ワールド極限ミステリー 2024年10月2日 Part 2/2

  • 2 days ago
Transcript
00:00That's a wound I got when I strangled my wife.
00:13There's a scar on her neck.
00:16It's thin and deep.
00:19It's a thin string, so she's strangled pretty hard.
00:24In fact, the culprit used a thin string to tighten his neck when he killed his wife, so he had a scar on his hand.
00:36Based on years of experience, the detective's intuition showed that the culprit had a scar on his hand.
00:44The bank clerk's husband stole $25,000 from his wife for his investment.
00:50He also embezzled money from construction companies.
00:58The bank clerk was so scared that he killed his wife to keep his mouth shut.
01:05In the detective drama, which leads to the solution by the manipulation of the incident, the reality is beyond the drama.
01:17That's why Nagumi Sasaki, a former detective from Saitama Prefecture, chose this case.
01:25The Police's God Investigation Best 3 solved the incident beyond the detective drama.
01:30The Police's God Investigation Best 3.
01:32The second place goes to...
01:35The $300,000 case of the Police's God Investigation.
01:43No matter how advanced the investigation is, the most important thing is to make money on your own.
01:50I think it's a typhoon that shows the detective's commitment to arrest the culprit.
01:57In 1986, when Japan was heading for a bubble economy, an unbelievable incident occurred.
02:04I really didn't know about this.
02:07It was a weekday morning in Yurakucho, the center of Tokyo.
02:11An incident that shocked the public that about 300 million yen was stolen from a cash transporter.
02:18The man who stood up to this incident was...
02:22a specialist in capital investigation,
02:25Uhei Tsukamoto.
02:28His colleagues at the time called him...
02:33He's a god.
02:36The God of Capital Investigation.
02:40He has a bitter past that he can't forget.
02:44At this rate, I'll be in the middle of the $300,000 case.
02:5018 years ago, the $300,000 case of the Police's God Investigation was stolen from a cash transporter.
02:57Tsukamoto was involved in the investigation, but he was unable to arrest the culprit.
03:01It was a regrettable incident.
03:05Another $300,000 case that occurred after 18 years.
03:09What was the culprit of the $300,000 incident?
03:13It was Shimono Shogo, who has more than 2.32 million followers.
03:17What was the culprit of the shocking incident?
03:21This time, he will definitely catch the culprit.
03:25He will break all records.
03:31The crime occurred in front of the Tokyo Transportation Building in front of JR Yurakucho Station.
03:39This is the current situation of the crime and the same hell.
03:45All the stores on the first floor of the building are closed.
03:49The shutters are closed at this time of the day, and the passengers are empty.
03:55The incident occurred 38 years ago at a blind spot in such a big city.
04:01I'm here.
04:02Hello.
04:06It was around 8.20 a.m. in front of the Mitsubishi Bank Yurakucho branch.
04:11A cash transporter arrived with cash and other necessities for the day's business.
04:22It was time to try to transport the cash-filled $300,000 case from the cash transporter.
04:32What's going on?
04:36A man attacked the guards with a siren spray.
04:41In the blink of an eye, the cash transporter stole the $200,000 case and the $300,000 case.
04:48He ran away in a white wagon.
04:52The time of the crime was only 3 minutes.
04:56The witness knew that the culprit was a man, but he was wearing a full-face helmet, so he couldn't see his face.
05:12He rushed to the scene of the incident with his subordinates from the police station.
05:19He was Uhei Tsukamoto, the chief of the police station.
05:27What's the damage?
05:29The cash is $300,000.
05:33What?
05:35The cash transporter stole another $300,000.
05:42Mr. Tsukamoto, look at this.
05:49The cash transporter stole another $300,000.
05:54There's no point in investigating this car.
05:57What do you mean?
06:00Why did Mr. Tsukamoto think so?
06:03It's a handbag.
06:06The culprit must have committed a crime by wearing a handbag.
06:10I can tell right away.
06:13Mr. Tsukamoto immediately noticed that the culprit was wearing a handbag when he committed a crime.
06:22He judged that the culprit's fingerprints were not attached to the cash transporter.
06:27Where did you find the fingerprints?
06:29That's great, Mr. Tsukamoto.
06:31Mr. Ogata.
