Daily Mail

Suave, educated, middle class . . . the crooked banker fooled us all

- CHRISTOPHE­R STEVENS

The devil is in the detail. All of banker Lukasz Rybarczyk’s protestati­ons, that he was being framed for theft by a shadowy band of organised criminals, sounded plausible until a receipt for £12.95 turned up.

The Accused (C5) was crammed with detail. The latest example of an emerging television genre, the real-life police investigat­ion, it followed 32- year- old Polish immigrant Lukasz from the moment of his arrest, giving viewers access even to sensitive conversati­ons with his solicitor and barrister.

We saw and heard far more than the jury could, not least because so much of it would be inadmissib­le in court — Lukasz’s tearful conversati­ons with his 13-year-old brother, for example.

Lukasz was a banker, but not the sort that gets millionpou­nd bonuses. he worked for a high Street bank as a customer liaison officer, and stood accused of siphoning £ 26,000 from an elderly client’s nest- egg into his own account.

When police first confronted him, he seemed oddly calm — but perhaps that was a sign of innocence, born of certainty that this misunderst­anding would soon be cleared up. Yes, a large sum had turned up in his account, but it

SQUAWKER OF THE NIGHT: Bored to tears in his hotel room before the Rio Olympics, the world’s fastest man, Usain Bolt, was screeching along with his favourite song in I Am Bolt (BBC1). It’s reassuring to know there’s one thing he can’t do.

was an inheritanc­e, he insisted. We wanted to believe Lukasz. he was well- spoken, and clearly worried sick. A judge and jury see only the man in the dock, but we were able to observe him, trapped in a living nightmare.

Two factors helped us to trust Lukasz. First, as he kept saying, only an idiot would hide stolen loot in his own bank account — and with two degrees, Lukasz seemed no idiot. Second, he was baring his soul to the camera. Didn’t that suggest he was being framed?

And then that incriminat­ing £12.95 receipt turned up, for a meal in a gay bar that was one of Lukasz’s favourite haunts. It proved he was using another plundered account, one this time that belonged to a dead customer. explain that away . . .

even after he was convicted, and was facing two years in prison, Lukasz kept pouring out his heart to the cameras, insisting he’d been set up: ‘I cannot believe that this has happened,’ he pleaded.

Similar documentar­ies have let us spy on a murder probe and a child cruelty investigat­ion. This is psychology in the raw. The only complaint is that it’s over too quickly. Channel 5 could air all the footage from a case non- stop, over 24 hours, and we’d still be glued.

It does feel as though the BBC has been airing 50th anniversar­y celebratio­ns right around the clock, with non-stop dramas and documentar­ies, to hail the death of the law against gay sex.

Like all TV that treats the gogglebox as a soapbox, most of it has been tiresomely earnest. Man In An Orange Shirt (BBC2) didn’t so much fall into that trap as fling itself in headfirst.

Oliver Jackson- Cohen and James McArdle played young soldiers Michael and Thomas during the 1944 Italian Campaign. Their eyes met across a crowded battlefiel­d, and they knew at once, etc, etc.

After the war, however, Michael married a teacher ( Joanna Vanderham) and started a family. The director assumed we’d feel pity for the poor fellow, parted from his true love by a cruel law.

But the law didn’t force Michael to trap his wife in a loveless marriage with a child, and humiliate her while leading a double life. he chose to do that himself. When the hero turns out to be a cowardly cad, the drama is dead . . . however earnest the intention.

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