Death in Paradise Season 2 Episode 3
Follow our telegram group to get the latest movie updates
https://t.me/seriestoponlineUSA
Follow our telegram group to get the latest movie updates
https://t.me/seriestoponlineUSA
Category
🎥
Short filmTranscript
00:00Oh, I'm free, nobody now owns me, yes I'm free.
00:13So, morning team briefing. I thought we should sharpen things up a little and
00:16start each day as we mean to go on. Fiddle?
00:30Sorry Chief, it's just that crazy Ali was throwing a full moon party last night and
00:36well, here. And your self-destructive link to the lunar cycle is well documented.
00:42So, let's just leave it there, shall we? All of it.
00:48Hey, you think it'll be quiet here again today? The phone hardly rang at all yesterday.
00:52It's too hard. No one's got enough energy to break the law.
01:00Miss Smaid? Carlton? Lovely day.
01:07Look.
01:14Ah!
01:31Oh!
01:32Oh!
01:33Oh!
01:34Oh!
01:35Oh!
01:36Oh!
01:37Oh!
02:01So, uh, what do we know about this place?
02:16Jack Avanda Clinic specializes in cosmetic procedures.
02:19Very exclusive.
02:20You mean expensive.
02:22Well, you book in for a facelift and spend the next two weeks sitting by the pool.
02:25By which time all trace of the surgeon's knife has disappeared.
02:28And the secret of your eternal use is safe for another year.
02:32The clinic is owned by an English surgeon, Jeremy Tipping.
02:35He's been on the island for years.
02:37Got the big yacht in the harbor and everything.
02:39Real beauty.
02:40Even has a jacuzzi.
02:42Police.
02:43We've covered about the corpse.
02:51Impressive.
02:53I meant the ambiance.
02:55Clearly.
02:56Vivaldi?
02:57Well, it gives me the creeps.
02:58It's so impersonal.
03:00They all arrive in the big black cars and then just disappear again.
03:03I doubt if anyone here sees anything of the island.
03:06It's just like they've never actually been here at all.
03:08Ah.
03:09Inspector.
03:13This way.
03:13No, I haven't had a facelift, Inspector.
03:25I come here for physiotherapy, a low sports injury.
03:25Mala, my physiotherapist.
03:30Beautiful hands.
03:31Beautiful hands.
03:31Beautiful hands.
03:31Beautiful hands.
03:35Her name is Valerie Dupree.
03:38French.
03:40Apparently a husband had just left there for a younger woman.
03:43Saw the staff and I think it's a simple case of suicide.
03:46Do we know if she could swim?
03:47Yes.
03:48I understand she swam most evenings.
03:50How sad you must be to take your own life.
03:53Well, let's not jump to conclusions.
03:56Selwyn.
03:57Hello.
03:58Jeremy.
03:59This is Detective Inspector Richard Poole, Sergeant Bordet.
04:03Pleasure.
04:03Sorry we're not meeting in better circumstances.
04:06Quite.
04:06And Mrs. Dupree was last seen alive when?
04:08Um, I understand her nurse saw her yesterday evening.
04:11And the body was discovered?
04:12First thing this morning, one of our guests found her.
04:16We will try to keep the disruption to a minimum, Jeremy.
04:20Isn't that right, Inspector?
04:24Yes, absolutely.
04:27Good.
04:28Well, I'll just go and get dressed.
04:38Um, the ambulance has been held up, so Dwayne and Fridale are moving the body inside.
04:48Hmm?
04:48Out of sight.
04:50Oh, right.
04:52Yeah.
04:53You know this part's been moved?
04:55And, uh, it's been chipped.
04:59This is just awful.
05:01The poor woman.
05:02I'm, I'm, I was just in town.
05:03I, I just got back.
05:04And you are?
05:05Sorry, um, I'm Anna Jones.
05:07Um, Dr. Anna Jones.
05:08You work here?
05:09Yes, I'm their general manager.
05:11But you're a doctor?
05:12Of psychology.
05:13Um, part of my job is that I screen the clients.
05:16Oh, so you must have examined Mrs. Dupree?
05:19Yep, uh, yeah, I did.
05:21Um, which I have to say I'm not feeling particularly comfortable with right now.
05:24She was clearly depressed.
05:26Her husband of 25 years had just started divorce proceedings.
05:29But I, I honestly thought that the, um, cosmetic procedure would give her a fresh start, you know,
05:35help her feelings of low self-esteem.
05:37Um, clearly I was wrong, sir.
05:40Sorry.
05:41I'm so sorry.
05:45Hello?
05:46Hi.
05:46Yes, Mrs. Katzenberg.
05:48Mm-hmm.
05:48Yep, yep, yep.
05:49So, can I, can I call you back?
05:51Yes, in five minutes.
05:52Okay, yes.
05:52Bye.
05:53Is there anything else I can help you with?
05:57If we could just see Mrs. Dupree's room, then we can get out of your way.
06:00Yes, absolutely.
06:01Um, it's this way.
06:04Sir?
