Rose and Maloney (2002) s03e01 Episode Script

Carl Callaghan

- Maloney?
Gonna be long?
Sorry I just need a
- Yes well
- I'm sorry about all the stuff
but as soon as I find
somewhere to live I'll-
- No it's fine Rose don't worry.
- It's really nice of you to
take me in.
- Yes.
- I didn't know people took
those credit check things
seriously but-
- Really?
- Anyway, that guy Josh,
he's gonna come with this van
and help me shift my things
to some storage place his mates
run.
- Well I don't wanna be pedantic
Rose
but Josh is still serving
18 months in Pentonville
for receiving stolen goods.
- Right.
Well as soon as I get
him out of Pentonville,
he's gonna come with his van.
- And where is this storage
space?
- It's up West somewhere I think
he said.
- Oh yeah sorry.
I'll just hold it.
- Yes.
- It's a bit of a funny colour.
- I like it okay.
- You don't think it looks
like a tart's boudoir?
- No, no, not really.
You'll get used to it.
- Oh, I don't get an office.
This is the new boss.
Who's obviously had a taste
bypass.
- New boss eh?
- Yeah.
Some career asslicker from
a strategic think tank.
Whatever the hell that is.
- Beats me.
- Rose?
- Yeah in a minute.
Yeah he's a complete wally
apparently
but, then again, they always
are.
- Rose?
- For god sake Maloney what is
it?
- So
I'm Wallace Canford
and I just want you to
know that I am excited
and I'm flattered by this
appointment
because, for a long time, I've
admired the fantastic work
the Criminal Justice Review
Agency does.
But, one or few changes, I
think we can improve efficiency.
I think we can share tasks and
resources.
And I really do think
that we can probably have
a more team-based approach.
Wouldn't you say?
That's
good.
Well, listen, hey, any
questions?
Yeah.
- A more team-based?
I don't quite understand.
- Rose, isn't it?
- I work with Mr. Maloney here
we do everything together.
- Is that right?
- We do tend to
collaborate yeah.
- So I didn't quite see-
- Listen, I think, for example,
the senior case managers
could take an interest
in the minor cases and not
just the headline grabbers.
- Such as?
- Well I understand
that we've got a backlog
of disputed shoplifting
appeals for example.
Now, listen, that is just the
kind of area
where your experience can really
count.
You know?
What do you say?
- How am I supposed to know
he's down with the kids
and wants to paint his own
office?
- Well maybe because his picture
was in the CJRA journal and
"The Times" and "The Guardian".
- What is that?
- My shoplifting cases.
Rather sweet I think.
Yours now.
- Jesus, how many offences?
- 326.
- And he says he's innocent?
- He says he's the victim of
a worldwide CCTV conspiracy
run by the CIA actually.
- All right?
- Hey.
- Bloody marvellous.
Thanks Joyce.
- Oh, and there's a
policeman here to see you.
- The car had its number plates
removed.
So we're trying to trace
it by type and year.
But there are over 400 red
Mark II Toyota Corollas
and none of them registered to a
Denis Bowland.
Found a locked security box
under the rear seat of his car
containing various documents:
driver's licence, NHS cards.
And this.
Now we're trying to trace him
on the computer but no luck.
Does the name mean anything to
you?
- We're reviewing his conviction
for rape.
- Oh right.
So maybe somebody did have good
reason
for torching him with an
iron and strapping him into
the front seat of his car
and waiting for the tide to come
in.
- No it couldn't be a reason.
- Why not?
- Because he's still in prison.
- Rose.
Mr Maloney.
I hope this is good news.
I got a bet on with Mark over
here.
Five up says it's good news eh
Mark?
- Shut up Denis.
- And a fiver is a lot of
spondoolay on the Section 42s.
- All right.
Denis this is Detective Sergeant
Mallam.
- Okay.
And what have you got to do with
me?
- Mr. Bowland
is this your driving licence?
- Yeah, it looks like it.
- Found it in a car
by the Thames this morning,
Denis.
Body inside.
- Need you to identify him.
- I don't know.
Jesus.
Who's done that?
Is he saying I had
something to do with it?
- I don't think he saying
anything, Denis
but obviously there's a bit of
curiosity.
- I don't know this guy okay?
- Take a closer look.
Is he a relative?
Friend?
Business associate?
- Rose do I-
- Just look again, please.
- I can't help you here.
Look I've got no reason to lie
to-
- I've got no reason to
believe anything you say Denis.
You're a convicted sex offender
and it gets my back up just
being in the same room as you.
- Okay.
Okay. Are you going to explain
to him Rose
that I am not a sex offender,
that I didn't hurt or rape
anyone?
- We're examining the safety
of your conviction yeah.
- Is it a relative or a friend?
- I have no sisters or brothers.
