and a broken mirror.
What about his alibi for Amelie? Says he was car clamping.
Talking to his mates slash employees.
No doubt they know more than they're saying but they're scared.
Can't we scare them? Vehicle tax? Licence infringement? No luck so far.
Are we sure he hasn't got the Courier van stashed away? No, that van's in a scrapyard somewhere.
If it wasn't, we would've found it by now.
Before Laura gave up Levi, you had to coax her a bit, didn't you? Yeah.
A bit, gov, yeah.
What did she say? Erm, he lost his rag the other day.
Smashed up a stereo in front of the kids.
That doesn't sound like anything we could charge.
No.
Unless it's just the tip of the iceberg.
My mum, my mates, they never got it.
What I saw in him.
When we got together, he made me feel so special.
It sounds mental but he made me feel safe.
It was little things to start with.
"Why do you talk to your mum so much?" "What do you wanna see your mates for? "Aren't I good enough?" "Why do you need a bank card? What do you need money for? "You just waste it on rubbish.
" What about more recently? Here's the situation, Laura.
We think Levi has committed some very serious crimes, including murder.
But right now we don't have the evidence to prove it so we can't keep him in custody.
He He's getting out? Mmm.
Tomorrow.
Unless you can tell us something that will let us bring a charge against him.
I can't, he'll kill me.
No, he won't.
You're gonna protect me, are you? Heard that one before.
If you help us, Laura, he's finished.
It's over.
He's never getting out.
You never have to see him again.
He's the father of my kids.
What am I supposed to tell them? We're not pretending this is easy.
We know you're conflicted.
But .
.
we're desperate.
We need to keep Levi locked up and deep down, I think that's what you want too.
I don't know where to start.
Yes, I do.
The first time I said I was leaving him .
.
he got me up in the corner and ripped my clothes off.
I mean everything.
He pushed me out there, naked, and locked the door.
I was hysterical and just lost it.
Banging on the glass, screaming at him to let me in.
Apologising even though I hadn't done anything wrong.
Felt like the whole street was watching.
Then he just started laughing.
Sticking his tongue out.
Taking pictures of me, like it was all a big joke.
Laura, we can take a break any time you want, OK? On the news it said you found Amelie's stuff near Walton Bridge.
Yeah, that's right.
Why do you mention that? Laura? He raped me under Walton Bridge.
Given the seriousness of these multiple charges of rape and assault and given your past history with the complainants, we're satisfied bail should be denied.
You will be remanded in custody at Her Majesty's Prison .
.
Woodhill, Milton Keynes.
Milton Keynes? You fucking kidding me? Milton fucking Keynes? I can't leave London.
I can't leave my mum.
I've got a business to run.
Twat.
I'm not gonna forgive this! I'm not gonna forgive this! OK.
We've got him off the street but there's still a long way to go.
Without wishing to diminish their gravity, his domestic crimes are a sideshow.
We still haven't found a Courier and after all your efforts, that's a kick in the teeth but we were thorough and we can be proud of that.
Thorough is what gave us the van in the first place.
Thorough told us that buses were now fitted with outside cameras and thorough is how we'll get him for these murders and attempted murders.
ALL: Yes, gov.
Gov.
Yes, Chris.
We may not have the van itself but phone data is matching up a treat with CCTV.
Based on bus and static cameras, we can place the van in and around Twickenham Green between 21:32 and 22:08 on the night Amelie died.
OK.
The landline at Little Benty, almost certainly Laura, calls Bellfield's mobile at 21:37.
Cell site data tells us that when his phone was called, it was transmitting to a mast here on Fourth Cross Road.
That mast covers Twickenham Green and all the nearby streets.
Ie, exactly where the CCTV shows the van to be.
When Laura's call hits his mobile, it goes straight to voicemail.
We can picture the scene.
He's in his van, cruising the Green, hunting for a victim.
His phone rings, he panics, turns it off after one ring.
It's too late, it's logged.
