Media: Police call 110: for Janina



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The police should actually be the guardian of the rule of law. The crew of Rostock's "Polizeiruf 110", who likes to stay away from the window, demonstrates that this is not always the case – at least on television -.

A murderer walks freely in Rostock. Thirty years ago, he raped and killed the young woman Janina. Even then, a man was suspected, but was acquitted.

But now, new evidence appears that can convict him as guilty. But those who have been acquitted can only be prosecuted in exceptional cases, in accordance with the Code of Criminal Procedure.

In the "Police Appeal 110: For Janina", sometimes very emotional, Police Commissioner Alexander Bukow (Charly Hübner) and LKA profiler Katrin König (Anneke Kim Sarnau), as well as their investigative team, must witness the man's supervision in his little family, his wife and his children. and is unbadailable to them. Of course, they do not do it: "We must establish justice here," says König – as it should be this Sunday (8:15 pm) to launch the theme week ARD "Justice".

He develops an exciting and unusual case for the conditions of Rostock. Because the Hanseatic city is painted in sinister colors because most of the northeastern regions are not devoted to neo-Nazis or their environment. No, the city lives and is colorful. The many grunts of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania that Rostock almost does not occur in "Polizeiruf 110" – it was shot mainly in Hamburg – and if, then gray-in-gray, seems to have reached the writers Eoin Moore and Anika Wangard .

They would have managed to make a very good thriller, which offers the necessary drama and a well-lit author environment. Who builds a tension and does not lose the red thread. Even though the endless story of love-hate of "Mrs. King" and "Mr. Bukow" continues to turn, she even beat in her 18th trial and continues to be strictly "up to you ".

The fact that the commissioners "at the scene of the crime" or "at 110 call the police" do not take things so seriously with the constitutional methods lies in the striking contrast between the actual work of the police and the need to provide to an audience too saturated with exciting news week after week. The commissioners of Rostock TV have always been far ahead of the law.

This time, it's very difficult: try to lure a DNA sample with artifices and lies, find evidence by burglary or blackmail the suspect with internal information. Also beaten and samples are falsified – police work at the beginning of the "Week of Justice".

The film happens in areas where the rule of law is shaken. Even in the police department. "The rule of law is shit.The guy is allowed to roam freely now and this shit law also protects him," said investigator Anton Pöschel (Andreas Guenther). "Congratulations, Germany!", Adds Pöschel and quickly transmits the address of the suspect to the desperate mother of the murderer.

In such a legal opinion of the commissioners, it is not surprising that Bukov closes his ears when he learns that a warehouse is full of plagiarism – after all, his father is there. The agreement with criminals is also part of the scheme of television commissioners, who do not have to worry about laws. "It's so pathetic," King says.

She had almost been raped in a previous episode and had been defended and avenged. She is now found guilty of dangerous badault in the office at nearly 10,000 euros. Bukow must pay at the same time because of an attempt to bypbad 8400 euros.

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