My mum's dead.
My dad, God knows.
And since you lot framed me up
for rape,
I'm a little thin on the friend
front.
Now why don't you piss off?
- Well
I'll leave it with you to look
at.
Don't you ever tell me to
piss off again, shit head.
- Jesus.
- What do you think you're
doing?
- So sue me.
Did you see anything?
- No.
- Come on Mark.
Rose you saw that, you saw him
do that.
I want him charged!
- You just leave it Denis.
- I don't know this guy okay?
Okay?
- Okay.
Stay calm.
- Well, I thought you
had something for me.
Does he have to be here all the
time?
Much as I love you, Mark.
- I think we'll be all right.
- It will be bad news Denis.
Fiver says it's bad news.
- So?
- We've managed to track down
the victim.
At last.
- I don't believe we call her
the victim.
- She wanted to have sex with
me.
- Yes but before we speak to
her,
we'd like you to go through
your account one more time.
- Oh Christ come on.
We know this by heart.
- Once more for luck eh?
- I'd been cabbing for about 11
hours
before I picked her up.
It's 15 please.
- Haven't got any money.
- I'll drive you to a cash point.
- Haven't got anything.
- Police station then.
They'll find whatever shit
you're on.
- You haven't got a licence for
this cab.
- You wanna bet on it?
- What colour was her dress?
- It was dark.
What does it matter?
- It all matters.
- Get in the back.
- I can't remember what
bloody colour it was.
You're not gonna make me say
what kind of sex we had again
are you?
It was bloody miserable.
I wasn't proud of myself.
But I didn't force her.
I didn't hurt her and I walked
her to her door afterwards.
Take care of yourself love.
- Well I'm sure she was very
grateful.
- Okay.
So what have you got for me?
- We finally got a full
disclosure
from the original prosecution.
- And?
- Information was withheld
from your defence lawyer.
- Like what?
- We'll notify your lawyer
after we've spoken to her.
If there's anything to know
okay?
- Why don't you just
Okay.
Speak to Danny yeah?
That's it.
- Think about him.
How'd he get your licence?
And my card?
- Are you two being dim on
purpose?
My case is under review.
The police are running
interference;
they're trying to involve
me in random cases.
I'm in jail for
- If you're pissing me about
Denis,
I will drop you so fast your
balls'll come out of your ears.
- Good news Mark.
You're out of a fiver.
- Hey Denis, they
getting you out?
- Matter of time Bandy.
- I'm gonna cut off
your ears you pervy little toad.
- I'll bet your trainers against
my telly
I'll be out of here in
a month, my ears in tact
and you still thumbing your wank
mag.
Take that?
- Yeah I'll take that.
- Come on.
- And I'll wear your trainers
while I bang
your good lady with the inverted
nipples.
- I'll kill you!
I'll kill you!
- He'll never get over this
place.
It's the claustrophobia.
I think it's the worst
part of the punishment.
- It's not nice.
- You know yo have to
live shoulder to shoulder
with the same people in
your face the whole time?
- Nightmare.
- We could go home and have a
takeaway.
- He's lying, you know?
- Sorry?
- He's lying when he says
nobody comes to visit him.
Every second Tuesday,
they're all over each other.
- Who?
- The girl that comes.
Just watch him.
It's all bollocks.
I see through him.
- I don't think that guy gets
out enough.
- Do you think Denis knew
the dead guy in the car?
- He's a very good liar if he
did.
Do you think he's a rapist?
- I'm not sure but something's
going on.
- Could be a coincidence.
- Do you believe that?
- No.
- My turn to do food tonight.
I fancy a Chinese.
Do you fancy a Chinese?
- Whatever.
- What'd we have last time?
- Chinese.
Do you ever, you know, cook food
Rose?
- No.
- Why's that then?
- It's no job for a woman
Maloney.
- No!
Get off of me.
Piss off, I mean it!
Stop it!
No piss off!
- Babe come here,
what's the matter with ya?
Bitch!
- I'd had a pissy night.
I had to get out of there
so I just go in the first cab I
could.
His cab.
How much is that?
Mate, do you wanna tell
me how much that is?
Oh shit.
No!
No!
No get away from me!
No!
He did walk me home.
It was only to let me know
he knew where I lived.
Go away.
He was cruel you know?
Go away.
Please go away.
- You never saw Denis Bowland's
face throughout the attack?
- It was dark.
He'd taken the light out of his
car.
I got the registration number
and the make, that was enough.
- And it's not true that you
offered to have sex with him?
- No!
No it's not true.
Christ almighty.
Shit.
What have you bought me here
for?
You believe him.
- Lola I'm sorry this is not
about belief.
This is to do with whether
a conviction is safe.
We have to ask these questions.
Maybe there was an element of
consent.