06:05Mm, yes.
06:06Yep.
06:08Coming.
06:08Coming.
06:12Um, Carlton here took care of her, so he can show you everything you need.
06:17Okay.
06:17Oh.
06:18Sorry.
06:19Yes.
06:20Um, yes.
06:22Right.
06:23Uh-huh.
06:24So, how well did you know Mrs. Dupree?
06:27It was her first visit here.
06:30And you last saw her when?
06:32Drug round about 9.30 p.m.
06:35All the patients get heparin.
06:37Mr. Tippin is very insistent.
06:38Heparin?
06:39An injectable anticoagulant enables wound healing by preventing blood clot formation.
06:46Right.
06:47So, you gave her the injection as normal?
06:52Sure.
06:53Same as every night.
06:59Did you speak to her?
07:01Dr. Jones is very particular.
07:03She doesn't encourage conversation with the clients.
07:06So, assuming she died sometime that night,
07:09you may well be the last person to see her alive.
07:13I couldn't say.
07:14She was my last patient of the round.
07:16I just give her the injection and go straight home.
07:20All right.
07:23We'll be fine from here.
07:31No note?
07:35You know who this is?
07:37Um, hmm.
07:38Tea?
07:40Not any old tea.
07:42This is Da Hong Powell.
07:44Oh.
07:45You know, gram for gram, this is more expensive than gold.
07:51Hmm?
07:52Hmm.
07:53Camellia sinensis, if I recall correctly.
07:56You know, when Nixon visited China,
07:59they gave him two ounces of this as a gift.
08:04Two ounces.
08:05Imagine.
08:10That's half empty.
08:11It's a little strange, don't you think?
08:12Why?
08:13Well, you go to the trouble of making yourself a cup of the most expensive tea in the world.
08:17I love this bag.
08:19What?
08:20You go to the trouble of making yourself a cup of the most expensive tea in the world,
08:24and then halfway through, you put down the cup, you go outside to the pool and drown yourself.
08:27People can be spontaneous.
08:29They do strange things.
08:31I disagree.
08:33You know, throughout my career, I found them to be surprisingly predictable,
08:37provided you truly understand their motives, of course.
08:40So why drink only half a cup of tea?
08:44Maybe she used it to wash down the rest of these.
08:53There has a pen.
08:54Mm-hmm.
08:55Sleeping tablets.
08:57Tea or not tea, the truth is that this woman felt so alone, so miserable, that she take her own life.
09:04Well, I disapprove of assumptions in principle.
09:06In this case, you may be right.
09:09There's nothing here.
09:10Let's go.
09:13I know what you're thinking, Sergeant Bourdais,
09:19but this is very probably the last thing she drank before she committed suicide,
09:23and as such, we should test it.
09:24You mean you should test it?
09:27Absolutely.
09:35You know, I'm surprised they don't get that fixed, the money they charge.
09:38It's been like being pushed around on a supermarket, probably.
09:41We found this in her dressing gown pocket, Sue.
09:43Nothing else.
09:44We'll see what you can recover from it.
09:46In the last call, surviving Prince, we may at least be able to determine time of death for the coroner.
09:51Sure.
09:51Well, team, all finished?
10:00Yes.
10:01And?
10:02Most likely suicide.
10:04So, just as I said.
10:05Yes.
10:06Apart from the tea.
10:10The tea?
10:10Yes.
10:11Valerie Dupre made herself an expensive pot of tea, yet failed to drink it.
10:21There are some important people at the clinic, Inspector.
10:25Rich people with great influence.
10:27All of whom we want to welcome to the island with open pounds.
10:32I'm sure you understand me.
10:35Yes, sir.
10:52Liming?
10:54Is that a word?
10:55Of course it is.
10:56It means hanging out with your friends and having a beer.
11:00You know, taking it easy.
11:01Relaxing.
11:02Really?
11:04Come on.
11:09The pathologist's report on the suicide lady.
11:12So it is suicide?
11:13Seems so.
11:15Cause of death, hypoxia, cardiac arrest, chlorinated water found in lungs.
11:20It correlates with suicide by drowning.
11:23No sign of trauma, apart from a recent surgery to the face.
11:28Thought to be cosmetic in nature.
11:30Blood test shows traces of glycosaminoglycan, which tallies with reported anticoagulant unfractionated heparin.
11:38That's it.
11:40What about the diazepine?
11:42Sir?
11:43You know blood?
11:45There's no sign of that here.
11:47But we found an empty bottle of diazepine in her room.
11:50That's what we assumed she took.
11:51Well, there's nothing here.
11:53Could have worked its way through her system.
11:55Not a dose big enough to knock her out.
11:56What about her medical records?
11:59Any history of blackouts for you?
12:02No.
12:03Any long-term medical conditions at all?
12:06Epilepsy?
12:06Seizures?
12:07No, nothing.
12:08Maybe she just slipped and fell.
12:10Then where's the trauma?
12:11Lump or swelling?
12:12Broken skin?
12:13There isn't any.