06:34Thank you for your hard work.
06:36Mr. Ogata, the chief detective of the police station, was the one who called the shots.
06:41He has the nickname of the Red Demon.
06:45Mr. Ogata, who is three years older than Mr. Tsukamoto, was the senior of the police station where Mr. Tsukamoto was first assigned to.
06:51Mr. Ogata was killed in this case?
06:55That's right.
06:58Mr. Tsukamoto, did you hear about the damage?
07:02Yes.
07:04I remembered the damage.
07:06Me too.
07:08I can't forget the damage.
07:13It's a mysterious case that the two of them were involved in.
07:17It's called the biggest mystery case in Japan.
07:20The damage of 300 million yen.
07:23The culprit, who became a white-collar police officer, stopped the cash transporter, which was worth about 300 million yen.
07:31Yes.
07:32Is this a car from the Japanese Shintaku Bank?
07:34That's right.
07:35The Sugamo branch office has been bombed.
07:37What?
07:39There may be dynamite in this car as well.
07:41Let's check the outside of the car.
07:43Yes.
07:46The driver suddenly turned off the engine.
07:49He thought the dynamite would make a sound.
07:53That's when...
07:55There's dynamite over there!
07:57It's going to explode!
07:58Watch out!
07:59Run!
08:00The bankers panicked and ran away from the car with the money in their hands.
08:07Of course, the 300 million yen case was left in the trunk.
08:14The white-collar police officer got on the cash transporter and ran away.
08:22More than 170,000 people were involved in the investigation.
08:27Tsukamoto and Ogata were also involved in the investigation.
08:31The investigation was in vain.
08:33They couldn't catch the culprit.
08:35They met with an accident.
08:39This time, we'll definitely find the real culprit.
08:43We'll definitely find the culprit who stole 300 million yen.
08:50Mr. Misawa, a former reporter who covered the incident at the time, said this about the detectives.
08:57The 300 million yen case was left in the trunk for two months.
09:02It's still left in the trunk.
09:05We can't lose this time.
09:07This 300 million yen will pay off.
09:10It's a revenge for the 300 million yen case.
09:13That's why we're so excited.
09:15About 50 minutes after the incident,
09:18a white car was found in an underground parking lot about 700 meters away from the crime scene.
09:27The car was a stolen car.
09:29There were empty Juralmin cases and three helmets in the car.
09:35Michael Jackson's mask, coat, and gloves were left in the car.
09:40Twenty-something items were left in the car.
09:43It's going to be found out soon.
09:45Tsukamoto thought that the fingerprints on the car were likely to lead to the culprit.
09:54Because the culprits were wearing gloves during the crime.
09:59When they were in the car before the crime, they were likely to have taken off their gloves.
10:08Tsukamoto found 157 fingerprints on the car and the empty Juralmin cases.
10:17That's a lot.
10:19This is too much.
10:22There were 157 fingerprints.
10:25There must be the culprits' fingerprints in this.
10:29There must be the culprits' fingerprints.
10:32However, there are many fingerprints that have nothing to do with the culprits in these 157 fingerprints.
10:38It's extremely difficult to find the culprits' fingerprints by examining them one by one and excluding the ones that have nothing to do with the culprits.
10:53At this rate, it will be the end of the Fuchu 300 million yen case.
10:59Tsukamoto had a bitter experience in the Fuchu 300 million yen case.
11:05In fact, in the Fuchu 300 million yen case, a large number of foreign goods were left in the same way.
11:12There were 124 items, including counterfeits, sheets worn by motorcycles, and raincoats that were thrown away.
11:25At that time, Tsukamoto was in charge of the investigation as a supervisor.
11:32According to the supervisor, there were fingerprints of important people for 100 people and 200 people from the investigation department every day.
11:43There were more than 110,000 people on the list of important people in the Fuchu 300 million yen case.
11:51The fingerprints of those important people and the fingerprints on the 124 foreign goods had to be identified by a few people.
12:02It was very difficult.
12:07According to Mr. Ogawa, who worked under Mr. Tsukamoto as a former inspector general,
12:14there were a total of 5 million to 6 million fingerprints on the Fuchu 300 million yen case.
12:24It was a situation in which it was not known how many years it would take.
12:29The call was picked up by a man with a phone.
