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Episode 1

Episode 1

Episode number: 1
Episode 2

Episode 2

Episode number: 2
Episode 3

Episode 3

Episode number: 3
Episode 4

Episode 4

Episode number: 4
Broken blossoms

Broken blossoms

Episode number: 5

Overview: A dead man lies in a Duisburg bus - apparently the accidental victim of a stabbing. The murdered man was the owner of a dance studio that he ran together with his wife, Manuela Prinz. The investigation reveals that the perpetrator is a Thai. But when the detectives track him down, they find another body. Everything indicates that the Thai committed suicide. Schimanski suspects that the aloof Manuela is not telling him everything she knows. But suddenly it is she who asks him for help: her husband's "business friends" have contacted her and threatened her life if she is not willing to secure further "deliveries".

Episode 6

Episode 6

Episode number: 6
Episode 7

Episode 7

Episode number: 7
Episode 8

Episode 8

Episode number: 8
Solitary confinement

Solitary confinement

Episode number: 9

Overview: Thanner is annoyed: While he has to do the dirty work for the police - he has to identify the body of a prostitute - Schimanski is reopening a case that he, Thanner, closed long ago. And Thanner knows why: Ilona Vogtländer, daughter of Rolf Vogtländer, who is accused of murdering his wife Eva, is far too beautiful for Schimanski to resist.

Episode 10

Episode 10

Episode number: 10
Episode 11

Episode 11

Episode number: 11
Episode 12

Episode 12

Episode number: 12
Episode 13

Episode 13

Episode number: 13
Schimanski - Moltke

Schimanski - Moltke

Episode number: 14

Overview: Schimanski and Thanner are confronted with a case that happened a long time ago and that they were unable to solve: in 1978, one of the perpetrators was seriously injured during a bank robbery and was then executed in the bank by the leader of the gang. The perpetrators managed to escape - except for the Pole Zbiginiew Pawlak, who waited next to his dead brother until the police arrived. During the subsequent investigation, Pawlak was unable to say a word. The press then nicknamed him "Moltke", which he kept even during his prison sentence because he remained stubbornly silent.