Crime scene: Deadly meeting

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Episode of the series Tatort
Original title Deadly meeting
Country of production Germany
original language German
Production
company
SDR
length 86 minutes
classification Episode 210 ( List )
First broadcast September 4th, 1988 on ARD
Rod
Director Bruno Voges
script Peter Scheibler
production Hartmut Grund
music Paul Vincent Gunia
camera Wolfgang Peter Hassenstein ,
Michael Haertel
cut Stefan Arnsten ,
Cornelia Berger
occupation

Tödlicher Treff is the 210th episode of the Tatort television series . By the South German Radio result produced for the first time on September 4, 1988 at the First Channel of ARD broadcast. For chief detective Hans Schreitle ( Horst Michael Neutze ) it is the third and last case as a chief investigator. It's about the murder of the computer specialist at a large company and another murder of a member of the management team.

action

Georg Tüsing, the computer specialist for a company in Stuttgart, catches a burglar in the company that he recognizes and who then shoots him. The body is found the next morning by his colleague Johanna Laufenberg. Schreitle begins the investigation; the company's managing director, Bruno Decentz, whose data had been spied on by the perpetrator during the break-in, Laufenberg provides him with as a contact person during his investigations in the company. Laufenberg and the head of sales Zoller, with whom she has a secret relationship, explain to Schreitle that Tüsing kept the personnel file and had the task of determining who was working effectively or ineffectively in the company. In addition, he had all employee data in his PC. Schreitle and his assistants go to Tüsing's private apartment, Tüsing was widowed, he does not seem to have had a significant private life, but the officers find a true-to-original copy of his office in his apartment, and all the data about the company's employees are on the computer at home stored on his company PC. Schreitle and his assistant Karin Beisel find out that Tüsing has also collected and archived private information about his colleagues at home, only the dossiers on Decentz and Zoller are downright harmless. Schreitle seeks out Decentz, who is clueless about the dossiers, but Schreitle is convinced that he instructed Tüsing to create them.

Zoller and Laufenberg leave the company together, watched suspiciously by their colleague Walter Salbach. Schreitle and Beisel meanwhile find out that Tüsing had created an extremely negative dossier about Laufenberg and there referred to the relationship with Zoller, there is nothing to be found in Zoller's dossier, the officials conclude that the dossier must have been manipulated by Zoller. Laufenberg admits to Schreitle that he had a relationship with Zoller, and shortly afterwards Schreitle and Zoller were surprised by the news that Zoller had been appointed to the management team. On the other hand, in a personal conversation, Decentz suggests to Laufenberg to look around for another company, since it does not have the promotion opportunities in his company like Zoller, but is capable of doing so, Laufenberg reacts disappointed. When Laufenberg wants to confront Zoller, whom she suspects behind the decision, he breaks up with her, Schreitle observes the scene. Opposite Schreitle, Laufenberg is buttoned up about the incident and Zoller in general, but she gives him the advice that he should look at certain bookings from the company that are documented in Tüsing's computer. Zoller, who is shadowed by Schreitle's colleagues, strolls through the city with his new lover, his secretary Evelyn Trost, and Laufenberg is also watching the couple. Meanwhile, Schreitle and Beisel find out that the company has documented dummy bookings that deviate from the real bookings.

Johanna Laufenberg, who was disappointed by Zoller, received an anonymous letter at the company with the request to come to a meeting point at night if she wanted to find out more about Zoller. She showed the letter to Walter Salbach, who insisted on coming along. Schreitle and Beisel go to see him and confront him with the fact that he has enriched himself by DM 2 million at the expense of his company through the bogus bookings, but Clentz denies the murder of Tüsing, although Schreitle is convinced that Tüsing blackmailed him. In the evening Laufenberg and Salbach drive separately to the meeting point with the ominous informant, but both wait in vain, the next morning Zoller is found shot there in his car. Zoller's widow Marga testifies that her husband went out again in the evening, she assumed that her husband went to another woman because she knew he was cheating on her. Declaration informs Schreitle that the group management has acquitted him of all allegations and wants to transfer him to a branch in Costa Rica. Schreitle confronts him with the fact that Zoller and not Tüsing blackmailed him with the manipulations, while Schreitle gives Schreitle a hint that Johanna Laufenberg had a motive due to the fact that she was exploited and dumped by Zoller. Laufenberg visits Schreitle shortly afterwards and informs him of the anonymous letter and the meeting; she asserts that she has not met anyone and is innocent. She also tells Schreitle that she let Salbach know. Salbach says that he observed Laufenberg at the meeting point for her own safety, and that he also protests his innocence. Salbach admits that he hated Zoller, he is in love with Johanna Laufenberg and couldn't bear the way he took advantage of her. While Salbach and Johanna meet in the evening and get closer, Schreitle learns that Tüsing and Zoller were shot with the same gun that belonged to Zoller.

The next morning Salbach visits Schreitle and makes a confession regarding the murder of Zoller. Meanwhile, Beisel informs Schreitle that the silencer that was used in Thüsing's murder was found in Zoller's house. Schreitle and Beisel go to Johanna Laufenberg and tell her that Zoller is Tüsings' murderer. She reacts surprised, also about the fact that Salbach has made a confession regarding the murder of Zoller. The officers call in to Salbach, who repeats his confession, but Schreitle confronts him and Johanna with the letter that Johanna had sent to Zoller, she guided him to the meeting point an hour earlier to kill him, the officers found the letter in Zoller's house . Johanna confesses to Zoller's murder and is arrested by Schreitle.

background

The episode was filmed in Stuttgart and Munich between August 3 and September 4, 1987.

criticism

The critics of the TV magazine TV Spielfilm judge this crime scene only mediocre and comment: "Not too constructed and completely human".

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Tatort: ​​Deadly meeting dates for the 210th crime scene at tatort-fundus.de
  2. ^ Tatort: Tödlicher Treff short review on tvspielfilm.de, accessed on January 3, 2016.