- Thirty years after the death of a suspected terrorist, the man's daughter receives an anonymous note claiming he was murdered. Clues lead the team to the Greenham Common antinuclear protests of the 1980s.
- Bryony Willis receives an anonymous note to say that her father, peace activist Winston Lovett, did not accidentally blow himself up but was murdered. The team visits Bryony's estranged mother Alison, who points them towards two feminist campaigners who had issues with Winston - Mary Griffith, an inveterate agitator and lecturer Frances Kane. To the team's surprise Frances admits that she and Winston were actually undercover cops infiltrating the protest movement. Then Bryony reports a stalker, whose identity brings closure and reconciliation to the case. Throughout Sasha resists the attempts of her ex-husband Ned to get back with her.—don @ minifie-1
- The team re-examines the death of peace activist Winston Lovett who, 30 years ago, was killed when the home-made bomb he had in his possession went off unexpectedly. Now, his daughter Briony Willis has received an anonymous note saying her father was murdered. Briony's mother Alison Willis - though she and Winston were never married - never thought he might have been murdered and neither mother nor daughter have any idea who might have sent the note. The team interviews several other activists from that time including Frances Kane and Mary Griffith who was a member of the Angry Brigade, a rival group to Lovett's peace group. The case takes a twist however when Alison reveals Winston was an undercover police officer, DC Benjamin Harker. He had genuinely converted to the cause and Alison believes the police killed him. The solution to the case however is far more straightforward and a surprise for everyone involved.—garykmcd
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