Murder Scene The Incident Room S02E03 Killers at the Corner Shop
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00:00The incident room is the heart of any major police inquiry.
00:07I am going to leave absolutely no stone unturned.
00:12Vicious attack, stabbed multiple times.
00:15It doesn't stand a chance.
00:16A place where evidence is gathered.
00:18I saw the car, saw the group.
00:21We had DNA, we had blood at the scene.
00:25The evidence was overwhelming.
00:27Suspects identified.
00:30In my view, he was the last person to see Jayden alive.
00:33We're coming after them, we're now on a manhunt.
00:36Keep your hands out, alright? I've got a taser, okay?
00:38Murderers interrogated.
00:41I'll be honest with you, I don't give a **** away at shit.
00:45He's involved not only in her disappearance, but a murder as well.
00:48And cold-blooded killers brought to justice.
00:51£1500 to travel from Manchester to shoot somebody dead.
00:56This is murder scene.
00:58The incident room.
01:04Tonight, a robbery goes wrong.
01:07Please, watch your place, watch your emergency.
01:09Can you hear me, please?
01:10Help it's convenient, sir.
01:12I feel like robbing them.
01:14There's nothing everything up now.
01:17Leads to the murder of an innocent shopkeeper.
01:20And a massive manhunt to catch the men who killed him.
01:33Oh, we need an ambulance, please.
01:34Oh, we need an ambulance, please.
01:35My name's David Pervin, and I investigated murders for more than 26 years.
01:56for more than 26 years.
02:06This is Gamal Singh.
02:08He's 63 years of age, very jolly man,
02:13and he helped everyone that came in contact with him.
02:16On Saturday evening, he was bludgeoned to death.
02:21The offenders abused extreme violence.
02:24I need to know who they are,
02:27and I need to get onto them and arrest them
02:30as quickly as possible.
02:36In my efforts to identify these offenders,
02:40I am going to leave absolutely no stone unturned.
02:45I'm doing this for the family of Gamal Singh.
02:49With a team of around 60 detectives,
02:54the incident room is open.
02:57The attack took place at Mr Singh's corner shop.
03:09He was battered around the head with a hammer.
03:11A robbery gone wrong.
03:12Witnesses made a frantic 999 call.
03:15Please, yeah, we need an ambulance.
03:17This close-knit community is in complete shock.
03:20When a murder happens,
03:23recovering evidence
03:26and tracing witnesses quickly
03:29is critical.
03:31We were in the pub having a few drinks,
03:33and from time to time we'd go out and have a cigarette.
03:48The shop door opened,
03:50and I heard the bell tinkle.
03:52Now, in this area,
03:54it's quite unusual to see youths with their hoods pulled up,
03:57and I shouted to them,
03:58I said, what are you doing?
03:59And they started running.
04:00So that media set of arm bells in my head,
04:05there's something wrong.
04:10Two men have fled,
04:11but there are still two in the shop.
04:14So I went to the door,
04:16and I could see two people behind the counter,
04:19and all I could see was they were doing kind of that.
04:23So I'm assuming they were pulling cigarettes out or whatever.
04:26So I grabbed over the door,
04:28pulled the door short,
04:29and I turned around,
04:30and I shouted,
04:31phoned the police, they're still here.
04:34How quick convenient, sir.
04:36Nothing like robbing them.
04:38David holds the door shut with all his strength
04:41to trap the two offenders in the shop
04:43until police arrive.
04:46By this time, I turned back,
04:47and one of them was there at the door,
04:49and he was screaming and shouting.
04:51I had the door really tight,
04:53and I would not let it go.
04:55We're locked in, in the shop.
04:58Next minute, he reached into his hell like that,
05:01and I thought to myself,
05:02oh my God, what's he got?
05:03I thought it was a gun.
05:07Turned away, and I heard the window go.
05:13Myself, I thought, have I been shot?
05:14And I kind of looked.
05:16I was in disbelief, you know.
05:18Then I seen his hand come down again.
05:22And he had a lump hammer,
05:23a short-nosed stubbed lump hammer.
05:27The offender tries to smash the window to escape,
05:30but turns for the back door instead.
05:32It's unlocked.
05:33Next minute, I heard, they're out, they're out,
05:36they're running.
05:37They're out, they're out!
05:38They're out, they're out!
05:39They're running down the rock now!
05:44I went into the shop.
