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Crime and Punishment

Gabriel Weston examines how television has played a crucial role in documenting seismic shifts in British law and policing, from the death penalty to laws against homosexuality.

From the death penalty, to laws against homosexuality, Britain's criminal justice system has undergone momentous change in the last 70 years.

In this Timewatch guide to Crime and Punishment, presenter Gabriel Weston examines how television has played a crucial role in documenting these seismic shifts in British law and policing.

Looking back through the Timewatch back catalogue of documentaries and a host of BBC archive rarities, Gabriel discovers how historians and filmmakers have not only chronicled these profound changes in law but also managed to shape public opinion.

By highlighting miscarriages of justice, like that of the wrongful imprisonment of the Birmingham Six, or by shining a spotlight on other issues of corruption and damning flaws in police procedures, Gabriel finds that television actually became a powerful agent for change.

1 hour

Last on

Sun 25 Jul 202100:25

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Credits

RoleContributor
PresenterGabriel Weston
Camera OperatorJames Daniels
Camera OperatorLorian Reed-Drake
SoundKevin Meredith
ColouristJonathan Fetherston
Re-recording mixerAaron O'Neill
Series ProducerJames Gray
Production ManagerPatricia Burns
Executive ProducerEmma Parkins
ProducerAndy Webb
DirectorAndy Webb
EditorAndy Webb
Archive SourceBBC
Archive SourceBridgeman
Archive SourceGetty
Archive SourceITN Source
Production Company360 Production

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