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- Ruja Ignatova founded OneCoin crypto, hyped riches but disappeared in 2017 before FBI/Interpol pursuit. Despite scam exposure, cult-like following remains after being misled by get-rich vows. Funds missing, Ignatova's whereabouts unknown.
- TV SeriesIt tells the story of Alex, a young man who tries to find out the truth about the murder of his father, who was a sniper for the Bundeswehr.
- Asma al-Assad - raised in London and educated at elite schools, is a successful career woman who, as the wife of Bashar al-Assad, is a beacon of hope for Syria. The eyes of the former ambassador of the European Union in Syria, Frank Hesske, still light up today when he speaks of Asma al-Assad, the beautiful First Lady of Syria. She was "a darling" and not only comparable to Lady Diana from Great Britain because of her British origins, he enthuses: "And we diplomats," the former ambassador says surprisingly honestly today - "we let ourselves be seduced".
- The bitter struggle for the White House 'Yes we can' is over - instead, America is in a tough and dirty campaign. Election in a war-torn country Marion Schmickler and Stefan Niemann accompany people through these torn States of America - the 23 year-old twins Anna and Ida Eskamani, dedicated Obama supporters from Florida, which stand for a liberal, a progressive America and clamor 'Four more years'. And Jim Wilson, the 70-year old Vietnam veteran and 'Superfan' by Mitt Romney. His truck he drives thousands of miles back and forth across America, raises his flag wherever the candidate occurs. 'We need finally a president who stands for a strong America and not apologizing constantly,' says Wilson, why he gives Romney a year of his life. Through the lens of campaign workers experienced the audience with first hand what it means today in America to live, what it means to have lost all that it means to have no health insurance, what it means to be a citizen of a country, the less it is always possible to bridge the gap between rich and poor.
- They came from Senegal, Nigeria and Ghana, from Central Asia and North Africa. They were looking for a new and better life in Europe. Now they lie buried on a hill near the Greek-Turkish border, drowned in the border river Evros.
- Cameras hidden in lipstick, dead mailboxes, secret meetings in hidden places, fake names and fictitious vows of love - the stories of West agents of the Stasi are in no way inferior to the great spy thrillers. But who were these spies? What their motives? How were they recruited? And what explosive information did they actually reveal? A little-known chapter of German-German history that still raises many questions today.
- Who shot Rohwedder? New traces in the murder case. Detlev Karsten Rohwedder (1932-1991) was a German manager and politician who was murdered by a sniper as the president of authority for Germany's reunion in East Berlin. The left-wing terrorist Red Army Group confessed to action. After German reunification in 1990, it was confirmed that Stasi, the security and intelligence organization of East Germany, had been monitoring the RAF, and in the 1980s had provided ten ex-members shelter and new identities.
- 2020–Podcast EpisodeOn the facts page "Faktglaublich", the Science Cops discover this unbelievable case: A German doctor is said to have found a cure for Alzheimer's disease. Is it being held back by the pharmaceutical industry? In addition, the cops have to go out because of imminent danger: Is politics once again reacting too slowly to the mutated Corona variants?
- Sophia is eight years old. She looks like a girl and identifies herself as such but she was born a boy. At the age of four she decided to no longer be a boy. Now she only wears skirts and dresses, has let her hair grow out and relates to princesses from her favourite TV series. At first, her parents thought it was but a phase. However, as she constantly demonstrates aggressive and violent tendencies when called by her old name, her parents and brothers were obliged to accept her as a daughter and sister.
- At the Lower Rhine they say, that you can see on Fridays who will come to a visit on Sundays. The area between Wesel and Emmerich is that flat. Hanns Dieter Hüsch, the poet from Moers, said about it, "The Lower Rhine wants to be looked at. And then the big love begins." Her visit leads Tamina Kallert into the old Roman Town of Xanten and to the cultural metropolis of Kleve. A fisherman tells her about the secrets of the Rhine and why the river was always this region's life line.