Law and Order: UK (2009) s01e03 Episode Script
Vice
'In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups.
The police, who investigate crime, and the Crown prosecutors, who prosecute the offenders.
These are their stories.
' You're slow, boy! You are dreamin'! I am faster than you every day! You're never gonna beat that! Right, I'll prove it.
This one.
Right, time me.
Go! ALARM Stay where you are! Stop! Stay where you are! I didn't do it! I didn't do it I didn't do it! Need urgent assistance.
I didn't do it! They didn't do it.
Body had been there ten or 12 hours by the time they got there.
So who's the poor sod in the back? No wallet or ID.
Head stoved in.
Multiple blows from a blunt instrument.
Toolkit in the back of the car.
Weapon might have come from that.
Frenzied attack, judging by the splatter patterns.
You love saying "splatter patterns", don't you? The two kids are in custody.
Looks like they've taken half the sat-navs in a square mile.
Right.
So is this still an HQ for toms? Yeah.
Might explain why his John Thomas was hanging out.
"Blowus interruptus", if you ask me.
Ron, PNC results.
Vehicle belonged to a Frank McCallum.
Blimey! Previously Detective Sergeant McCallum.
He used to be a copper, in Vice.
He's one of us.
We'd been separated nine months.
I was hoping the split was temporary.
When we were first married, he used to bring me an orange lily every Friday night.
I'd call him a hopeless romantic.
He'd say, "No, just hopeless.
" Working for Vice changed him.
He stopped being the man I married.
That's what being a copper does.
Eats you from the inside.
Is there anyone you'd like us to contact? I wanted kids.
I told him he'd be a great dad.
He was a good man.
Darling, I'm so sorry.
I just got your message.
Thanks, Josh.
I'm sorry, sir, you are? Josh Pritchard.
I'm Frank's boss.
Oh.
ErmDS Brooks.
This is DS Devlin.
ErPC Cook will take you home.
Just give us a call if you need anything.
Speak to you in a minute, right? Battle Fieldz, is that your company? Yeah, with a Z.
It's a paintballing centre out in Epping Forest.
Frank's our operational director.
And what does that job involve? Everything.
Ermsecurity, supplies, making sure the arenas were in good nick.
He did a fantastic job.
Tell me, was he into prostitutes? And what kind of question's that? A relevant one.
Yeah, well, I don't know, do I? Why on earth would he tell me that? It's not the kind of conversation you normally have with your boss.
'We've got teams looking for witnesses.
' CCTV? Not round there.
Local kids have a league table, who knocks out the most cameras.
We're checking all private systems within half a mile.
It'll take time.
A murder weapon would make it too easy.
The search teams haven't turned anything up.
Forensics have found prints in the prelim exam of the car, but none of them match our records.
Maybe our girl's new in town.
Or boy.
You think it's a prostitute scam gone wrong? He does, I don't.
McCallum's ex-Vice.
He knows the ropes.
Ain't gonna get scammed, then bashed to death in his own motor.
Revenge killing? Someone he had a run-in with at Vice? So why's he got his ninky-nonk out? (SNIGGERS) You call it a ninky-nonk? You should hear what I call you! Talk to the friendly neighbourhood tarts, find out what they've heard.
last night.
Hear anything about it? Bit buff for a copper, you! Do you mind, love? His head's big enough, without you adding to it.
Maybe a girl tried to rip him off.
We don't scam punters round here! Start getting a reputation like that, business dies on you.
Anyone new here, might not understand the rules? Help us out, I'll throw in a get-out-of-jail-free card, next time you're nicked for soliciting.
There's a new girl, round the back of Paddington.
Little Irish girl.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Blonde mousey hair, green eyes, looks about 12.
It's a good market for her.
Well, does she have a name? Niamh! Bloke's asking for you by name.
Hello, Niamh.
Hello yourself.
Do I know you? Not really.
No, but you might know this.
What? You're Old Bill? Don't you have anything better to do with your life? That bag's almost as big as you, love.
What have you got in there? Not much.
Well, do you mind showing us? These belong to Frank McCallum, who was murdered yesterday.
You were arrested on suspicion of his murder.
No.
I found them.
On the pavement near the railway lines.
Where are you from, Niamh? If I had to guess, I would sayDungannon.
Or a village just outside, likeCookstown.
It's about five miles away.
I got family.
Distant family.
Mad family.
Don't see 'em much, thank God.
Your parents know you're here? My mum's dead.
My dad's a bastard.
Snap.
Are we related, do you think? (SIGHS) Niamh, the man that was murdered used to be a policeman.
So, for myself and Matt here, it's like losing a member of our family.
You were found with that murdered man's property on you.
Your fingerprints were in his car.
Tell us what happened.
The driver's door was open.
He was already dead, lying in the back.
There was no-one around.
I promise you, on my life, I didn't do it.
The coat was in the back.
The wallet and phone were in there.
So I grabbed them, took the keys, shut it all up.
Look at me.
You think I could kill him? Some days I think anybody's capable of anything.
OK.
We're gonna charge you with theft of articles from the car, and we'll keep you here until we can get a full forensic report - I told you I didn't! I know, sweetheart, I know.
But sometimes people lie.
Niamh Quinn is telling the truth.
Of all the stuff under her fingernails, and, really, you don't wanna know, no skin or blood from Frank McCallum.
Plus she doesn't share the same lipstick as the killer.
What, you took a lipstick trace off his - Wangdoodle.
Oh yeah.
But she cguld h!ve other dipsticks This one's Blush by Nyman.
It's not one you get in Superdrug.
American manufacturer.
Only Selfridges stock it.
Classy girl he had in his crotch.
From the text messages folder on his mobile, text from aSanchia.
"Urgent.
Must see you tonight.
Don't mess me about.
" What do we know about this Sanchia? I called the number.
She's the accountant at a paintballing centre.
Battle Fieldz.
With a Z! Nice work.
We'd been on a date.
He'd been asking for a while.
I sort of gave in.
I got drunk quite quickly that night.
He ended up back at mine.
When he asked about going out again, I said no.
So he tried to blackmail me.
How was he gonna do that? I work in accounts, I know the systems.
Sometimes I get people in for free andtake a few of the supplies.
I told Frank when I was drunk.
After you turned him down, he tried to use that against you? He locked the door, said he'd report me, unless I went out with him.
Basically, slept with him.
I told him to take a running jump.
Can I ask you what kind of lipstick you wear, Sanchia? I don't.
Where were you Wednesday between noon and 5pm? Here, all afternoon.
Health-and-safety course, with half a dozen other staff.
Sanchia's alibi's rock solid.
Your little friend Niamh, she really isn't a credible suspect.
She's naive, no worse than that.
We need to know more about the victim.
Who was Frank McCallum? We turned over his flat.
Nothing of interest.
Sparse little gaff in Wood Green.
Classic divorced bloke, on his own, totally unhomely and depressing.
Not all divorced blokes live like that.
Says "Mr Frayed Carpet In His Lounge"! The people before me had a cat! What are you doing with those ties? Vice are holding a wake for McCallum at the Golden Hind.
I thought we should nip down, find out a bit more about him.
Excellent! people's records, numberplates, etc.
Usually about employees at the paintball place.
When did you last speak? Oh, I don't know Ten days ago.
He wanted me to check out a false charge on the company credit card.
Frank thought it might've been phished.
Internet fraud.
And what did you find out? It was a legit company behind the charge.