It's a grey area.
- What kind of woman are you?
He raped me.
He knew exactly what to do.
I'm going now.
- No Miss
please.
We're not the police,
you do understand that?
- Yeah.
The police were nice to me.
They believed me.
- Well, I'm really very
sorry Miss Shore, I truly am,
but we have to ask you about
something that's come up.
When the police investigated
your attack,
they spoke to your employers
of Markham's Associated Printers
who told them that you'd been
sacked.
They suspected you were using
drugs
and had been stealing petty cash
and that, when the office
manager confronted you,
you offered to have sex with
him.
We also have statements from the
nightclub
you used to go to, Suki's
in Dagenham, where you were
well-known and barred
for importuning clients.
- I had a problem.
I used crack.
That's all, I was into it.
- Yes, but the police and the
prosecution
should have informed
Mr. Bowland's lawyers.
- Lola
do you still use drugs?
- You piss off.
Both of you piss off.
- Well the statements exist.
They should have been
disclosed to the defence.
We have to note it.
- It's all right.
- Don't see what else we could
have done.
- Are you completely lacking in
empathy?
- What?
- Empathy.
The ability to be alongside
somebody else's emot-
- I know what empathy
means Rose don't do that.
- What?
- Hiya.
Working late?
- Lot of shoplifting to deal
with
on top of everything else.
- Yeah, well, oh well.
- I don't think you're allowed
to
- Doesn't matter.
Nobody about so
Here.
- Trying to stop.
Promised Maloney.
- Maloney isn't here.
- So do you often work late?
- I suppose.
- No life?
- Nope.
Sorry I called you a wally
yesterday.
- It was the
career asslicker.
- Oh, did I say that?
- Yeah you called me it
in the tart's boudoir.
- They say you're the
best investigator here.
- Yes they do.
- Well, the police are on my
back
about that body on the beach.
Not gonna release any
information to the press
until they know who he is.
So
what can we tell them?
- Bowland denies all knowledge.
Says the police are trying to
get him.
And
looks like they withheld
evidence
from the original trial so
- Well wanted to get their man.
- He had no previous history,
a couple of bans for
driving without insurance,
but that's it and he just
isn't reading rapist to me.
- Can you read a rapist?
- Probably not.
- Just 'cause
if you can't read your client,
well maybe that's because
he doesn't want you to.
So, you know, just stay on him
'cause I don't want to look
silly in my first week do I?
- No.
Do I still have to do
this shoplifting file?
- Oh, give it to me.
It's just that
I probably should learn
how to do this you know?
Jesus.
Do you want to give us a clue?
- Guilty as sin.
- Thanks.
- You're not gonna do those now
are you?
- I've got no life.
It's why we're good, Rose.
This is why we're good.
- Empathy in oven.
Don't forget insulin!
Thanks Auntie Marion.
- That's Bowland's girlfriend.
She visits the same day,
same time for three years.
- Do rapists have girlfriends?
No, I'd really like to know.
- You'd be amazed.
Anyway they're all innocent of
course.
- Seems strange.
- What's strange is all
these guys locked up in here,
convicted of unspeakable crimes
and they've all got partners
who love and care for them and-
- And we haven't.
- I was trying to avoid that
thought.
- Did you manage it?
- No.
- There we go.
- [Radio Operator] Blue team to
D Wing,
Blue team to D Wing immediately.
- What's her name?
- You'll have to see
the governor about that.
- Blue team to-
I've gotta go.
- Why is he so upset?
What's happened.
- We showed him
a picture of a dead man.
- Oh come on.
- You're going to speak to him?
- Nope.
- Get her name from the
governor?
- No.
- Behave in an impulsive,
unprofessional,
potentially compromising way.
- You know me so well.
- Isn't there a
law against following people?
- Not discreetly.
Kind of classy for a mini
cab driver's girlfriend
wouldn't you say?
- So what do we do now?
- Yes?
- Yes my name's Maloney.
I'm from the Criminal
Justice Review Agency.
- The what?
- The Criminal Justice Review
Agency.
Would it be possible for me to
come in?
- I never heard of this-
- It's about Denis Bowland.
- Cruise control and
the upgrade stereo system.
- Please go away.
- Vanda.
- Yeah?
- Who is it?
- Malek I
- Why have you come to my house?
- I just wanted to talk to you
about
some of the Liberal Democrat
policies
that we hope will excite you
and encourage you to vote for
us in the local elections.
- We don't vote.
- Can I leave you a leaflet?
- Didn't you hear me?
Piss off.
- Okay.
- What do you mean it
isn't available in that colour?
- You need to come to this
address at seven o'clock.
- No.
- We need to discuss this
further
or I'll come back tomorrow.
- Please.
No.
- And we hope we can rely
on your vote in the future.