12:34I'm talking to you.
12:36Hey, listen.
12:38This is an incident that the chief is doing.
12:42We need to consider the fingerprints of the Special Investigation Department.
12:46We can't investigate this many fingerprints.
12:51What did you say?
12:53The man who called me was…
12:56Oh
13:27You're the one who called me yesterday, right?
13:31This 300 million yen case...
13:34The police department is investigating it with full force.
13:38Concentrate!
13:42But Tsukamoto didn't hesitate.
13:44He turned to the God of Investigation, Hachibei Hiratsuka.
13:49I have something to say.
13:51Rather than identifying it as a large-scale smuggled item,
13:54it should be identified as a fingerprint on a rubber bike.
13:59What caught Tsukamoto's attention
14:01was the fingerprint left on the back side of the knee of the fake bike.
14:08It's hard to believe that it's someone else's fingerprint on the back side of the knee.
14:14It's highly likely that the bike was originally blue,
14:16but the fingerprint was left on it when the criminal painted it white.
14:22The fingerprint on the back side of the knee is definitely the criminal's.
14:28But Hachibei...
14:31Did you see the criminal paint the bike?
14:36What?
14:38No.
14:40I don't care about your theory.
14:42Investigate everything!
14:47Hachibei, who only believes what he saw,
14:50was frustrated that he couldn't say anything back.
14:56At that time...
15:00The supervisor can't see the criminal's face.
15:04He can't do anything.
15:07But the criminal is here.
15:14He's definitely in the fingerprint.
15:21If I can find the fingerprint,
15:24I can use it as evidence to arrest the criminal
15:27and compete with the detectives of Investigation Team 1.
15:32I'll use the fingerprint to surpass Hachibei Hiratsuka.
15:40Tsukamoto got to know Hachibei Hiratsuka
15:42in the case of the Kuchuu Sanmokuen,
15:44and decided to follow the fingerprint.
15:49Tsukamoto, who solved many cases
15:51and became known as a specialist in fingerprint investigation,
15:55was in charge of the Kuchuu Sanmokuen case 18 years later.
15:59It was the Yurakucho Sanmokuen case.
16:06However, 157 fingerprints were found
16:09from the white wagon car and foreign goods
16:11that the criminal abandoned.
16:14157 fingerprints were found.
16:18This is too much.
16:21The investigative team thought
16:23that the Kuchuu Sanmokuen case was a double-edged sword.
16:27On the other hand, the investigation team
16:29was looking for clues about the criminal
16:32from the foreign goods in the white wagon car.
16:37Helmets and gloves are sold in both stores in Japan.
16:41I don't think it's easy to find clues
16:43about the criminal from the buyers.
16:46How about the masks?
16:48I don't think it's easy to find clues
16:50about the criminal from the buyers.
16:52I don't think it's easy to find clues
16:54about the criminal from the buyers.
16:56The foreign goods investigation was difficult.
17:00All the goods used in the crime
17:02were mass-produced goods.
17:05It's just like the Kuchuu Sanmokuen.
17:09Ogata was also one of the investigators
17:12of the Kuchuu Sanmokuen case.
17:21That's right.
17:24He had a certain idea
17:26from the memory of the case 18 years ago.
17:31In the Kuchuu Sanmokuen case,
17:33a large number of foreign goods,
17:35such as cigarette butts and cigarette butts,
17:38were left behind.
17:42However, when he investigated in detail,
17:47the silence speaker attached to the fake white wagon
17:50was a transistor megaphone
17:52that was often used at sports events.
17:55The documents were in the empty case
17:57of a cookie made by a big confectioner.
18:02The light that looked like a red light
18:04was a brake light for a car
18:06that was mass-produced at that time.
18:09In this way,
18:10most of the foreign goods were mass-produced.
18:14He couldn't find the criminal from there.
18:20In fact,
18:21Hachibei Hiratsuka was the only one
18:23who found a foreign good
18:25and was approaching the criminal's identity.
18:30What Hachibei noticed was
18:32a transistor megaphone
18:34attached to the fake white wagon.
18:39What is this?
18:41He saw something small and curious
18:43on the microphone part.
18:47Hey.
18:49I want to check what this is.
18:51Have the supervisor peel off the white paint.