Er Velvet Holdings.
I don't know what he did with the information.
Did he have a taste for prostitutes? (SIGHS) Show a bit of respect, will you? Is that a yes or a no? Frank was a good copper! But he wore his heart on his sleeve.
Fell in love four times a day.
Nothing got to him more than a hard-luck story.
He thought he could help the girls, you know.
Fix their lives.
Worst place for a bloke like that is Vice.
Right, we'll need the names of the people he pissed off.
That wasn't Frank.
He was putting his life back together.
He was doing good.
Sorry, boys, you've hit a dead end.
Mind that, mind that! Frank McCallum asked an ex-colleague of his to investigate an apparently fraudulent charge made by them to your company credit card.
No details about Velvet in any of McCallum's files.
So, how many people are authorised to use your company credit card? I don't know.
Three, I think.
But ask Sanchia.
We'll need the names of those authorised users, plus the account statements for the last few months.
Sure.
Sorry, Mr Pritchard, you said you'd never heard of Velvet Holdings.
No.
Well, Battle Fieldz .
.
made seven payments to them last month, at £1,000 a throw.
And half a dozen the month before that.
Wow.
Maybe it'sa supplier that's changed their name.
ErSanchia, got those invoices on there? Give me a sec and I'll look.
Each payment was made using company credit card number two.
Who uses that? Ermit's probably Frank.
Velvet Holdings "Miscellaneous Supplies.
" Very miscellaneous, seeing as neither of you know about them.
Check Companies House.
Get a full FIU.
See what we can get from them.
I became a 'tec for the glamour.
What happens? I spend most of my nights here, trawling through paperwork with you.
Well, you can bet your life Frank McCallum did the same when he was on the job.
Just remember why you're doing this, Matt.
What kind of person does that? So, where are we? Well, company search, "Velvet Holdings", look: nothing.
No phone numbers, website, emails, business accounts.
Nothing.
No clues about what they do.
Although, registered office is in Oxford Street.
I mean, we go there, we could find an operating address, maybe even some names.
We're a clearing house.
Companies put this as their registered address for official mail - Inland Revenue, Companies House - and we forward it on to where they're really based.
So, what, you sit here all day, forwarding letters? All day, every day.
I'm not allowed a computer, cos that'd be too distracting.
And that cameramonitors me.
All day.
Every day.
You enjoy your job, Kieran? I'm a facade.
Velvet Holdings? Yes.
Here we go.
That's everything we've got on file.
Thank you.
Velvet Holdings have their mail forwarded on to a shop in Barnes called Toby's Play Room.
Let's have a look at that phone number.
Yep.
Frank McCallum's mobile bill.
He called that shop the day before he was killed.
of the shop.
I think the accountant advised Emma to set it up, some tax break.
A man called Frank McCallum rang here a couple of days ago.
Do you know what that was about? No.
Sorry.
I didn't speak to him.
I did.
Emma, thas i3 Detective Sergeant.
.
Erm Sorry.
DS Brooks.
This is DS Devlin.
Emma Sandbrook.
I own the shop.
Eryes, no, erFrank.
We spoke last week.
He rang about his delivery, to see if it had come in.
We supplykids' stuff to his paintball company.
Kids and paint, my idea of hell.
Did you make the delivery? No.
He picked it up himself.
Tuesday, I think.
And Wednesday, did you see him then? No, I don't think so.
You're not sure? Erm No.
Can't have been.
We went shopping.
Yeah, that's right.
We don't work Wednesday afternoons.
We treat ourselves.
We took the tr!in to Bond Street, had a late lunch at Selfridges.
Bit of window shopping, that sort of thing.
Well, you've got some nice stuff.
Have you been open long? Ermabout three and a half years.
Is everything all right with Frank? He was beaten to death on Wednesday afternoon.
Oh, my God.
That's terrible.
Well, we'll be in touch if we need anything else.
She said he rang about a delivery, but he picked the stuff up himself.
From Epping to Barnes! And he's the operational director.
No.
Why bother with that? Why do Battle Fieldz have 'em in Miscellaneous Supplies in their accounts? They've got a category for that stuff.
Maybe a mistake.
Depends what you favour.
Conspiracy or cock-up? You know me, Mattie, I believe everything everyone tells me, and I'm disappointed on a daily basis.
So, if it's not paintballing equipment, what are they supplying Could be a drugs front.
Dealing coke to the middle classes of southwest London.
Nah.
Nah.
But you've got the accounts file for Velvet Holdings? Yeah.
All legit on the surface.
So go below the surface.
Talk to everyone who's made payments into the company and find out exactly what they're paying for.
Feet off the table.
I work like a bastard down here, Monday to Friday.
I'm allowed a bit of play.
We'd just like to know what the girls from Velvet Holdings supply you with.
Don't try and put any stigma on me, lads.
I could have an affair, be keeping a bird here, but I couldn't live with myself.
This way, it's a business transaction.
We all have a good time, they get paid, and I'm not betraying the wife.
They're prozzies.
Bloody good ones.
"High class" doesn't come into it.
Save up, lads.
Treat yourselves.
Do you recognise these women? Oh, aye.
There we go! That's Coral, and that's Amber.
Bloody hell.
I get a rod on like Nelson's Column, just thinking about her.
A school like this can't come cheap.
That's before you've even bought the first tennis racket.
There's enough gaps in what they're saying to bring 'em in.
I know, but still I hate this bit.
Splitting families.
.
.
so good, and your serving is so much better.
I've been improving a lot.
You have, my love.
Hello, gentlemen.
Mrs Sandbrook.
This is my son Toby.
He's just been selected to represent the school.
Isn't it great? Nice work, mate.
Thanks.
Go ask your father for a drink, my love.
Is everything OK? We'd like you to come with us to the station.
Now? It's related to Frank McCallum's death.
I'm sorry, we can't, not now.
Emma Sandbrook, Kate Barton, I'm arresting you on suspicion of the murder of Frank McCallum.
You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned - This is ridiculous! Anything you do say may be given in evidence.
Emma, what's going on? Nothing.
Theseer These policemen want to ask us about a guy who bought stuff from the shop.
That's all.
Well, can't it wait, chaps? No, it can't.
I'm sorry, sir.
KATE: Take Joe.
Tim's getting changed.
Give them tea.
I'll pick them up later.
We won't be long.
What? Car's this way.
HUSBAND: Emma? What's going on? See you later, darling.
Nothing.
See you later.
Kate, we checked with Selfridges.
They've got no record of you at the restaurant the afternoon Frank McCallum was killed.
We didn't have a reservation, and we paid cash.
There's no sign of you on the CCTV cameras along Bond Street, either.
Have you got any receipts for your purchases? Threw them away.
Sorry.
Kate, I've been married twice.
No woman throws away receipts for clothes they've only just bought.
How did the prostitution start? We prefer to call ourselves escorts.
That's classier, I agree.
But whatever you want to call it, how did it start? We bought our house five years ago.
Top of what we could afford.
A year later, I found my husband was having an affair.
After I chucked him out, I found out he'd run up debt in my name.
We owed on the boys' school fees.
I was 40 grand in debt, couldn't cover the mortgage.
Have you ever been in so much debt? It's like you can't breathe.
Did you kill Frank McCallum? No.
Did Emma? We were shopping all afternoon.
Frank McCallum had a wife who loved him, a job he enjoyed, and a lot of mates who are struggling to understand why at the age of 47 he is dead.