05:52And Mr. Singh was, like, laid on his back.
05:55And as I looked behind him, I could see a puddle of blood.
06:01After that, I just had them on him.
06:12One of the first people on the scene is the shopkeeper's own son.
06:19There was a few people around the door.
06:21I went in, saw him on the floor, and I knew it was serious straight away.
06:29Just by the condition that he was in,
06:33I knew it was very, very serious.
06:40I remember cradling his face on his head and talking to him while he was
06:46on the floor and just saying, I'm here.
06:48I'm here.
06:49But he wasn't communicating.
06:51And then just waiting.
06:55Waiting for the ambulance to turn up.
07:00But they couldn't step the boot from.
07:03This time now is very important.
07:18You need to get all the evidence that you can get right at the outset.
07:26Because tomorrow, that evidence may be gone.
07:30We need to identify and arrest the murderers.
07:39Not going to stop until you've done it.
07:41Detectives rush to the crime scene, including deputy SIO, Jonathan Hoyle.
07:56It's what they call the golden hour.
08:04We secure and preserve whatever we can, evidentially.
08:08Otherwise, it may be lost forever.
08:10The premises were ransacked.
08:14Um, shells overturned.
08:18There's a lot of blood inside the premises, splatterings up against the wall where Mr. Singh had been attacked.
08:31This was an extreme case of a robbery gone wrong.
08:50This was an extreme case of a robbery gone wrong.
08:53This was an extreme case of a robbery gone wrong.
08:59It was chaos.
09:15In the early hours, Gamal Singh loses his fight for life.
09:19The incident room is now hunting men with the motive to murder.
09:34Detective Superintendent David Purvin gives the team his initial assessment.
09:40Four men who'd gone into the store and attacked Gamal.
09:52Our suspects run from the shop down the road.
09:58Back in the store, there's blood pooling near to the counter where Gamal Singh would normally stand.
10:06And there's blood pooling further to the back of the store.
10:10The hard work starts now.
10:21With brutal murderers on the loose, the team urgently needs to turn up evidence.
10:29I don't want these guys on the street any longer than is necessary.
10:33They create a danger.
10:36We need to absolutely nail them.
10:40Police are searching for the killers of a 63-year-old shopkeeper bludgeoned to death in a botched robbery.
11:06They are on the hunt for four men they believe to be extremely dangerous.
11:16In Huddersfield, shopkeeper Gamal Singh has been murdered in a brutal attack.
11:21The murder inquiry team is under pressure to identify the four men who fled the scene.
11:28We have about 60 specialised homicide detectives on the case.
11:33They're leaving no stone unturned in an effort to identify who these four offenders are.
11:41Ground zero for the investigation is the crime scene.
11:54The hunt for evidence begins here and spreads out to the surrounding streets and fields.
11:59Witnesses help the team to plot the route taken by some of the suspects as they fled the scene.
12:15Detective Constable John Lee is one of the officers scouring the area for any evidence.
12:21I knew that I heard it really well because I was brought there as a kid.
12:25So it made sense for me to be on that job because I knew all the local areas.
12:30The witness has seen him run down the back of the bowling club.
12:38There was quite a big creole at the back.
12:43We walked down this field and we found this jacket.
12:47It contained cigarettes and sweets from Mr. Singh's shop.
12:54We can link that to the shop and if we can link it to one of the individuals,
13:09well then, we're in business.
13:24The shop where Gamail met his death had been the centre of his and his family's life for the past five years.
13:34A lot of these, it's the first time I've seen these, so.
13:37Yeah.
13:38Most of the pictures he's smiling in.
13:40Yeah.
13:43Yeah.
13:46I have to nick some of these for a minute.
13:50It was a community shop.
13:52People would pop in.
13:53Sometimes if he was busy stacking the shelves, etc.
13:56They'd just leave the money on the counter.
13:57So in terms of cameras, we never needed them.
14:02We wouldn't have shoplifters because we'd know.
14:0490% of the customers we'd know.
14:07Well, the ironic thing about that was he had trouble the week before.
14:10Two days before the murder of Gamail Singh, he's attacked and robbed in his shop.
14:24He'd been at this store for five years.
14:29He'd never had any problems.
14:31And just in this week, he has two robberies.
14:36I think he was more upset about being pushed than something being stolen.
14:44But it was that sense of right and wrong.
14:46Why are you stealing for?
