Latest Headlines Contact About
Latest TV & Radio News
Crimewatch
Ahead of a new series of Crimewatch Live presented by Rav Wilding and Michelle Ackerley starting on BBC One on Monday 30 September, the BBC is marking 40 years of Crimewatch.
Over its 40-year history Crimewatch, Crimewatch Roadshow and Crimewatch Live has broadcast over 700 programmes, featuring more than 7000 police appeals involving every police force in the UK and bringing criminals to justice with the help of the public.
A key element of Crimewatch has been its on screen appeals and reconstructions featuring some of the UK’s most high profile cases, including the murder of Julie Dart (1991) and the Stephanie Slater kidnapping (1992), the murder of James Bulger (1993), the Lin and Megan Russell murders (1996), the murder of Sarah Payne (2000), the M25 sex attacker (2002) and the murder of 7-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield (2005).
Julie Shaw, Commissioning Editor for BBC Daytime, said: “Crimewatch is not just another crime series, it sits at the heart of what public service broadcasting at its best can do. Throughout its 40-year history, the team have built unprecedented trust with the country's police forces and the public, providing an outlet to help catch the country's most audacious criminals.”
One of the most difficult appeals for the programme team was following the murder of Crimewatch presenter Jill Dando in 1999, the case remains unsolved.
Michelle Cox, Executive Producer, BBC Studios Documentary Unit, said: “We’re extremely proud to be marking 40 years of such a landmark programme, the legacy and continued results we get each series make it an incredibly special programme to be part of. The ability to give victims and their families a place to tell their stories through our sensitively produced films, and to actually yield results is a testament to the long-lasting respect the public have for the programme."
23 September 2024
Back to the headlines Next Story
Latest Headlines Contact About
Online since 1985