If you provide a false alibi for a killer .
.
you are in just as much trouble as they are.
Misguided loyalty will not help you.
Or your sons.
I'm telling the truth.
Steve and I put all our money into starting up the shop.
We remortgaged, took out a loan, lost money hand over fist every month.
It got worse and worse.
Then Steve lost his bloody job, and I knew Kate through the school.
And we were in the same situation.
We'd sit in her kitchen in the evenings, drinking wine, trying to come up with a solution.
We were joking at first.
Then I just thought, "Well, why not? What's so bad about that?" We don't do the scuzzy end.
We pre-select and vet all our clients.
Mostly young blokes with some money, some class.
Sounds almost aspirational.
Don't judge me.
I know what I am.
I know what people will think of me.
And does it matter to you, what people will think? I've been doing it to keep my family together.
I'm good at it.
I make others feel good.
DOOR OPENS Emma.
I'm afraid your DNA was all over the murder scene.
On Frank McCallum's body, and on a toolkit in the back of his car.
That would've been the Tuesday.
He came to the shop topick up his order.
I helped him load stuff into the car.
I must've moved the toolkit.
We searched your house.
We found this.
Blush by Nyman.
Also found on Frank McCallum's body.
Nice colour.
Suits you.
I'm not a murderer.
Sorry, Emma.
We're going to charge you with the murder of Frank McCallum.
Traces of her rare and expensive lipstick were on his body.
But we don't have a murder weapon, and she denies she was there.
She'd have us believe he was murdered by some street prostitute.
How will you stand this up in court? Motive.
What provokes Emma Sandbrook into such a brutal attack? Find that, we unlock the case.
Frank McCallum gets justice.
They had sex in the car, he refuses to pay, she gets angry.
No.
Inconsistent.
She's a thousand-pound escort.
All her other clients she saw in hotels or their homes.
Maybe car sex turned Frank McCallum on.
George is right.
I don't think Emma would've taken that risk.
Every aspect of their work was careful, pre-planned, safety-conscious.
A long way from watertight.
You've got a lot of work to do.
Why did she get in the car? What happened after she did? Phyllis! Do you mind? We're in conference! You need a new receptionist.
That one's easy to get past.
Phyllis Gladstone, representing Emma Sandbrook.
I've seen you defend.
Did I get her off? Yep.
What are you doing? When did prostitutes fly the flag for women's rights? Sexual exploitation of women.
What?! How did you make that leap? Drop the charges.
You can't win this.
The DNA evidence is irrefutable.
Ah, the great God science.
I'll turn it to dust beneath my fingers.
Motive? Out! You don't know, do you? Out! Good.
Good! I'll tell my client.
She'simpossible.
And brilliant.
You have to find that motive.
Start prodding the husband.
He must be feeling a little bruised.
She wasn't in the car.
She didn't kill him.
I know her.
But, until this came out, you didn't know she was a prostitute.
Stop calling her that! I'm sorry.
Sometimes it's too much to take in.
Before we got married, I told her, if she ever slept with anyone else, I'm out.
No discussions, no second chances.
I'd just leave.
So why are you still here? Couldn't do it.
Maybe I shouldtake Toby and go.
But there's no off switch when youlove someone, is there? I just want to keep the familytogether.
So long as that doesn't include lying for them.
I've told you everything she told me.
She wasn't there.
Did you find anything on Frank McCallum's credit-card bills? Yes.
Almost every time there's a Velvet Holdings charge, there's a charge the same day from Hotel 103, a small hotel in Marylebone.
Could be the love pad.
That's what I was thinking.
But the last payment was three weeks before the murder.
Sowhat? After that they switched hotels? Don't think so.
There's no more charges on the card.
Maybe they had a falling-out, stopped seeing each other.
See if any of the staff noticed anything odd about the last time McCallum and Emma were there.
Sure.
Checking in at 2:24pm on the 19th.
Yep.
Won't be a sec.
There you go.
That's her.
And that's your Mr McCallum.
No, it's not.
Look, what exactly is it you want me to say? You lie$ to the polace.
You were having sex with the woman accused of murdering your employee and you forgot to mention it? OK, so I'm really terribly sorry.
Just stop going on about it! You told police the charges were on Frank McCallum's card.
I promise you, swear to God, cross my heart and hope to die, I had nothing to do with Frank McCallum's death.
Nor did Amber.
Emma.
EmmaEmma Sandbrook.
She cacalls herself Amber.
What was she doi.
g ina car with Frank McCallum? I asked him to find her.
Why? Cos a couple of weeks ago, she Emmasaid she didn't want to continue with our meetings.
Why? I don't know.
She said it was nothing personal.
That it was her, not me.
Maybe I was just getting a little bit too close or something, I don't know.
But, I tell you, those two hours were the best part of my week.
I asked her to live with me, cos I wanted a relationship rather than just a transaction.
And about then she stopped returning my calls.
And so I knew thatFrank, he'd been in the police force, so I asked him to find her for me.
You sent Frank McCallum after Emma Sandbrook, and then you lied about it, persistently.
Er I didn't know what else to do, you know? I love her.
So, Frank McCallum lied to his old friend in Vice about why he needed information on Velvet Holdings.
It wasn't credit-card fraud.
He wanted to find Emma for Josh.
And we know he did, because he called her at the shop.
Which means he knew everything.
Her real name, that she was married with a child.
Is that why she got in his car, rather than meet him at Hotel 103? So she didn't meet him for sex at all.
He picks her up, drives her somewhere out of the way And threatens to tell the whole of Barnes about her secret.
Unless she sleeps with him whenever he wants.
It's the same thing he demanded of the woman at the paintball company! Emma's driving force all along was to keep her family together.
That's why she sold sex.
So what happens if Frank McCallum threatens to expose a secret that would make her husband leave and tear her family apart? And you think that gives Emma Sandbrook a motive for murder? Yuck! Big yuck.
What a stretch! That theory will sag like an undercooked souffle in court.
After she killed him, she panicked.
Did the first thing that came to mind.
She put lipstick around his penis, to make it look like he'd been with a prostitute, not realising her lipstick was traceable back to her.
She wasn't there.
She didn't do it.
Emma pleads guilty to manslaughter on grounds of provocation.
McCallum's widow is saved the trauma of a trial.
Show some humanity, Phyllis.
If my client refuses your offer? We'll try her for murder.
She can expect a heftier sentence.
Take this offer, Emma could get as little as five years.
She'd be out in time to see Toby do his GCSEs.
I'll put your suggestion to my client.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I do have other work.
Think she'll take it? I'd never predict Phyllis Gladstone.
If she refuses, blackmail's a good mitigation, even at a murder trial.
It's motive, not a defence.
You're never gonna believe this.
Emma Sandbrookwants to confess.
Frank McCallum came to the shop.
He said he worked for Josh Pritchard and that he knew all about me.
He said if I didn't get in the car with him, he'd drive straight round to see my husband.
I couldn't bear the thought of it coming out, so I got in the car.
He drove and parked up and then he locked the doors and said he wouldn't tell my husband, so long as I agreed to have sex with him, free of charge, whenever he wanted.
II told him I wasn't going to do that.
And I tried to get out of the car.
And that's when he grabbed me.
DI CHANDLER: Where did he grab you? First by the wrist, then by the hair.
Hehe pulled my head down into hiscrotch and forced me to I'm sorry, Emma, we have to be clear about this.
