It was the first date that ended in death for a young woman.
And now, the man who took her out on a dangerous speedboat ride on that night has gone into hiding.
Charlotte Brown and Jack Shepherd met through the dating website OkCupid. Brown was a 24-year-old business development consultant. Shepherd was a web designer. He owned a 1980s speedboat, which he’d bought on Gumtree to “pull women”, a court was later told. He’d entertained up to 10 women on the speedboat, taking them out on London’s River Thames. Police had caught him speeding more than once and lectured him about the importance of wearing life jackets.
When Shepherd and Brown organised their first date, it was December 2015, in the early days of winter. Shepherd took Brown out for dinner at an expensive restaurant, and they shared two bottles of wine. Later, he took her onto his speedboat, bringing champagne for the trip.
Phone footage taken on the night shows Brown shouting that they were going “so fast”. In fact, Shepherd was driving the speedboat at more than twice the legal limit. Shepherd then handed the controls over to Brown, who had no boating experience.
The boat hit a submerged log and capsized. Both Shepherd and Brown were thrown into the cold water. Shepherd screamed for help.
“He kept saying ‘Help me, help me, somebody help me,’” a nearby resident, Steven Morrissey, later said in a statement. “It was just ‘Help me’ – not ‘us’, or ‘her’.”
When help came, Shepherd was clinging to the boat’s hull. Brown was in the water, unconscious. She was in cardiac arrest and suffering from hypothermia. She didn’t survive.
“I was just trying to show off about having a speedboat like I thought it would impress her,” Shepherd told police the next day.