12:14So, a reasonably fit and able swimmer, Valerie Dupre, makes herself a very expensive cup of tea,
12:24then takes barely a single sip before leaving her room and walking to the swimming pool and throwing herself in.
12:33Then, using nothing more than her own willpower, she holds herself down under the water until she drowns.
12:39So, you're saying it wasn't a suicide?
12:43Then, it couldn't have been an accident.
12:46Which means, somehow, as unlikely as it seems, I think she was murdered.
12:53Well, the pathologist's report was clear.
13:01There were no other factors in her death.
13:03She drowned.
13:05How can that be?
13:07Maybe someone held her in the pool?
13:10The only logical explanation.
13:11And yet...
13:13What?
13:14Well, imagine you're taking a midnight swim and I decide to drown you.
13:17Hmm?
13:18What do you do?
13:18Okay, let me rephrase that.
13:25You're not a trained police officer.
13:27I'm not.
13:28No.
13:28You're a depressed woman with no apparent aptitude for self-defense.
13:32Oh, okay.
13:33All right.
13:33Well, then I'm drowning.
13:36Struggling for air.
13:37I guess I'd struggle.
13:38Hmm.
13:40Yet the victim showed no signs of restraint, bruising to the neck or shoulders.
13:43No hyoid bone fracture, you know.
13:47Try and subdue her and, uh, characteristic injury patterns would be impossible to avoid.
13:52Hmm.
13:53Well, what if it was just a little push down in the back of the...
13:56No, you don't.
13:57No, you don't.
13:58I mean, whichever way you do it, I think we've established it's impossible to hold someone
14:02down underwater without giving them so much as a bruise.
14:07And then there's the tea conundrum.
14:09Detective Inspector.
14:12Is there a problem?
14:13I'm afraid there is.
14:15Perhaps you could enlighten me.
14:16We're no longer sure that Valérie Dupré's drowning was a suicide.
14:20I don't, uh...
14:22I don't think I understand you're suggesting it's some kind of accident.
14:24I'm suggesting she was murdered.
14:28Well, that's nonsense.
14:29We're going to need a complete list of your staff and clients.
14:32But, just, just...
14:33Hang on a minute.
14:33What are you basing this assertion on?
14:35Well, that's a police matter.
14:36You will just provide me with what I've asked for?
14:38Absolutely not.
14:39That's confidential information.
14:40Sorry, but as I'm now treating this as a murder inquiry, I must insist.
14:44We can always get a warrant.
14:46And until the investigation's complete, I'm going to have to request that you close the
14:49clinic temporarily.
14:51No one enters.
14:52No one leaves.
14:53And we'll be confiscating passports.
14:54You're imprisoning my clients.
14:56Just until the interviews have been completed and they've been eliminated from our inquiries.
15:08I mean, the poor woman was just floating there.
15:11Face down.
15:13Can I ask you how well you know Mrs. Dupré?
15:16Oh, not at all, really.
15:18I mean, we just passed the time of day.
15:20Her husband was rich, I know that.
15:22She was a feisty one.
15:24You should have heard her on the phone to him.
15:26Well, one assumes it was her husband.
15:29One couldn't help overhearing.
15:31I mean, she was quite animated about something.
15:34Would you say she was angry or upset?
15:37I'd say both.
15:39I mean, everyone divorces in the same language, don't they?
15:43Besides, after three useless husbands, one learns the signs.
15:48So you're not married now?
15:50I was, yes.
15:51Um, three tries to finally get it right and then my darling number four goes and dies on me.
15:59You must miss him.
16:02Yes, I do.
16:05We just had so much fun together.
16:07Well, if you want to have some fun, maybe you should see more of our island.
16:12Why come all this way and not experience it?
16:14Well, because everything I need is right here.
16:16If you change your mind and want to see more of the real Sainte-Marie, this is my mother's bar.
16:24Oh, thank you.
16:25Oh, that's very kind.
16:27My pleasure.
16:28My pleasure.
16:30Okay, I think we're done here.
16:32So, if you think there's anything else might be important?
16:35Well, um, since you ask.
16:42Now, I'm not one to gossip, but, uh...
16:45I had started to wonder whether she wasn't one of those older women who were prey on younger men?
16:51Oh.
16:51Sexually?
16:52Yes.
16:53Um, anyone in particular?
16:56Ah.
16:56I think they were having some kind of lover's tiff.
17:03I couldn't hear what was being said, but, um, it all sounded terribly passionate.
17:16I appreciate you've got more questions, but my patience is already on the table.
17:19Well, um, quite frankly, as head of this establishment, I would hope that I could count on your cooperation.
17:26Yes, yes, uh, well, quite right.
17:29Uh, look, why don't we both act like proper Englishmen in compromise?
17:34Come and join me in theatre, and I'll do my best to answer your questions there.
17:37Theatre?
17:37Actually, it'd be nice to have a little time to chew the fat with a fellow countryman.
17:42Changing rooms this way.
17:44Um, um...
17:46So you weren't in a relationship with her?