14:47The shop was a soft target.
14:49How can this be that he's robbed twice in two days?
14:56How can they not be connected?
14:59I must identify, locate and arrest those two from Thursday night.
15:05He was known as a real community figure.
15:15Someone who would deliver in a sledge in the snow to keep customers happy.
15:21The murder has horrified the general public.
15:25Many neighbors tried to stop the attackers on the night,
15:29but they couldn't prevent them getting away.
15:31The attackers are now being sought in connection with Mr Singh's murder.
15:35And the intense media coverage surrounding the case
15:40gives Detective Superintendent Pervin an opportunity.
15:45I need to make an appeal urgently.
15:48I need to ask the community of Huddersfield to help this investigation.
15:59When something like this happens,
16:01the people watching it on our programmes tend to want to help.
16:05So if there's something out, like an appeal for whoever did this to somebody,
16:09as happened to Gamal Singh, they want to do their very best to find who did it.
16:14David can't know for sure the two robberies aren't connected,
16:20but he knows he wants to speak to the two men who robbed the store earlier that week.
16:26Publicly saying they are implicated in a murder investigation might flush them out.
16:31In the appeal, I'm going to say that I believe the robbery incident on Thursday is connected with the murder.
16:44Anyone who has any information or suspicions that will assist the investigation
16:50should continue to contact the police and share that information.
16:55They know who they are.
16:57The spotlight is already directly upon them.
17:01And I call on them to do the right thing and hand themselves in
17:07before we knock at your door and arrest you.
17:16Those involved in the robbery on Thursday, you can imagine what they were thinking.
17:21They've been involved in a robbery.
17:23And now the SIO is saying, I believe you're involved in a murder.
17:29And they turn themselves in.
17:32They fully admit they robbed the shop two nights before, but provide a solid alibi.
17:39They were nowhere near Cowcliffe, the night Gamal Singh was murdered.
17:43Without doubt, the two committing the robbery on Thursday are alibi for the fact that they could not have committed the murder.
17:56What I can do now is concentrate on the four offenders that the witnesses did see on Saturday night.
18:03The search goes on for the hard evidence that will bring convictions.
18:17I want to find something that will tie those offenders in forensically.
18:25Something that will put them in that store when Gamal Singh was murdered.
18:33There is no obvious sign of a murder weapon at the scene.
18:39One suspect had a hammer.
18:44But there's no clear evidence it was used in the attack.
18:49We don't at this stage have any DNA.
18:52We don't have any fibre.
18:54We don't have any fingerprints or footprints.
18:56But what we do have are lots and lots of glass fragments.
19:03The detectives believe they do have a motive.
19:11A robbery gone terribly wrong.
19:16The offenders have grappled violently with Gamal Singh.
19:20Smashing bottles and overturning shelves.
19:23The forensic pathologist tells me that Gamal Singh has been struck at least six times to the back of the head.
19:44Possibly seven or as many as nine.
19:47Witnesses had seen suspects holding a hammer.
19:55But the coroner's report suggests that the murder weapon could in fact be lying in pieces on the shop floor.
20:02The offenders have taken bottles off the shelves and they've battered Gamal Singh with them.
20:12What is certain of is that there is no indication in the skull injuries that an injury has been caused by a hammer.
20:27With a hammer ruled out, the glass could be the missing piece of the jigsaw.
20:37The murder weapon was in fact one of Gamal Singh's own wine bottles.
20:43In the forensic lab, scientists can identify the exact bottle the shards came from.
20:49Fragments of it could prove vital in catching the killers.
21:02We're getting closer.
21:06But we know the level of violence that these use on Gamal.
21:15They're on the loose.
21:16They could do this again.
21:22Men who attack in this way will present fear to the whole community.
21:29The police have to bring them in before four desperate men harm someone else.
21:36Or go on the run.
21:46The police are looking for four men they believe are connected to the murder of shopkeeper Gamal Singh in the Cowcliffe area of Huddersfield.
22:03Detective Superintendent David Pervin and his team are investigating the cold-blooded murder of shopkeeper Gamal Singh, a beloved member of the community.
22:17This particular murder was an absolutely ferocious and senseless killing.
22:27The killer's transport could provide the clue the team are looking for.
22:33Officers scour the area, but turn up empty-handed.
22:40It's imperative Detective Superintendent Pervin knows how these men travelled to and from the crime scene.
