Dougie Briggs, played by Max Gold, appears for several weeks over the spring of 1994, and is actively involved in the storyline that marked the introduction of
EastEnders' third weekly episode, The Queen Vic Siege. Dougie had been a paratrooper alongside
Grant Mitchell (
Ross Kemp) in the
Falklands War, and meets up with him again more than 10 years later, by which time Grant is the landlord of
The Queen Victoria public house. Grant allows Dougie to stay at The Vic, despite his wife
Sharon (
Letitia Dean)'s objections. Sharon begins to feel uncomfortable around Dougie after noticing him leering at her on several occasions, but Grant refuses to ask him to leave. Dougie persuades Grant to help him out with a raid on a supermarket, promising him a vast financial return, but Grant starts to have second thoughts when he finds Dougie's sawn-off shotgun. After doing some investigating, Grant discovers that Dougie had been discharged from the paratroopers because psychological tests had revealed that he was
psychopathic. Dougie tried to stop the Medical Officer from filing the results, and when he refused Dougie shot him in the head and then raped his wife. Realising that he has left Sharon alone in the Vic with a convicted murderer and rapist, Grant flees home and arrives just as Dougie is attempting to sexually assault Sharon. A fight ensues and Grant is knocked unconscious, after which Dougie holds Grant, Sharon and barmaid
Michelle Fowler (
Susan Tully) hostage with his shotgun, and demands money. The gun goes off when Grant tries to claim it and Michelle gets in the way of a stray bullet and ends up in a pool of blood on the Vic's floor. Grant overpowers Dougie, and beats him unconscious, but he is forced to leave him in the Vic while he takes Michelle to hospital. He contacts his brother
Phil (
Steve McFadden) to get rid of Dougie's body and gun, but by the time Phil arrives at the Vic, Dougie has escaped. Grant is convinced that Dougie will return for revenge, but he is apprehended by the police before he can get to the Vic. ==Elizabeth Willmott-Brown==
Elizabeth Willmott-Brown, played by
Helena Breck, is the ex-wife of rapist
James Willmott-Brown (
William Boyde). One of James's victims,
Kathy Beale (
Gillian Taylforth), begins to have a recurring nightmare about her rape in 1994. Her boyfriend,
Phil Mitchell (
Steve McFadden), decides to go in search of James to scare him away. He traces him to Elizabeth's home, but she tells him that James is not in and she is unsure when he will be back. Phil refuses to give up and when Elizabeth leaves her house many hours later, he demands that she tell him where James is because he has raped his girlfriend. Elizabeth gets angry and tells Phil she is well aware that James is a rapist, but she is trying to protect her two children from it. She also reveals that James has been imprisoned for the rape of another woman. In 1987, during a conversation with
Angie Watts (
Anita Dobson), James refers to his wife as "Clare", from whom he has been divorced for some months. In 1988, James refers to his wife as "Anne" over the telephone. In September 2017, Elizabeth's daughter
Fi Browning (
Lisa Faulkner), tells
Mick Carter (
Danny Dyer) that her mother killed herself after falling into depression, and that she found her in the bath. ==Geoff Barnes==