What did Frank McCallum force you to do? To perform oral sex on him.
I was struggling.
I managed to push him off me, and crawled into the back of the car, but he came after me and was trapped.
I saw the spanner on top of the open toolkit.
And Frank was He was clawing at me, pulling at my clothes.
So I grabbed the spanner and swung it.
I was protecting myself.
I thought he was going to kill me.
'Attempted rape.
' When did you dream that up? It's the truth.
It happened just as she said.
And no jury hearing that will convict her of murder.
'Why didn't she mention rape before?' She didn't think she'd be believed.
Really? She's no shy wallflower.
We know McCallum asked another woman for sex in exchange for his silence.
And we know he never went further than asking.
Every rapist starts somewhere.
If you can find proof within the evidence to support Emma's assertion, I'll listen.
Until then, my duty is to the murder victim.
He's still owed justice.
So, can you make it home with what you've got on this case? Yeah.
Good.
No further arrangements.
Emma Sandbrook stands trial for murder.
Oh, by the way, Emma's husband has corroborated her story.
He told her to stay away from the police.
He disposed of the murder weapon.
The police are locating it now, based on his information.
He changed his story? Sweetie, don't look so disappointed.
Not only is Emma lying, she's got others lying for her, as well.
You're not convincing me, and you won't convince a jury.
Lies rarely sustain under pressure, Phyllis.
Well, we'll soon find out.
May the best man win.
a sex worker called Debbie Kane complained to the Police Complaints Authority that she was arrested by Frank McCallum after refusing to have sex with him? That complaint was not upheld.
And 3ubsequently in2002 a sex worker called LisaMcCormack filed a similar complaint.
Also dismissed.
It's easy for prostitutes to make these complaints.
Frank wasn't that sort of bloke.
Were complaints made against anyone else in the Vice Squad? Not to my knowledge, no.
MURMURING Thank you.
Did those complaints allege Detective McCallum used violence? Absolutely not.
Do you know why they were dismissed? They were investigated by the PCA.
There was an on-the-record hearing.
They concluded there was no evidence to support the charges.
There's no saliva in the lipstick! Sorry? I've been back through forensics.
The lipstick marks on Frank McCallum's body didn't contain traces of saliva.
Contradicting Emma's evidence that McCallum forced her to perform oral sex.
So I asked Forensics to check back for other inconsistencies.
They queried why the lipstick was the only marking on McCallum's penis.
If it had been outside of his clothes during the attack, it should've been splattered with blood.
But it wasn't.
Which means the lipstick was applied after she'd killed Frank McCallum.
The facts undermine Emma's story.
She was in the car, but she wasn't raped.
Hello? Hi.
ErmI'm Annie McCallum.
Frank's wife.
Oh, come in, come in! James Steel.
I was in court this morning.
I know what they're trying to do.
Now, Frank was many things but he wasn't a rapist.
We believe you.
But are the jury going to believe that? You know, SHE killed him, and now she's lying about him.
Who's speaking out for Frank? Who's defending him? We are.
I promise.
I thought the money came from the shop.
I didn't think to ask questions, not when we needed it so badly.
The money Emma earned .
.
was a lifesaver.
Before that, we were in massive trouble.
If Emma's acquitted, will you let her come home? Yes.
We're a family.
Toby needs his mum.
So, despite everything, you're here, giving evidence in support of your wife.
I don't agree with her selling sex.
But I understand why she did it.
She sacrificed herself, to keep the family together.
And I'mcertain she's telling the truth about what happened in the car.
Thank you.
Is it difficult, being continually humiliated by your wife, Mr Sandbrook? Pertinent questions, Mr Steel, please.
Emmacomes to you in tears andshe tells you she just killed a man who tried to rape her, and you tell her not to go to the police? I was worried they wouldn't believe her.
You're not a stupid man.
You must have known they'd find out.
I-I-I don't I mean, it It wasn't the best decision.
None of this is the truth, is it? Your wife never told you she killed Frank McCallum in self-defence.
I told you what happened.
She came up with the story of attempted rape after her arrest and demanded you go along with it.
No! "She told me she wasn't there.
" That's from your original statement.
Were you lying then? Or are you lying now? Can anything you say be believed? In your line of work, have you ever been asked to do things that youdidn't want to do? One man threatened me with a carving knife.
I had no choice but to let him do what he wanted.
Rape you.
Yes.
What would have happened if you'd refused? I think he might have killed me.
Mrs Sandbrook was responsible for you becoming a prostitute? We discussed it together.
It was a short-term solution toa difficult problem.
But you soon got used to the money? Neither of us were going to do it forever.
Emma had been wanting to stop for a few months.
She'd had enough.
She wanted out before Steve discovered.
No further questions.
JUDGE: I will rise for the short adjournment.
Members of the jury, please be back here in one hour.
Give me Emma's police statement.
And every statement by her husband and Kate.
Sure.
USHER: Court, rise.
When I saw the spanner, I just grabbed itand swung it.
I was just trying to get him off me.
Why didn't you go to the police? Because I knew they wouldn't see a mum from Barnes, just a whore.
I was just trying to protect my family.
Thank you, Emma.
How many strangers have paid you to have sex with them? JUDGE: Answer the question, please, Mrs Sandbrook.
Were you proud of being a prostitute? Not proud, no.
Ashamed, then? Sometimes.
Whydid you want to stop being a prostitute? Why do you think? It's your evidence we require, Mrs Sandbrook.
I have a husband and son.
I don't think I could carry on living with myself if I .
.
if I didn't stopdoing it.
So you felt guilty and ashamed? Like I said, yes, sometimes I did, yes, sometimes.
And were you worried that if your husband found out he might leave you, as he'd previously threatened? I never wanted to hurt Steve.
So when Frank McCallum threatened to tell your husband, you had no choice but to kill him? No.
He tried to rape me.
You reached for a spanner and you hit him 14 times.
That's a frenzied attack.
What did he say to make you so angry? He was attacking me! I-I told you.
He brought out all that guilt and shame and self-loathing you'd worked so hard to bury.
No! You thought you were about to - I was fighting him off! .
.
be free of prostitution.
He was trying to RAPE ME! He was threatening to destroy your life.
No! You just said you hated your life, couldn't live with yourself.
All that rage came flooding out.
No! That is not how it was! Was he still talking, after the first blow with the spanner? Second? Third? Or - I don't know.
I can't remember! Was he still threatening to tell Steve when you hit him the fifth time, the seventh, the ninth? It was fast.
I don't know.
When did he lose consciousness? When you could've got out of the car if you'd wished.
The 11th blow or the 13th? I don't know.
Because your story is a lie, isn't it, Mrs Sandbrook? No! He was trying to rape me.
After you killed him, you panicked.
You altered the scene to make it look like a prostitute's attack by applying lipstick to his dead body.
No, I did not! Forensic tests found no saliva traces in the lipstick.
MURMURING You didn't attack him in self-defence.
If that was true, you would've fled, the moment you'd fought him off.
You killed him because he threatened to expose you as a prostitute.
No.
No.
No.
Defendant, please rise.
Members of the jury, have you reached a verdict upon which you are all agreed? Yes.
In relation to the count of the murder of Frank McCallum, do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty? Guilty.
I can't help thinking about Emma's family.
Why did Emma force us to trial? She could've taken our first offer.
There's adway3 more than gne victim.
But it was the right verdict for Frank McCallum.
Justice has been done.
