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Forensic Files - Season 1, Episode 4 - The Footpath Murder - Full Episode

September 16, 2024 / 22:57

This episode discusses the murders of Linda Mann and Dawn Ashworth in Narborough, England, and the groundbreaking use of DNA evidence in solving the cases. Key figures include Detective David Baker, author Joseph Wambaugh, and geneticist Dr. Alec Jeffreys.

Linda Mann, a 15-year-old girl, was found murdered in 1983, leading to a lengthy investigation with little evidence. The autopsy revealed she had been strangled and sexually assaulted. The investigation faced challenges, including a lack of leads and false trails.

Three years later, another 15-year-old, Dawn Ashworth, was murdered under similar circumstances. The police connected the two cases, leading to the questioning of Richard Buckland, who confessed to Dawn's murder but denied involvement in Linda's case.

Dr. Alec Jeffreys developed DNA profiling, which was used to test evidence from both murders. The results excluded Buckland as the murderer, leading to his release after four months in custody.

The investigation continued until Colin Pitchfork, who had evaded police by having a coworker take a DNA test for him, was identified and confessed to both murders. He became the first person convicted through DNA evidence.

TL;DR

The episode covers the murders of Linda Mann and Dawn Ashworth and the revolutionary DNA evidence that led to Colin Pitchfork's conviction.

