Batic - 61 - Der traurige König

What's a toothache when your superior Brandner unexpectedly sends a young colleague to your side – for training purposes. The Munich chief inspectors Franz Leitmayr and Ivo Batic are polite and not at all uninterested. The young colleague is gaining more and more plus points.
On a routine business trip, the three find themselves in a precarious situation. In a burning car in front of a farm, they can see the outline of a person before the car explodes. In the window of the adjacent farm they see the silhouette of a man.
Leitmayr wants to ask the man. Shots are fired. Leitmayr scores three times. Siggi Aumeister collapses and falls into a coma.
The internal investigations immediately begin to take effect. Franz Leitmayr has to give up his gun to secure evidence. His office is searched - routinely for alcohol and drugs. According to the regulations, the police officer Leitmayr is offered a leave of absence after "firearm experiences". He must testify before a commission of inquiry. Investigator Maus acts particularly sustainably in this context. Why didn't Leitmayr recognize that his opponent's weapon was a "replica"? A psychological consultation is pending: therapist Sophie Wiesmann refuses to prescribe sleeping pills for the patient Leitmayr.And Batic of all people testified to the investigative commission that Leitmayr took painkillers on the day of the crime. Why is Batic stabbing his longtime colleague Leitmayr in the back?
But it is far worse to face the parents of the badly injured Siggi. Schorsch and Elisabeth Aumeister run a long-established hardware and household goods store in the immediate vicinity of Leitmayr. Mother Elisabeth and father Schorsch know Franz Leitmayr as a customer. They have no idea that he of all people fired the shots at their beloved son.
There are vending machine pictures in which Siggi Aumeister happily poses with a woman. But nobody in the family wants to know Adriana Kaminski. The older son Markus no longer lives in the parental home. As the deputy branch manager of a hardware store, he leads an independent life. But the facade is crumbling. There was a robbery at the hardware store in which brother Siggi was allegedly involved.
What secret is the family hiding? When Siggi dies in the hospital, the signs for Chief Inspector Leitmayr within his department are upset. And not only there.
Mother Elisabeth is torn between her love for her husband Schorsch, who has innocently got into debt, and her two sons. And she knows exactly: if the shop dies, Schorsch dies too.
Trailer
Recently Updated Shows

24 Hours in A&E
Cameras film around the clock in some of Britain's busiest A&E departments, where stories of life, love and loss unfold every day

On the Case with Paula Zahn
Led by Emmy Award-winning journalist Paula Zahn, On the Case features in-depth interviews and original reporting that go beyond the headlines in search of fascinating mysteries from within our nation's justice system. Each episode is highlighted by Zahn's riveting exclusive interviews, which draw out different viewpoints from the people personally connected to tragedies that rocked their local community and the investigations that attempted to piece together the truth On the Case with Paula Zahn.

Invasion
Earth is visited by an alien species that threatens humanity's existence. Events unfold in real time through the eyes of five ordinary people across the globe as they struggle to make sense of the chaos unraveling around them.

Peacemaker
This James Gunn-created series continues the saga of Peacemaker, a vainglorious superhero/supervillain who believes in peace at any cost — no matter how many people he has to kill. After a miraculous recovery from his duel with Bloodsport, Peacemaker soon discovers that his freedom comes at a price.

48 Hours
48 Hours is a CBS news magazine that investigates intriguing crime and justice cases that touch on all aspects of the human experience. Over its long run, the show has helped exonerate wrongly convicted people, driven the reopening -- and resolution -- of cold cases, and changed numerous lives. CBS News correspondents offer an in-depth look into each story, with the emphasis on solving the mystery at its heart. The program and its team have earned critical acclaim, including 20 Emmys and three Peabody Awards.