The police, who investigate crime, and the Crown prosecutors, who prosecute the offenders.
These are their stories.
' You're slow, boy! You are dreamin'! I am faster than you every day! You're never gonna beat that! Right, I'll prove it.
This one.
Right, time me.
Go! ALARM Stay where you are! Stop! Stay where you are! I didn't do it! I didn't do it I didn't do it! Need urgent assistance.
I didn't do it! They didn't do it.
Body had been there ten or 12 hours by the time they got there.
So who's the poor sod in the back? No wallet or ID.
Head stoved in.
Multiple blows from a blunt instrument.
Toolkit in the back of the car.
Weapon might have come from that.
Frenzied attack, judging by the splatter patterns.
You love saying "splatter patterns", don't you? The two kids are in custody.
Looks like they've taken half the sat-navs in a square mile.
Right.
So is this still an HQ for toms? Yeah.
Might explain why his John Thomas was hanging out.
"Blowus interruptus", if you ask me.
Ron, PNC results.
Vehicle belonged to a Frank McCallum.
Blimey! Previously Detective Sergeant McCallum.
He used to be a copper, in Vice.
He's one of us.
We'd been separated nine months.
I was hoping the split was temporary.
When we were first married, he used to bring me an orange lily every Friday night.
I'd call him a hopeless romantic.
He'd say, "No, just hopeless.
" Working for Vice changed him.
He stopped being the man I married.
That's what being a copper does.
Eats you from the inside.
Is there anyone you'd like us to contact? I wanted kids.
I told him he'd be a great dad.
He was a good man.
Darling, I'm so sorry.
I just got your message.
Thanks, Josh.
I'm sorry, sir, you are? Josh Pritchard.
I'm Frank's boss.
Oh.
ErmDS Brooks.
This is DS Devlin.
ErPC Cook will take you home.
Just give us a call if you need anything.
Speak to you in a minute, right? Battle Fieldz, is that your company? Yeah, with a Z.
It's a paintballing centre out in Epping Forest.
Frank's our operational director.
And what does that job involve? Everything.
Ermsecurity, supplies, making sure the arenas were in good nick.
He did a fantastic job.
Tell me, was he into prostitutes? And what kind of question's that? A relevant one.
Yeah, well, I don't know, do I? Why on earth would he tell me that? It's not the kind of conversation you normally have with your boss.
'We've got teams looking for witnesses.
' CCTV? Not round there.
Local kids have a league table, who knocks out the most cameras.
We're checking all private systems within half a mile.
It'll take time.
A murder weapon would make it too easy.
The search teams haven't turned anything up.
Forensics have found prints in the prelim exam of the car, but none of them match our records.
Maybe our girl's new in town.
Or boy.
You think it's a prostitute scam gone wrong? He does, I don't.
McCallum's ex-Vice.
He knows the ropes.
Ain't gonna get scammed, then bashed to death in his own motor.
Revenge killing? Someone he had a run-in with at Vice? So why's he got his ninky-nonk out? (SNIGGERS) You call it a ninky-nonk? You should hear what I call you! Talk to the friendly neighbourhood tarts, find out what they've heard.
last night.
Hear anything about it? Bit buff for a copper, you! Do you mind, love? His head's big enough, without you adding to it.
Maybe a girl tried to rip him off.
We don't scam punters round here! Start getting a reputation like that, business dies on you.
Anyone new here, might not understand the rules? Help us out, I'll throw in a get-out-of-jail-free card, next time you're nicked for soliciting.
There's a new girl, round the back of Paddington.
Little Irish girl.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Blonde mousey hair, green eyes, looks about 12.
It's a good market for her.
Well, does she have a name? Niamh! Bloke's asking for you by name.
Hello, Niamh.
Hello yourself.
Do I know you? Not really.
No, but you might know this.
What? You're Old Bill? Don't you have anything better to do with your life? That bag's almost as big as you, love.
What have you got in there? Not much.
Well, do you mind showing us? These belong to Frank McCallum, who was murdered yesterday.
You were arrested on suspicion of his murder.
No.
I found them.
On the pavement near the railway lines.
Where are you from, Niamh? If I had to guess, I would sayDungannon.
Or a village just outside, likeCookstown.
It's about five miles away.
I got family.
Distant family.
Mad family.
Don't see 'em much, thank God.
Your parents know you're here? My mum's dead.
My dad's a bastard.
Snap.
Are we related, do you think? (SIGHS) Niamh, the man that was murdered used to be a policeman.
So, for myself and Matt here, it's like losing a member of our family.
You were found with that murdered man's property on you.
Your fingerprints were in his car.
Tell us what happened.
The driver's door was open.
He was already dead, lying in the back.
There was no-one around.
I promise you, on my life, I didn't do it.
The coat was in the back.
The wallet and phone were in there.
So I grabbed them, took the keys, shut it all up.
Look at me.
You think I could kill him? Some days I think anybody's capable of anything.
OK.
We're gonna charge you with theft of articles from the car, and we'll keep you here until we can get a full forensic report - I told you I didn't! I know, sweetheart, I know.
But sometimes people lie.
Niamh Quinn is telling the truth.
Of all the stuff under her fingernails, and, really, you don't wanna know, no skin or blood from Frank McCallum.
Plus she doesn't share the same lipstick as the killer.
What, you took a lipstick trace off his - Wangdoodle.
Oh yeah.
But she cguld h!ve other dipsticks This one's Blush by Nyman.
It's not one you get in Superdrug.
American manufacturer.
Only Selfridges stock it.
Classy girl he had in his crotch.
From the text messages folder on his mobile, text from aSanchia.
"Urgent.
Must see you tonight.
Don't mess me about.
" What do we know about this Sanchia? I called the number.
She's the accountant at a paintballing centre.
Battle Fieldz.
With a Z! Nice work.
We'd been on a date.
He'd been asking for a while.
I sort of gave in.
I got drunk quite quickly that night.
He ended up back at mine.
When he asked about going out again, I said no.
So he tried to blackmail me.
How was he gonna do that? I work in accounts, I know the systems.
Sometimes I get people in for free andtake a few of the supplies.
I told Frank when I was drunk.
After you turned him down, he tried to use that against you? He locked the door, said he'd report me, unless I went out with him.
Basically, slept with him.
I told him to take a running jump.
Can I ask you what kind of lipstick you wear, Sanchia? I don't.
Where were you Wednesday between noon and 5pm? Here, all afternoon.
Health-and-safety course, with half a dozen other staff.
Sanchia's alibi's rock solid.
Your little friend Niamh, she really isn't a credible suspect.
She's naive, no worse than that.
We need to know more about the victim.
Who was Frank McCallum? We turned over his flat.
Nothing of interest.
Sparse little gaff in Wood Green.
Classic divorced bloke, on his own, totally unhomely and depressing.
Not all divorced blokes live like that.
Says "Mr Frayed Carpet In His Lounge"! The people before me had a cat! What are you doing with those ties? Vice are holding a wake for McCallum at the Golden Hind.
I thought we should nip down, find out a bit more about him.
Excellent! people's records, numberplates, etc.
Usually about employees at the paintball place.
When did you last speak? Oh, I don't know Ten days ago.
He wanted me to check out a false charge on the company credit card.
Frank thought it might've been phished.
Internet fraud.
And what did you find out? It was a legit company behind the charge.
Er Velvet Holdings.
I don't know what he did with the information.