Episode

22:57
00:00:13
[Applause]
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[Music]
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on a deserted footpath early on the
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morning of November 22nd
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1983 a hospital worker witnessed a
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terrible
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sight it would be the first case in the
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world where DNA evidence help find the
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Killer
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[Music]
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[Music]
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narborough England a quiet little
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village of about 6,000 residents where
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violent crime is almost unheard of it is
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something you expect to happen in a city
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not in a small village
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community 15-year-old Linda man was a
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typical teenager quiet but popular she
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liked school and enjoyed being with
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friends on a cold November evening Linda
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left her home in nbor to walk the mile
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or so to her friend's house when Linda
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didn't return home by midnight her
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frantic parents called the
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[Music]
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police early the next morning her
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semi-nude body was discovered along a
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secluded footpath known locally as the
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black pad detective David Baker was
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called to the
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scene her clothing was in the St of dis
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array her jeans
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removed uh and her underclothes were
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stwn about it was a cold night and she'd
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got a a scarf around her neck and and
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and the scarf had been used uh to
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strangle her she was very brutally uh
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attacked sexually assaulted word of
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Linda's murder traveled quickly in the
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otherwise quiet Village the people were
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horrified
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horrified I'm very worried particularly
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those with the young girls young
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daughters a search of the crime scene
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turned up little of substance but the
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autopsy provided some important clues
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about Linda Man's last moments alive
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five the absence of injury to her
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private parts and also generally on her
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body there was very little injury to her
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would suggest that it was not a violent
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attack and that she may have died very
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quickly the conclusion was that um she
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was strangled and then raped a Sean
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sample taken from Linda's body turned
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out to be an extremely important piece
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of evidence it came from an individual
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with type A blood and a pgm1 plus
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profile but this matched 10% of the
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adult male population in England since
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Linda man's body was found only a few
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hundred yards from a local Psychiatric
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Hospital some speculated that the killer
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may have been a patient others weren't
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so sure the thing that I was very
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anxious to establish is that it was
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unlikely to have been a psychiatric
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patient from the hospital it was much
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more likely to be a man leading a normal
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life perhaps with a a family uh
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certainly one who had friends relatives
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and contacts who thought of him as a
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normal individual Linda man was in the
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wrong place at the wrong time former cop
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turned author Joseph wau wrote a
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best-selling book intitled The blooding
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it Chronicles the events surrounding the
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murder of Linda man and the
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history-making investigation which would
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follow it's very unusual and still is in
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a village like narb in Britain for a
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complete
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stranger to Ambush and murder someone uh
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on a foot path I mean it was so unheard
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of police questioned thousands of people
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about Linda man's whereabouts on the
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night she was killed they put more into
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a murder investigation over there which
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they call an inquiry uh than we do here
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because they have so few murders
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compared to
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us Linda man was buried in a churchyard
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not far from where she was murdered on
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the day of her funeral police set up a
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surveillance and videotaped the crowd
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for anything or anyone unusual often one
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finds that um criminals will revisit the
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scene of the crime or some other uh
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activity associated with the crime and
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it was just a precaution today police
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issued a new poster to try to jog
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people's memories but it was of little
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help the investigation dragged on for
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months then a
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year with no eyewitnesses few strong
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leads and several false Trails the
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murder hunt hit a dead end well really
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in any police investigation after a week
