It is a scene reserved only for your worst nightmares. You live alone, but there is suddenly a stranger in your bedroom. He does not have to unfasten the zipper over his mouth on the black leather mask he is wearing to say why he is there. Prominent, against the dim light and the dark leather, there is one word scrawled crudely in white capital letters across the forehead of the mask… RAPIST.
Read moreSeason 5 - Episode 3
Red stains on the carpet, red stains on your knife, oh, Dr Buck Ruxton, you murdered your wife. The nursemaid saw you and threatened to tell, oh, Dr Buck Ruxton, you killed her as well…
— Lancashire nursery rhyme, parody of the song ‘Red Sails in the Sunset’, latter half of the 1930s
Read moreSeason 5 - Episode 2
Raoul Moat had been on the run from the police. Using a double-barrelled shotgun, Moat fired the weapon at his ex-girlfriend, Samantha Stobbart. She suffered life-threatening injuries. In the same attack, Moat murdered her new partner, Chris Brown. Moat was obsessed and could not face the fact that his six-year relationship with Samantha had ended (Part 2 of 2).
Read moreSeason 5 - Episode 1
A highly volatile former nightclub doorman is released from prison. He is in a jealous rage. The carnage that followed saw one person dead, and two left with life-threatening injuries. The attacks would spur one of the biggest manhunts the UK had ever seen culminating in a stand-off that resulted in yet another life being taken... (Part 1 of 2).
Read moreBonus Episode 9 [TWAU Plus]
Meeting a partner on the internet is common practice in this day and age — its popularity is on the rise. One group, the elderly seeking companionship, have become the preferred target for romance scammers trying to extort money...
Read moreBonus Episode 8 [TWAU Plus]
On April 21, 2013, a 19-month-old was rushed to Addenbrookes Hospital in Cambridge after a seizure. Doctors informed the boy's parents that his condition may be some form of congenital disorder, and surgeons had to undertake emergency surgery, removing part of his skull to reduce pressure on his brain. It was discovered he had suffered a subdural haematoma. After consultation with doctors, his parents made the extremely difficult decision to remove him from life support, and he continued to breathe unaided until he passed away three days later. At first glance, this would seem like an unfortunate and unavoidable tragedy. But investigators began to look deeper into the circumstances surrounding the boy's death...
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 52
Stuart Lubbock’s family would not see the justice they rightfully deserved but Michael Barrymore felt he too was a victim — he claimed his arrest on suspicion of murder in 2007 was a miscarriage of justice (Part 4 of 4).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 51
On September 13, 2002, at the offices of Epping Forest district council, the inquest into Stuart Lubbock’s death was concluded. The frustrations during the proceedings were felt no more so than by the coroner Caroline Beasley-Murray who believed that she was left with no other choice than to pass the verdict she did (Part 3 of 4).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 50
Stuart Lubbock, a father to two young children, was 31 when he was found lifeless, floating in a swimming pool that belonged to celebrity entertainer Michael Barrymore. Stuart was naked apart from a pair of boxer shorts. He had suffered severe internal injuries that would later be described as “horrific”. Essex police undertook an investigation that lasted almost a year, and several arrests were made. Still, no one was ultimately charged, and the inquiry wound down (Part 2 of 4).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 49
At 5:46 am, on the morning of Saturday, March 31, 2001, a call was made to the emergency services. The operator was told that a male, who would later be identified as 31-year old Stuart Lubbock, was found lifeless and hyperthermic in a swimming pool. The pool belonged to celebrity entertainer Michael Barrymore who lived at 4 Beaumont Park Drive in Roydon — a village in Essex in the southeast of England (Part 1 of 4).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 48
Terence Whall was on trial for murder. The prosecutor at Mold Crown Court told the jury that the defendant had shot his victim with a crossbow. The arrowheads used in the attack were designed for hunting animals — razor-sharp to sever a prey's arteries (Part 2 of 2).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 47
"When he left his home to look at the Sky dish, there was someone waiting outside, in the dark, armed with a high-powered crossbow. A crossbow, members of the jury, is a silent, quick and deadly weapon” — Prosecutor Peter Rouch QC, Mold Crown Court, January 2020 (Part 1 of 2).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 46
Michael Telling had killed his wife, Monika. He hid her body in a summer house for five months, before cutting off her head and disposing of the remains. He never disputed those facts. But after his arrest Telling argued that he was not responsible for his actions as he suffered from an abnormality of mind (Part 2 of 2).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 45
There are two sides to every coin like there are two sides to every story. A headless body is found in the undergrowth of a natural beauty spot in Devon. Police soon find the culprit who openly admits that he carried out the killing. However, not everything is, as it seems… or perhaps it is? (Part 1 of 2).
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 44
If you robbed a bank, how much do you think you would get? What would you spend the money on? How much money is a life worth?
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 43
“There may have been some sort of consensual behaviour at the start of this night’s activity. But we say that you can be sure that, whatever may have started willingly, there is no way that Natalie either consented to or was able to consent to what John Broadhurst did to her after that, leading to her untimely, unseemly and tragic death.”
— Prosecutor David Mason QC, Birmingham Crown Court, November 2018.
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 42
Jack and Charlotte were on a date. The evening was going well. So well, in fact, that Jack invited Charlotte back to his houseboat on the most famous river in London. Little did they know, that following the events of that night, one of them would end up dead and the other chased by police, halfway around the world.
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 39
Sometimes a killer can just blend in. Be one of many faces in a crowd, unnoticed by everyone, including the officers desperately searching for them. The person known to many as an unassuming "softly spoken gentleman", carries on with his life. Will he ever have to pay the price for what he has done?
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 38
“Psychological reports say they are absolutely sane individuals. It’s frighting that they are such ordinary people. There is nothing special about them.”
— Detective Inspector Peter Wall, outside Manchester Crown Court, 1993.
Read moreSeason 4 - Episode 37
Sally Challen was found guilty of murdering her husband, Richard in 2010, but over the intervening years, much was changing in the outside world (Part 2 of 2).
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