Did he have a taste for prostitutes? (SIGHS) Show a bit of respect, will you? Is that a yes or a no? Frank was a good copper! But he wore his heart on his sleeve.
Fell in love four times a day.
Nothing got to him more than a hard-luck story.
He thought he could help the girls, you know.
Fix their lives.
Worst place for a bloke like that is Vice.
Right, we'll need the names of the people he pissed off.
That wasn't Frank.
He was putting his life back together.
He was doing good.
Sorry, boys, you've hit a dead end.
Mind that, mind that! Frank McCallum asked an ex-colleague of his to investigate an apparently fraudulent charge made by them to your company credit card.
No details about Velvet in any of McCallum's files.
So, how many people are authorised to use your company credit card? I don't know.
Three, I think.
But ask Sanchia.
We'll need the names of those authorised users, plus the account statements for the last few months.
Sure.
Sorry, Mr Pritchard, you said you'd never heard of Velvet Holdings.
No.
Well, Battle Fieldz .
.
made seven payments to them last month, at £1,000 a throw.
And half a dozen the month before that.
Wow.
Maybe it'sa supplier that's changed their name.
ErSanchia, got those invoices on there? Give me a sec and I'll look.
Each payment was made using company credit card number two.
Who uses that? Ermit's probably Frank.
Velvet Holdings "Miscellaneous Supplies.
" Very miscellaneous, seeing as neither of you know about them.
Check Companies House.
Get a full FIU.
See what we can get from them.
I became a 'tec for the glamour.
What happens? I spend most of my nights here, trawling through paperwork with you.
Well, you can bet your life Frank McCallum did the same when he was on the job.
Just remember why you're doing this, Matt.
What kind of person does that? So, where are we? Well, company search, "Velvet Holdings", look: nothing.
No phone numbers, website, emails, business accounts.
Nothing.
No clues about what they do.
Although, registered office is in Oxford Street.
I mean, we go there, we could find an operating address, maybe even some names.
We're a clearing house.
Companies put this as their registered address for official mail - Inland Revenue, Companies House - and we forward it on to where they're really based.
So, what, you sit here all day, forwarding letters? All day, every day.
I'm not allowed a computer, cos that'd be too distracting.
And that cameramonitors me.
All day.
Every day.
You enjoy your job, Kieran? I'm a facade.
Velvet Holdings? Yes.
Here we go.
That's everything we've got on file.
Thank you.
Velvet Holdings have their mail forwarded on to a shop in Barnes called Toby's Play Room.
Let's have a look at that phone number.
Yep.
Frank McCallum's mobile bill.
He called that shop the day before he was killed.
of the shop.
I think the accountant advised Emma to set it up, some tax break.
A man called Frank McCallum rang here a couple of days ago.
Do you know what that was about? No.
Sorry.
I didn't speak to him.
I did.
Emma, thas i3 Detective Sergeant.
.
Erm Sorry.
DS Brooks.
This is DS Devlin.
Emma Sandbrook.
I own the shop.
Eryes, no, erFrank.
We spoke last week.
He rang about his delivery, to see if it had come in.
We supplykids' stuff to his paintball company.
Kids and paint, my idea of hell.
Did you make the delivery? No.
He picked it up himself.
Tuesday, I think.
And Wednesday, did you see him then? No, I don't think so.
You're not sure? Erm No.
Can't have been.
We went shopping.
Yeah, that's right.
We don't work Wednesday afternoons.
We treat ourselves.
We took the tr!in to Bond Street, had a late lunch at Selfridges.
Bit of window shopping, that sort of thing.
Well, you've got some nice stuff.
Have you been open long? Ermabout three and a half years.
Is everything all right with Frank? He was beaten to death on Wednesday afternoon.
Oh, my God.
That's terrible.
Well, we'll be in touch if we need anything else.
She said he rang about a delivery, but he picked the stuff up himself.
From Epping to Barnes! And he's the operational director.
No.
Why bother with that? Why do Battle Fieldz have 'em in Miscellaneous Supplies in their accounts? They've got a category for that stuff.
Maybe a mistake.
Depends what you favour.
Conspiracy or cock-up? You know me, Mattie, I believe everything everyone tells me, and I'm disappointed on a daily basis.
So, if it's not paintballing equipment, what are they supplying Could be a drugs front.
Dealing coke to the middle classes of southwest London.
Nah.
Nah.
But you've got the accounts file for Velvet Holdings? Yeah.
All legit on the surface.
So go below the surface.
Talk to everyone who's made payments into the company and find out exactly what they're paying for.
Feet off the table.
I work like a bastard down here, Monday to Friday.
I'm allowed a bit of play.
We'd just like to know what the girls from Velvet Holdings supply you with.
Don't try and put any stigma on me, lads.
I could have an affair, be keeping a bird here, but I couldn't live with myself.
This way, it's a business transaction.
We all have a good time, they get paid, and I'm not betraying the wife.
They're prozzies.
Bloody good ones.
"High class" doesn't come into it.
Save up, lads.
Treat yourselves.
Do you recognise these women? Oh, aye.
There we go! That's Coral, and that's Amber.
Bloody hell.
I get a rod on like Nelson's Column, just thinking about her.
A school like this can't come cheap.
That's before you've even bought the first tennis racket.
There's enough gaps in what they're saying to bring 'em in.
I know, but still I hate this bit.
Splitting families.
.
.
so good, and your serving is so much better.
I've been improving a lot.
You have, my love.
Hello, gentlemen.
Mrs Sandbrook.
This is my son Toby.
He's just been selected to represent the school.
Isn't it great? Nice work, mate.
Thanks.
Go ask your father for a drink, my love.
Is everything OK? We'd like you to come with us to the station.
Now? It's related to Frank McCallum's death.
I'm sorry, we can't, not now.
Emma Sandbrook, Kate Barton, I'm arresting you on suspicion of the murder of Frank McCallum.
You do not have to say anything, but it may harm your defence if you do not mention when questioned - This is ridiculous! Anything you do say may be given in evidence.
Emma, what's going on? Nothing.
Theseer These policemen want to ask us about a guy who bought stuff from the shop.
That's all.
Well, can't it wait, chaps? No, it can't.
I'm sorry, sir.
KATE: Take Joe.
Tim's getting changed.
Give them tea.
I'll pick them up later.
We won't be long.
What? Car's this way.
HUSBAND: Emma? What's going on? See you later, darling.
Nothing.
See you later.
Kate, we checked with Selfridges.
They've got no record of you at the restaurant the afternoon Frank McCallum was killed.
We didn't have a reservation, and we paid cash.
There's no sign of you on the CCTV cameras along Bond Street, either.
Have you got any receipts for your purchases? Threw them away.
Sorry.
Kate, I've been married twice.
No woman throws away receipts for clothes they've only just bought.
How did the prostitution start? We prefer to call ourselves escorts.
That's classier, I agree.
But whatever you want to call it, how did it start? We bought our house five years ago.
Top of what we could afford.
A year later, I found my husband was having an affair.
After I chucked him out, I found out he'd run up debt in my name.
We owed on the boys' school fees.
I was 40 grand in debt, couldn't cover the mortgage.
Have you ever been in so much debt? It's like you can't breathe.
Did you kill Frank McCallum? No.
Did Emma? We were shopping all afternoon.
Frank McCallum had a wife who loved him, a job he enjoyed, and a lot of mates who are struggling to understand why at the age of 47 he is dead.