18:55When he removed the paint,
18:57only about 4 mm of material
18:59was attached to the microphone part.
19:02What on earth is this?
19:06This is...
19:08a fingerprint.
19:10A fingerprint?
19:11A fingerprint is a pattern
19:13used to make the letters appear
19:15in the newspaper.
19:17For example,
19:18this wave pattern
19:19is used to make it easier to see
19:21the word busy.
19:24This is a fingerprint.
19:26Each newspaper has its own fingerprint.
19:30As a result of the police investigation,
19:32it was found to be a fake fingerprint
19:34of the Sankei Newspaper.
19:36Amazing.
19:38The criminal
19:40painted this on the newspaper.
19:44Then,
19:45the newspaper ate it.
19:49It's the criminal's mistake.
19:51The investigators went to the newspaper's warehouse
19:55and went back two years after the incident.
19:58They searched for the same fingerprint.
20:01They continued to search for rice grains
20:03on the beach.
20:05Finally,
20:06they found the same
20:07seven-pattern fingerprint
20:08after a month.
20:11They decided to look for the person
20:13who was shooting the Sankei Newspaper
20:14in this area.
20:18The thief was found
20:19in just a few thousand pieces.
20:22Will they finally find the criminal?
20:25They went to the newspaper's warehouse
20:27to see the list of people
20:29who were shooting the Sankei Newspaper.
20:33They found the Sankei Newspaper
20:35owner's house.
20:38Do you have a copy of the Sankei Newspaper
20:40from December 1968?
20:47Two years ago,
20:49the person who was shooting the Sankei Newspaper
20:51didn't have a copy of the Sankei Newspaper.
20:55No way.
20:58There was not a single copy of the Sankei Newspaper
21:00from two years ago.
21:10I'll do it again.
21:11Hurry up.
21:13You've been doing this for a long time.
21:17Actually, Ogata was a subordinate
21:19of Hachibei in the Edo period.
21:24In this way,
21:25the case of the Sankei Newspaper
21:27never reached the criminal.
21:31What did Ogata learn
21:33from Hachibei?
21:36The goods prepared for the crime
21:39will not reach the criminal.
21:42From now on,
21:43the goods related to the criminal's life
21:46will be the focus.
21:48The goods related to the criminal's life?
21:52That is...
21:55A blanket.
21:57A blanket found from a wagon.
22:01The blanket is likely to be used by the criminal.
22:05It is a daily necessities that is directly linked to the criminal.
22:09Is the blanket itself a mass-produced product?
22:14There is a number written on the blanket tag.
22:18Why do you think this number is written?
22:23Is it a leased product?
22:25Probably so.
22:27Immediately contact the company
22:29that leases the blanket.
22:31Yes.
22:35Two days after the incident,
22:37the situation has changed.
22:39At the underground parking lot
22:41of Inari Toyokawa in Akasaka,
22:43about three kilometers away from the scene of the incident,
22:46a staff member found a bundle of 1,000-yen bills
22:48in a black plastic bag
22:50from a paper bag in a department store.
22:55Where did you find the cash?
22:58Well,
23:00the bag was around here.
23:07There was a shopping bag
23:09from a department store in Mitsukoshi.
23:12The width was about this long.
23:16I put it in the bag
23:19and left it there.
23:22In the corner of the parking lot,
23:24where ordinary people can enter and exit,
23:26there was a large amount of 1,000-yen bills
23:28in a paper bag from Mitsukoshi Department Store.
23:32It was found that out of the 333 million yen
23:35stolen from Mitsubishi Bank in Yurakucho City,
23:3815,000 of them were 1,000-yen bills.
23:41Why are they here?
23:43Probably because the 1,000-yen bills were piled up,
23:46the culprit thought he had thrown them away.
23:48Then Tsukamoto said,
23:51From now on,
23:53we may be able to find the fingerprints of the culprits.
23:57But the bills are touched by an unspecified number of people,
24:00so it is difficult to find the fingerprints of the culprits.
24:04The bills that have already been distributed are impossible.
24:08But,
24:09how about this one?
24:12Among the bills thrown away by the culprits,
24:14there were 3,000 new ones.
24:18Who is likely to touch the new ones before they go on the market?