17:48Absolutely not.
17:49Then can I ask you where you were that night?
17:51In my room.
17:52Alone?
17:53Yeah.
17:54Worst luck.
17:55Mm.
17:57Is there anything else I can help you with?
17:59Yes.
18:00I'd like your passport.
18:05Hmm.
18:09Can we get some more light here, please?
18:11I can't see a thing.
18:12It's like trying to operate in the black hole of Calcutta.
18:18Slightly better.
18:19Ah, you're operating on her, uh, right.
18:26Yes.
18:27Not sure this is quite the, um, it's a beautiful woman.
18:32Perfectly equipped.
18:32Now, you tell me.
18:34Are these too small?
18:36Well, um, hold this for me, would you?
18:44Um, I did what I always do.
18:46Um, worked until ten, and then I went home, took the phone off the hook.
18:49Um, well, a job like this, you need downtime.
18:53Clients can be pretty demanding.
18:54I can imagine.
18:57Um, and, uh, Dr. Tipping?
18:59Mister.
19:00He's a surgeon.
19:01Uh, always a mister.
19:04Don't forget it.
19:05It's guaranteed to set him off.
19:06So, he can be difficult?
19:09Well, he has a temper, but he's an artist, a perfectionist, and people like that need everything to be just so.
19:15I spent the night on my yacht, caught up on a bit of correspondence, uh, polished off the last of the single malt, and then turned in.
19:24And, uh, uh, can anyone confirm that, or, uh...
19:27You could.
19:28Take my word for it.
19:30Failing that, the harbour master should back me up.
19:33Our clientele are rich, important people.
19:35You can understand why they insist on total discretion.
19:38Which is why you discourage your nurses from even talking to them.
19:41We're a sanctuary, Detective Baudet.
19:44There's no autographs, no chit-chat.
19:47Our staff are paid well to obey the rules.
19:49This is a business first and a hospital second.
19:51Oh, sorry.
19:53Hello?
19:54Uh-huh.
19:55Okay, yeah.
19:56Tell her I can deal with it right away.
19:57Mm-hmm.
19:58Look, I have to deal with this.
20:00If there's anything else I can help you with.
20:08Um, could you, uh, fingersher do it?
20:11Mm-hmm.
20:18Tell the truth, uh, economic meltdown and all that, we were, uh, we were struggling.
20:23Anna came along with a new marketing strategy, encouraged me to push the whole privacy thing.
20:27Top-class clients, total discretion assured, and, uh, now here we are.
20:33One big happy family.
20:35Light!
20:36I need light, for God's sake.
20:41Well, I'm glad you find it amusing.
20:42I could be scoffed for life.
20:44Now, where were we?
20:45Uh, yes, where?
20:46Um, Mrs. Dupree was last seen around 9.30 p.m. by her nurse, Carlton Reynolds.
20:50He gave her medication of heparin.
20:52Uh, Dr. Jones finished work and left the clinic shortly after 10 p.m. and spent the evening alone at home.
20:58Well, Mr. Tipping says he was on his boat.
21:01The harbormaster confirms he saw lights on the boat.
21:04Of course, that doesn't mean he was actually there.
21:06One thing did come of, though.
21:08Jane Smythe thought that Mrs. Dupree may have had a lover's teeth with one of the other guests.
21:12Who?
21:12Um, Paul Vincent, he denies the liaison.
21:15Says he's having, uh, blepharoplasty?
21:18Eyelid tack from the Greek.
21:20And do you believe him?
21:22About Mrs. Dupree?
21:23Uh, yes, I do.
21:26Chief!
21:28The commissioner's at the station.
21:30He's looking for you.
21:31He doesn't seem very happy.
21:32I thought I made it perfectly clear.
21:50Any disruption at the clinic was to be kept to an absolute minimum.
21:55Next, you're confiscating passports.
21:58Then you announce it's no longer a suicide, but a full-blown murder inquiry.
22:04Yes, well, there were, uh, significant inconsistencies.
22:07Inconsistencies?
22:08Yes, sir.
22:09Such as?
22:11Well, uh, we were led to believe that Valerie Dupree drowned, despite being fit, healthy, and a competent swimmer.
22:17Uh, uh, uh, uh, we found an empty pill bottle in her room, but no sign of that medication in her bloodstream.
22:23And, and finally, she makes herself a very expensive cup of tea, and, um, walks out and kills herself halfway through drinking it.
22:32The tea conundrum.
22:36Tell me, at least you've managed to establish some kind of motive, a reason anyone would have wanted her dead.
22:44Well, we're working on that, sir.
22:45All right.
22:49Talk me through the murder.
22:51How was she killed?
22:56Well, we're working on that, too, sir.
22:57Any evidence of an assault?
23:00No, sir.
23:02Witnesses.
23:03So, the sum total of the evidence that led you to put this island's most wealthy and most influential people under virtual house arrest consists of a few inconsistencies and a half-drunk cup of tea.
23:21No, sir.
23:52I'm going to let you run with this for now.