Time and place, sound and picture.
How does he wriggle out of that? Easily.
He lost his phone.
He lent it to a mate.
He's got a Peugeot, not a Courier, and that's not him in the van.
What about the garage that says they sold him the Courier? That's interesting but it's not compelling.
How is it not compelling? It was months ago, might not have been Levi.
He didn't even give his full name.
Shit.
This is good work, Chris, but you need to develop it.
We need to put the phone in Bellfield's hand at 21:37 and we need to put him in that van.
Yes, gov.
OK, that's all.
Thank you very much.
I remember that day because it was the first day I'd been out since having the baby.
I needed loads of stuff but Levi didn't like me going out Anyway, he said when he got back from clamping, he'd take me to the Somerfield's, in Hayes.
And did he? He didn't turn up so I got in a cab.
When I got to Somerfield's, he called me, asking why I wasn't home.
What sort of time was that? About eight.
He came to find me and he took our eldest two to Toys R Us while I finished shopping.
What sort of mood was he in? Fine.
Good.
He called again while I was paying to tell me what toys he'd got the kids.
And then you came back here, to Little Benty, together? What time did you get here? Some time around nine, I suppose.
What is it, Laura? You asked what kind of mood he was in.
At the supermarket he was Levi at his best.
Mucking about, helping out with the kids.
By the time we got home, it was like a switch had been flicked.
In what way? He didn't help me unpack.
He didn't come in.
He just backed the van up and let me unload the bags.
And this was roughly five, ten past nine? And then he just drove off.
I got the baby down and then I went to make a cup of tea and that's when I realised I'd forgotten the milk so I called Levi and I asked him to bring some in.
And what did he say? He didn't answer so I left him a message.
That's our 21:37 call.
Of course, having the van would be ideal.
Of course, having the van Sure, but The van plus forensics.
Ideal from a CPS perspective.
We're not gonna get the van, Andrew.
He's made it disappear.
I see.
So are you gonna recommend charges or not? Well, the fact is we are minus any forensics linking him to Amelie.
We've got phone data and Laura's testimony, put him in the van at Twickenham Green on the night that Amelie was killed.
Defence would just say that Laura is lying or confused about the day.
She's not confused.
Just had a baby.
Sleep-deprived.
Doolally.
She called him to get milk and that was the call that pinged the mast by the Green at 21:37.
But they didn't actually speak.
My guess is that she called him all day and vice versa.
What about the trip to Somerfield's? Is the shop on her bank card? No, she paid cash.
Right.
Pity.
Yeah.
Maybe it's worth looking into the other things you suspect him of.
Marsha McDonnell.
The attack on Sarah Knight.
Yeah, we already are.
I'm sorry, Colin.
We're not ready for court yet.
OK.
Right.
Come on.
Vehicles.
Yeah, working through the list.
Fleet.
Now, the Previa is still a possibility on the attack on Sarah Knight but no forensics.
Amelie.
Ford Courier, we can't find, obviously.
Marsha McDonnell.
On the night she was killed, he might have been driving a Fiat Punto.
Based on what? Bus cameras.
The cameras picked up a car behind Marsha's bus.
Weirdly, the internal camera got the best shot.
There he is and there's Marsha.
Tentatively IDed as a Punto but we can't make out a registration.
Of course we bloody can't.
KNOCKING / DOOR OPENING Gov? Someone to see you.
Laura.
I want to talk about Milly Dowler.
In 2002 we were renting a flat in Collingwood Place.
Off Station Avenue.
Except we weren't living there, not the week that Milly disappeared.
I was dog-sitting for a friend in West Drayton.
Me and Levi were about to move to Little Benty and he was getting it ready.
That morning he left early to finish decorating.
So Levi went to Little Benty, leaving you in West Drayton.
He didn't call all day.
Was that unusual? He normally called every couple of hours to check up on me.
Mmm.
Did you call him? His mobile was off.
He never switched his phone off.
Cinemas, hospitals, never.
