History
1995
At the
start of the year, Quinnan discovered the human side of prostitution when posing
as a brothel client (To Crack A Nut); Haines returned to Sun Hill to help
Meadows track down a consignment of lethal heroin (Hot Stuff); and
Johnson had a lot to answer for when Marshall was assaulted during an undercover
operation (Hard Knocks). Quinnan was spat at by a prisoner with Hepatitis B
leading to him having injections (New Management); DI Johnson left under
a cloud (Done is Done); and Deakin's new role as Acting DI brought him into confrontation
with Monroe (Getting Even).
New
arrival DS Don Beech proved to be more than a match for Skase (Expert Witness);
Bob Cryer's exemplary record was on the line when a professional police hater
brought a complaint against him for swearing (Uncle Bob); and having
been rejected for the post of Area Welfare Chief, Cato walked out of Sun Hill (Is
that the Time?). Two new probationers - Keane and Slater - joined the
station (New Moves); Hollis' green fingers caused havoc when he tried to
introduce a station garden (Flora and Fauna); and Deakin (pictured)
and Greig were held hostage by a desperate villain (Alone).
A new Chief Inspector - Paul Stritch - arrived (Little Green Apples);
Slater managed to get himself punched by an irate boyfriend (Learning Curve);
and Hollis tackled
canine kidnappers (Not Just For Christmas). Harris had to deal with a
flirtatious informant (Swan Song); Boyden tried to turn a top class
prostitute into an informant, completely unaware that she was an undercover DS!
(In On The Game); and Deakin got his old rank back of
Detective Inspector (Deeds of Mercy).
Keane faced her first undercover operation for CID
(When
Opportunity Knocks);
Jarvis
and Hollis picked up fleas from a tramp (Have a go Hero); Eric Richard
(Sgt. Cryer) reached a milestone when he appeared in his 500th episode (In
the Midnight Hour); Ackland was hospitalised after being assaulted by a
young drug dealer (Looking After Your Own).
Garfield
had the unenviable honour of taking Stritch out on the beat with him (Upstairs
Downstairs); someone tried to frame McCann for robbery (Skin Deep);
and Boyden
received a letter from the Child Support Agency having been named as a father -
much to his surprise! (Mother's Ruin). Carver worked undercover as a barman to expose an
extortion racket and got a surprise when Beech arrived unexpectedly (Too
Clever By Half); Conway's diving team found a corpse in a dock (Still
Waters) - the diving scenes in this episode were supervised by avid diver
Mark Wingett (who plays Jim Carver); and Cryer was taken hostage at
gunpoint (Night Beat).
Stritch's new timekeeping tests landed Loxton with a murder
charge (Response Time); a two part story saw the brief return of Jo Morgan (Knowing
the Score and Some you Lose) and was followed by a three part story
in which Ackland was the target of a hit man (pictured) and Morgan
met her death (Fire, All Tucked Up and Bait). These
episodes proved to be the first significant departure from the rigid template
McQueen had laid down some 11 years earlier. Crucially Ackland's emotional
reaction to the threat formed the centrepiece of the drama and not the
investigation itself. The decision to screen the story across multiple episodes
ensured that events took on the pivotal status required to justify a shift in The
Bill's emphasis. Undoubtedly the move proved a success, with the three-parter
capturing some of The Bill's highest-ever viewing figures.
Neatly,
the death of Jo Morgan at the story's conclusion provided a legitimate reason to
introduce an ongoing thread into The Bill's previously self-contained
episodic format. Damage Limitation (the episode that immediately
followed) dealt, in part, with the aftershock of Morgan's death, and in so doing
indicated to the viewer that from now on The Bill was to embrace the kind
of long running character and plot developments previously avoided.
Beech was under
pressure when an old friend of his was implicated in a violent murder (Strictly
Personal); Quinnan found himself facing a complaint of sexual harrassment by
a burglary victim (Allegations and Allegiances); and DS John Boulton (pictured) made his debut
(Saved). In a one hour special CID was in a race against time to find a
girl locked in an airtight van (Deadline); there was a riot on the
Meadowlands Estate (Photocall); and McCann got 96% in part
one of his Sergeant exams (Love Me, Love My Dog). Sun Hill played a
grudge football match against young offenders (Neutral Territory); and
Carver's loyalties were tested when his ex-girlfriend became embroiled in a
suspected drug attack (Journey Home).