24:24A person from a bank,
24:26a person from Okura Printing Company,
24:29and
24:30Yes,
24:31the culprits.
24:33That's right.
24:34If the fingerprints of other people
24:36from the bank and Okura Printing Company
24:38come out from this new one,
24:40they are the fingerprints of the culprits.
24:44First,
24:45let's start with the new one.
24:48Yes.
24:50How to collect fingerprints from the new one?
24:56At the time of the incident,
24:57Mr. Ogawa, a former supervisor who actually collected fingerprints from the dead soldiers,
25:01gave it a try.
25:05Usually,
25:06when detecting fingerprints from paper,
25:08a certain special liquid is applied
25:17and dried with a hair dryer.
25:23By adding heat and water vapor with a steam iron,
25:27Mr. Amino's fingerprints react chemically
25:30and turn purple.
25:32Wow.
25:35It comes out so clearly.
25:37Yes.
25:38However, in this case,
25:40a large amount of sandpaper is needed to detect fingerprints.
25:44It takes time to work on one by one.
25:49Mr. Tsukamoto decided to detect fingerprints in a surprising way that turns to iron.
25:55That is…
25:56That is…
25:59There are times when we use a microwave oven
26:01and heat it up
26:03at once
26:05to detect fingerprints.
26:08In that case,
26:10a large amount of sandpaper is applied to the detection liquid
26:14and dried with a hair dryer.
26:17Microwave oven.
26:20One by one,
26:21it is put into a thick notebook.
26:24This is also difficult.
26:26In addition to the page where the sandpaper is sandwiched,
26:29the notebook is wrapped in a wet towel
26:33that contains water with a hair dryer.
26:39Wow.
26:44Microwave oven.
26:45A certain amount of time is heated in a microwave oven.
26:48In that case,
26:50fingerprints can be detected at once.
26:54Wow.
26:55This is what he does.
27:007 fingerprints have been detected
27:03from 3,000 new 1000-yen bills.
27:09Only 7.
27:11From now on,
27:12I have to remove fingerprints from the bank and Okura Printing House.
27:16I have to do it.
27:19I will ask the bank and Okura Printing House
27:21to submit fingerprints of all employees
27:23who may have touched this 1000-yen bill.
27:26And this is the evidence of these 7 fingerprints.
27:29Yes.
27:31Well…
27:33What should I do with the fingerprints of wagons and foreign goods?
27:38You don't have to touch them.
27:39What?
27:42He said he would catch them.
27:44Why?
27:47The fingerprints of those wagons
27:49must be the fingerprints of the culprits.
27:52I don't care about your theory.
27:55Check everything.
27:58He didn't forget the bitter experience
28:00that he couldn't reach the culprits
28:02because of the huge number of fingerprints.
28:09The culprits must be in these fingerprints.
28:14Yes.
28:18In this way,
28:19the bank and Okura Printing House
28:21cooperated with each other
28:23and submitted fingerprints of 1018 employees
28:26who may have touched the 1000-yen bill.
28:29Oh, no.
28:31And then,
28:32they collected the 7 fingerprints
28:34from the 1000-yen bill one by one.
28:37Oh, no.
28:38I can't think straight.
28:40One day,
28:44Mr. Tsukamoto,
28:45did something happen to you?
28:47What?
28:50Well…
28:53Well…
29:01Actually,
29:02Tsukamoto was in the hospital at that time.
29:05He was in the hospital at that time.
29:13The reason was…
29:16Mieko,
29:17are you okay?
29:18Mr. Tsukamoto,
29:19what's wrong with you?
29:22I panicked when I heard that you had collapsed.
29:26I'm glad that you look better than I thought.
29:28I was surprised.
29:31Mieko, his younger sister,
29:33and Tsukamoto have been good brothers since they were young.
29:36Mieko worked at a pharmaceutical plant,
29:38and Tsukamoto was a hard worker,
29:40just like Tsukamoto.
29:44Don't you think you work too much?
29:47Mr. Tsukamoto,
29:48I'll give you back
29:50exactly what you said.
29:54You're busy with the investigation, aren't you?
29:56You don't have to come to visit me.
30:01Anyway,
30:02catch the murderer.
30:06Yes,
30:07I know.
30:10Come on,
30:11go back home.