22:47The use of taxis by criminals is quite widespread.
22:54The team investigate the many taxi companies that serve the Huddersfield area and examine the fares taken the night Gamal was murdered.
23:04One particular taxi firm was Far Town Taxis.
23:15One of the drivers remembered taking four young lads up to Cowcliffe store on Saturday evening around 8.28.25pm.
23:30The perfect time for the four offenders that murdered Gamal.
23:45Alongside the huge public appeal, police are leaving no stone unturned in trying to identify the suspects.
23:53And the detectives know there is one usually silent group that will have information.
24:01The criminal underworld.
24:11A useful tool often deployed in murder investigations is the use of chisers or in common parlance, snouts.
24:23Chisers or covert human intelligence sources are criminal informants.
24:30They have a unique insight into local illegal activity and will offer to help police in exchange for cash or to undermine a rival.
24:41Payments vary from a few pounds for basic information up to several thousand for helping break up organised crime.
24:49You always have to be extremely careful when you're dealing with chisers information.
24:57One, about the identity of the informer.
25:01But two, about the information that they're giving.
25:05It may not be reliable.
25:06Intelligence officers from the incident room reach out to their contacts, saying they need names fast.
25:22Detective Superintendent Pervin has to tread carefully to avoid putting the informants in danger.
25:29Any information that's received via that route has to go into the intelligence cell, which is kept separate and locked away from the main incident room to protect the identity of the individual and the information that's being provided.
25:50And one criminal informant offers up a revelatory piece of information.
25:56They said, you need to be looking at this group of people.
26:01We think they may have committed the murder.
26:04We've got a number of nicknames for the suspects.
26:16One was nicknamed Crazy.
26:22The intelligence cell come up with a name.
26:25The first name that we've got for a potential suspect.
26:29His name is Aslam.
26:30Umar Aslam has no previous convictions and is not known as a sophisticated criminal.
26:38But informants soon reveal he is friends with people with a more chequered history.
26:44And we come up with Nabeel Shafi.
26:49Muaz Khalid.
26:52Rehman Apsal.
26:53All of the other members of Aslam's circle are known to the police for theft and violence.
27:00Are these our four?
27:01Are these our four murders?
27:04But Detective Superintendent Pervin knows if he brings them in,
27:08he has to have enough evidence to make sure they aren't simply put back on the streets.
27:17We have names.
27:19And we have their addresses.
27:20But we've only got 24 hours.
27:2524 hours in which, if arrested, they have to be charged or released without charge.
27:32I've got limited forensic.
27:39I need more evidence.
27:40I need more time.
27:43But time is not on his side.
27:46The intelligence cell comes forward again with information from another informant.
27:51The information is that two of this group are going to fly to Pakistan.
28:00We have no agreement with the Pakistan authorities to return offenders to the UK.
28:05If they're gone, it could be years before we bring them back to face justice.
28:18SIO David Pervin is waiting for results from the forensics lab.
28:22But the intelligence that two of the gang are planning to flee forces his hand.
28:29We need to make sure, as best we can, that when we kick a door in,
28:37those suspects are going to be behind that door.
28:40We have to coordinate and get all of these suspects at the same time.
29:02DC John Lee is a Tier 5 interviewer.
29:05That means he's qualified not just to interview the most serious criminals,
29:12but also to take control when multiple suspects are going to be interrogated.
29:20Interview is all about preparation and planning.
29:31As a Tier 5 interview advisor, you're gathering all the information together,
29:35and you're keeping everybody in the picture.
29:37That's when you've only got 24 hours of initial to interview.
29:44John can't risk anything going wrong.
29:48He sends the suspects to separate police stations across Yorkshire to be interviewed.
29:53He tried to move them in different locations, more like different police stations,
29:58so that there's no chance of any information being leaked between each other,
30:02because people don't shout down the cell corridor to each other and things like that.
30:09With the suspects in the cells all being interrogated, they can't disappear to Pakistan.
30:16But they are saying nothing.
30:19David sends specialist search teams to each of their homes.
30:22We need to find evidence within each address that will connect each offender with the murder of Gamal Singh.
30:39And particularly looking around fragments of glass that may have been on their clothing when they committed the murder,
30:52or has been deposited in their own bedrooms.
30:56We've ripped up the carpets.
31:01We took all of their bedding.
31:03And we took all of their clothing.
