- Lessing is suspected of murder. Dorn tries to save her partner from the prison.
- The Weimar commissioners Kira Dorn and Lessing bring the scrapyard owner Harald Knopp to court. He is said to have murdered an art collector 15 years ago. During the trial, Knopp surprisingly presented the murdered woman's nephew, Rainer Falk, as a witness and was acquitted. Shortly afterwards Lessing finds Knopp who was shot. When it turns out that the fatal shot from Lessing's service weapon was fired, the inspector comes under suspicion of murder. The special investigator Eva Kern, a former colleague of Kurt Stich, takes over the case. It's not good to eat cherries with her. Lessing ends up in a cell, Kira Dorn is withdrawn from the investigation because of bias. Supported by the newly in love policeman Lupo, she nevertheless does everything possible to prove Lessing's innocence. She seeks out Knopp's brother Georg and his wife Hannah, who, as an actress, dreams of her own theater. From them she learns that Harald Knopp's wife Birte, who was interested in esotericism, left her husband despite the acquittal. Birte does not believe in his innocence and is convinced that the god of calamity is responsible for all of their misery. Rainer Falk also makes himself seriously suspicious when he tries to force Birte to hand over an old Indian statue at Knopp's scrapyard. Kira's intervention prevents worse. Falk escapes, but that same night a murder attempt is carried out on Falk - by a woman in a green parka like the one Kira wears. The special investigator triggers a manhunt. In order to prove their innocence and to catch the real culprit, Kira Dorn and Lessing have to flee from their own colleagues.—ARD Das Erste
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