On 16th November 1989, Ann Ming made a terrible discovery. Two months after her 22-year-old daughter, Julie Hogg, went missing, Ming found her body concealed beneath the bath in Hogg’s home – a hiding place inexplicably overlooked by the forensic team who had investigated her disappearance. Worse still, she had to watch the man responsible, Billy Dunlop, escape a prison sentence during two separate trials and then openly boast about committing the murder at the local pub.
More than 15 years later, Ming’s relentless fight for justice changed the ancient double jeopardy law in the UK, which protected criminals from being tried twice for the same offence. Since then, Ming has been awarded an MBE for her significant contributions to the criminal justice system and now works with police forc