match of the day sees andy murray face stefanos tsitsipas. there s a host of grand slam champions elsewhere too and keeping across it all at the all england club is chetan pathak. chetan, bring us up to speed. the rain going on with the death first and second round matches played this in time but the sun is out in tennis is relentless. cheer on centre court behind me when liam brody the british wildcat he was a upset last year is playing casper ruud who is the fourth seed who has reached three of the last four grand slam finals and brodie has levelled things up and is two set since heading to a shoot out on centre court and whoever wins the deciding set will be in for the third round and other casper ruud is not a natural glass course player and his biggest success have come in a different court and he says he is still figuring out at the surface but the whole crowd is getting behind him. he beat british world champion before. three time grand slam champion is through to the
that today continues to mean that a portion of it is going to go to oil and gas, a significant portion as you rightly say, and at the same time we incrementally increase our renewable spend as and when those value pools emerge. wael sawan, ceo of shell. four retired detectives who ran the first investigation into the killing of stephen lawrence the uk s most notorious racist murder will not face criminal prosecution for their actions in the case, the bbc has been told. the crown prosecution service made its decision today after considering a file of evidence for nearly three years. an official public announcement is due later today. our correspondent daniel de simone broke today s story and gave us more detail about the background of the case: this case is 30 years old now, 30 years this year. stephen lawrence was an 18 year old student who was travelling home with his friend waiting for a bus in eltham, south london, and was set upon by a gang of young white men and stabbed to d
lawrence, who was aged 18, was murdered in april 1993 in south london in a racist attack by a gang of young white men. just to repeat again, four retired detectives who ran that murder investigation, the first murder investigation, will not face criminal prosecution for their actions in the case. in 1999, a public inquiry said the first lawrence murder investigation was marred by a combination of professional incompetence, institutional racism and a failure of leadership by senior officers. that report was highly critical of three of the officers for the decision not to make quick arrests. arrests did not take place for two weeks, despite police receiving information implicating four of the prime suspects within 2a hours of
inquiry and in fact fatally undermine all possible future inquiry is an example they gave was to say the subject of the inquiry can t decide what information is relevant to hand over. imagine inquiry into someone who potentially had done something criminal, if that person could decide what to hand over the inquiry might be pointless. so they said it was a really important point of principle, too. they mean, really good out that the action from me so quickly. thank you, our political correspondent there damian grammaticas in westminster. let s stay with uk legality because for retired detectives who ran the first investigation into the killing of stephen lawrence, the uk s most notorious racist murder, will not face criminal prosecutions for their actions in the case according to sources that have spoken to the bbc. we can speak to our correspondent daniel simone who broke the story. i m looking at some of the details here. cps saying they have meticulously reviewed substantial
jail time. i think at some point these people realized that it was just a matter of time until it was up, and i think they wanted to do damage control. if i was their attorney, i d be interested in doing damage control, protect them and also, obviously, cooperate with the investigators. arthel: meanwhile, of course, our heart aches for gabby petito and her parents and for other parents who share that same heart ache. i want to ask you, stuart, do you think that the fbi will now begin to pay more attention to reports of missing people of color? you know, i have to tell you, you know, and i ve been asked this question, i will tell you this, i think all law enforcement whether it s the fbi on the tate level or local state level or local level, i think people that sign up to do this type of work and certainly the seasoned detectives who, unfortunately, have to deal with the tragedy of the loss of life, i don t think they look at a person s background or their