If you provide a false alibi for a killer .
.
you are in just as much trouble as they are.
Misguided loyalty will not help you.
Or your sons.
I'm telling the truth.
Steve and I put all our money into starting up the shop.
We remortgaged, took out a loan, lost money hand over fist every month.
It got worse and worse.
Then Steve lost his bloody job, and I knew Kate through the school.
And we were in the same situation.
We'd sit in her kitchen in the evenings, drinking wine, trying to come up with a solution.
We were joking at first.
Then I just thought, "Well, why not? What's so bad about that?" We don't do the scuzzy end.
We pre-select and vet all our clients.
Mostly young blokes with some money, some class.
Sounds almost aspirational.
Don't judge me.
I know what I am.
I know what people will think of me.
And does it matter to you, what people will think? I've been doing it to keep my family together.
I'm good at it.
I make others feel good.
DOOR OPENS Emma.
I'm afraid your DNA was all over the murder scene.
On Frank McCallum's body, and on a toolkit in the back of his car.
That would've been the Tuesday.
He came to the shop topick up his order.
I helped him load stuff into the car.
I must've moved the toolkit.
We searched your house.
We found this.
Blush by Nyman.
Also found on Frank McCallum's body.
Nice colour.
Suits you.
I'm not a murderer.
Sorry, Emma.
We're going to charge you with the murder of Frank McCallum.
Traces of her rare and expensive lipstick were on his body.
But we don't have a murder weapon, and she denies she was there.
She'd have us believe he was murdered by some street prostitute.
How will you stand this up in court? Motive.
What provokes Emma Sandbrook into such a brutal attack? Find that, we unlock the case.
Frank McCallum gets justice.
They had sex in the car, he refuses to pay, she gets angry.
No.
Inconsistent.
She's a thousand-pound escort.
All her other clients she saw in hotels or their homes.
Maybe car sex turned Frank McCallum on.
George is right.
I don't think Emma would've taken that risk.
Every aspect of their work was careful, pre-planned, safety-conscious.
A long way from watertight.
You've got a lot of work to do.
Why did she get in the car? What happened after she did? Phyllis! Do you mind? We're in conference! You need a new receptionist.
That one's easy to get past.
Phyllis Gladstone, representing Emma Sandbrook.
I've seen you defend.
Did I get her off? Yep.
What are you doing? When did prostitutes fly the flag for women's rights? Sexual exploitation of women.
What?! How did you make that leap? Drop the charges.
You can't win this.
The DNA evidence is irrefutable.
Ah, the great God science.
I'll turn it to dust beneath my fingers.
Motive? Out! You don't know, do you? Out! Good.
Good! I'll tell my client.
She'simpossible.
And brilliant.
You have to find that motive.
Start prodding the husband.
He must be feeling a little bruised.
She wasn't in the car.
She didn't kill him.
I know her.
But, until this came out, you didn't know she was a prostitute.
Stop calling her that! I'm sorry.
Sometimes it's too much to take in.
Before we got married, I told her, if she ever slept with anyone else, I'm out.
No discussions, no second chances.
I'd just leave.
So why are you still here? Couldn't do it.
Maybe I shouldtake Toby and go.
But there's no off switch when youlove someone, is there? I just want to keep the familytogether.
So long as that doesn't include lying for them.
I've told you everything she told me.
She wasn't there.
Did you find anything on Frank McCallum's credit-card bills? Yes.
Almost every time there's a Velvet Holdings charge, there's a charge the same day from Hotel 103, a small hotel in Marylebone.
Could be the love pad.
That's what I was thinking.
But the last payment was three weeks before the murder.
Sowhat? After that they switched hotels? Don't think so.
There's no more charges on the card.
Maybe they had a falling-out, stopped seeing each other.
See if any of the staff noticed anything odd about the last time McCallum and Emma were there.
Sure.
Checking in at 2:24pm on the 19th.
Yep.
Won't be a sec.
There you go.
That's her.
And that's your Mr McCallum.
No, it's not.
Look, what exactly is it you want me to say? You lie$ to the polace.
You were having sex with the woman accused of murdering your employee and you forgot to mention it? OK, so I'm really terribly sorry.
Just stop going on about it! You told police the charges were on Frank McCallum's card.
I promise you, swear to God, cross my heart and hope to die, I had nothing to do with Frank McCallum's death.
Nor did Amber.
Emma.
EmmaEmma Sandbrook.
She cacalls herself Amber.
What was she doi.
g ina car with Frank McCallum? I asked him to find her.
Why? Cos a couple of weeks ago, she Emmasaid she didn't want to continue with our meetings.
Why? I don't know.
She said it was nothing personal.
That it was her, not me.
Maybe I was just getting a little bit too close or something, I don't know.
But, I tell you, those two hours were the best part of my week.
I asked her to live with me, cos I wanted a relationship rather than just a transaction.
And about then she stopped returning my calls.
And so I knew thatFrank, he'd been in the police force, so I asked him to find her for me.
You sent Frank McCallum after Emma Sandbrook, and then you lied about it, persistently.
Er I didn't know what else to do, you know? I love her.
So, Frank McCallum lied to his old friend in Vice about why he needed information on Velvet Holdings.
It wasn't credit-card fraud.
He wanted to find Emma for Josh.
And we know he did, because he called her at the shop.
Which means he knew everything.
Her real name, that she was married with a child.
Is that why she got in his car, rather than meet him at Hotel 103? So she didn't meet him for sex at all.
He picks her up, drives her somewhere out of the way And threatens to tell the whole of Barnes about her secret.
Unless she sleeps with him whenever he wants.
It's the same thing he demanded of the woman at the paintball company! Emma's driving force all along was to keep her family together.
That's why she sold sex.
So what happens if Frank McCallum threatens to expose a secret that would make her husband leave and tear her family apart? And you think that gives Emma Sandbrook a motive for murder? Yuck! Big yuck.
What a stretch! That theory will sag like an undercooked souffle in court.
After she killed him, she panicked.
Did the first thing that came to mind.
She put lipstick around his penis, to make it look like he'd been with a prostitute, not realising her lipstick was traceable back to her.
She wasn't there.
She didn't do it.
Emma pleads guilty to manslaughter on grounds of provocation.
McCallum's widow is saved the trauma of a trial.
Show some humanity, Phyllis.
If my client refuses your offer? We'll try her for murder.
She can expect a heftier sentence.
Take this offer, Emma could get as little as five years.
She'd be out in time to see Toby do his GCSEs.
I'll put your suggestion to my client.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I do have other work.
Think she'll take it? I'd never predict Phyllis Gladstone.
If she refuses, blackmail's a good mitigation, even at a murder trial.
It's motive, not a defence.
You're never gonna believe this.
Emma Sandbrookwants to confess.
Frank McCallum came to the shop.
He said he worked for Josh Pritchard and that he knew all about me.
He said if I didn't get in the car with him, he'd drive straight round to see my husband.
I couldn't bear the thought of it coming out, so I got in the car.
He drove and parked up and then he locked the doors and said he wouldn't tell my husband, so long as I agreed to have sex with him, free of charge, whenever he wanted.
II told him I wasn't going to do that.
And I tried to get out of the car.
And that's when he grabbed me.
DI CHANDLER: Where did he grab you? First by the wrist, then by the hair.
Hehe pulled my head down into hiscrotch and forced me to I'm sorry, Emma, we have to be clear about this.
