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00:00The Arrest is the pivotal moment in any investigation.
00:13If you get it wrong, then it's game over.
00:22Police officer with a taser!
00:24Taser, taser, taser!
00:30Taser, taser, taser!
00:44Everything they're doing is on body-worn video.
00:46Police!
00:48Everything they're doing would be examined by defence lawyers.
00:54They can't make any mistakes.
00:56I haven't done anything wrong!
01:00Police have made a renewed appeal for two runaway parents to hand themselves in.
01:18Constance Martin and Mark Gordon are thought to be sleeping rough after going missing with their newborn child last month.
01:26The risk at the moment only increases day by day for me when we don't have a confirmed sighting.
01:32And my call to Constance and Mark is to think of the baby and reach out to us.
01:38When the police deal with big, high-profile cases, there is already a massive amount of pressure to solve that crime.
01:56Because you are being watched.
01:58And you are being watched by everyone.
02:00Hello. Sorry mate.
02:02You'll stop for a second.
02:04In this case, the coverage was massive.
02:08And that was because of the people that were involved.
02:12It was headline fuel from day one.
02:18Stop, alright? Well, I need to speak to you.
02:20Well, because potentially I think you may have been in national news.
02:24There's a kind of resistance in a way that's pretty futile because their photographs and their names are everywhere in this hunt to try to catch them.
02:40Put the stuff down. We're going to put you in cards.
02:44I don't know whether this was denying reality or a tactic that they hoped might buy them more time and prevent them from being arrested.
02:52Put the stick down and I'll explain.
02:56Put the stick. Let go of the stick. The stick in your hand. Let go of the stick.
03:02Four times the officer had to ask him to put that stick down. Four.
03:09Yeah, already we can see he's not going to be playing ball here at all.
03:12Right, at this moment in time, until I can confirm who you are, you're both under arrest on submission of child neglect.
03:17You don't have to say anything, but it may harm you to fence if you don't mention when questioned, something which is lying in court, anything to be given in.
03:21Do you have to understand?
03:25When Constance was arrested, I don't think I would describe her as being fully compliant.
03:29All right, where's your child, madam? Where is the child, please? Daddy bear.
03:36But the police are obviously well-prepared. They're obviously well-breathed.
03:40They've got a photo of them on their phones, of each of them, to try to make it easier to identify them.
03:45Constance. Constance, Arabella, whoever you are.
03:48All right, where's your child?
03:50Have we searched here?
03:53I've just asked. I'm going to go and do it now. I've just...
03:57Why are we under arrest, too?
03:59Why are we under arrest, too?
04:00You're under arrest for child neglect.
04:01We're in what?
04:02I'm trying to find my issue again.
04:03Where is your child?
04:04You are under arrest for consuming of the birth of a child.
04:06How's that? That's not arrestable.
04:07It's all right.
04:08Section 27, Offences Against the Person Act, expose a child under the age of two years where by life or health to be endangered. Do you understand what you've been arrested for?
04:18There is a child missing and she's concerned that they've potentially arrested her for wrong legislation. Is she being ignorant? Is she being difficult? Is it deliberate? It's baffling.
04:40Part of the M61 motorway has been closed to traffic this evening after a car burst into flames on the hard shoulder. It's understood it broke out at around 6.20pm and that the driver and passenger escaped before the blaze took place.
04:58When the police turned up at the burning car, outside the vehicle they found things like nappies, dummies, bibs, rompers. The kind of stuff that would make you think whoever was in the car had a baby with them.
05:28What happened next was the police searched a car where they found something that confirmed their suspicions. A placenta wrapped in a towel.
05:39So it already started off quite concerning. They're at a car fire. There's evidence a baby's been born there with no medical attention. But then they come across a passport. They find out it's Constance Martin.
05:51And when police dug into her background, that's when alarm bells started ringing. Because her and her partner, Mark Gordon, had had four children already that had all been taken into care. So this went from a missing person case to a potentially child protection emergency.
06:14Over the next few hours, police would discover much more about the car's occupants and launch a search that would grip the entire country.
06:33Constance Martin was born into a wealthy aristocratic family and had a life of luxury, certainly compared to many people.
06:44Her family, they had a home, Critchell House, set in about 5,000 acres of land. And they have links to the royal family.
06:56Her grandmother was a goddaughter of the late Queen Mother. And her father, Napier, was a page to the late Queen back in the 1970s.