Goodbye.
- Yeah.
You know us, always discreet.
I know.
I'll buy you dinner.
Give me his name again.
Yeah got it.
Thanks Bill we owe you.
- She's not coming.
- Story of your life.
- Jesus.
What are you guys into?
My contact almost jumped out of
his skin
when I gave him that address.
- Why who is she?
- Well she's nobody, but
he's Malek Dimitriev.
Nasty.
- In what way?
- People trafficker nasty, drug
nasty,
cut your toes off one by one
nasty.
My guy at the Serious Crime
Squad said he's untouchable.
- Come on Joyce.
Nobody's untouchable.
- He will kill me for speaking
to you.
- Who are you?
- Vanda Berkov.
I belong to Dimitriev.
- You're married to him?
His girlfriend?
- I mean I belong to him.
- Right well,
if there's anything else
you want me to find out
- Thanks Joyce.
- We saw you with Denis Bowland
today.
That's an unusual relationship.
- Stay away from us.
Know nothing about this.
- Miss Berkov
I don't know what your
connection to Denis is-
- But we know he told you
about the man in the car.
- Can I show you
what they did to him?
- Oh my god.
- Yes not very easy to look at I
know.
Do you know who this is?
- Yes.
- Hey.
Rose!
Mr Maloney.
You have met Danny, my lawyer?
- Nice.
You've been doing really great
for Denis.
- Right.
Thanks for coming.
- You got the stuff
the prosecution held back?
- Yeah interviewed Lola Shore.
- And she's a bad prosecution
witness it turns out, right?
- Yes.
- I told ya.
- He bet me he can get me
out in under four years.
- Oh yeah?
What did he bet?
- I don't know.
- It was nothing much.
Anyway-
- We met Vanda last night.
- Vanda?
- So we aren't gonna carry on
being stupid about this are we?
- What did she tell you?
- She told us that this is your
brother.
Obviously we told her you
didn't have a brother.
And she said we should speak to
you
because she was worried
if she said any more,
someone might kill her.
- So this might be the
moment lads, feel free.
- Do we have any guarantee
of client confidentiality?
- Maloney?
- No.
- Or shall we just call
the police?
- Listen
I'm begging you-
- Yes, you are.
Denis.
So who is this?
- See I'm
Actually,
my name
is Henry Piers Callaghan.
Harry.
And this is
This is my brother
Carl.
His name is Carl.
- Does this mean that,
after you've told us what
you're going to tell us,
we could all be party to a
conspiracy?
- Yes.
- Oh shit.
- I'm really very sorry
about your brother.
- Carl has
Carl always stuck by me.
Once it started it was, it
was
we couldn't stop.
It just, it just got out of hand
and now
it's so fucked up.
Everything.
Carl's dead Danny.
- Okay.
Harry.
From the beginning,
a full name to start.
- He's not speaking into that.
- And then you, Danny.
Or you explain all this to
the prison governor right now.
Full name to start, please.
- My name is Harry Callaghan.
In August, 2001, I was working
as an off shore investments
manager
for Future Life Ventures at
Canary Wharf.
It was a gang of us.
We just liked having a laugh,
that's all.
Mainly we gambled.
- Yes!
- Shit man.
This is shit.
- Come on Harry wise up.
- Nah I mean it.
Let's do something interesting.
You, Damo, how much have you got
left?
- Couple of grand.
- All right lay me odds on
something.
- On a dog?
- No something interesting.
Come on.
Jesus has nobody got any
imagination around here?
- Look why don't you just bet
him
to shag the next girl that
comes out of them bogs?
Whoever she is.
- There.
My own brother.
Genius.
- Whoever she is right?
- Yeah but I want all
that money and your Audi.
And half your bonus.
You making notes Danny?
- Got it H.
Cash, car, what's your bonus?
- 75K.
Jesus.
Against what?
- The flat.
- Harry steady bruv.
- No, no, no worries bruv.
You know I'm plain irresistible.
Damo?
- Yes I know.
I see.
Okay.
- She was just
beautiful.
Really, totally
beautiful.
- I'm going to my new
home mate, in my Audi.
- Hi.
- Hello.
- Vanda.
Come here.
We go.
- Should have given it up there
and then.
But I didn't.
It was too late already.
I just started hanging around
at the dog track for a couple of
weeks,
making friendly.
She didn't try and stop it.
- Did you know what Malek
Dimitriev did?
- It didn't take long to work it
out
or for him to work out
that I could help him.
- Help him do what?
- Anything.
- All right.
Very good.
- Anything to stay close
to her.
- She's beautiful yes?
- Oh yes.
- And smart.
You know when she came here
first,
she was just a whore, you know?
And now I trust her with
everything.
Are you the the kind of person
Harry,
that a man can trust?