23:56Not because I think you're right, but simply because there's something I've always wanted to say since I joined the force.
24:06You've got 24 hours to solve this case.
24:10Do we understand each other?
24:13Yes, sir.
24:13Sir?
24:26Commissioner?
24:27He says he has every faith in us.
24:36So, let's set up the board.
24:38Dwayne.
24:39Chief.
24:40Go through the passports.
24:41I want full background checks on everyone at the clinic, staff and guests.
24:44How many?
24:45Fidel.
24:45Sir?
24:45The victim was seen angry during a phone call.
24:48Everyone assumes it was with her wayward husband.
24:50Let's double check.
24:51Sir.
24:52Camille, I want you to have another crack at this poor Vincent.
24:56We have a witness saying they'd had a disagreement.
24:58If they weren't having an affair, what were they talking about?
25:00Threatened to arrest him for wasting police time.
25:02It will be my pleasure.
25:07I thought we'd done this.
25:08I told you I hardly knew the woman.
25:10Yeah, I believe you weren't having an affair, but we still have a witness who saw an argument.
25:15We were arguing.
25:16Then what?
25:17Look.
25:20Why don't we make a deal?
25:22I'll answer your questions if you give me my passport back.
25:26I run my own business and our biggest client is on the verge of switching to a rival supplier.
25:31What kind of business?
25:33Flowers.
25:35So you're a florist?
25:36That's a perfect product.
25:38Perishable.
25:39Constant demand.
25:40I built a firm up from nothing and now we've got 20 people on the payroll.
25:43And if I don't get back to talk to my clients in person, we'll all be out of a job.
25:50Okay.
25:51We can do a deal.
25:52You answer my question and maybe I won't arrest you.
25:56Look.
25:58I tried my best to be nice.
26:01But she just wouldn't take no for an answer.
26:04In the end, I had to make my feelings clear.
26:08That's it?
26:08That's it.
26:10She didn't like it.
26:11I didn't want a big drama, so I went back to my room and stayed there.
26:14Ah.
26:15Which means you still have no alibi.
26:17So business or not, there's no way I can sanction you leaving the island.
26:21What if someone could prove where I was?
26:23So you don't deny you spent the whole night in Paul Vincent's room?
26:31No.
26:31Then why lie and say you went home?
26:33I forbid my staff from even starting conversations with the client.
26:36So how would it look if they knew that I was sleeping with one of them?
26:40And I can't imagine what Mr. Tipping would do.
26:42What time did you go and meet him?
26:46Um, so I went after I finished work.
26:49I called him when he was leaving.
26:51And what time was that?
26:52Uh, ten.
26:53Maybe a few minutes afterwards.
26:54Um, Paul was waiting for me.
27:02Um, look, I know that it was a stupid thing to do,
27:06but Paul can be a very determined man, and that can be hard to resist.
27:13Are you going to get that?
27:14Uh, no, uh, no.
27:15It's fine.
27:16That's, it's not important.
27:19Look, Paul and I spent the entire night together.
27:21There is no way he could have killed anyone.
27:23And career or no career, if I have to, I will swear to that in court.
27:33Uh, so, mind the clear?
27:36Dr. John has confirmed your alibi.
27:38So, why can't I have my passport back?
27:40All papers will be returned with the others the moment the case is officially closed.
27:43But if I'm no longer a suspect...
27:44Hey, she backed you up, she didn't have to.
27:50Don't push your luck.
27:53Yeah.
27:54Yeah.
27:55Yeah, no, no, no.
28:06No, no, no.
28:10Hey, we're at the moment.
28:12Oh, yes, sir.
28:12Oh, my God.
28:42The pop was moved, damaged in the process, then put back in the wrong place, leaving a ring.
28:52Now, you've seen the clinic. It's spotless.
28:54So the cleaner would have cleaned the ring on the floor during the daily round.
28:59So we can infer the damage was done the previous night.
29:03But how?
29:04We know there wasn't a struggle. She had no injuries.
29:07What if she knocked it on the way to the pool?
29:09Hmm. A suicidal woman carefully replaces a damaged pot before lowering herself silently into the water.
29:16Now, the tea. The tea has to hold the key.
29:20If it didn't poison her, why prepare it and only drink half a cup?
29:23She was disturbed. My head killer.
29:26Carlton Reynolds was the last person to see her.
29:27Have you got Dr. Jones's new statement?
29:31Yes, it's here.
29:32She saw Carlton last night, didn't she?
29:34Uh, yes. She said it was past ten.
29:38Yes, but he told us he went home around 9.30.
29:41Which gives him 30 minutes to have murdered Valéry Dupré.
29:52Come, let's see what he's off to.
29:54But they expect us to bring him in.
29:55Ah, it's called initiative.
29:58Yeah, it's also called disobeying a direct order from a senior officer.
30:01Dwayne, and now he's getting away, look.
30:03Come on, baby.
30:09Ah, good girl.
30:31What's he doing?
30:32I don't know.
30:38You know, there's absolutely no point in running.
30:44Hey!