31:08The clock is running down.
31:11Who will crack first?
31:12With only a few hours left in custody, the suspects start to talk.
31:20Each one of them was admitting going to the storm.
31:25Each one of them starts to blame the other.
31:31But none of them are admitting bludgeoning Gamal Singh.
31:35It's always good when they are talking.
31:47If they're talking and blaming other people, it's even better.
31:51Admitting being part of the gang at the scene of the murder is enough for them to be charged with robbery.
31:59And remanded in custody.
32:00But more will be needed if they are to be convicted of Gamal's murder.
32:22While the police search for evidence, Gamal is laid to rest in a traditional Sikh funeral.
32:29The number of people attending shows how much the vicious attack has affected the local community.
32:43The deer was just an outpouring.
32:46There were thousands here.
32:52A lot of them probably didn't even know my father.
32:55But because of what they'd read and what they've heard.
32:58I think they just felt obliged to come here and pay their respects.
33:02So it was, it was humbling.
33:11People even outside that couldn't even get in.
33:13It was that busy.
33:15Not just the Sikh community, but from across the board.
33:18There were Muslims here, there were Christians here.
33:21Every different race and religion were here just to pay respect to a good man.
33:28A trial is set for the men to face the robbery charge in September 2010.
33:39But the Crown Prosecution Service is worried there is still insufficient proof that they carried out the murder.
33:46The suspects are remanded in custody.
33:49David now has six months to look for the evidence that will convict them of the murder of Gamal Singh.
33:55In these investigations, I'm looking for motive.
34:02I know that's robbery.
34:04I'm looking for opportunity.
34:06Can they commit the offense?
34:08David needs to place them at the scene of the crime.
34:13Officers set to work trawling thousands of hours of CCTV footage.
34:17Counter-terrorism CCTV recovered camera footage, stills, videos from in and around Huddersfield.
34:29The CCTV footage showed us the offenders met together in Huddersfield Town Centre in the hours before the murder of Gamal Singh.
34:46Giving them the opportunity to travel to the store and commit the murder.
34:58The CCTV also turns up a huge piece of evidence that might tell him who actually committed the murder.
35:06We recovered this jacket in the field below the store.
35:14When we review the CCTV from Huddersfield,
35:19one of our offenders is wearing that exact jacket.
35:27The jacket was dropped by one of the men trapped in the store by eyewitness David Singh.
35:35Its owner was one of the two who spent longest at the crime scene, trying to smash their way out.
35:42David Pervin has the murderers in his sights.
35:47It's crucial he now finds the final evidence to prove it beyond all doubt.
35:51CCTV might be that killer evidence.
36:13Detectives have arrested the individuals they suspect are responsible for the murder of Gamal Singh,
36:19a 63-year-old shopkeeper killed by repeated blows to the head during a botched robbery.
36:27The incident room at Huddersfield Police Station is investigating a robbery that turned to murder.
36:35Detective Superintendent David Pervin has four suspects in custody.
36:40They all deny killing Gamal.
36:42David needs to put together the pieces to make sure a jury puts them behind bars for good.
36:55The tireless CCTV troll by counter-terrorism officers comes up trumps.
37:01A female came forward who was in Malachi's restaurant in the town centre.
37:17Who informed us that she'd overheard a conversation between two young men,
37:23which suggested to her that they'd been involved in the incident.
37:28That witness has overheard them talking about beating up a man earlier in the evening.
37:36I believe they're talking about murdering Gamal Singh.
37:42From that restaurant, we would try and track those people.
37:47They were seen to visit the Onion Cinema.
37:53Entering Tesco supermarket.
37:56Going to the toilets to swap clothing.
38:06They swapped and changed clothing.
38:10They're trying to fool us.
38:12They're changing clothing.
38:13They're changing appearance.
38:15It's more damning evidence.
38:16We now have clear movements and association between the group,
38:23both prior to the murder and subsequent to the murder.
38:28It corroborated the intelligence that the individuals were likely to be responsible.
38:39SIO David Pervin now has hard evidence that could convict his suspects.
38:51Opportunity.
38:52Opportunity.
38:53Opportunity.
38:54Yes, they're in the vicinity.
38:57Preparatory steps.
39:01To get the taxi to the store.
39:05How to inconvenience, sir?
39:08Motive.
39:09Robbery.
39:11We're going to end in the shop.
39:13And subsequent actions.