07:05Along with the stately home upbringing, there was a private school with £30,000 a year fees.
07:18Then Leeds University, where a degree in Arabic helped her land a job with Qatar's international TV news channel.
07:26Constance worked at Al Jazeera for about a year. She left to become a freelance photographer and then went to acting school.
07:35And it was about this time that she met Mark Gordon, when her life changed dramatically.
07:40She was originally described by her friends as being really sociable, really outgoing, constantly posting on social media, sort of living her best life, really.
07:52She had everything. But then she sort of walks away from all of that.
07:56She doesn't post anymore. She doesn't speak to friends, doesn't speak to family. She disappears into this relationship with him.
08:07Martin's family disapproved of Gordon, who was 13 years older and had a criminal record.
08:13That rift widened when she had four children. And her privileged, orderly life gave way to chaos.
08:23They never stay in one place too long. They are always on the move.
08:30There was reports of them damaging rental properties when they lived there.
08:34At one point, they were even living in a camper van.
08:35And that's when the children are actually taken into care because the lifestyle is actually really unstable, certainly for young kids.
08:53When the car catches fire, they are desperate to get away from the scene.
08:59Mark Gordon approaches a car that's pulled over. The driver's filming what's happening.
09:07Where to, mate?
09:10Oh, just to the nearest Leicester.
09:12Nearest? Leicester.
09:14The driver says, yeah, I'll take them once the emergency services arrive.
09:18I'll tell you, OK.
09:20They don't want to wait for the emergency services, perhaps unsurprisingly.
09:23And Constance Martin manages to persuade another driver to give them a lift, which takes them to Bolton, which is probably the nearest town from where they were.
09:34Once the police have ascertained that they've actually fled, they'll know that the people involved haven't got any transport.
09:40So where are they going to go? They're going to head to a train station, bus station, some transport hub to try and move on.
09:46And these transport hubs are well lit and they've got excellent CCTV.
09:52At Bolton Bus Interchange, three miles from the fire scene, officers found what they were looking for.
10:00Here we see Martin and Gordon entering the bus exchange.
10:05And what stands out is both of them are wet. It's a horrible, damp, rainy night.
10:10Once they've entered, they begin to look up and it would seem to be they're checking the departure board.
10:18They're looking for where they can go, how they can get there.
10:21Martin's wearing a burgundy puffer jacket, which is quite distinctive.
10:27But the critical thing is she's holding something underneath her jacket, very gently cradling something.
10:34There seems to be something sticking out.
10:39That would appear to be a baby under there.
10:43As a senior detective, I would classify this as a very high risk missing persons case.
10:50That child needs to be found.
10:52You stop for a second.
11:11Stop for a second.
11:13Well, I need to speak to you.
11:15Well, because potentially I think you may have been in national news.
11:18The arrest of Constance Martin and Mark Gordon marks the end of a nationwide hunt and seven weeks of confusion for police.
11:33When you look into cases like this, you always try and find a pattern.
11:36So if you're looking for anyone who's wanted or going on the run, you look, right, where are their friends and family located?
11:41What ties do they have to local areas?
11:43Where's the phones going? Where's the money withdrawals being made?
11:47But because they didn't have a plan, it makes it really hard for police to track them.
11:56Along with the Bolton bus station CCTV, police retrieved more footage of the couple getting into a cab outside.
12:06Road traffic cameras showed this had taken them 35 miles west to Liverpool.
12:14They stayed for just a few hours before embarking on a much longer journey east.
12:20In Liverpool, the couple approached a taxi driver and asked him to take them to Harwich.
12:25He said yes, but this would cost £400 cash up front, enough to put many people off.
12:33But let's not forget that although Constance Martin was estranged from her family,
12:37she still had an independent trust fund income of more than £3,000 a month.
12:43So the couple said yes to the taxi driver, paid cash up front and off they went.
12:48With the disappearance now making national news, the public were on alert.
13:07After checking out of their Harwich Hotel at 7am, there was a reported sighting in nearby Colchester two hours later.
13:17But by midday, they were 60 miles away, in the capital.
13:21So the police have done an extensive CCTV trial, painstaking work.
13:26And they've found Martin and Gordon as they arrive in a taxi in East London.
13:31And this is the first glimpse we have initially of the possibility of the baby.
13:36We see Martin in this distinctive burgundy puffer jacket.
13:41But once she's getting out of the car, she's been handed something down.