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or two uh the trail is usually cold it's
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quite difficult we suffer all the time
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yes please come forward what all along
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Linda's parents held out hope that the
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killer of their daughter would be caught
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the only thing that they could possibly
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get now was Justice for their daughter
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and that seemed to be going away from
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them it's always frustrating when uh you
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know you've not got an answer to a
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problem and I mean you're forever
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looking over your shoulder a to see what
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you've missed and then trying to guess
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what might happen in the future and the
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search for Linda man's killer continued
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for the next 3
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years 3 years had passed since the
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murder of Linda man and life in the
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small village of narbar was beginning to
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return to normal until the afternoon of
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July 31st
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1986 another 15-year-old school girl
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Dawn Ashworth was walking home from her
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part-time job at a new stand instead of
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taking the main road she took a shortcut
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down a thickly overgrown foot path
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called 10 lb Lane
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when Dawn didn't return home by 9:30
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that night her parents called the police
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another teenage girl was missing Dawn
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Ashworth went missing last night we all
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hoped and prayed that this was not a
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repeat of the Linda Manas yes 2 Days
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Later police discovered Dawn ashworth's
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nude body under some heavy brush and
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hay she was discovered less than a mile
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from where Linda man was murdered 3
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years early
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earlier like Linda man Dawn Ashworth had
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been strangled and sexually assaulted
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Dawn had quite marked injuries to uh
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gendel area which would indicate was a
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very violent attack uh and her injuries
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elsewhere in the body would also
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indicate that she had um suffered
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violent injury therefore she had been
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attacked violently which would indicate
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that she had put up a fair struggle
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before she died Seaman samples taken
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during 's autopsy revealed that the
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attacker had the same blood type as
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Linda man's murderer there were other
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similarities as well there were
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signature elements in the crime
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certainly uh both murders took place on
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foot paths both girls were uh
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teenagers um both girls were walking
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alone both manually
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strangled both um severely sexually
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assaulted all school girls were advised
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to travel in groups and not to walk
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anywhere alone Dawn ashworth's father
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had given his daughter the same
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advice I war and wander about the
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dangers of going down there on a road
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we've got to
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find the fiend really that did this to
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my daughter to our
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daughter and
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um stop it from happening again police
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launched an extensive investigation into
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the murder of dawn Ashworth and within a
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week police got a break Witnesses saw a
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young man in the vicinity of 10 lb Lane
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on the afternoon of dawn ashworth's
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death he was 17-year-old Richard
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Buckland a kitchen worker at the
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psychiatric hospital located just a few
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hundred yards from where both Linda man
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and Dawn Ashworth had been murdered
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police brought him in for questioning
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and he quickly became their Prime
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Suspect for one thing he knew details of
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the murder which weren't in the
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newspapers in addition to that when we'
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questioned Mr bookland uh he couldn't
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really account for his movements on uh
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that particular afternoon if I were
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working on the case I probably would
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have become very
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suspicious uh given the things he told
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the police given his background given
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his reputation around the village for uh
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liking to scare girls they're walking
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home from school things like that
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finally after 15 grueling hours of
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interrogation Richard buckin confessed
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to the rape and murder of dawn
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Ashworth police finally had their man
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given the similarities between the two
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murders police were convinced that
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Buckland also raped and murdered Linda
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Man 3 years earlier buckin denied it was
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he telling the truth the answer lay just
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a few miles away in a university
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Laboratory
