The two-part documentary Crime in Post-War Germany shows how strained life was between 1945 and 1949 in the four occupied zones. Using the example of individual, particularly serious criminal cases, like in Dresden where a wood collector comes across the severed legs of a person or in Hamburg, where the so-called rubble murders terrify the whole city.
Silvana Durán, who swore to capture the culprit of his father's death, arrives at the prosecution and discovers that his father was an intermediary of Francisco Miranda, leader of the most important cartel in Mexico.
Tracking the efforts of father-son activists to put an end to dolphin slaughtering in Japan and the Solomon Islands. The series is a follow-up to the 2009 Academy Award-winning documentary, "The Cove."