- Of course.
- I would hope so Harry.
She says you work in a bank.
- Investment fund.
- Yes I have funds.
That kind of money that needs a
home.
You understand?
- Sure.
- Good.
Speak to her.
Like I said, she deals with
everything.
- She hated it.
He brought her over from Armenia
under the floor of a lorry
and rented her out
until she worked out how to make
herself
indispensable to him
and how to make him crazy about
her.
- And, in spite of that,
you started seeing her?
- Have you ever been in love Mr
Maloney?
- Oh, well you haven't
then, if you don't know.
- And she loves me right back.
Even in here.
For four years.
I'd do anything for her.
- You helped her steal
Dimitriev's money.
How much?
- I diverted 2.4 million
into an unlisted Lichtenstein
account in my name.
- Jesus.
- He found out of course.
- About Vanda or the money?
- Christ.
No, just the cash or she'd be
dead now.
That's why I'm in here.
So he could still believe in
her.
- Okay.
So what happened next?
Is this you Danny?
- Harry was in trouble.
Like, serious trouble.
Malek's men have caught up with
him.
He'd only just got away.
For Christ sakes Harry.
Give the money back.
Say it was a mistake.
- He knows I took the money.
- If he's some kind of heavy
guy-
- He's the heavy guy.
- Well, what does he do?
- Everything.
Kills people Dan.
He can find me.
Anywhere.
And if he think
If he thinks Vanda had
anything to do with it, oh god.
- He stayed at my flat for a
coupla days.
But he was just losing it.
We was trying to think of a
way how he could disappear
and still see the girl he loved.
Mr. Bowland.
And then we had a stroke of
luck.
- Yeah.
- And it was perfect.
I couldn't believe the idea I
was having.
- Can you help me?
Some stupid whore is
saying that I raped her.
And it's total bollocks.
- Have you been arrested and
charged?
- Not yet.
The police came around my
flat, but I was out in my cab.
- What did they do that for?
- Some bitch tricked me into
screwing her.
She stole my money and now
she's trying to say that-
- Hang on Mr. Bowland, hang on.
- Can you sort it out?
She's lying.
- His story checked out.
I went and asked about her.
She'd done it before.
I made sure it was just a
classic shakedown, the poor sod.
- Okay?
You like that?
- Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm sorry.
You can forget about the fare.
- No, I want your cash.
Or I'll tell people you raped
me.
- What?
- Just give it to me wanker.
People saw me get in your cab.
- No, no, no!
Get out of my car!
You ropey cow go on!
- Bastard!
Bastard, I'll get you back!
- You see it was very simple.
We just needed to find a place
where Dimitriev would never
look.
So we paid Bowland to go away.
Harry took his place.
- Good.
- I love you.
- It's all right.
It's going to be all right.
I'll be here.
Okay?
I promise.
- Harry.
- Okay.
Okay.
Carl helped me.
He helped me memorise
everything about Denis Bowland.
And he kept all the stuff
so he could remind me
in case I forgot anything.
Where he was brought up,
what school he went to.
his middle name, everything.
It didn't take long.
I just became Denis Bowland.
- Number two, I think.
I think, it was dark.
- That's all right love.
You've done really well.
- How much did you pay Bowland?
- Quarter of a million
to disappear forever.
He was a loner.
He had no relatives.
He was bloody delighted with
that.
He just went away.
- Where?
- I don't know.
Up north.
If he's still invisible after
four years,
he gets another hundred
thousand.
- You let a potential rapist to
walk away.
- He was no rapist.
She shook him down for drugs
money.
- How'd you know that?
- The CPS are always a mess.
They sent me the withheld
files by mistake.
Anyway, I asked around the
club, like the police did.
You see I knew I could say
that the prosecution had
withheld evidence at any time
and I would have a case to get
him out.
Time would've passed,
Dimitriev would have
forgot about his money,
Harry could come out, carry on
somewhere
a long way away.
Hopefully with Vanda.
He just wouldn't be Harry
anymore.
- I don't understand why
you didn't just go away.
- He'd have found us.
- If you blow the whistle on
this now,
Dimitriev will know where
Harry is and he will kill him.
Just like Carl.
He found him
and he tortured him to death.
- How'd you know Carl didn't
tell him?
- I'm still alive.
Carl
loved me.
So he could,
he could never tell.
- So what are you gonna do?
- I'm sorry Maloney,
I was just looking for somewhere
to plug my hairdryer in.
- Yeah well you unplugged
the oxygen pump and the water
heater.
- I'm sorry.
- Very sensitive.
My nieces love them.
- Right Maloney, I'm sorry.
I'll buy you new ones.
Nobody'll know the difference.
- Well unique markings
on this one you see.
Great crested angel fish.
Cost 200 quid.