13:45We can see it looks like a tiny child moving, which then we get a glimpse of her head, but then she turns away.
13:55But then the next shot we get on the high street, we can actually see a tiny baby,
14:01possibly a few days old, under her jacket.
14:04The problem is it's January, it's absolutely freezing.
14:08That child needs warmth and food.
14:10Inside a kebab shop, Martin puts the baby in a buggy, which Gordon had bought from a local store.
14:21Till records showed he'd also purchased a tent and sleeping bags.
14:26Police now feared the couple were planning to leave London, sleep rough and attempt to remain under the radar.
14:35We know from the movements that they've been across the United Kingdom.
14:42And I think now my plea to the members of the public is they could be anywhere within the United Kingdom, in any town, in any city.
14:50As police renewed their search appeals, the media began publishing more information about Constance Martin's unlikely partner.
15:03Mark Gordon's background is actually deeply disturbing.
15:08He was born in Birmingham before moving over to America.
15:13When he was 14, he broke into his neighbour's property, held a woman up at knife point and sexually assaulted her, all while her kids were asleep in the next room.
15:25He gets convicted of that crime, gets 40 years, serves 20 and then is released and deported back to the UK.
15:37Gordon's deportation was in 2010.
15:41By 2016, he was living with Martin.
15:45In 2017, he was in trouble with the law again.
15:50After one of their children was born in hospital, they actually were refusing to give away their names.
15:58Police turn up and again, they're very obstructive, but what happens next is Mark Gordon gets very aggressive.
16:04Attacks a couple of these officers whilst he's trying to be restrained.
16:07Now, all of this is in a maternity setting with children around and he acts like that.
16:14To me, that says that this person is extremely unpredictable, doesn't know how to act, is temper first children later.
16:24Four years after the assault conviction, social services received reports of a domestic violence incident.
16:32It was then that all four children were formally put up for adoption.
16:47A week after the car fire and an early morning shopping trip for Constance Martin.
16:53By now, she and Gordon had left London and travelled 60 miles south.
16:59What's concerning here is her appearance. She looks run down, this is a new mum.
17:06She's changed her clothes, but she looks dishevelled and the food that she's buying just doesn't fit with what a new mum would be buying for a baby.
17:15So, again, this would heighten the fears of the police knowing that they have to find this couple as soon as possible.
17:21The items she's buying, fizzy drinks, crisps, sweets, you can eat them on the move, you can eat them camping out, you don't have to cook them because they haven't got access to any of that.
17:32So, whilst it's also a convenience food and she's really not taking care of herself, that food is almost out of necessity as well.
17:39Following the New Haven sighting, the police hunt and media coverage was growing ever more intense.
17:58The searches here are expected to continue long into the night.
18:04Moving from place to place.
18:05They chose to go on the run.
18:08It was then that Martin's father, Napier, made an emotional appeal for her to return.
18:15Darling Constance, even though we remain estranged at the moment, I stand by, as I have always done and as the family has always done, to do whatever is necessary for your safe return to us.
18:30I beseech you to find a way to turn yourself and your wee one into the police as soon as possible, so you and he or she can be protected.
18:47I think anyone who's a parent would appreciate the emotions he must have been going through.
18:53I mean, it's not an easy thing to do anyway, let alone to do so publicly, and when your life has effectively had a spotlight shone upon it.
19:03And I also wish you to understand, you are much, much loved, whatever the circumstances.
19:15For more than a month after that appeal, the search continued.
19:19Then came a 999 call from a member of the public who'd spotted a couple outside a convenience store.
19:30Cold, dirty and hungry.
19:36Hello. Sorry mate.
19:38You stop for a second.
19:42Put the stick down.
19:44Drop it now.
19:45Oh, look at the photo of mine.
19:46Where's your child madam? Where is the child please?
19:47There is a lot at stake here.
19:48They finally found these two after weeks of searching, but there is no sign of the baby.
20:05Where's your child, my friend?
20:07Where's the child?
20:08At my food please.
20:09Where's the child?
20:10At my food please.
20:11In a minute, where's your child?
20:12Where's your child?
20:14Where's your child?
20:15Food?
20:16In a minute.
20:17Where's the child?
20:18Food.
20:19Where's your child?
20:20At my food please.
20:21In a minute, where's your child?
20:23My food.
20:24Not on the moon.
20:25What are you grabbing me for?
20:26Where's your child?
20:27Is that aggression necessary?
