Die größten Fehler in jedem Tatort | WALULIS

#Walulis #Walulyse #Tatort Even after more than thirty years, Tatort remains the baby of German television. Every Sunday, it gathers around nine million viewers in front of the television – on average! But where there's light, there's also shadow, because Tatort is full of mistakes. Find out where these lurk and which mistake is the most blatant here! → We're part of funk! More can be found at: ►YouTube:    / funkofficial   ►funk Web App: https://go.funk.net ►Facebook:   / funk   ►Imprint: https://go.funk.net/impressum → More from WALULIS: ►WALULIS DAILY: https://walul.is/daily ►WALULIS // Instagram: https://walul.is/instagram ►WALULIS // Facebook: https://walul.is/facebook ►WALULIS // Twitter: https://walul.is/twitter ►Why Hitler is to blame for Tatort: ​​   • Hitler ist Schuld am Saarland Tatort | WAL...   Whether it's the realistic Leitmayr and Batic from Munich, the funny Thiel and Boerne from Münster, or the partially mentally ill Dortmund trio Faber, Bönisch, and Dalay, Tatort offers a team of investigators for every taste. This is just as much a part of the recipe for success as the current topics it addresses. A crime scene is often a piece of contemporary history and a reflection of society. At least it tries to be. Nevertheless, the writers, directors, and producers of a crime scene regularly make serious mistakes. Not in a cinematic or technical sense, but from a realistic and legal perspective. That's why we asked ourselves: How realistic is the crime scene really, and what mistakes regularly occur in a crime scene? For this purpose, we enlisted the help of specialist lawyer Dr. Alexander Stevens. He is well-known as a criminal defense attorney for Judge Alexander Hold and has appeared as a legal expert on Kabel 1 and Galileo. Together with him, we analyze the errors in a crime scene. More specifically, we examine the individual steps of a case: securing evidence at the crime scene, arresting the suspects, and interrogating them. What is misrepresented in the crime scene, and how does it actually unfold? Would the evidence collected by the crime scene investigators even be admissible in court? Do two to three investigators always have to do everything from observation, interrogation, and arrest alone, or do several specialists share these tasks? And do real detectives really live in deluxe luxury apartments and drive fancy American cars? And if none of this were true, would that be a problem? Can we demand realism from the crime scene, or wouldn't that be incredibly boring?