- Are you sure it's dead?
I think we should at least
consider the possibility
of keeping quiet about Harry.
- How's that Rose?
- We recommend Harry's case for
appeal-
- Denis Bowland's.
- Yeah all right.
Harry gets released, disappears
with Vanda, who's harmed?
- While they disappear with
2.4 million of illegal money.
- They have to hand it over.
- Who to?
- Well that's detail.
- Well it's a
detail in your world Rose.
No we have to tell Wallace about
this.
- No don't you understand?
If we-
- All right I've already told
him.
- What?
- I emailed him.
I'm sorry, Rose, but there
are some lines we don't cross.
- But that's shit Maloney.
We're supposed to trust each
other.
- Well, I'm sorry again but it's
done.
Now can we please stop talking
about work?
- But they love each other.
She's had this terrible
exploited life
and she's finally trying
to make something-
- Rose!
Can we talk about this
tomorrow in the office?
- No!
No we need to talk about this
now Maloney.
I think we need to start
investigating the original
crime.
We find Bowland, wherever he is,
we make sure he's innocent
But that leaves Dimitriev free.
He's murdered Harry's brother.
So what we're gonna do about
that Maloney?
Maloney?
- Okay.
Malek Dimitriev.
Born 1958, Kiev.
Imprisoned in 1993, 16 counts of
murder,
including three minors,
racketeering, prostitution.
Mysteriously released in '97.
Interpol files relate to '98,
2000, 2001
when he bought two nightclubs
and a snooker hall in Tottenham.
No UK police record.
They're waiting for him to
do something wrong basically.
And that's all we can get
without drawing attention to
ourselves.
- Thanks Joyce.
- Do you want me to go?
- No, no.
Listen we are off the record
here
so if you don't wanna be
a part of this then
- No, no if I can help
these guys I want to.
- Thanks Joyce.
- Good.
Okay well we understand don't we
that unless we report this
we will be breaking the law?
- Come on Wallace we're not
children.
- We understand that Wallace
but what we need to know
is what do we do now?
- Okay.
If we hand them over,
do we have confidence
that the police will deal with
Dimitriev
before he gets the
chance to escape or kill
Mr. Callaghan and his
girlfriend?
- We don't have any evidence
against him
without our client's
cooperation and Harry's scared.
He's really totally petrified
and I would be too if I were
him.
- Right I've deleted the
email report that you sent me
and I'm suggesting that you
send it to me again in 48 hours.
- Sorry?
- At which point I will
take the appropriate action.
- That's it?
- So it gives you two days to
run around
and do your inimitable thing is,
that's what you want isn't it?
- Yes.
- No!
- Listen, I don't wanna
get fired in my first month
for perverting the course
- Perverting the course
of justice, thank you.
And you want to solve your case,
show everyone how wonderful you
are and how well you get on.
So it's a compromise.
You know, I just don't know
about it.
- Well nice move Wallace.
So if it all goes wrong,
you deny everything,
we get the blame is that it?
- Yeah.
I used to work for Tony Blair
and I've got every confidence in
you all.
- Thanks.
- So what was the plan again?
- Oh, you wanna talk about it
now do you?
- That's 39 minutes of your 48
hours gone.
CJRA.
Yes.
Just a minute.
A solicitor representing Lola
Shore.
They want to introduce a new
statement.
- Piss off.
- We need to speak to you Lola.
- No I've spoke to my lawyer,
that's all there is to it.
You can read the statement.
- You really think it's that
easy?
- I've been
getting some stuff.
Trying to live a bit more
normally.
Haven't taken any drugs
for three months now.
- Great.
That's great.
- Yeah.
Why should I be the victim
always?
You better sit down.
So?
- So why have you changed your
story?
- I wanna tell the truth.
- Why now?
- I wasn't attacked.
You were right.
Everybody was right about me.
I was
I am a drug addict.
I stole money to get drugs.
I tricked men to get money for
drugs.
- And Denis Bowland?
- Yeah.
He wouldn't go along with it.
I was
I wasn't a very nice person.
- And if his case comes up for
appeal?
- I'll say so.
I lied.
- The police'll charge you
with wasting their time.
Possibly perjury.
You'll be prosecuted.
- Look, I've changed now.
I wanna tell the truth.
- So now you're claiming that
Denis Bowland didn't rape you.
- I'm very ashamed of myself.
- They've paid you off haven't
they?
- I don't know who you're
talking about.
- Vanda.
Her name is Vanda.
When'd she come and see you?
- I've never met anyone called
Vanda.
- She paid you.
I hope it was worth it.
- Do you think I'm proud
of what I've become?
I stole and screwed to get
money.
I've got a degree.
My parents haven't spoken
to me for three years.
I'm trying to leave it all
behind me now.