So what did you do? I was going to the shops and I couldn't find my car key.
I realised he'd taken it.
Levi had? What sort of car was that? A Daewoo.
I only had the one key but on the same ring I had the keys to Collingwood Place.
So on the day that Levi was uncontactable, he had access to Collingwood Place.
When did you hear from him? When he came home.
I mean, when he came to find me at West Drayton.
What sort of time was that? Late, about 11.
He brought fried chicken and cans of lager for us to share.
He'd changed.
He was wearing this white tracksuit.
Was it new? Had you seen it before? I'd seen it in the wardrobe in Collingwood Place.
So when you saw him wearing that tracksuit, you were pretty certain he'd been to Collingwood Place.
Thought he'd taken a girl there.
But you didn't ask him.
You don't ask Levi about stuff like that.
The next morning I realised my car wasn't outside so I called Levi.
He said he'd been for a drink with some mates and got a cab home cos he'd drunk too much to drive.
I told him I needed my car so he said he'd call a cab and we could go and fetch it together.
And did he? It wasn't there.
It wasn't where he'd parked it.
Did you find it? He said it must have been nicked.
He made me file a police report.
Sorry, Laura, I just wanna be clear on this.
Sorry, Laura, Levi took your Daewoo on March 21st, 2002 and you never saw it again.
Never.
Amelie, Marsha and Sarah.
I can't get one of them over the line with the CPS.
Thank God he didn't get bail.
And I've heard nothing back from Surrey about Milly.
When you offer up a suspect that solid, you expect to hear something.
Are they winding things down? Have they got a new lead? You're asking the wrong person.
I've been officially removed from the Milly enquiry.
You're kidding.
The junior analyst has taken over.
They think I'll leak to you over the dinner table.
Not that I recall the last time we actually sat down for dinner.
That's a pain.
What? You being taken off Milly.
You are fucking unbelievable.
I just told you I've been demoted in all but name and all you can think of is yourself.
and all you can think of No.
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
It's outrageous, the way they've treated you.
It's outrageous and unfair.
Yeah.
It is.
Good morning.
What's this? Well, it looks like breakfast in bed to my trained eye.
I've confirmed the move-in date and I've emailed the packers.
Only took me two hours to find it.
Let's splash out on a barbecue at the new place, shall we? Get back into it.
Just say if I'm trying too hard.
Well, well.
You want something.
Just your blessing.
I can't wait any longer for a response from Surrey on Milly.
I've called them and they're expecting me.
You know the rapes and the domestic assaults? I mean, how long is he actually going to serve? You know how it goes.
You get a good lawyer, he said, she said.
We must make one of these murders stick and I honestly don't care if it's one of yours or one of ours.
Can't you send someone? Louise.
You marching into the place where I work, telling them you've solved their big case makes things tricky for me.
You can see that, right? As in, kill whatever trust my bosses have left in me stone dead.
Steve Scott.
Good to meet you.
This is DS Jo Brunt.
Sir.
We've met before, actually.
Internet fraud thing in Epsom, was that? So we did.
Back when we called it the world wide web and thought a firewall could save you.
You're telling me different? This is Maria.
She's been made SIO on Milly.
Nice to meet you, Maria.
Good to meet you, Colin.
Shall we? After you.
The obvious corollary is that he used Laura's car to move Milly's body and then junked it, the same as he did with the van he was driving when he killed Amelie.
As for the MO, we've seen him try to get girls into his car in broad daylight, he's brazen.
We need to corroborate Laura's account.
Do you have any cars caught on CCTV that could be her cherry red Daewoo? Yeah, we do.
We have a red car turning into Station Road at 3:50.
We never established who was inside.
That's it.
That's Laura's Daewoo.
No, it's a Daewoo, you can't see the reg.
She was the only person to have one of that particular colour and model registered locally in 2002 and the only person who had the keys to it that day was Bellfield.
The thing is, Colin .