30:45Come on, you damn it!
30:46You see that?
30:48Watch and learn.
30:56That's the fourth time you've tested the tea.
30:59One can't be too thorough, Sergeant.
31:02Fidel.
31:08He hit me.
31:09It's a free clinic.
31:15No one pays a penny.
31:17I only take what's about to expire.
31:19Half open boxes, ready to be disposed of.
31:22Perfectly good medication thrown away.
31:24It's crazy.
31:25So when you told us you left the clinic at 9.30.
31:28I stop off at the pharmacy.
31:30I just take a few things each time.
31:33That way no one notices.
31:34When I have enough, I advertise the clinic.
31:38It's mostly women, children, mothers, people who need help but can't afford the doctor's bills.
31:45So, you've been running an unlicensed clinic with stolen medication.
31:50Why run, then?
31:51I thought Dr. Jones had sent you.
31:53I guess I just reacted.
31:54I'm sorry about your nose.
31:55I'd be happy to take a look at it.
31:56What's her relationship with Valerie Dupre?
31:58I was a nurse.
31:59When Mrs. Dupre arrived, she was heartbroken.
32:01She just wanted to talk.
32:03Her husband had an affair.
32:04A younger woman.
32:05She panicked, ran out, and arranged to have surgery.
32:07But now she was here, nothing had changed.
32:09She was scared.
32:10I was scared.
32:11Lonely.
32:12I listened to her, that's all.
32:13You say Valerie was scared.
32:14That sounds like an unusual emotion.
32:15I think it was very unusual.
32:16When Mrs. Dupre arrived, she was very nervous.
32:18When Mrs. Dupre arrived, she was heartbroken.
32:19She just wanted to talk.
32:20Her husband had an affair.
32:21A younger woman.
32:22She panicked, ran out, and arranged to have surgery.
32:23But now she was here, nothing had changed.
32:26She was scared.
32:28Lonely.
32:29I listened to her, that's all.
32:32You say Valerie was scared.
32:35That sounds like an unusual emotion.
32:38Her world had just caved in around her.
32:42Her husband doesn't love her.
32:44No children.
32:45Friends taking sides.
32:47And now a face she don't even recognize.
32:49Wouldn't you be afraid to face the world again?
32:52You think she was unhappy with her surgery?
32:54I know she was.
32:56She had already contacted her lawyer.
32:59Listen.
33:01That night, when I was with her,
33:04I knew she wanted to talk.
33:07I wanted someone to listen.
33:09I was tired.
33:11It had been a long day.
33:14So I walked away.
33:16I could have helped her.
33:19And I just walked away.
33:21And that's something I've got to live with for the rest of my life.
33:24Thank you, you've been most helpful.
33:29I think we have all we need here.
33:33So, am I free to go?
33:35Unless Officer Best wishes to make a complaint?
33:39I guess we both made a mistake.
33:48Um, Dwayne.
33:49Let's see that Nurse Reynolds gets his property back.
33:52Sir?
33:53Phone company?
33:54Yes.
33:55Valerie Dupree made three phone calls the day she died.
33:57All to the same number in Paris.
33:58I just checked it out.
33:59It was a French lawyer.
34:00She was going to make a complaint about the clinic.
34:01I think we may have found our motive.
34:05Sorry.
34:18Sorry, I was held up in surgery.
34:20Well, I assume your presence here means we're making progress?
34:23Possibly.
34:24Did you know that Valerie Dupree made three calls to a firm of personal injury lawyers the same day she died?
34:30Uh, please.
34:32You're implying I murdered her because she was threatening legal action against my clinic?
34:41People have been killed for less.
34:43Do you, um, recognise the name of this lawyer?
34:47No, I've never heard of him.
34:50Good.
34:51Because that's my shopping list.
34:53It says Bananas and Sunblock.
34:55Your eyesight's failing, isn't it, Mr. Tipping?
34:57Why else would you keep complaining about the light in the theatre?
35:00Yet if you were just short-sighted, why not wear glasses or contact lenses?
35:04It all suggests to me this is more than a simple refractive problem.
35:09It started about a year ago.
35:13I thought it was just old age that I needed glasses, but, uh...
35:18Things got worse.
35:19In the end, I got on a plane and went to see an old colleague back at Moorfields.
35:23Turns out I'm a bit of a rarity.
35:26I have retinitis pigmentosa.
35:29The sight fades day by day.
35:32I think the word he used was inexorable.
35:35There's no treatment.
35:37I'll end up blind.
35:39And yet you continue to operate?
35:41Well, what I do here isn't real surgery.
35:44Besides, most of the procedures I could do with my bloody eyes closed anyway, so it's...
35:48Look, Inspector.
35:50I'm a surgeon.
35:53This...
35:54It's my life.
35:57I thought I could cope.
35:59Now that I had another, maybe, twelve months.
36:02But, uh...
36:06Valerie Dupre's face simply wasn't up to snuff.
36:09Her scars were going to be visible.
36:11She had every right to complain.
36:13But I never...
