Night Squad

Season 6

6 episodes · Sep 12, 2008

0/6 watched

Swipe a row to mark watched · long-press to mark up to there

  • S6E1

    Like sisters

    Sep 12, 200852m

    A little girl disappears just as a supermarket is closing. A first suspect is arrested. But the security cameras show that she had disappeared somewhere in the bakery area. The new suspect is now Ludovic, a 15 year-old bakery apprentice...

    Reviews
  • S6E2

    The man who doesn't exist

    Sep 12, 200852m

    An ordinary accountant is violently assaulted by two men. A stranger comes to his rescue and provides first aid, but runs away as the police arrive. The Good Samaritan is Omar, an African doctor, a refugee in France illegally. But his statement could bring down Bati Morelli, a major gangster.

    Reviews
  • S6E3

    Problem area

    Sep 19, 200852m

    A woman waits for the lift, the doors open and she enters without looking, falling five stories down the lift shaft. The last straw for the residents, tired their ever-deteriorating environment, who demand that those responsible are found. Beneath the machinery cables, the investigators find a hoard of drugs.

    Reviews
  • S6E4

    Dangerous liaisons

    Sep 19, 200852m

    Whilst doing their regular beat, the police officers come across a man of Asian origin, who panics when he sees them. As he flees, he throws away a box containing a woman's finger, recently amputated.

    Reviews
  • S6E5

    Nightmares

    Sep 26, 200852m

    The police are called to the scene of a serious traffic accident. Various items found in the vehicle enable them to make a connection with the murder of a young girl for which a down-and-out had been charged and found guilty.

    Reviews
  • S6E6

    Body and soul

    Sep 26, 200852m

    The body of a woman has been placed on a bench in the Bois de Vincennes. The corpse is dressed in luxury clothing but it rapidly becomes obvious that she was naked when killed. She is soon identified as being Marie Guibert, wife of a renowned cardiologist.

    Reviews