20:28He's not being aggressive.
20:29Of course not.
20:30I will not do anything to describe you.
20:31Where's the child?
20:32I want food.
20:33It must have been.
20:37Must have been awful for the police there.
20:41Because the only two people that know where this child is are giving no answers.
20:46We want to know where the child is.
20:49Where's my food?
20:50Is the child alive?
20:52I want food please.
20:53Is your child alive?
20:55Where's the child?
20:56Who?
20:57Where's the child?
20:58You can't put into words what that feels like.
21:02It's almost like torture.
21:04The couple had been camping on a nearby nature reserve.
21:17After another 48 hours of searching, police found the baby.
21:23Dead.
21:25Inside a supermarket bag in a disused allotment shed.
21:31Her name was Victoria.
21:35Detectives believed she'd died of hypothermia at some point during the couple's time on the run.
21:42But Martin claimed she'd accidentally smothered her after falling asleep exhausted.
21:47Two parents have each been jailed for 14 years for causing the death of their baby daughter through negligence.
22:04It follows an earlier trial in which Constance Martin and Mark Gordon were convicted of concealing the child's birth and perverting the course of justice.
22:15The judge said they'd shown no genuine remorse for their actions.
22:19During the couple's two old Bailey trials, experts were unable to give the exact cause of baby Victoria's death.
22:31But one other question was answered.
22:34Why had Martin and Gordon gone on the run in the first place?
22:38They'd had children taken into care already and they were terrified of losing this one.
22:45Constance has had four children taken off her.
22:49Four.
22:50So I suppose when she's pregnant again, about to give birth, she knows full well that the second she steps foot inside that hospital, the police are going to be called.
22:57Social services are going to be called. She's seen it happen already.
23:03They know what the outcome of this is going to be.
23:06And I suppose through that fear and desperation, they think the only way to avoid it is to run.
23:15I don't think they wanted this to be the outcome.
23:18But it's not surprising that it ended so tragically.
23:22Now, I'm going to get this.
23:24Now, I'm going to get this.
23:25Hi there, David, how are you doing?
23:53When you're arresting somebody you're starting the legal process for them so
24:03it's really important to get everything right get it wrong then frankly it's
24:14game over you lose the investigation you could lose your career most importantly
24:20you'd deprive the victim and family of justice
24:37In this case the police by their own admission have already messed up once they can't afford to have
24:45that happen a second time so in making the arrest it's absolutely critical that the officers do it
24:52in as professional and legally compliant way as is absolutely possible David Boyd 50 years old
25:02finally facing the consequences of a horrific crime committed in his mid-20s
25:08the murder of schoolgirl Nikki Allen
25:14they're so polite to him aren't they I mean even to the extent of worrying about whether his handcuffs are too tight or not
25:32do you have any medication that you need to take yeah so we need to take some with you if you've got some
25:50it's like before they've come in they've decided we've got to be really really courteous at every
25:54point in this operation well part of the team that's reinvestigating the murder of Nikki Allen
26:00yeah okay part of that investigation has uh really suspect that you may have had some involvement in
26:06that okay so the officers have not given a lot away but they've said the investigation has shown that
26:16he might have had some involvement in it so i'm arresting you on suspicion okay of that offence you do not have
26:22to say anything but it may have no offense if you do not mention when questioned and then as he's being
26:27arrested on suspicion of the murder he is a big sort of almost like like a sort of deflation a big
26:35exhalation of breath i'm arresting you on suspicion okay of that offense and he looks away to his left as
26:42if you know with with hindsight you could say that you know the game's up now you know he's he's been
26:47hiding all this time and now it's like oh so this is it this is the moment this is the moment i've been
26:52dreading for all those years
27:04the east end of sunderland home to the city's docks
27:11and in the early 90s the garths four blocks of tightly packed tenements
27:17nicki allen was seven and lived on the ground floor of weirgarth with her mum sharon
27:30everyone who met nicky said she was a happy and friendly girl and i think you know
27:34her smile just lights up every photograph she's in you know i think that's one of the things that
27:40i remember most of the time that looking at the photographs and just seeing this luminous smile
27:50at around 10 pm on a mid-autumn night nicki left her grandfather's flat to walk back to her own
27:59just two floors below but she never arrived
28:09when a child goes missing particularly a young child in an area where they know very well out of
28:17the blue that is literally the the call that stops everything there is nothing bigger than a potentially
28:24abducted child and all missing children of that age initially are treated as potentially abducted children
28:33a huge overnight search drew a blank