36:15I never imagined that it would make her take her own life.
36:19You still believe she committed suicide?
36:21Yes, I do.
36:23I'm not proud of what happened, Inspector.
36:25I'm prepared to take my share of the blame.
36:27I shouldn't have operated on her.
36:29But that doesn't make me a murderer.
36:31Exactly.
36:32Hi, G.
36:47Anything?
37:12Honorary police station.
37:15Ah, yes. Hold on one more one, please.
37:16Oh, sir. It's the commissioner.
37:21He says the 24 hours are up.
37:23We need to return the passports to the clinic guests.
37:27Just a minute, sir.
37:30Yes.
37:36So that's it? I can go?
37:38That's it? You can get back to running your floral empire.
37:41Yes, I can.
37:42You never mentioned you were born on Saint-Marie.
37:45I read your paper. It says you were born here. In Honorary?
37:48Sure.
37:49My parents moved off the island when I was 10, so...
37:53When I saw the clinic was here, I had to give them a call.
37:57He can't fight fate.
38:00I gotta go.
38:01I just thought it was strange, that's all.
38:15When I was at the clinic earlier, I spoke to him in French.
38:18At the time, I thought he just hadn't heard me.
38:20But how is it that someone who would have gone to school here doesn't know a word of French?
38:25Well, I know plenty of people who went to school in England who can't speak English.
38:29Maman, do you remember a boy called Paul Vincent?
38:33Um, late 1970s? Local family?
38:37No. I knew the Vincent family, but they had two girls.
38:41No, wait.
38:43They had a son who died very young. It was so sad.
38:46I think his name was Paul.
38:49But maybe I'm wrong.
38:52Miss Smite looks happy.
38:53How do you know?
38:56She can't smile.
38:58In fact, she's had so much work done, I'm surprised she can move her muscle.
39:08She didn't drink it because she couldn't drink it.
39:10The answer's been staring me in the face, quite literally.
39:13Are Cleon Taylor rich, important people?
39:16Yes.
39:17They insist on total discretion.
39:20This is a business first and last but a second.
39:23Fidel, I need a list of all the clients in the clinic.
39:29That is, sir.
39:29No, no, no. Not the ones there now.
39:30All those as well, but going back, say, two years.
39:32And cross-check with the immigration records when they arrived in St. Marie and when they left.
39:37Duane, gather everyone together, commissioner included.
39:39I'll be at the clinic in an hour.
39:41Camille, with me.
39:42Where to?
39:43The public records office.
39:45And then the graveyard.
39:46Obviously.
39:48Bye.
39:53Chief!
40:08Paul thinks he does left the clinic.
40:10Cab driver said he's gone down to the marina.
40:12Come!
40:14Just a coin?
40:15No way.
40:16It plays havoc with my hair.
40:32That way!
40:37Get!
40:37Get!
40:38Get!
40:54Wayne!
40:56Wayne!
40:57Wayne!
40:57Not on my watch.
41:27I honestly didn't expect that to work.
41:39This had better be good.
41:53No.
41:54It had better astound me.
42:01I've called you all here because Valerie Dupre did not commit suicide.
42:12Every murder investigation has to focus on three things.
42:15Means, motive and opportunity.
42:19Usually those things all point towards one person.
42:21However, in this case, only nurse Carlton Reynolds, the last person to see the victim alive, seemed to have the opportunity.
42:28On the night of the murder, you thought she wanted to tell you something.
42:32You said she seemed frightened, wanted to leave the clinic.
42:35Yes.
42:36You assumed it was fear of the future.
42:38However, I now believe she was afraid for her life.
42:42The Jacaranda Clinic prides itself on absolute discretion.
42:49Clients quietly come and go.
42:52As Sergeant Bourdais said, it's like they've never actually been here at all.
42:59And that's the whole point, isn't it, Dr Jones?
43:02Please, can I have your phone?
43:07And the other one?
43:13Yeah, I thought having two phones was strange.
43:28But I dismissed it.
43:30That was a mistake.
43:32Because once I realised that the white one was for the legitimate clinic,
43:36and the black one was for some kind of illegal operation,
43:39everything started to fit together.
43:42White for good.
43:45Black for bad.
43:47Your own private joke at everyone else's expense.
43:51Because it's essential you know exactly who's ringing you, isn't it?
43:56You told me that the clinic was losing money until Dr Jones arrived.
44:01You explained how she'd turned the place around with a new marketing strategy.
44:06But you didn't restructure the existing business at all, did you?
44:09You simply used it as cover for another one.
44:11Helping criminals begin new lives.
44:14By finding someone of a similar age to them,
44:17who died young and stealing their details,
44:19you provided new faces and new identities.
44:23San Marie's the perfect location.
44:25No electronic records means it's almost impossible for police and borders to cross-check.
44:30You know, I have absolutely no idea who this gentleman is,
44:34but I do know he's not Paul Vincent.
44:37The real Paul Vincent died over 35 years ago as a small child.
44:41Absolute rot. Selwyn.