30:15I got it.
30:18Mr. Tsukamoto,
30:22bye-bye.
30:26Mieko found out that it was Maki's stomach cancer.
30:33The bank and the Okura Printing House
30:36thoroughly examined the fingerprints of 1018 people.
30:43One of the seven fingerprints
30:45was the fingerprint of the Okura Printing House staff.
30:51The possibility of the remaining six fingerprints
30:53being the fingerprints of the murderer increased.
30:56The only thing left is who the murderer is.
30:59That's it.
31:01Yes.
31:02I'm going to identify the entire history of the police station.
31:06Now we know who the murderer is.
31:11The entire history of the police station, huh?
31:18Tsukamoto didn't like the fingerprints.
31:23The six fingerprints were registered
31:25to the police station
31:27and the entire history of the police station.
31:31In fact, they were the fingerprints of 6 million people.
31:36The result was...
31:41What do you mean?
31:44The six fingerprints didn't match at all.
31:47Why is that?
31:52What do you mean?
31:53What do you mean?
31:56The six fingerprints didn't match at all.
32:01It doesn't match the entire history of the police station.
32:04How can a professional do that?
32:09If the fingerprints don't match,
32:11how can we find the murderer?
32:15The investigation of the fingerprints went smoothly.
32:19Maybe...
32:22the murderer is a foreigner.
32:26A foreigner?
32:31The fingerprints
32:33were a little thicker than ours.
32:38Now that you mention it...
32:40If the murderer is a foreigner,
32:42the police station's list and the fingerprints don't match.
32:46I can't believe it.
32:48Then...
32:49what should we do?
32:51Where should we look for the evidence?
32:53The fingerprints of the international mission.
32:57The hotel's foreign guest card.
33:03The fingerprints of a foreigner who spent the night at the hotel.
33:09There are a lot of things to do.
33:12It's getting wider again.
33:14In 1986,
33:16there were more than 4.9 billion people in the world.
33:20Among them,
33:22they had to find the murderer of a foreigner.
33:29Days when they forget about their job and face their fingerprints.
33:33It's been about two months since he visited his sister.
33:36Mr. Tsukamoto.
33:38It's from your wife.
33:40It was rare for his wife to come to work.
33:47It's me.
33:49What's wrong?
33:53I see.
33:57I understand.
34:00Bye-bye.
34:02It was news that his sister, Mieko, had passed away.
34:10He wanted to go to his sister as soon as possible.
34:15But...
34:19Catch the murderer.
34:34His sister's words echoed in his heart.
34:40And...
34:42Mr. Tsukamoto believed that the six fingerprints on his sister's card
34:47were the murderer's fingerprints.
34:50He spent the night looking for the murderer's fingerprints.
34:54It's like a game.
34:59It's been half a year since the incident.
35:02The world was once again in a maze.
35:06People were starting to sigh.
35:10Unexpected faces appeared.
35:18Mr. Ogata.
35:26The detectives are walking around with their shoes off every day.
35:31But...
35:33The key to finding the murderer is the fingerprints.
35:37I have a question.
35:40I'm counting on you.
35:45I look forward to working with you.
35:49I'm here to kill you.
35:51The commander of the investigation team visited the surveillance room.
35:55It was a strange example of a strange example.
35:59The police officers are operating this case with full force.
36:05Focus!
36:10The times have changed.
36:21Excuse me.
36:25It was the moment when the investigation team and the surveillance team became one.
36:30The investigation team and the surveillance team became one.
36:34On the other hand, the investigation team arrived at one of the 49 leases
36:39that a foreign company in Tokyo had lent out.
36:45They were checking the leases one by one.
36:51The leases were mainly in port areas.
36:5490% of the leases were owned by foreigners,
36:57and 90% of the leases were owned by foreigners.
37:01He's right.
37:04Maybe the culprit is a foreigner.
37:08It matches the theory of Tsukamoto.
37:12Ten months after the incident,
37:15the whereabouts of the leases were finally revealed.
37:20Exactly a year before the incident,
37:22two French men came to the port to rent a large apartment in Azabu-Juban.
37:33I want to sleep in the room from today,
37:36so lease me a futon set.
37:38That was their request.
37:40Okay.
