- In their sixth joint case, the Berlin "Tatort" investigators Nina Rubin and Robert Karow are called to the outskirts. A body was found in a burned-out van. Rubin and Karow quickly determine that there were three other, older cases with a similar course of events. They were never enlightened. Is it a serial killer? Another link leads to Berlin-Wannsee: all victims were conceived with the help of in-vitro fertilization in a fertility clinic. Managing Director Dr. Irene Wohlleben and her laboratory manager and life partner Hanneke Tietzsche recently handed over the management of the clinic to Irene's son Dr. Handed over to Stefan Wohlleben. He was born in the 1980s as one of the first test tube babies in Germany. During their investigation, the commissioners also come across a loner named Harbinger. As a 16-year-old he attacked Irene Wohlleben, today he runs a key service in a Berlin subway station. Harbinger used to be called Werner Lothar and, according to his psychiatrist, suffers from borderline syndrome. Robert Karow uses unusual methods to try to gain the eccentric man's trust and lure him out of his reserve. In this case, Anna Feil, now a trainee inspector, makes an unbelievable discovery on her own behalf. And on the fringes of the investigation, Nina Rubin has a serious argument with her older son Tolya.—ADR Das Erste
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