28:36but next morning two neighbors found nikki's coat and shoes outside the old exchange a derelict building
28:50just 300 yards away they went inside
28:58when they found nikki's body she'd been brutally brutally murdered
29:03she had 37 stab wounds to her little body she'd been beaten around the head with something like a brick
29:10and then to cap it all she'd been dragged down a set of steps with her head banging on the steps as
29:17she's gone down into this basement area to hide her whoever could have done that to her needed catching
29:24straight away you won't think it would happen somewhere away about she lived but it does doesn't it
29:31the kids have to suffer they'll be kept in the house because they're not even safe i mean it happened in the
29:35cars didn't it they're not even safe
29:39police had one lead
29:42a neighbor who said she'd seen nikki outside the local boar's head pub
29:47before following a man in the opposite direction to her home
29:53grainy street camera footage backed up the story
29:57and provided one further clue
30:01this was in the early days of cctv and the footage was incredibly shaky
30:07but what you could see was that nikki was skipping happily along behind him which suggested
30:12that she knew him already and that she trusted him and that she was you know that she was going
30:17along without thinking that anything bad was particularly happening to her
30:21from eyewitness reports police released an artist's impression of the man she'd followed
30:28soon afterwards they arrested a 24 year old loner who lived in the same tenement block as nikki
30:35george heron was quite a misfit you know he would have been perceived as an oddball he had these
30:43oversized glasses he wore a baseball cap all the time he was really into doctor who
30:48i think he probably fitted the bill of what the police might have imagined the person who carried
30:53out this crime would have been like heron initially denied knowing nikki but then admitted he did
31:05but what he wouldn't confess to was the murder
31:10i didn't kill her well i believe you did kill her john i believe you did i've interviewed a lot of
31:17people over the years and i would go as far as to say that the interview of george heron was probably
31:25one of the worst and most oppressive interviews that i've ever heard recorded on the tape you are
31:32involved and you know what happened and they don't in uk police interviews there are three general
31:38principles no threats no promises no lies those officers lied to heron that girl was seen with
31:46you near the bosehead public house on that wednesday night within seven or eight minutes
31:53if that sank by a witness you were seen with her in law street that was a lie they had a witness that
32:02saw a man with nikki at the relevant time that evening but at no time did that witness say it was
32:09george heron and in fact we know that later on there was an identification parade and that witness
32:16didn't pick george heron out you are involved and you know what happened to me i don't i'm sorry george
32:23you do i don't you know his denials were checkable
32:28but the police just had him in their sights and there was no way they were going to let him out
32:36without a yes no george come on tell the truth you tell me the truth you know george and you know it
32:45you know the truth you know the truth you know the truth you know the truth you know the truth
32:53after three days of interrogation and more than a hundred denials heron finally did admit to murder
33:02but at his trial the following year the judge ruled he'd confessed under duress and ordered the jury
33:09to find him not guilty the family were completely devastated
33:14and more so and i think cruelly because the police continued to say that george heron was guilty
33:21they'd went on believing that this guilty man had got away with it basically workmen boarded up
33:27windows at the accused man's house after the anger of an estate spilt over the community would have
33:33been convinced that george heron was nikki's killer and he was out of prison for the rest of his life
33:39when he was acquitted all of that glimmer of light that they might have had that might have come out
33:47of nikki's tragic death was snuffed out because in their mind a guilty man was now walking free
33:52and could go and do this to other girls
34:06for years after george heron's acquittal northumbria police refused a full reinvestigation into nikki
34:20allen's murder but one woman was determined to make them reconsider her mother sharon henderson
34:32sharon was amazing she was completely relentless she wrote to the queen she wrote to politicians
34:38she started petitions she had marches she did her own house to house inquiries
34:45so gradually just through sharon's sheer determination there seemed to be a little
34:50bit of momentum and pressure on the force that hadn't been there before
34:54following advances in dna testing northumbria police finally did form a team to reinvestigate the case
35:11one of its first and successful tasks was to reanalyse items of nikki's clothing
35:18which had been kept in storage they found dna on a t-shirt and a pair of leggings the t-shirt was
35:26the last item that nikki was seen in her dna and another person's the police knew that they were looking
35:34for a man so they analyzed the dna from over 900 men that were living around east underland at the time of the murder
