
I Fought the Law on ITV: How Ann Ming changed the double jeopardy law and where she is now
Natasha Rigler | 3:44am Sun 31 Aug | Updated 6:54pm Sat 30 AugSheridan Smith stars as the ‘inspirational’ Ann Ming in ITV’s harrowing new drama I Fought the Law.
The mini-series follows Ann’s true-life endeavours to change the law for her late daughter Julie Hogg, who was brutally murdered aged 22.
Julie’s killer escaped punishment for almost two decades due to an 800-year-old double jeopardy law.

Sheridan Smith plays Ann Ming in I Fought the Law [Credit: ITV]
Here, we look at who Ann Ming is and how she changed a law that had stood in time since the Magna Carta.
Who is Ann Ming from ITV’s I Fought the Law?
Ann Ming is a 79-year-old mother-of-three from Billingham in Stockton-upon-Tees. Together with her husband Charlie, she had a son called Gary and two daughters, Julie and Angela.
The family had relocated from Yorkshire to Stockton-upon-Tees shortly after Angela was born. This was so they could be close to Ann’s ailing mother.
Ann enjoyed a successful career as a hospital theatre nurse and later became a grandmother to Julie’s son, Kevin. But her world was turned upside down in 1989 when Julie vanished.
Ann’s story is at the centre of ITV’s new drama I Fought the Law. Sheridan Smith plays Ann in the mini-series.
What happened to Ann’s daughter Julie?
Julie had been working as a pizza delivery driver when she disappeared. She was 22 at the time and her son, Kevin, was three years old. Julie was estranged from her husband Andrew. His name in I Fought the Law has been changed to Matthew.
On November 15, 1989, Julie had worked a late shift and Kevin was staying overnight with Ann. But the following morning, Ann was unable to get hold of her. She visited Julie’s house but there was no answer at the door.
Forensic police combed the property for three days but there was no sign of Julie. She was declared a missing person.
But, three months later, police returned the front door keys to her estranged husband. After the central heating was turned on, he noticed a bad smell. Ann went upstairs to investigate and made a horrific discovery.

Ann’s daughter Julie Hogg was murdered in 1989 [Credit: Shutterstock]
Ann was faced with her worse fears as the smell wafted from behind the panel. It was coming from Julie’s body.
“I was absolutely hysterical,” Ann said. “I just ran downstairs to Andrew and said, ‘She’s under the bath, she’s under the bath’. That was the start of a living nightmare that you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy.”
Julie had been strangled and sexually assaulted. Her body had been lying in a blanket underneath her bath for three months, despite police searching her house.
Ann’s fight begins
William ‘Billy’ Dunlop was soon arrested and charged with Julie’s murder. A local labourer, Dunlop lived two roads away from Julie and the pair knew of each other.
A court heard Dunlop had visited Julie’s house on the night she went missing. He was intoxicated and had been thrown out of a rugby club for making unwanted advances towards a stripper.
Dunlop had a fight with a man in the street before turning up at Julie’s door. He then brutally murdered her, sexually assaulted her and hid her body.
In 1991, Dunlop stood trial for Julie’s murder but the jury failed to reach a majority verdict. A re-trial took place in the same year and, again, the jury did not reach a majority. Dunlop was acquitted and free to go.
Seven years later, Dunlop was jailed for GBH (grievous bodily harm) after a brutal attack on a man and a woman. While in prison he began bragging that he’d killed Julie but was protected by the UK’s 800-year double jeopardy law.

Ann’s fight for justice is played out in I Fought the Law [Credit: ITV]
Furious, Ann made it her mission to get the law overturned so Dunlop could be properly punished for what he did to her beloved Julie.
How did Ann Ming change the Double Jeopardy law?
Ann Ming began her campaign by contacting the then-Home Secretary, Jack Straw, outlining her severe dissatisfaction with the criminal justice system.
She told Channel 5’s Incident Room: “I wrote a letter to Jack Straw outlining our case and what had happened and we got to go and see him at the Home Office. When I went in, I had a picture of Julie and a picture of Dunlop that had been in the local paper.
“I said, ‘That’s our daughter and that’s the man who killed her. We’re not happy with the perjury sentence. It needs to be changed’.”
Also appearing on camera, Kevin Hogg, Julie’s now grown-up son, added: “I always recall her saying to me, ‘An 800-year-old law? It’s stupid. It’s not going to stop me’.”
And Ann was right. For 15 years, she campaigned to the Criminal Justice System, the Crown Prosecution Service and the Law Commission. She also met with top defence barristers, the Government, the Lord Chancellor, the Attorney General, Jack Straw and his successor, David Blunkett.
Ann’s determination paid off and the law was overturned. Thanks to Ann, The Criminal Justice Act 2003 now allows defendants to stand trial for a second time, providing new and compelling evidence has emerged since their acquittal.
‘Nobody is better than anybody else’
In 2006, on the 17th anniversary of Julie’s death, Billy Dunlop was sentenced to life in prison for her murder. He must serve a minimum of 17 years. Dunlop was the first person charged with a murder he had already been cleared of.
Ann was later awarded an MBE in the Queen’s Birthday Honours for services to the Criminal Justice System.
Ahead of I Fought the Law landing on ITV, Ann has reflected back on her tireless fight for her daughter Julie. Sadly, her husband Charlie – Julie’s father – died in hospital in 2013. He had been battling with Parkinson’s disease.
Speaking to Good Housekeeping, Ann said: “If you believe in yourself and know it’s the right thing that needs to be done, don’t be put off by somebody else. Nobody is better than anybody else.

Ann outside court after Billy Hogg’s landmark sentencing [Credit: Steve Maisey/Shutterstock]
“Don’t be frightened to stick up for what you want to do. Believe in yourself.”
Where is Ann Ming now?
Ann is still living in the North East of England. She has retired from campaigning now she is approaching 80, although believes the parole system needs an overhaul to stop killers from ever being moved to an open prison.
The widow, who nursed husband Charlie through his illness before he died, enjoys line-dancing classes. She is also still very close with her grandson Kevin. Now 39 and with his own son, Kevin works to help other victims of serious crime.
Ann said: “The thing that has changed for me is that I’m not frightened to die now, because I know Julie will be there waiting for me.”
When is I Fought the Law on and where can you watch it?
I Fought the Law is a mini-series made up of four hour-long episodes. It will air on ITV1 and be available to stream for free on ITVX.
The series will begin at 9pm on Sunday August 31. Episode two will air the following night, also at 9pm.