Wednesday, February 20, 2013

But "Operation X" may reveal that the authorities are sleeping tremendously per hour when it comes to protecting consumers


But "Operation X" may reveal that the authorities are sleeping tremendously per hour when it comes to protecting consumers. Lack of control means that the sale of illegal taps is widespread, and at the same time, it turns out that the way the taps will be approved at is in direct conflict with both European and Danish law when it comes to how many heavy metals we have to get in our drinking water. In autumn premiere confronted the authorities and the Danish importers responsible for the taps, which delivers the most heavy metals. The bestsellers in diet pills often contain a combination of caffeine and ephedrine following the same recipe as the forbidden "Letigen-pill". But ephedrine are both on the doping list and illegal under the Medicines Act - and the combination is deadly. Yet the Danes with a few clicks of the mouse book the illegal goods home. The Danish authorities are aware of the problem, but when websites hiding behind a veil of false foreign addresses, it is almost impossible to get to the bottom of the offenses. Operation X follows the tracks and identify any of the Danish backers, which serves much money on a conscious gamble with their customers' lives and health. In the program when Morten Spiegelhauer among other until one of their traffickers hiding places in Spain and to a large warehouse in Holland, where many of the illegal pills distributed. In the hunt for sponsors when Grohe 114628 Solo 7 1 2 22 Rainshower Shower Head Red Operation X also looking forward to a few very surprising revelations about the illegal pills way into the Danish consumers. Among other things, it is documented that the partially state-owned Post Denmark participates very actively in delivering a bulletproof smuggling route into Denmark for the illegal pills backers. Doping the Danes (26 April 2007). Doping for Danes. Photo: Peter Muhlhausen / TV. Anabolic steroids are no longer reserved for elite athletes, but today is a very common sight in the fitness centers with ordinary Danes. Morten Spiegelhauer and Operation X examines this time the phenomenon of "motion doping", which is an explosively growing problem in the Danish gyms. Estimated 60,000 Danes frequently use steroids and other doping substances to make their bodies bigger and stronger. In the program we come far and wide in search of the perpetrators. Along the way we meet former drug-addicts who talks about not least the psychological side effects of drugs. In the pursuit of organized trade brings a doping-purchase in Koge, us to Spain, where steroids appear to come from a well established pharmaceutical company. At the same time, it turns out that drug dealers in Koge officially acting as dieticians and nutritionists, and thus has hundreds of athletes in their "stable". Many of these athletes appear in fitness and bodybuilder contexts. And when Morten Spiegelhauer choose to take a closer look at their federal "DBFF" he discovers something. The union's president has namely parallel his own business with fitness products, which he sells products that are on the list of doping substances. Follow up (10 May 2007). In the program we follow up on the two previous broadcasts "The models nightmare" and "Tricked for porn".

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