39:17They're smashing everything up now.
39:22They run away from the store, having committed a murder.
39:26Get out! Get out!
39:30They meet up together in Huddersfield.
39:32They're swapping clothing.
39:34They're trying to clear their tracks.
39:36David now knows the exact movements of the four men.
39:45And has images that implicate them in murder.
39:49But he's still not sure of a conviction.
39:51In September 2010, six months after Gamal Singh was murdered,
40:0820-year-old business student Mawaz Khalid,
40:1218-year-old Nabil Shafi,
40:15A-level student Rayman Afsal, also 18,
40:18and 20-year-old crazy Umar Aslam,
40:22finally stand trial at Bradford Crown Court.
40:29They all deny murder.
40:38It's a painful process for David Singh,
40:42still affected by witnessing the murder
40:44of a respected community figure.
40:46I was classed as a chief witness.
40:49They had their own barristers.
40:51And each barrister quizzed me
40:54to be questioned by somebody.
40:58And for the first time to ever be in a Crown Court
41:01was tough.
41:04You know, they can ask you as many questions,
41:06they can dress them up any way they want.
41:07The answers still didn't be the same.
41:09Which is the truth.
41:10With no CCTV in the shop,
41:17the prosecution cannot definitely prove
41:20who it was that wielded the lethal blows.
41:23Forensics cannot provide any smoking gun evidence.
41:27There were still some questions
41:29unanswered for the family.
41:31They wanted to know specifically
41:36who caused Gamal's death.
41:44What part each took in that murder,
41:48how many blows,
41:49how many strikes,
41:50on Gamal,
41:52those answers
41:53were never given in court.
41:55Rayman Afzal
42:00and crazy Umar Aslan,
42:02the two men
42:03who had left the shop first,
42:05were convicted of robbery,
42:06but cleared of killing Gamal Singh.
42:09Afzal
42:10is sentenced to five years
42:11and four months,
42:13while Aslan
42:14receives six and a half years.
42:18The jury ruled
42:19that Morwaz Khalid
42:20and Nabil Shafi,
42:22who were locked in the store
42:23by David Singh,
42:24were guilty of murder.
42:25Khalid has to spend
42:28at least 21 years in prison.
42:31Shafi receives
42:32a 20-year minimum sentence.
42:35It was joint enterprise
42:37by the group
42:38and certainly the two
42:39who were trapped
42:41in the store.
42:42The jury,
42:43the judge,
42:44were happy
42:45that they
42:46subsequently
42:49committed the murder.
42:51If they'd have served
42:52their full centres,
42:54as they still are now,
42:55they will still be
42:5640 years of age
42:57or there or thereabouts
42:58when they come out,
42:59Mr Singh will still be dead.
43:00so is there a justice there
43:03for the individual
43:05to make her mind up into?
43:19For Gamal's family,
43:20they're left to reflect
43:21on how their father
43:23was murdered
43:23in the corner shop
43:25he loved.
43:25He loved.
43:27My dad liked to come up
43:28to Castle Hill
43:29normally with family
43:30and with friends.
43:33Probably have a pint
43:35at the pub
43:35at the same time.
43:36You don't come to terms
43:42with it.
43:43You just
43:43do the best you can
43:45supporting each other
43:48as a family,
43:48supporting
43:49who you can.
43:53When days are difficult,
43:55they're more difficult.
43:57And then days,
43:58when we've got days
43:59of joy or celebration,
44:01they're not as joyous.
44:02Within Sikhism,
44:06there's a word
44:07called SEPA,
44:08which is just
44:08to serve and to help.
44:10I think that was
44:11very much part of him
44:12and his well-being.
44:15They got the equivalent
44:17of 70 pound.
44:1970 pound for the man's life.
44:25I was satisfied
44:26that we identified
44:28and arrested
44:29and gained convictions
44:32I don't think
44:34you're ever satisfied
44:35no matter how long
44:36a sentence is given
44:38that that is appropriate
44:40for causing
44:42the death
44:43of a person
44:44in this way.
44:46because wouldn't
44:47theì €
44:48have stopped
44:49because of
44:49like this.
44:51See us.
44:52�com
44:52and here lies
44:53in this
44:53裡 ay
44:54over
44:57we go find
44:59too many
45:00we see
45:07in this
45:08this
45:10vigilance
45:11and
45:12we
45:12and
45:13see you