I did something wrong and
I wanna make up for it.
I told my mum and dad I wanna
change
and they said they'd help me
if I started telling the
truth about myself okay?
- I don't know.
I don't know if it is okay.
- He didn't rape me.
Denis Bowland didn't rape me.
I made it up and I hope he
gets out because I'm sorry.
I'm really sorry.
- Do you believe her?
- Dunno.
- I mean, even if she was paid
off,
doesn't necessarily mean she's
lying.
- Well,
all I can say is Harry and Vanda
are going to the ends of
the earth for each other.
Wish somebody'd do that for me.
I'm stumped.
I really don't know what to do.
- Well there's a first
time for everything.
- Yes funny.
Do you really think Wallace'd
throw us to the wolves?
- Oh you better believe it Rose.
For the first time in your life,
you've got a boss who's cleverer
than you.
You're acting as if you're
enjoying it.
- How old would you say he is?
- He's 44 Rose.
Too old for you on past
evidence.
- Well normally-
- As well as being a work
colleague.
- Yeah I know.
- He's unsuitable for a
personal relationship.
Totally unsuitable.
Be like you and me.
- Yeah.
- Yeah.
- Yeah right.
Let's go.
- Yeah.
- I'm telling you we've had
no contact with Lola Shore.
None.
- And you haven't given her
money
to change her testimony in
court?
- No.
You think I'm gonna risk my
career by bribing a witness?
- I think that might be the
funniest thing
you've said so far Danny.
As I work it out, you've aided
and abetted
the laundering of illegal drug
money,
been complicit in the
theft of 2.4 million pounds
and conspired to facilitate the
flight
of a suspect in a rape case.
- Bowland didn't do it.
How many more times do I have
to tell you? He's innocent?
Harry's innocent?
You know, I'm innocent.
I just tried to help my friend.
- How do we know you didn't pay
her?
- Because I don't have any
money.
Only Harry can withdraw the
money.
I will have to smuggle a
document in for him to sign
so we can pay hundred
thousand to Mr. Bowland.
- The what?
- It's four years next week.
We have to pay him.
- How?
- He'll contact me by email.
- Oh Jesus.
- That is,
if you'll help us.
- You have to get some evidence
on how
Dimitriev killed Harry's
brother.
- No, it's impossible.
Danny tell them.
- Then we'll consider letting
Harry,
or should I say Denis',
case go forward to appeal.
But you'll have to surrender the
money.
- Who to?
- That's detail.
The key to all this is
getting evidence on Demetriev.
Neither Ms. Linden, nor I
can help you if he goes free.
- You are fools.
- Sorry that's the deal.
What do you say?
- Sergeant Mallam dropped by.
He's very keen to speak with
you.
- Sergeant Mallam.
It's nice to see you again.
- Got some information you
might be interested in.
On the Bowland case.
I know you.
You're his lawyer, right?
- Why?
- We've been on the wire
with the other forces, trying to
find out
who the guy in the car was.
- And?
- Nothing.
But the cops in Birmingham
are very interested in your
Denis Bowland.
- Why's that?
- Because they've got a
copy cat on their patch.
A mini cab driver who rapes his
clients
and then walks them to their
door.
Got you the report.
- He walks them to their door?
- Exactly the same M.O.
Even his physical
description fits your client.
So what do you reckon to that?
- I think you may have put
a rapist out there, Danny.
That's it, game over.
- Is somebody gonna
tell me what's going on?
- I think I can help you
Sergeant Mallam
but only if you help us.
- So that's him?
You're sure?
Denis Bowland?
- He's in his thirties, he has a
beard
and he walks his victims to the
door.
Four in the last eight months.
Two of the victims feel they
could
identify him if they saw him
again.
- Jesus they're gonna crucify
us.
- It's not exactly our fault.
This last woman was
attacked three days ago,
before we even knew about Harry
being-
- Okay.
Okay listen.
Christ.
Okay we call it in now.
Okay?
- We've already called it in.
- You've what?
- I think maybe, maybe we should
listen
to what Rose has to say.
It'll help us all Wallace.
- Joyce, thanks for
everything now piss off.
- What?
- You're out of here, while
you've still got a career.
Okay?
Go on.
- I always get the good stuff.
- Yeah I know, it's funny that
isn't it?
Okay.
This had better be good.
- That's good.
30,000 pounds has gone
from my account Vanda.
What was that?
- I paid deposit for the
Maserati.
- You ask me before you take my
money.
- I did.
You just forgot that's all.
- Shit.
I have to pay legal cash for
legal car.
Shit.
This country, they're so
stupid about bureaucracy.
They're so pathetic.
- It's better to be legal on the
road.
- You're right.
You're always right.
- Policeman spoke to me
yesterday.
- What policeman?