.
we have a very strong suspect of our own and we're hopeful that analysis of mud from his car will match pollen from Minley Heath, where Milly was found.
Once we've established that, one way or the other, perhaps we'll find time to have a look at your man.
We're offering you a suspect who's not only a paedophile but a killer and a rapist.
Suspected killer and - Who not only lived right on the plot but was provably there at exactly the time when Milly disappeared.
And you wanna wait for pollen samples? What the fuck is wrong with you? Colin.
I'm struggling here.
Completely struggling to fathom why you do this.
Seriously.
Why? Don't you wanna solve it? That is an obscene suggestion.
Obscene! How dare you come down here, saunter in, the big I am, and suggest - even suggest - something like that? Now, I have seen first hand what those officers have given, the sacrifices they've made PHONE RINGING .
.
to get justice for Milly so you are gonna apologise to each and every one - I'm sorry, I've gotta take this.
That is breath-taking.
Hello? Absolutely breath-taking! Thanks for getting back.
Give me a sec, I'll just get somewhere quieter.
Who do you think you are? Yeah.
Oh, I'm sorry, we're gonna have to cut your case.
Hmm? After two years.
Two years of investigation.
Where have they gone? I think the meeting's over.
I'm just a DS, Colin.
I'm just a bloody DS.
Was that really forensics on the phone? Yeah, of course.
They're having another go at the Marsha footage.
They've got some new software.
What happened to never leave a man behind? You're not a man.
I thought he was gonna have a fucking heart attack.
I can't get hold of Chris.
He's in the evidence room with some bird from Hounslow.
Gov, this is DS Nicola Hart from Hounslow.
She was on Sarah Knight.
So glad you're looking at it.
We gave it our all but we don't have your resources.
Nice to meet you, Nicola.
There's a ton of stuff.
I just wanted to be on hand to answer any questions.
That's very decent of you.
Chris said you found the people carrier.
We thought it was a Previa.
It's weird there wasn't any of Sarah's DNA.
I mean, he ran over her twice.
Why are you here? I said to Chris, I just wanna help.
I wanna get justice for Sarah.
If you're uncomfortable, I get it, I'll go.
No.
You can stay.
Nicola, got some CCTV here from a pub.
Looks like it hasn't been viewed.
No, I've seen it.
There's nothing on it.
No, I've seen it.
Well, the seal's not broken.
That's impossible.
Is it the 27th or the 28th of May? Er, 28th.
We already logged the 27th.
That has been viewed.
We viewed them both.
We viewed the 28th as well.
You pulled both tapes cos you didn't know which side of midnight she was attacked? Yeah.
Well, no, not exactly.
She was attacked after midnight but we didn't know that then so we just took the tape for the 27th.
And when you realised your mistake? We sent someone back to the pub to get the 28th.
Explains the two bags.
And why they're logged a page apart.
It doesn't explain why this is sealed.
It doesn't explain Nicola? Unless you made a copy, this is unseen.
Oh, God.
I went on leave that day and I asked the DS covering for me to check the footage.
Did you tell them there were two tapes? They viewed the 27th cos it crops up here first.
They didn't turn the page and see the 28th.
The action to view the CCTV is marked as complete.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Do you think that's what happened, Nicola? When I came back from holiday, he said he'd seen the tape and there was nothing on it.
I thought he meant the 28th.
He didn't know the case.
He didn't know she was attacked after midnight.
Must be Sarah's bus.
Levi's Previa.
Oh, Jesus.
Pull it back, Jonesy.
Get the clearest frame.
Nah, no chance of getting the driver or the plates.
No, but that mark.
That's still there, right? Yeah.
It's the leaking petrol cap.
It ties him to Sarah like the Courier never did with Amelie.
We got him.
Should've had him back in May.
Should've had him back in May and Amelie would still be alive.
Dominique.
How nice to see you.
Bonjour.
How are you? Very good.
Good, good.
Thank you very much.
