tv Close up Deutsche Welle April 28, 2020 6:30pm-7:00pm CEST
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conquest turned into tragedy is not the kind of freedom that we want. how did moeen become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. filming in the sights of fire starts may 20th on g.w. . this investigator is using virtual reality technology to digitally revisit the scene of america. law enforcement across europe are working with the latest tech to track down criminals and even prevent crimes before they happen. but. he was caught he was trapped. i mean you wish this. investigation to all.
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new tech and techniques are transforming law enforcement. there's been a murder and rough break and florencia bear from the varian state police have been called to secure evidence usually this work will be done by a police forensics team breaker and bear work for another special unit. the crime scene has been recreated an actor is lying in the kitchen in the same position and location as the victim was found in the resigns of a struggle and of alcohol consumption. breaker and she will begin gathering
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evidence but they won't be using cameras and measuring instruments. so let's use the structure of light 3 d. scanner this looks a bit like a shoe print as we've reported. this scanner captures the injuries to the victim's head in an accurate and true to scale straight day image the equipment costs 80000 euros and it can record every single visual detail of a crime scene. before it's even your own 10 years ago crime scenes were only photographed it now we also use the laser scanner for serious felonies of the advantage is that the recorded image is 3 d. giving us an exact digital replica of the real life crime scene. this is such a replica of another crime scene the detail 3 d. scan is stored in an archive so the police can review it at any time.
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break and his team record about 60 crime scenes a year mostly felony crimes. the offices need for scans to capture this room the process takes only 12 minutes. discovered a kind of it's this scanner can't see through that table. for she may so i have to move it to get a complete an image of the room as possible just looking also to. breakers team also take $360.00 degree panoramas of the room the scanners recalled in black and white and the photos will be used to add color to the scan later. the last step involves a full structured like 3 d. scan which is accurate to $100.00 micro mages the 3 d. laser scan by comparison is accurate to within one millimeter meaning that using
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the structured light scanner to record the victim's wounds gives the investigators an image which is more than 10 times more precise. so often see the victim suffered a massive blow to the head and from the look of the stripes here this imprint was caused by a shoe sole for most of what we're hoping is that we'll be able to compare the marks on his head with the suspects shoes up like. determining whether an imprint was caused by a specific shoe is hard to do with 2 d. photographs because these can distort images 3 d. images are different. and this scan shows that the imprint was left by it shoeless eyelets an important fact that could prove useful when identifying a suspect the fact that it is now possible to digitally record an archive entire crime scenes is changing the fight against crime but. that's perfect if it's becoming increasingly difficult to commit the perfect crime. we have new and better
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equipped more precise devices like these 3 d. scanners which allow us to capture store and evaluate more evidence than we ever could in the past. high tech devices aren't only being used to investigate murders. kilda bryant is a police officer in the city of new girl. he and his team are on the burglary bait burglars a particularly active cheering long winter nights but the offices in broke have a new tool. i had to recount welcome to the night shift we've had some break ins over the past few days particularly in the neighborhood of calcutta and around so you can bring. all. the team uses a software program which analyzes burglary statistics and predicts which
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neighborhoods are most at risk for tonight it has flagged one area in particular. and this does not hold a car that is a car stuff yet it was one of a stretch between house numbers 140 to 150 being with us so that's where we'll focus our patrols tight on that live look out for any vehicles from the region of all of the criminal groups from there have been working in and around the city and long as awful. hildebrand and office over there got tough head out on patrol in the past they had to rely exclusively on their instinct and experience to catch burglars now they're putting their trust in the predictive software to tell them which areas are most at risk and to help the officers prevent break ins. this is i fear for this neighborhood has a large number of single family houses either but they're at higher risk especially in winter when it gets dark earlier because perpetrators can tell whether someone