- He came to the club.
They said that they found a
body.
They showed me a picture.
It was Carl.
- How did they know to come to
you?
How did they know who it was?
- I don't know.
Maybe they ask someone.
They knew he was Harry
Callaghan's brother.
- I told you about mentioning
that bastard's name in my house.
You hear?
- Yes Malek.
You know I'm sorry.
He's gone wherever.
- Nobody steals from me.
I will kill anyone who steals
from me.
- Did Carl tell you where Harry
was?
- He would have told me if he
knew.
- What did you do to him?
- I found him
and burned his bollocks
with an iron.
I cut his toes off.
Then I killed him.
Very, very slowly.
Harry Callaghan will see that.
He will see what I can do.
And he will know
that I never forget.
- Did you do it by yourself?
- Yes.
You are still beautiful.
- Ms. Linden tells me
you're prepared to
testify against Demitriev.
- Yes.
I know he killed Carl Callaghan.
I know what he did to him.
- You do know doing this will
place you
in danger for the rest of your
life?
- I will do anything
if you will help Harry.
I don't care for myself now I
I just want you to help Harry.
- And you do understand what
we must do about Denis Bowland?
- Yes.
I feel terrible shame
that these women were
attacked because of us.
We thought he was innocent.
- Okay.
Better take me through it.
- Vanda will take the
document for Harry to sign
to release the 100,000 pounds
to pay off Denis Bowland.
Danny will withdraw the money
and arrange to hand it over
to Bowland at his office.
- Mr Bowland.
- Where's my money?
- Sergeant Mallam's
men can do their job.
- Hello Mr. Bowland.
- You wa
- And get Bowland
out of the picture.
- That makes Birmingham safer.
And then what?
- Vanda, you go home
and confirm that Demetriev's
there.
You then leave, without alerting
him.
We need you safe to
testify against Demetriev.
That's where Sergeant Mallam
comes in.
Come to this office.
Where you'll be interviewed by
the police.
- Yes.
- Harry's gonna be arrested
for perverting the course of
justice.
There's no way around it.
They'll probably let him
off with time served.
- Are you Henry Piers Callaghan?
- Yeah.
You can put money on it.
- There you go chaps.
- Oh nice!
- I won't be a minute.
Where is she?
- Armed police.
- Armed police!
- Hello this is Vanda.
I'm not around at the moment
but please leave a message
and I will get back to
you as soon as I can.
I promise.
- Vanda, hi.
This is Rose again.
We're getting rather
anxious about you Vanda.
The police need to speak to you.
I need to speak to you.
Where the hell are you?
Could you please call
me if you're delayed?
If there's a problem.
Thanks.
? I wish I knew how
? It would feel to be free
? I wish I could break
? All the chains holding me
? I wish I could say
- Did you cook this?
- Yeah.
See what you think.
- That's bloody good Rose!
- Am I such a nightmare to live
with?
- No it's just
It's just sometimes I
need some space Rose?
- You've been so kind Maloney
but
I can find somewhere else to
live.
- No you don't have to.
- No it's okay.
You took me in and I appreciate
that.
- No word from Vanda?
- No.
No.
We've been had.
- Yeah.
- Police interviewed Lola Shore,
she admitted Vanda paid her
30,000 pounds
in cash to change your
testimony.
- 30 grand.
- Lola was raped.
- Will they let her keep the
money?
- Yeah I hope so.
Oo I got you a present.
- Ah thanks Rose.
- They didn't have the
great crested thing-me.
- Look you don't have to leave.
You stay here until
you've found somewhere.
- No honestly, I'll be fine.
- Rose.
Please stay.
- Okay then.
? When I sing
? Cause I know
? I know how it feels
? Oh I know how it feels
- Oh Maloney you stupid, stupid,
stupid.
I hate shepherd's pie.
- Where's Vanda?
Where is she?
- Danny?
- Listen I've just spent two
days being grilled by the cops.
I didn't have-
- Oh for Christ sakes.
Haven't they let her go yet?
She'll get bail though right?
- Shit.
- She's gone Harry.
- What, what?
- That's it, I'm sorry.
She's blown you out.
- No.
Vanda loves me.
She wouldn't do that to me.
- She killed Demitriev.
Didn't they tell you?
- Demetriev's
- Yeah he's dead Harry.
She's given you your life back.
- No, no, she hasn't gone.
I mean I signed the
transfer for the money.
- That was just a hundred
thousand for Bowland.
- No nope.
Didn't you read the document?
I gave her the lot.
All 2.4 million.
So she could
So that she could
So she could
- Oh shit.
- She's waiting.
She's waiting for me.
- I don't think so Harry.
- She's waiting for me, I'll bet
on it.
I'll bet anything on it.
I'll bet everything I got on it.
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