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Richard Buckland confessed to killing
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Dawn Ashworth but insisted he had
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nothing to do with the murder of Linda
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Man 3 years earlier police were
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convinced he was lying and set out to
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find the truth here at the University of
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Leicester ironically less than 10 miles
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away from where both teenagers were
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murdered Dr Alec Jeff a geneticist had
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been researching her hereditary diseases
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when he accidentally discovered an
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amazing technique called DNA or genetic
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profiling there was a case of Eureka you
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could see individual identification you
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could see parentage analysis paternity
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disput sorting out immigration cases
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David Baker said well look let's cement
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the case against this young man let's go
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to this geneticist at leester University
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this Dr Alec Jeff and take the SE
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samples from both murders and cement our
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case with this new thing called genetic
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fingerprinting whatever it is and let's
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just prove that he did both of them
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because we know he must have done both
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of them Dr jeffri wasn't sure that he
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could do what Baker wanted because this
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sort of analysis had never been done
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before Dr jeffy's breakthrough technique
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for analyzing DNA is called restriction
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fragment length polymorphism or
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rflp it can identify an individual based
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on just a small amount of their DNA DNA
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that can come from semen blood hair
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roots and other cells DNA is a complex
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chemical which is present in all living
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cells it's a little like a computer
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program containing coded instructions on
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how to make a human being no two
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individuals have the same DNA pattern
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except for identical twins Dr jeffy's
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task was to take the seen recovered from
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Linda man and Dawn Ashworth and compare
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it to the blood sample from Richard
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Buckland to see if it was a match first
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white blood cells from Richard
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buckland's blood sample were treated
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with a special chemical solution that
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allows the DNA a sticky white substance
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to float
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free next the DNA is cut into smaller
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pieces using special proteins called
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restriction enzymes which act like
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chemical scissors the DNA fragments must
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then be sorted out by a process called
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electroforesis the DNA is marked with
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the radioactive die and placed in
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separate Lanes on an electrooptic gel
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then it's subjected to an electric
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field under ultraviolet light you can
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see how the electrical current draws the
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negatively charged fragments through the
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gel to the positive end of the
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tray the separated fragments are then
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visualized on x-ray film called an auto
00:13:33
radiogram which resembles a barcode
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showing an individual's unique genetic
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makeup Dr Jeff first used this technique
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to resolve an immigration case and after
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that a paternity dispute but this would
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be the first time that was ever
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attempted in a criminal case to reveal
00:13:51
the identity of a double Murderer let's
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start with uh Linda man this is her DNA
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profile taken from my hair next track is
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a mixture of seen and vaginal fluid from
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that victim showing her DNA profile as
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expected plus a single man Sean DNA
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profile next victim daor Ashworth this
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is her blood DNA profile a band here and
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another one off to the uh
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left Trace Amounts of seamen recovered
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from that victim both revealed two faint
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bands whose position on the auto
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radiograph is very similar to the Sean
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profile seen from Linda man so first
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conclusion both girls have been raped
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and therefore presumably murdered by the
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same man what about the prime suspect
00:14:40
Richard Buckland this is his blood DNA
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profile here and here completely
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different from the Sean profile
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conclusion both girls have been raped
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and therefore presumably murdered by the
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same man and that man was not the prime
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suspect Richard
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Buckland the result shock the police
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it was it was a blow to us they didn't
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basically didn't believe a word that we
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were saying and that was quite right
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healthy skepticism of of an entirely new
00:15:08
technology and indeed I didn't believe
00:15:09
the results myself so we did retesting
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the testing was done again independently
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by home office friendsit scientists all
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pointing to the same conclusion namely
