Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Here we confront the police

 
the owner of model agency BBC Studio has not yet been taken in for questioning. We are also Herning police investigation in the case against Rudy Frederiksen. We also meet the fake co-owner of the Moulin Rouge, Robert Scott, again. Now he calls himself Robert Ditlev Lefevre and, together with his wife, Lisa Larsen, now art expert. Together contacts the Danish artists and offers them to exhibit and sell their art from a gallery in southern France. The artists have to pay £ 3900 for this service, but then they in turn promised a large sale. In order to investigate what is going on picturesque Morten Spiegelhauer even six images that we get one of those contacted artists to deliver in the gallery. Shortly after the artists have paid the couple and handed over their art, closes the gallery and the art disappears. The artists reviewing the case to the North Zealand police, but they reject the case. The artists complain about this decision to the Public Prosecutor who also reject the case. The poison in the drinking water (22 October 2007). Taps. Photo: Peter M? Hlhausen / TV. Grohe 11 4790 Veris Thermostatic Valve Trim Operation X dissects the market for taps in Denmark, and reveals surprising illegality and lack of control. In many Danish homes, there are faucets that deliver too many dangerous heavy metals in drinking water. The glass of water you drink when you get up in the morning or when you get home from work, can contain so much lead that the daily limit will be exceeded only with one glass of water. Morten Spiegelhauer travel to China, where the Danish importers have produced their faucets cheap. Under the guise of being Danish taps importer gets Operation X is shown factories where everything from old engine parts for dirty gear smoking with the crucible and will turn into new faucets, which ends up on the shelves of Danish businesses. In Denmark, a number of faucets purchased from Danish stores tested for release of heavy metals, and the result is discouraging. A number of taps provide either too much or too little nickel lead in relation to what is healthy manner. - Lead is one of the most dangerous substances we know, in terms of brain development and you have not the slightest chance to see that you drink a poison. Authorities must protect ourselves from these dangerous products, says Professor Philippe Gran Jean, who has studied the harmful effects of lead. But Operation X can reveal that the authorities have slept tremendously in hours when it comes to protecting consumers. Lack of control means that the sale of illegal taps are widespread. 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 can get in our drinking water. The program confronts the authorities and the Danish importers responsible for the taps which give most heavy metals in Operation X's test. After the program sent went Commerce and Construction Authority and the Environmental Protection Agency together in action to get a handle faucet area. This meant, among other things, extensive checks to identify illegal taps. In addition, the website godkendtevandhaner.dk launched, as Danes can go in and see if their faucets now have the regulatory approvals.

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