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is home from the lights out on a plus burglars expect to find more valuables in single family homes was over there to. serial burglars will often return to a given area again within 72 hours to hit a 2nd property also because they know the night. board the software capitalizes on this tendency. alexander gloop of the lower saxony state police helped develop the computer program it's called pre-match and it helps identify whether a particular break in was committed by serial burglars and thus whether they are likely to strike again nearby. kid or titans we've got the burglars in this case is focused on stealing jewelry which is easy to carry and easy to sell it it's much harder to go unnoticed when you're carrying electronic gear on the british class north of. the yellow areas on this map indicate neighborhoods that are particularly at risk the break ins the software identifying the areas means police can
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geographically focus their prevention efforts. but will the calculated projections prove correct the officers will soon find out. meanwhile the investigators in munich have assembled there 3 days scan. break and his team found bloody footprints in the kitchen with the help of the chemical luminal luminal reacts with iron found in blood coursing a short lived blue glow. if i can see here that will work well for a 3 d. comparison could be for very short of. breath breakers college degree is in
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geographic information science but he's been working for the bavarian state police for 10 years at 1st he did his job alone now he leads the department's team for photo technology and trade in crime scene imaging. he often deals with cases like this double. luminal treatment has turned trace elements of blood that wouldn't be visible to the naked eye blue 3 d. imaging is expanding the possibilities of what can be learned from these traces. often reveal shoe prints for example before these prints couldn't be examined but now we can incorporate them into the 3 d. scan and then if we could give an issue that might have been involved we can compare it with aluminum friends. you couldn't do that before the mission accomplished. and since the 3 d. image of the crime scene is preserved in an archive offices can go back to a long after the real one has been contaminated using virtual reality technology.
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several investigators can be within the same virtual crime scene at once the officers can communicate with each other and even move around including the victim's body. can you measure the distance from the table leg. to his head. 7 centimeters. ok he couldn't have been kicked like that. could you move the body a little closer to the table. exactly so that i can see it better. well that works the boy who can fish but we'd like different types of experts to be able to use our virtual crime scenes in the future besides the medical examiner could carry out tests on blood stained patterns and ballistics could use our virtual last june in on some version lead to a from. the 3 d.
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model can also be used to determine whether a crime witness is telling the truth in this case a witness testified that they had seen their neighbor. going to him for the prosecutor's office was trying to determine the precise field of vision and that's easy for our team to do to use or we simply combine the view from the 2 windows and could thus tell exactly which area was within sight of. the 3 d. imaging can therefore help prove or disprove a statement provided by a witness. authorities in switzerland a using a different kind of 3 d. technology to help them with their investigations. experts at the institute of forensic medicine at the university of zurich preparing
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to conduct an autopsy on the body of a shooting victim. there will be no surgery in the traditional sense this is going to be a virtual autopsy. forensic specialist dr michelle tali uses computed tomography scans all c.t. scans to help determine what happened in syria every cadaver link to a police investigation is scanned and in this case police a puzzled. we get this i suspect says he thinks the victim pulled a gun 1st and then he pulled a gun but that seems at odds with the location of the entry won't say which is at the back of the victim's had not the front so we're trying to find out what really happened to. this. the procedure is called of a topsy a virtual autopsy a c.t. scan shows a body's bones blood vessels and soft tissues it combines a series of x. rays taken from different angles into the cross-sectional images will slices each
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slice is no sicker than a page dr tally finds the bullet in just a few seconds don't seem to hear form if you can see the nose here in front again you'd hear the eyes are up here and this is the brain isn't it i ski and if we move upward a little we see that this area of the brain shows evidence of bleeding and that's where the bullet is a year in d.c. and. the result is clear. gave the scum of the evidence shows that the victim was shot from behind and not in the front as the suspect claimed he had done after the victim drew his gun so the suspect statement was incorrect people fall short of the storage. in a normal autopsy the brain is removed from the skull before it's examined this makes it hard to determine the exact angle and location of a bullet. mixed a robot makes a 3 d.