37:42They said they needed 450,000 yen each for a month's rent.
37:48When they went to get the money,
37:51the two men came back.
37:54They paid back the 1 million yen.
37:59We're chefs.
38:01We're going to open a French restaurant in Tokyo.
38:05One of them was a 35-year-old man.
38:09The other was a 45-year-old man.
38:12After that, he disappeared without asking for the 450,000 yen he was supposed to pay back.
38:19That's suspicious.
38:21We'll follow their whereabouts closely.
38:24But Mr. Ogata, we don't have any leads so far.
38:27We have a lead.
38:29It's an obitsuki satsutaba.
38:32What?
38:34If he went out and prepared an obitsuki satsutaba,
38:39he must have returned the money to Nihonen.
38:42It's either a bank or a hotel nearby.
38:46If that's the case,
38:48he must have submitted an ID card.
38:51I see.
38:53Go to the Azabu hotel bank right now!
38:56Yes, sir!
38:58According to the detectives' investigation,
39:0412 days before the incident,
39:06a French man found out that he had embezzled more than 2.5 million yen from the bank.
39:18We found out that he was on his way to Singapore from Narita
39:23on the 13th day of the incident.
39:28The police department immediately called for help from the French police.
39:33We followed his whereabouts.
39:36We received a list of suspects from France.
39:39Do you have all the fingerprints?
39:41Yes.
39:43The rest is up to the police.
39:45That's great.
39:47The list was handed over to the police chief.
39:51Finally.
39:53It's been about a year since the incident.
39:56The number of fingerprints that Mr. Tsukamoto has collected so far is 232,3985.
40:05It's been a year since the incident.
40:08Will he be able to find the culprit?
40:15The number of fingerprints that Mr. Tsukamoto has collected so far is 232,3985.
40:24Will he be able to find the culprit?
40:31Mr. Tsukamoto.
40:32Mr. Tsukamoto.
40:35He's here.
40:38I knew it. He's in here.
40:41Please check.
40:46What?
40:48300,000?
40:50Will the fingerprints match?
40:52Will the fingerprints match?
41:01There's no mistake.
41:03It matches one of the six.
41:06I did it.
41:08The French man who borrowed a fork to talk to the chef.
41:12These two fingerprints match perfectly with the fingerprints on the 1,000-yen bill.
41:17That's great.
41:19He was found to be the culprit of the 300,000-yen incident.
41:24Four people, including the remaining two who entered the country together, were found to be the perpetrators of the 300,000-yen robbery.
41:32The four were a famous gang in France.
41:37Mr. Tsukamoto and Mr. Ogata finally succeeded in their revenge 18 years after the 300,000-yen incident.
41:45Mr. Tsukamoto was called the God of Fingerprints.
41:54Mr. Sasaki, a former detective from Saitama Prefecture, chose him as the number one detective.
42:01I was arrested in Tokyo for only 84 hours after the incident.
42:06I searched each and every security camera in 260 locations.
42:11I caught up with the stars that fled to Okinawa from Tokyo.
42:15The key to this operation was the front and rear legs of the stars.
42:21The first place goes to Ryu-san's investigation of the front and rear legs of the stars.
42:26He analyzed the security cameras of the 260 cameras and made a 84-hour attack.
42:31In August 2021, at Tokyo Metro Shirokane Takanawa Station,
42:36a man was found to be Ryu-san.
42:40A security camera captured the man wearing a bulletproof vest.
42:46A man in a black hat, black polo shirt, and pants was seen to be Ryu-san on the escalator.
42:53The culprit immediately ran away from the scene.
42:59Then, the police conducted an investigation.
43:03First, we collected the security cameras of the crime scene and followed the stars.
43:09When we were chasing the security cameras,
43:12we found the front and rear legs of the stars.
43:16We also found the front and rear legs of the stars.
43:19When we were chasing the security cameras,
43:22we found the front and rear legs of the stars.
43:25We found the front and rear legs of the stars.
43:32The front legs of the stars are the footprints of the suspect.
43:38If we know where the footprints come from,
43:41we can find the suspect's home.
43:44What are the footprints?
43:47The footprints lead to the four suspects' homes.
43:54The people who conducted this investigation are...
43:57These are the detectives from the SOSC,
44:00which is the SSBC.
