This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper - Part 2
Tue, Feb 01, 2000
  • S1.E2
  • This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper - Part 2
The police team headed by George Oldfield continue to be thwarted and frustrated, in their investigation to track down the Yorkshire Ripper. Oldfield's health begins to deteriorate under the stress, and the hunt is sent off track by the receipt of several tapes from a man with a North-East accent claiming to be the Ripper. This misleads many officers, and becomes the central point in a mass advertising campaign and appeal for information. Meanwhile, the real culprit has been questioned several times through different lines of enquiry, but the relevance has become lost in the mountain of files and paperwork generated by the investigation over the years. More killings occur and the pressure from the media, women's groups, government and the Chief Constable increases. Oldfield fears that his position as head of the investigation is under threat from old rival Jim Hobson, who takes over when Oldfield finally succumbs to a heart attack. Eventually the Ripper is caught in Sheffield by two police constables who become suspicious, when he is found with a prostitute, in a car which has false number plates. They return to an alley that the suspect went down to urinate, and found a hammer along with a sharp implement. On returning to the police station they double-check in the toilets there, and discover a knife hidden in one of the cisterns. Dick Holland calls Oldfield so that he can be one of the first there when Sutcliffe is brought back to West Yorkshire for questioning.
7.6 /10
This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper - Part 1
Dramatisation of the long police hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper. Assistant Chief Constable George Oldfield takes over the investigation to track down the killer, who has brutally murdered several women in the North of England. He is confident that his techniques of using painstaking mass interviews and documentation will help catch the killer, but the killings continue and he becomes more and more frustrated. Data amasses and they have several good leads, but the team begins to be bogged down with the mounting paperwork. Oldfield also has to contend with pressures from the Chief Constable, and fear of being undermined through police force rivalries and politics, along with his distrust of colleague Detective Chief Superintendent Jim Hobson.
7.3 /10
This Is Personal: The Hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper - Part 2
The police team headed by George Oldfield continue to be thwarted and frustrated, in their investigation to track down the Yorkshire Ripper. Oldfield's health begins to deteriorate under the stress, and the hunt is sent off track by the receipt of several tapes from a man with a North-East accent claiming to be the Ripper. This misleads many officers, and becomes the central point in a mass advertising campaign and appeal for information. Meanwhile, the real culprit has been questioned several times through different lines of enquiry, but the relevance has become lost in the mountain of files and paperwork generated by the investigation over the years. More killings occur and the pressure from the media, women's groups, government and the Chief Constable increases. Oldfield fears that his position as head of the investigation is under threat from old rival Jim Hobson, who takes over when Oldfield finally succumbs to a heart attack. Eventually the Ripper is caught in Sheffield by two police constables who become suspicious, when he is found with a prostitute, in a car which has false number plates. They return to an alley that the suspect went down to urinate, and found a hammer along with a sharp implement. On returning to the police station they double-check in the toilets there, and discover a knife hidden in one of the cisterns. Dick Holland calls Oldfield so that he can be one of the first there when Sutcliffe is brought back to West Yorkshire for questioning.
7.6 /10

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Befriend and Betray

Befriend and Betray

Criminal organizations succeed by enforcing a strict code of trust and loyalty. To penetrate these organizations and gain access to their inner circles the police need a magic bullet. Alex Caine is that magic bullet. Only 30 years old, Alex, who grew up hard on the mean streets of Montreal, already brings a lifetime's worth of experience (foster care, military service, prison time) to the world's most dangerous occupation: professional gang infiltrator. His job is to befriend criminals, participate in their illegal activities, and gather evidence--then live long enough to testify against them in court. Inspired by real-life events, "Befriend and Betray" tells the story of Alex's first infiltration assignment: the case that transformed him from a rootless young man into a highly effective, defiantly unconventional crime-fighting resource. He is approached by P.C. Lau, a ruthlessly ambitious soldier for the Kam Tin Triad, who asks him to help his old prison acquaintance with a business proposition. Since Alex comes from Montreal and speaks French, P.C. figures that he's just the man to be the face of the Kam Tin as they try to move their heroin into eastern Canada. What P.C. doesn't realize is that Alex has been approached by the police and Criminal Intelligence Services who have asked him to say "yes" to P.C.'s proposal--thus giving them a long sought-after way into the Kam Tin. Complicating matters for Alex is the fact that his girlfriend Melanie has no idea that he's agreed to work for the police. Alex figures that the less she knows, the safer she'll be. But the more he lies to protect her, the more likely he is to lose the one person who sees him as more than just a valuable crime-fighting asset. Combining action, suspense, humour, and actual details drawn from the case files of Alex Caine, "Befriend and Betray" tells the story of one man's re-birth as an infiltrator--and his struggle to not lose his identity or his life along the way.

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