Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Mafia-trash meets Kölsch Cliques
Cologne - To-date was a "crime scene" before: mafia methods and Dumping of waste incineration Italian determine the action of thrillers on Sunday (ARD, 20.15 clock) - and especially in the real Cologne.
In the "crime scene" is only a charred and mutilated body added to the site of a waste management company in Cologne.
The Commissioners Max Ballauf (Klaus J. Behrendt) and Freddy Schenk (Dietmar Bär) are not making progress: the woman's body which was found on a rubbish dump, is mutilated and burned beyond recognition.
Quickly comes to the whole story, the garbage mafia into the game - and to Cologne: "The incinerator is much too large," says Ballauf in the "crime scene out." Random: In real life, has accurately determined that the administrative court in Cologne three weeks.
In the film, buys a large company in the waste and collected from. The garbage is mafia smaller recycling companies under pressure. And in Cologne from Sicily garbage is burned at dumping prices - what EXPRESS titled "discount for Mafia rubbish" (although it went to garbage from Naples) on 15 April reported.
"The film is ready for a year and tells a fictitious story," says producer Sonia Goslicki. "The Current, we might not: the reality has caught up with us. Glad to say. "
Names are not named in the crime - but who the Cologne waste scandal from 2002 to slush funds, corrupt politicians and fake donation receipts didn't remember knows who and what is meant. Ballauf and Schenk solved - of course - the case. EXPRESS tells - of course - nothing.