44:44Carry on, Inspector.
44:46You can't make these allegations without proof.
44:50Records of clients who've stayed at the clinic over the past two years.
44:55Among them you'll find 18 people also recorded as deceased.
44:59I understand your medical prowess may be on the wane,
45:03but even in your heyday I doubt you could resurrect the dead.
45:07No, the clinic was being used as a one-stop shop for identity theft,
45:13with the occasional spot of cosmetic surgery when needed,
45:17as in Mr. Vincent's case, to finish the job.
45:20All run by Dr. Jones, under everyone's nose.
45:24We've already established that Valerie Dupre was frightened the night that she died.
45:29We also have a witness who saw her clearly uncomfortable in the presence of the man we know as Paul Vincent.
45:34I think they were having some kind of lovers too.
45:38Things weren't quite as they seemed.
45:41Now I now believe Valerie Dupre somehow discovered the truth
45:45behind what Dr. Jones and her special clients were up to.
45:49She was in fact petrified of Mr. Vincent.
45:52So, he's the murderer?
45:55Is that what you're saying?
45:57This man's undoubtedly a criminal, but he is not, as far as I'm aware, a murderer.
46:02Then who is?
46:04Valerie Dupre's life was taken by the only person who had the opportunity.
46:08Carlton Reynolds.
46:09No, I swear.
46:11I didn't do it.
46:15You know, the first thing that bothered me about this case was a simple cup of tea.
46:19Why go to the trouble of making an expensive pot of tea, yet fail to drink it, unless you were disturbed?
46:27In this case, by their killer.
46:30Valerie Dupre was killed by the most powerful toxin known to man.
46:34A substance this clinic uses every day, yet which no lab would ever find unless they were looking for it.
46:40Potulinum toxin.
46:42Harmless enough when used to remove wrinkles, yet fatal in the hands of a killer.
46:48Administered unwittingly by Carlton Reynolds.
46:55But prepared very deliberately by Dr. Anna Jones.
46:59You waited for the moment that Valerie's Heparin injection was ready to be administered,
47:09and then you swapped it for a massive overdose of botulinum toxin.
47:15Carlton continued his rounds, not knowing he was now carrying a lethal syringe.
47:20What happened? Did she come to see you?
47:23Perhaps to tell you she'd called her lawyer and was going to complain?
47:27Whatever she was planning, she never got that far, did she?
47:30Instead, I think she overheard exactly what was going on at the Jacaranda.
47:35An illegal identity fraud, a racket involving some very unpleasant people.
47:42You knew you had to silence her, and that what you'd added to her medication
47:45would paralyse every muscle in Valerie Dupre's body within minutes.
47:50With her lungs paralysed and unable to breathe, Valerie died in her own bed.
47:56He then simply moved her, silent and unseen, on a trolley like any other patient.
48:02Yet the trolley had a bent wheel, making it difficult to manoeuvre.
48:06Which was why you knocked into a terracotta plant pot by the pool.
48:13Then you slid the body of Valerie Dupre into the pool
48:16to make it look like she'd drowned herself.
48:24All so that your criminal endeavours weren't exposed.
48:28Valerie felt she'd lost her beauty as well as her husband,
48:30but you took away the most precious thing of all.
48:33Her life.
48:37Lock her up.
48:38My dear fellow, it seems I may have been a little harsh on the phone the other day.
48:55What can I do to make it up to you?
48:56What can I do to make it up to you?
48:57It seems our mysterious Mr. Vincent's real name is Emilio Suarez.
49:04Big time drag runner, wanted in Florida and five other states.
49:10It seems our mysterious Mr. Vincent's real name is Emilio Suarez, big-time drug runner,
49:21wanted in Florida and five other states.
49:24With a bit of luck, they'll throw away the key.
49:26I couldn't agree more.
49:28Anything else come in?
49:29Nothing.
49:30It's still quiet.
49:32Right.
49:32Well, in that case, I suppose we should just, you know, lie.
49:37Fidel, you're in the hot seat.
49:40Professor Plum in the dining room with the lead piping.
49:44Is that wrong?
49:46I think we've established Professor Plum was nowhere near the piping, lead or otherwise.
49:51Okay, Wayne?
49:52This is it.
49:54This is the game.
49:55Okay, another pass.
49:56Camille?
49:57Can we please play something else?
49:59Like what?
50:00I don't know.
50:03Twister?
50:04Hide and seek.
50:05I'm so childish.
50:06Come on.
50:07Right.
50:08Colonel Mustard.
50:11No.
50:11Miss Carlet.
50:12I told you, you can't keep shouting out names.
50:14It doesn't work like that.
50:16Reverend Green.
50:17No.
50:17Well, one of them must be right.
50:19Yes, but that's hardly the point, is it?
50:20Look, can we please just play the game properly?
50:24This is the game.
50:26This?
50:26James Smythe looks 10 years younger.
50:35Amazing what love can do.
50:36This is it.
50:37Sergeant Bourdais, I'm going to count down from five.
50:39And then, by the officially ratified...