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skin of the body to capture all the surface injuries. the robot can also extract tissue. samples there will also be an m.r.i. in an effort to document everything the body can tell examiners when the sign fall east will be in cases where 3 d. scans could prove useful we run the whole program here and zurich's we actually have the 3 day centers where police and forensic experts were closely together to solve the. 3 d. tech is helping swiss investigators check the angle of the bullet impact victim testimonies and marks found on a victim's body. dr talley co-founded the vertamae c. program in the late 1990 s. today the 3 d. scans are not only used to clear up crimes but accidents too like this victim who died while mountain climbing globe obviously this technology has become standard at a number of major institutions around the world this arbitrage of
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a global recognition our project is getting the sensors r t global so these are all mccain on this one the in germany nearly 400 cases of murder were reported in 2018. police managed to solve almost all of them. the clearance rate for residential burglaries is much lower in 201-711-7000 break ins were reported in germany police only made arrests in 18 percent of cases in the us now brooke police are hoping to stop burglaries before they even happen with the help of the predictive software prematch. you have to approve of all of the software shows an increase in activity in the car neighborhood so why head over there and have a look around at home or hold. offices really catch burglars red handed but an
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increased police presence in high risk areas could make the list think. it's about breaking into someone's home. the arctic is on us all for that we pay close attention to suspicious vehicles particularly those that are out of town license plates and we keep an eye out for suspicious individuals on the street bypassing. some criticized that innocent people can also be caught up in these preventive patrols that's one of the drawbacks of using the pre-match software. after sunset officers hildebrand and grasshopper spot a vehicle that fits their profile. pic of fields falls on it's got out of town plates was overseas and it seems there's a driver and one passenger let's have a closer look. better than that. was the pre-match prediction right now it's
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time for face to face police work. now and i would like their driver's license and vehicle registration clearance so shine . a check of recalls comes back negative for previous arrests and other problems. the officers look into the car's trunk. no stolen property here. in the. loading starting the they had an angle grinder and some other stuff so they were probably doing construction around here either legally or illegally legal or illegal by. the rest of the shift is quiet perhaps the officers did manage to scare off some burglars just by patrolling the streets. there are
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about 300000 police officers in germany. and some of them have highly developed facial recognition scales. josh davis has developed a series of tests that can identify so-called super recognizers davis is one of britain's leading experts on through encik facial identification and he's been working with police departments to help them identify offices who may have these special skills. less than one percent of the population have super recognition ability it is very rare and which is why it's so important for policing and other security organizations. london police put together a team of the specialists in 2015 it's still not clear exactly how these people can remember all those faces it is possible but somehow the neurological processes of
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super recognizers a some help different from us the rest of us in the world although davis is not a super recognizing himself he has a pretty good idea of how the process might work. so what we think that super recognizers may be able to do better than other people is to somehow. showing the view in their minds they can rotate faces in their mind so when they're watching c.c.t.v. footage where for instance you might see someone walking sideways across the screen in their mind perhaps they mentally rotating that face in order to be able to match them. in london the super recognizes have already helped solve thousands of crime cases. recently davis assisted munich police in finding officers within its departments who have this capability. i am sure every police force in germany
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or anywhere else in the world has at least one super recognizer they just don't know they've got them yet they will solve crimes. one of munich places 37 super recognizes is this chief inspector we have been asked not to use her name she never forgets a face even if that face is only partially visible she demonstrates her skills in this test the goal is to find this man. so he's wearing a hat so some of his head is covered. good because that makes identification more difficult but it's definitely him says and it's like a feeling and if i'm uncertain i look at the person's facial expression 5 particularly the ice. that's pretty unique. super recognizers can also identify suspects from pixilated surveillance footage. unique
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police have yet to decide how to best employ their new found talented officers. thomas is in charge of the project he sees many possibilities. and how did you find him yes right here ok. you're currently in the crew in our recognizers could help in criminal investigations whenever pictures or videos are available whether the suspect has been identified by name or not and we have often become. the unique police have already used this super recognizes during the october fest to track down pickpockets and they're also keeping an eye on crowds at football matches and christmas markets. this super recognise i can even remember faces she only saw once briefly 10 years ago. there is another technique being used
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by police to solve crime one which some people oppose. detective renren t.m.r. helps solve a high profile murder case in the netherlands. this is column a quiet village in northern holland where on the 1st of may 999 a 16 year old girl was raped and murdered in a nearby meadow her name was mary and a fact struck. the case would change policing in the netherlands forever like how it would also be. the turning point in the career of detective are in gemma is an arc of their own home. money other was found in a meadow new about thing closer small little village mariana. was raped and murdered her throat was slit and it was a brutal scene to look up on. police found d.n.a.
