Can They Prove It Was Self-Defence? | Walford REEvisited | EastEnders
EastEnders Shock: Jasmine’s Confession Rocks Walford — But Is the Real Killer Still Free?
There are moments on EastEnders when the walls of Walford feel like they’re closing in — when secrets suffocate families and loyalty becomes a weapon. This week, the aftermath of Anthony Truman’s violent death has detonated across Albert Square, leaving lives shattered, truths distorted, and one burning question hanging in the air:
Who really killed Anthony?
What began as whispers in the corridors of the police station has erupted into a full-blown emotional catastrophe. Jasmine Fischer has confessed to murder. But nothing about this confession feels simple — or honest.
A Mother’s Desperate Arrival
“Mom, what are you doing here?”
The question lands heavy in the sterile air of the holding cell. Chrissy, exhausted and emotionally battered after months in custody, can barely process the sight of her mother standing before her.
“I’ve come to get you out of here.”
But freedom, it seems, comes at a devastating cost.
Chrissy has been insisting from the beginning that she didn’t kill Anthony. She has repeated it so often it has become a mantra. Yet now, in a twist that has left viewers stunned, Jasmine has stepped forward and admitted to the crime.
According to Jasmine, Anthony was standing over Zoe — violent, unhinged, and moments away from killing her. Jasmine claims she acted in self-defense, protecting both herself and her mother from a man spiraling into murderous rage.
But as the layers peel back, cracks begin to show.
The Missing Video — The Key to Everything
Jasmine insists there is proof.
She says she filmed it.
She claims her phone contains a video that captures Anthony’s attack — footage that would show she had no choice, that she struck him only to save a life. In her account, she walked in on her father about to kill her mother and did the only thing she could think of: she documented it, hoping the camera would stop him.
Instead, he turned on her.
It’s a chilling image. A daughter caught between violence and survival.
But there’s one catastrophic problem.
The phone is missing.
Jasmine swears it was in her bag at The Queen Vic — the iconic heart of Walford. She insists it was there before police dragged her in for questioning. Yet when the bag is searched, there is no device. No footage. No proof.
And without it, her confession becomes a noose.
A Family Torn Apart
Chrissy refuses to accept it.
“She’s lying,” she insists. “She must be.”
But why would Jasmine confess to murder if she didn’t do it?
The answer may lie in the unspoken bond between mother and daughter — a bond tested by trauma, secrets, and a shared history with Anthony Truman that was anything but peaceful.
Chrissy’s lawyer, Richie Scott, sees the confession as a victory. With Jasmine admitting guilt and a murder weapon already recovered, Chrissy’s discharge seems imminent. From a legal standpoint, it’s open and shut.
But emotionally?
It’s chaos.
Chrissy shocks everyone by declaring she killed Anthony herself — a desperate attempt to shield Jasmine from prison. Yet under scrutiny, her story falters. She cannot describe the weapon. She cannot explain the sequence of events with clarity. It’s grief speaking, not truth.
Meanwhile, Jasmine is formally charged with murder.
The words echo like gunfire in the courtroom.
Oscar’s Betrayal
Complicating matters further is Oscar — caught in the emotional crossfire.
Jasmine begs him to retrieve her phone. She claims he knows her password. She says it contains everything they need.
But Oscar is tired of being manipulated.
“You lied,” he accuses.
There’s history there — broken trust, blurred loyalties. Jasmine once locked him in a burning room, a betrayal that still simmers beneath the surface. Now she wants his help again.
Is this another lie?
Or is this the one time she’s telling the truth?
Oscar’s hesitation adds another layer of tension. If he finds the phone, he could save her. If he doesn’t, she may spend the rest of her life behind bars.
Zoe’s Haunting Silence
At the center of it all is Zoe — the alleged victim Anthony was attacking when Jasmine intervened.
“She saved my life,” Zoe whispers.
But trauma clouds memory. Fear distorts timelines. Zoe’s testimony could determine everything, yet she struggles to articulate what she saw. Was Anthony truly about to kill her? Or did the situation spiral out of control in a moment of panic?
In Walford, perception is everything.
And perception is shifting.
A Sinister Possibility
The missing phone raises darker questions.
Was it stolen?
Destroyed?
Or hidden deliberately?
Someone at The Queen Vic may know more than they’re saying. The pub has always been a stage for secrets, and if that device disappeared there, it likely didn’t vanish by accident.
If the video exists, it could exonerate Jasmine entirely — proving self-defense and exposing Anthony’s final moments as the violent culmination of years of turmoil.
But if it doesn’t…
Then Jasmine’s confession could be something else entirely.
A sacrifice.
The Ripple Effect Across Walford
Anthony Truman’s death has reignited old wounds across Albert Square. Neighbors whisper. Alliances shift. Families choose sides.
Some believe Jasmine is guilty — a volatile young woman pushed too far. Others see a frightened daughter protecting her mother from a lifetime of abuse.
Chrissy’s determination to take the fall underscores the depth of maternal love — but also the dangerous cycle of protection that has defined this family for years.
In Walford, loyalty often comes at a price.
And this time, the cost could be freedom.
What Happens Next?
As Jasmine awaits her day in court, the search for the phone intensifies. Every corner of The Vic is scrutinized. Every bystander becomes a suspect.
If the footage surfaces, it could blow the case wide open.

If it doesn’t, Jasmine’s fate may be sealed.
Meanwhile, Chrissy refuses to walk free while her daughter remains in chains. Her resolve hints at another twist yet to come — perhaps a revelation no one sees coming.
Because on EastEnders, truth rarely reveals itself quietly.
It explodes.
A Final Question
Was Jasmine a killer?
Or a hero in the worst possible moment?
With one missing phone and a family unraveling at the seams, Walford braces for a courtroom showdown that will redefine everything.
And if the truth is still out there — hidden in pixels and memory — the question remains:
Who really wanted that video to disappear?