44:05What is the SSBC?
44:08It is the SOSC that collects, analyzes,
44:10and analyzes communication equipment.
44:16We are here.
44:18In this case, the number of security cameras
44:21collected and analyzed by the two teams,
44:24the front and rear legs,
44:26is 260.
44:29There is no way.
44:31The conviction of the detectives and the fusion of digital investigation
44:35lead to the solution of this case.
44:38The detectives who followed the front legs
44:41found the security cameras of the suspects one after another.
44:45They found the footprints before the crime.
44:49The suspect was identified at the Shinjuku Express Bus Terminal
44:52a few hours before the crime.
44:59After that, he took a train from Sanchome Station in Shinjuku
45:03and followed the victim at Akasaka-Mitsuke Station.
45:06He took the same train at Tameike-Sannou Station
45:09and got off at Shirokane-Takunawa Station
45:12and arrived at Kyoko Station.
45:16On the other hand, the suspect had a hard time.
45:20He couldn't find the security camera of the suspect.
45:24It was more difficult after that.
45:26Where did the suspect disappear?
45:30In the meantime,
45:31a man in a white T-shirt
45:34got a video from a convenience store.
45:37The investigators saw it.
45:40It's him.
45:42He must be the star.
45:45The investigators judged that
45:47the man in a black T-shirt
45:49changed into a white T-shirt.
45:53How did they know that the man in a white T-shirt
45:56was the star?
45:59I felt that they noticed it very well.
46:04The veteran detectives look at the shoes first.
46:07The point that the suspect noticed
46:10was not the face, but the shoes.
46:14Even if the clothes change,
46:16the shoes rarely change.
46:20The investigators noticed that
46:23the man in a white T-shirt
46:25was the same person as the suspect.
46:28It's amazing.
46:30The detectives have been investigating for many years,
46:33but they didn't miss a single trace of the suspect.
46:38After that, the suspect boarded a taxi.
46:41Where did he go?
46:45The investigators predicted that
46:48the suspect would go to Shinagawa Station.
46:51Why did they predict that he would go to Shinagawa Station?
46:54How did they predict that he would go to Shinagawa Station?
46:57In fact, this prediction was made possible
47:00by a report from a detective.
47:03The suspect didn't go to Shinjuku, where he came from.
47:08If that's the case,
47:10he might use the Shinkansen instead of a long-distance bus.
47:14The detective who thought so
47:16predicted that the suspect would go to Shinagawa Station.
47:20And then,
47:22as predicted,
47:24in the security camera footage of Shinagawa Station,
47:26the suspect bought a ticket for the Shinkansen.
47:29I found him.
47:31The prediction made by the forefoot and the backfoot
47:35definitely caught up with the suspect.
47:38The operation of the security camera is very important,
47:41but more than that,
47:43the eyes of the detective who didn't miss a single trace
47:46and the ability to predict that are very important.
47:51The suspect went to Shizuoka Prefecture, where he lives.
47:57At Shizuoka Station,
47:59the suspect with a Boston bag
48:01was shown in the security camera footage.
48:03The security camera footage caught up with the suspect.
48:08At Shizuoka Station,
48:10the suspect with a Boston bag
48:12was shown in the security camera footage.
48:15The investigators immediately headed home,
48:18but the suspect had already left Shizuoka.
48:22The suspect would never let the suspect escape.
48:25The investigators saw the big luggage
48:28and predicted that the suspect would go far away.
48:30As predicted,
48:32the suspect took a plane
48:34from Aichi Chubu International Airport
48:36to Okinawa Naha Airport.
48:40The investigators
48:41analyzed the security camera footage of the suspects in their 20s and 30s.
48:46From Shinagawa to Shizuoka, Aichi,
48:49and Okinawa,
48:51they kept tracking down the suspects.
48:54It's amazing that you can track them down.
48:57Even though all the footage is still on the camera.
49:01And only 84 hours after the incident,
49:05the suspects were finally arrested.
49:08After analyzing the security camera footage of the suspects in their 20s and 30s,
49:12the investigators did a digital search
49:14and read the next move of the suspect.
49:16The key to the case
49:18has finally
49:20caught up with the suspect.
49:24If you want to watch this program again,
49:27go to iiVER.

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