What you need to understand is if the tape had been seen by Hounslow Police after Sarah had been run over, it would've almost certainly led them to Bellfield.
There's no escaping that and there's no excusing it.
Tu as compris ce qu'il a dit? Il a dit que si la police avait regarde la cassette, ils auraient pu empecher le meurtre d'Amelie.
Do you understand what I'm saying? If that tape had been viewed, then Amelie would probably still be here.
Ils ont pas fait leur boulot comme il faut, quoi.
Of course.
We understand what it means.
It's a shame.
It's a great shame.
But we are where we are.
It has happened and we cannot change the past .
.
as much as we would like to.
What I mean is mistakes get made.
We're human.
But thank you.
Thank you for telling us.
Thank you for your honesty.
What is important to us is that you carry on .
.
and you bring this evil man to justice.
Yes.
Now, will you two stay for something to eat? For my part, I can't imagine members of the British public being so understanding.
I'm just so so very sorry that we failed Amelie.
Yes, in Normandy we've got this tradition.
So, in the middle of Hello, Steve? I'm on a plane, about to lose my phone.
OK, look.
I'm sorry how things went the other morning.
We're making Bellfield our priority on Milly.
There's too much of what you've got for us to ignore.
'Can we put our heads together ASAP?' Yes.
Yeah, of course we can.
Whenever you want.
Thanks, Steve.
Bye.
Can you turn your phone off, please? Yup, OK.
Jo? What the CPS said about tying the van to the night Amelie was killed.
It got me thinking about Laura.
'In what way?' In a "she's got a fucking amazing memory" way.
I'm in the Somerfield's that she and Levi went to I'm in the Somerfield's before Amelie was attacked.
We've been over this, Jo.
'I asked her what she bought.
' Nappies, wipes, coffee, washing up liquid, baby powder.
It was 40 quid total, just over, so She payed cash, Jo.
How is this gonna help? 'Because they keep the receipts for two years.
' 'And?' And if her memory matches an itemised bill plus date and time, who can say she's got the wrong night and keep a straight face? Right? OK, there you go.
2004.
Thanks.
Ta.
Thanks.
Let me know if you need anything.
16th to 30th August.
16th to 30th August.
16th Yeah.
28th.
16th.
17th.
Here they are.
How'd it go? Erm, well, better than we had any right to expect, actually.
Welcome home.
Oh.
Oh.
We're looking for 19th August between 8pm and 9pm.
OK.
What's the total we're looking for? Just over 40 quid, gov.
Date and time below the total.
So, where's the office duty free, then? Hmm? I did get you a nice big Toblerone and a whole Camembert but Gary ate it in the car.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
£41.
08.
Date's right, time too.
20:34.
Pampers, baby wipes, Nescafe, Fairy liquid, baby powder.
Laura Marsh, I love you.
Colin Sutton.
'Mr Sutton, it's Andrew Hadik.
' Regarding the murder of Amelie Delagrange and the attempted murder of Sarah Knight, I'm faxing charging advice over now.
Come on, Andrew, give us a clue.
Sure.
It'll come out of the fax machine.
What about Marsha? We'll get to Marsha, rest assured.
Proving it was his Punto will help.
OK.
Charging advice coming through.
Yes!Yes! Nice work.
Well done.
Sarge? Can I sign the charge sheet on this one? Are you still hand-writing in the Met? We're all computerised.
Oh.
Don't worry, then.
Maybe you can press enter.
You don't understand, sir.
I still need you to read the charges.
We get prisoners from all over the country.
If I charged them, I'd be stuck in court from John o' Groats to Land's End.
Levi Bellfield, you are charged that on 19th August, 2004 at Twickenham Green you did murder Amelie Delagrange, contrary to common law.
That on 28th May, 2004 at Worton Road, Isleworth you did attempt to murder Sarah Knight, contrary to common law.
You do not have to say anything but it may harm your defence if you do not mention now something which you later rely on in court.
Anything you do say may be given in evidence.

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