What did Frank McCallum force you to do? To perform oral sex on him.
I was struggling.
I managed to push him off me, and crawled into the back of the car, but he came after me and was trapped.
I saw the spanner on top of the open toolkit.
And Frank was He was clawing at me, pulling at my clothes.
So I grabbed the spanner and swung it.
I was protecting myself.
I thought he was going to kill me.
'Attempted rape.
' When did you dream that up? It's the truth.
It happened just as she said.
And no jury hearing that will convict her of murder.
'Why didn't she mention rape before?' She didn't think she'd be believed.
Really? She's no shy wallflower.
We know McCallum asked another woman for sex in exchange for his silence.
And we know he never went further than asking.
Every rapist starts somewhere.
If you can find proof within the evidence to support Emma's assertion, I'll listen.
Until then, my duty is to the murder victim.
He's still owed justice.
So, can you make it home with what you've got on this case? Yeah.
Good.
No further arrangements.
Emma Sandbrook stands trial for murder.
Oh, by the way, Emma's husband has corroborated her story.
He told her to stay away from the police.
He disposed of the murder weapon.
The police are locating it now, based on his information.
He changed his story? Sweetie, don't look so disappointed.
Not only is Emma lying, she's got others lying for her, as well.
You're not convincing me, and you won't convince a jury.
Lies rarely sustain under pressure, Phyllis.
Well, we'll soon find out.
May the best man win.
a sex worker called Debbie Kane complained to the Police Complaints Authority that she was arrested by Frank McCallum after refusing to have sex with him? That complaint was not upheld.
And 3ubsequently in2002 a sex worker called LisaMcCormack filed a similar complaint.
Also dismissed.
It's easy for prostitutes to make these complaints.
Frank wasn't that sort of bloke.
Were complaints made against anyone else in the Vice Squad? Not to my knowledge, no.
MURMURING Thank you.
Did those complaints allege Detective McCallum used violence? Absolutely not.
Do you know why they were dismissed? They were investigated by the PCA.
There was an on-the-record hearing.
They concluded there was no evidence to support the charges.
There's no saliva in the lipstick! Sorry? I've been back through forensics.
The lipstick marks on Frank McCallum's body didn't contain traces of saliva.
Contradicting Emma's evidence that McCallum forced her to perform oral sex.
So I asked Forensics to check back for other inconsistencies.
They queried why the lipstick was the only marking on McCallum's penis.
If it had been outside of his clothes during the attack, it should've been splattered with blood.
But it wasn't.
Which means the lipstick was applied after she'd killed Frank McCallum.
The facts undermine Emma's story.
She was in the car, but she wasn't raped.
Hello? Hi.
ErmI'm Annie McCallum.
Frank's wife.
Oh, come in, come in! James Steel.
I was in court this morning.
I know what they're trying to do.
Now, Frank was many things but he wasn't a rapist.
We believe you.
But are the jury going to believe that? You know, SHE killed him, and now she's lying about him.
Who's speaking out for Frank? Who's defending him? We are.
I promise.
I thought the money came from the shop.
I didn't think to ask questions, not when we needed it so badly.
The money Emma earned .
.
was a lifesaver.
Before that, we were in massive trouble.
If Emma's acquitted, will you let her come home? Yes.
We're a family.
Toby needs his mum.
So, despite everything, you're here, giving evidence in support of your wife.
I don't agree with her selling sex.
But I understand why she did it.
She sacrificed herself, to keep the family together.
And I'mcertain she's telling the truth about what happened in the car.
Thank you.
Is it difficult, being continually humiliated by your wife, Mr Sandbrook? Pertinent questions, Mr Steel, please.
Emmacomes to you in tears andshe tells you she just killed a man who tried to rape her, and you tell her not to go to the police? I was worried they wouldn't believe her.
You're not a stupid man.
You must have known they'd find out.
I-I-I don't I mean, it It wasn't the best decision.
None of this is the truth, is it? Your wife never told you she killed Frank McCallum in self-defence.
I told you what happened.
She came up with the story of attempted rape after her arrest and demanded you go along with it.
No! "She told me she wasn't there.
" That's from your original statement.
Were you lying then? Or are you lying now? Can anything you say be believed? In your line of work, have you ever been asked to do things that youdidn't want to do? One man threatened me with a carving knife.
I had no choice but to let him do what he wanted.
Rape you.
Yes.
What would have happened if you'd refused? I think he might have killed me.
Mrs Sandbrook was responsible for you becoming a prostitute? We discussed it together.
It was a short-term solution toa difficult problem.
But you soon got used to the money? Neither of us were going to do it forever.
Emma had been wanting to stop for a few months.
She'd had enough.
She wanted out before Steve discovered.
No further questions.
JUDGE: I will rise for the short adjournment.
Members of the jury, please be back here in one hour.
Give me Emma's police statement.
And every statement by her husband and Kate.
Sure.
USHER: Court, rise.
When I saw the spanner, I just grabbed itand swung it.
I was just trying to get him off me.
Why didn't you go to the police? Because I knew they wouldn't see a mum from Barnes, just a whore.
I was just trying to protect my family.
Thank you, Emma.
How many strangers have paid you to have sex with them? JUDGE: Answer the question, please, Mrs Sandbrook.
Were you proud of being a prostitute? Not proud, no.
Ashamed, then? Sometimes.
Whydid you want to stop being a prostitute? Why do you think? It's your evidence we require, Mrs Sandbrook.
I have a husband and son.
I don't think I could carry on living with myself if I .
.
if I didn't stopdoing it.
So you felt guilty and ashamed? Like I said, yes, sometimes I did, yes, sometimes.
And were you worried that if your husband found out he might leave you, as he'd previously threatened? I never wanted to hurt Steve.
So when Frank McCallum threatened to tell your husband, you had no choice but to kill him? No.
He tried to rape me.
You reached for a spanner and you hit him 14 times.
That's a frenzied attack.
What did he say to make you so angry? He was attacking me! I-I told you.
He brought out all that guilt and shame and self-loathing you'd worked so hard to bury.
No! You thought you were about to - I was fighting him off! .
.
be free of prostitution.
He was trying to RAPE ME! He was threatening to destroy your life.
No! You just said you hated your life, couldn't live with yourself.
All that rage came flooding out.
No! That is not how it was! Was he still talking, after the first blow with the spanner? Second? Third? Or - I don't know.
I can't remember! Was he still threatening to tell Steve when you hit him the fifth time, the seventh, the ninth? It was fast.
I don't know.
When did he lose consciousness? When you could've got out of the car if you'd wished.
The 11th blow or the 13th? I don't know.
Because your story is a lie, isn't it, Mrs Sandbrook? No! He was trying to rape me.
After you killed him, you panicked.
You altered the scene to make it look like a prostitute's attack by applying lipstick to his dead body.
No, I did not! Forensic tests found no saliva traces in the lipstick.
MURMURING You didn't attack him in self-defence.
If that was true, you would've fled, the moment you'd fought him off.
You killed him because he threatened to expose you as a prostitute.
No.
No.
No.
Defendant, please rise.
Members of the jury, have you reached a verdict upon which you are all agreed? Yes.
In relation to the count of the murder of Frank McCallum, do you find the defendant guilty or not guilty? Guilty.
I can't help thinking about Emma's family.
Why did Emma force us to trial? She could've taken our first offer.
There's adway3 more than gne victim.
But it was the right verdict for Frank McCallum.
Justice has been done.