35:41the mass dna screening enabled police to finally and definitively rule out george heron as the killer
35:52and instead find a probable match with a career criminal who'd since left sunderland and moved 30
35:59miles south he was david boyd
36:03and we know that boyd has
36:32had 22 court appearances uh for 45 offences in in his lifetime so i'm not entirely surprised
36:39that the fact of the arrest has kept him so calm the fact of the arrest is almost an occupational hazard
36:46for him before we leave there'll be other officers coming here to the daffia house and the other daffia dog as well
36:52what evidence you got anyway now i find that an incredibly
36:56interesting question if you're an innocent person the obvious thing to do is to
37:04protest your innocence over and over and over again it wasn't me i didn't do it what are you talking
37:09about where on earth does this come from let's just get this sorted out not what evidence have you got
37:17what evidence you got anyway that is the question of a guilty man not the question of an innocent man
37:23in 1992 david boyd was 25 years old and living just three doors away from nikki allen's grandfather
37:38he bore a resemblance to the artist's impression put out at the time but there was another reason
37:47to suspect him whoever killed nikki had pushed her through a window that was six foot
37:53off the ground he then dragged her downstairs after stabbing her repeatedly taking her body to the
38:01basement now this was dark it was an october night somebody wouldn't just come upon this building they
38:11would have to have intimate knowledge of the layout and and be premeditated because they know exactly
38:16where they're going no lights are on and nikki's body went from outside through that window down
38:23those stairs as boyd knew nikki and her family police had interviewed him soon after the murder
38:35incredibly he told them he was familiar with the building and had even visited it
38:41just a few nights earlier supposedly looking for pigeons
38:53you know and i know and everyone else in southern knows that nikki's body was found inside the old
38:58exchange building in hendon on the morning of the 8th of october 1992 and she'd been murdered
39:04so if i show you though it was that night you might give it a confirm then following his arrest
39:13boyd repeated his story about visiting the building is this so you can remember the back
39:19of the building just for the record that's tr5 that looks like quite overgrown and there's a
39:25a bricked up window there and then we've got tr6 that was one we went through i think right okay so
39:34you're putting there's a window there that looks half-bordered or maybe three quarters bordered up
39:38yeah yeah go through in there in the middle you were going to do that all right how how high is that
39:44because it's it's difficult for my picture to view can you remember how high that is to get into
39:49i know it's pretty high because i pulled myself up boyd said his visit to the old exchange was the
39:58reason for his dna being on nikki's clothes according to him she must have brushed against surfaces that
40:07he'd touched just a few nights earlier the problem with this explanation is the dna was found under
40:16nikki's armpits on the t-shirt now you don't get this type of dna contact by brushing or touching
40:23something so it's likely that the actual explanation was that the dna came from him lifting her up
40:31pushing it through that window
40:36the complexity of the dna evidence meant police had to conduct years more tests and research
40:43but in 2022 they finally charged him with nikki's murder
40:55at boyd's trial prosecutors said he'd lured nikki away exploiting the fact that she knew and trusted him
41:05he intended to sexually assault her
41:07but when she screamed he struck her with a brick
41:12then pushed her inside the old exchange where he stabbed her to death
41:20in the years afterwards boyd committed more sex offenses
41:25in 1997 he indecently exposed himself to three young girls in a park
41:37and in 1999 he assaulted a nine-year-old
41:44but it would be another 18 years before police finally connected him to nikki's murder
41:50after a trial lasting three weeks the jury took just two and a half hours to return its unanimous
42:00guilty verdict the judge jailed boyd for life with a minimum of 29 years
42:10after the verdict northumbria police apologized to george heron for the serious and lasting impact of
42:17their wrongful prosecution back in 1992 and to sharon henderson the mother who'd had to fight
42:25more than 30 years for justice what went through your mind when you finally heard that word guilty
42:33the injustice of it all and that nikki's case wasn't up didn't know properly and they let this man in relation to nikki's mum
42:45i cannot begin to imagine what her life has been like having lost her her darling innocent little girl
42:52what she's suffered as a mother the way the criminal justice system most mostly the police have let her
43:03down and treated her i think is just beyond my understanding have you managed to keep the strength to carry
43:12on all this time because nick is my daughter and all over
43:16she's been really strong through this i think she deserves a lot of recognition a lot of praise for
43:26what she's done but also her heart should go out to her too
43:46so
43:56so
43:58so
44:00so
44:04so
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