- Jameel Khan comes forward to say that he deliberately planted Lucy in the Kestrel office and encouraged her affair to get evidence of the firm's illegal dumping of toxic waste in Africa,collected by a ship called the Agadir.Will makes full use of this at Martin's trial,the result prompting him to return to London,which pleases Jane,who feels guilty over Alan's suicide. Wenborn attempts to blackmail John Slater by offering to let him go if he will falsely name Will as the man to whom he sold the gun that killed Philip Spaull. However Wenborn's wife,after years of domestic abuse,ensures that his triumph is short-lived and ultimately more than one injustice is avenged as wrong-doers who have escaped the law are punished.—don @ minifie-1
- The trial begins and Will puts on an effective defence. He's learned that Lucy was planted in the oil company's offices to gather information on the disposal of toxic waste. He also learns the meaning of Agadir. Martin Newell presents himself quite well at the trial. DI Mark Wenborn desperately wants to to arrest Will for the murder of Philip Spaull and coerces a prospective witness to alter his earlier statement to the police to implicate the barrister. At home however, Wenborn has a physical encounter with his wife. In the end both Lucy's killer and the man who killed Spaull are revealed.—garykmcd
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