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that buckin was not the guilty party in
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this case after four months in custody
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Richard Buckland was released and became
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the first person in the world to be
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exonerated of murder through the use of
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DNA
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profiling I have no doubt whatsoever
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that he would have been found guilty had
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it not been for the DNA evidence he
00:15:37
would been jailed for life I mean that
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was that was a remarkable occurrence but
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why did Richard Buckland confess to a
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crime he didn't commit then the pressure
00:15:47
started getting really hard just didn't
00:15:49
have a chance he had to have discovered
00:15:52
the body himself because in the terms of
00:15:54
his confession he was able to give a
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very detailed description of her clo
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where the body was in what position it
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lay the ligature and so on details that
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nobody could possibly know unless they'd
00:16:06
actually seen the body with Buckland now
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out of the picture a double murderer was
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still
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loose and of course the next stage was
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for David Baker then to make what I
00:16:18
think was an incredibly courageous
00:16:20
decision a DNA man hunt police sent
00:16:24
letters to all men between the ages of
00:16:26
13 and 33 living in The Villages of of
00:16:29
narbar and Enderby the letter asked each
00:16:32
man to volunteer for a blood and saliva
00:16:35
test I'm sure they expected uh that the
00:16:39
real killer if he was indeed a resident
00:16:42
of The
00:16:43
Villages would probably try to uh Escape
00:16:48
responsibility of giving a blood sample
00:16:51
DNA testing would only be performed on
00:16:53
those who had the same blood type as the
00:16:56
killer which was about 10% it was really
00:16:59
an attempt to try and flush out uh the
00:17:02
guilty party which is what it did but
00:17:04
not the way police have
00:17:11
hoped the Trap was Now set a DNA Manhunt
00:17:15
to flush out the killer of Linda man and
00:17:17
Dawn Ashworth it was a bold plan more
00:17:20
than 5,000 men voluntarily gave blood
00:17:23
and saliva samples but one worker at
00:17:26
this local bakery didn't his name was
00:17:30
Colin Pitchfork and was already known to
00:17:33
police for earlier convictions for
00:17:35
indecent
00:17:36
exposure he didn't want any further
00:17:38
involvement with the police so he
00:17:41
persuaded coworker Ian Kelly to take the
00:17:43
blood test for him Kelly lived outside
00:17:46
the area and wasn't asked to take the
00:17:49
test himself Kelly was the perfect foil
00:17:52
Pitchfork spun him a yarn that um he'd
00:17:56
already given blood on behalf of
00:17:58
somebody else who uh couldn't go because
00:18:01
he was wanted by the police etc etc and
00:18:04
uh Kelly ostensibly swallowed that Hook
00:18:07
Line and Sinker since police required
00:18:09
identification before taking a blood
00:18:11
sample Kelly needed some photographic
00:18:14
proof he was Colin
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Pitchfork they both went down to a photo
00:18:20
booth and took a passport-sized photo of
00:18:22
Ian Kelly
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Pitchfork took his own passport slit the
00:18:33
plastic casing with a razor blade and
00:18:35
neatly inserted Kelly's photo in its
00:18:40
place the police failed to observe that
00:18:43
a photograph had been substituted for
00:18:45
the original one and therefore they
00:18:47
believed that this was Colin Pitchfork
00:18:49
and there was his picture to prove it
00:18:52
perfect Ian Kelly then took the blood
00:18:55
test for Colin Pitchfork of the more
00:18:57
than 5,000 men who voluntarily gave
00:19:00
blood and saliva samples none matched
00:19:03
the profile of the
00:19:04
murderer but no one could anticipate
00:19:07
what would happen
00:19:09
next on a summer's evening one year
00:19:12
after Dawn Ashworth was found brutally
00:19:14
raped and murdered Ian Kelly joined
00:19:17
fellow Bakery workers at this local
00:19:21
pub and the conversation turned to the
00:19:24
DNA
00:19:26
Manhunt a young woman in the group
00:19:28
overheard Kelly bragging that he had
00:19:31
taken the blood test for Colin
00:19:34
Pitchfork she sat there and listened to
00:19:36
that and thought to herself there's
00:19:38
something not right about this this
00:19:40
isn't something that someone normally
00:19:41
does no matter how afraid he is of the
00:19:44
police and so she put in a call to the
00:19:46
leerer uh murder inquiry team and that's
00:19:50
what made them focus on Colin pitch for
00:19:53
police quickly located Pitchfork to
00:19:55
question him about the blood test and
00:19:57
what he might know about the two murders
00:20:00
within a very short time he confessed to
00:20:03
killing both Linda man and Dawn Ashworth
00:20:07
Pitchfork uh believed in DNA
00:20:10
fingerprinting right away not that he
00:20:11
knew any more about it than the rest of
00:20:13
the world but he'd been following it in
00:20:16
the newspapers and he believed in it and
00:20:19
he knew that it was as good as an ink
00:20:21
fingerprint and he knew he was finished
00:20:24
when they arrested him so he confessed
00:20:25
quite readily without this breakthrough
00:20:29
the chances are the police NE would have
00:20:30
never caught pitch for and I think it's
00:20:33
fairly clear that had he not been caught
00:20:36
then he would have killed and killed and
00:20:38
killed again Colin Pitchfork was 27
00:20:42
years old married with two children his
00:20:45
wife had no idea she was married to a
00:20:48
serial killer I think he was able to
00:20:50
deceive her perfectly well so that
00:20:53
nobody in the whole world knew that he
00:20:55
was the guilty person it's the same
00:20:57
story uh the wife the brother the mother
00:21:00
the friends of serial killers never
00:21:03
suspect that they could be serial
00:21:05
killers on January 22nd
00:21:08
1988 Colin Pitchfork became the first
00:21:11
person ever to be convicted in a murder
00:21:13
case solved by DNA profiling and was
00:21:17
sentenced to life in
00:21:19
prison for his part in the deception Ian
00:21:22
Kelly was convicted of conspiracy to
00:21:24
pervert Justice and sentenced to an
00:21:26
18-month prison sentence which was
00:21:29
suspended he served no time for his
00:21:31
crime you did I was wrong for doing what
00:21:34
I
00:21:35
[Music]
00:21:41
did I think we've learned a lot from the
00:21:44
deaths of both of these two girls
00:21:46
certainly the scientific advances that
00:21:48
um have been made with um DNA has uh
00:21:52
spread itself now throughout uh the
00:21:55
world it was this case of all cases
00:21:59
where on which DNA really cut its teeth
00:22:01
in a forensic sense the door has been
00:22:03
opened to a whole new aspect of medical
00:22:08
investigation people will be talking
00:22:10
about this case 100 years from now not
00:22:12
because of my book but because of Alec
00:22:14
Jeffrey's discovery
00:22:18
[Music]
00:22:28
a
00:22:36
[Music]

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    Most heartbreaking

Episode Highlights

  • The First DNA Murder Case
    In 1983, the murder of Linda Man marked the first use of DNA evidence to catch a killer.
    “It was the first case in the world where DNA evidence helped find the killer.”
    @ 00m 50s
    September 16, 2024
  • A Double Tragedy
    Three years later, another teenage girl, Dawn Ashworth, was murdered in a similar manner.
    “Another teenage girl was missing. We all hoped this was not a repeat of Linda Man's case.”
    @ 07m 09s
    September 16, 2024
  • Colin Pitchfork's Capture
    Colin Pitchfork became the first person convicted of murder through DNA profiling in 1988.
    “Colin Pitchfork became the first person ever to be convicted in a murder case solved by DNA profiling.”
    @ 21m 11s
    September 16, 2024

Episode Quotes

  • It's always frustrating when you know you've not got an answer.
    Forensic Files - Season 1, Episode 4 - The Footpath Murder - Full Episode
  • This case is where DNA really cut its teeth in a forensic sense.
    Forensic Files - Season 1, Episode 4 - The Footpath Murder - Full Episode

Key Moments

  • Murder Discovery02:09
  • Community Shock02:44
  • DNA Breakthrough11:34
  • First Conviction21:11

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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