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evidence at the scene but it didn't match any of the profiles in their database. in 1990 police were only allowed to use d.n.a. to determine sex and compare the sample to their database but although there hadn't been a match many local residents felt they knew who the killer was right by the meadow where mariana was found stood a center for asylum seekers. a lot of people from that area pointed their fingers at that asylum seeker center show that was a factor in this case faced with mounting public tensions the prosecutor ordered the 1st ethnicity test to be run on a d.n.a. sample in a crime case. d.n.a. told us actually that it was much much more likely that the perpetrator came from western europe as an origin then from the asylum seekers have. the unexpected
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d.n.a. result helped clear the asylum seekers suspect in this case but critics have expressed concerns it could lead to discrimination run takes a different view. you can prioritize based upon information through the d.n.a. that you are probably going to find in the top 100 of those 10000. it wasn't until 2012 that marianas killer was finally identified and again it was d.n.a. testing that. helped crack the case. basic research conducted by professor manfred kaiser had helped develop a new form of d.n.a. research known as genealogical testing case that is head of the department of forensic molecular biology at the university of russia. in marianas case why chromosome d.n.a.
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tests were carried out in september 2012 in an effort to find any male relations to the killer. their money in this kind of d.n.a. profile analysis all you need is a sample from one male relative however far removed and that will give you the trail to track down your are known perpetrator. of. men living within a 5 kilometer radius of the meadow where mariana was found were asked for a d.n.a. sample around $8000.00 submitted their d.n.a. voluntarily but then something unexpected happened. i got a phone call was the 14th of november by the end of i they told me we have a match and that is something that you cannot describe. the killer was a local farmer who had voluntarily submitted his d.n.a. he had hoped the test wouldn't work. if he did not would have given his d.n.a.
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we would have found him anyway he was caught he was trapped. by the us this investigation to. critics we won that d.n.a. tests are not always 100 percent reliable our physical appearance for instance can vary from what it says in our d.n.a. and so false predictions can be made in the netherlands strictly legal rules determine when d.n.a. tests could be used. in the move the shoe sole a little higher your mic. we return to the virtual murder investigation in munich. ringback does the shoot match the imprint left on the victim's head. go ahead and push it right into the skin.
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on our own or we should take some exact measurements later. thank you michael but i think we've got a good match the past. 3 days scans allow investigators to return to the crime scene at any time every detail is recorded right down to the contents of the washing machine. this was a listen but i will scan everything because a detail that we didn't notice at 1st or which seemed in significant may become important later on in the investigation from course that was described as. the victim's body can also be re-examined at any time thanks to this 3 d. print which can be kept long after the actual could by has begun deteriorating or been buried. routh break up will now rush to report on whether the shoe sole fits the imprint on the victim's head he says it's rewarding for him to be able to help
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solve a crime. mangano to do so that feeling of being able to help find the truth and clear up a case with our work that makes me really appreciate my job nicholson motorboats whom. of course this wasn't a real homicide it was just a training exercise but 3 d. technology has helped many police to clear several murder cases. new technology has brought about a revolution in law enforcement and the perfect crime may soon become a thing of the past.
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