After the advent of mobile phones and surveillance, the prospect of traditional crime reasoning works was bleak for a time - if you can't solve a case, it means that you have not installed enough surveillance - and the solution given in "Truth Capture" is that surveillance can be tampered with.
……so what? Is this really a big secret? We're not heroines, we've all seen deepfake por...ahem. Coupled with highly developed CGI technology, video tampering is not even a conspiracy theory these days, it is a reasonable doubt about the reliability and validity of the evidence. The public and the judiciary still believe in these evidences, not in surveillance, but in the system, and believe that the public prosecutor’s law is upright and will not be faked. So in the final analysis, what the protagonist has to do is to expose the hypocrisy of this system and tell everyone: Look, look at the good things they have done.
And to do this and expose the scandals of Frank and others, only direct evidence, for example, that the official tampered with the video during the "Sikamo" operation. However, under the premise that the Victim's Family Alliance had clearly instigated the ghost within the organization, Eli, was not thinking of asking Eli to get some evidence, but asking Eli to help them film? (Black question mark) No matter how well filmed this play is, how does it prove that the official is also cheating? As long as the official denies it flatly, and then arrests a member of the victim's family allies and convicts them of obstructing justice, everything will be nothing more than a conspiracy theory. The two bus stop videos posted on the Internet are nothing more than "Your words against mine." Let netizens quarrel. This is where I find it the most difficult to understand.
Of course, maybe I didn't understand it. But I don't understand what happened next. Because the plan put together by the victims' families was actually not logically convincing, as long as Frank found Hannah and made her reappear in front of the public, the clown was herself. But what he thought of was to go with the flow, kill her, and fake the murder. You must know that killing a person may leave less flaws than fake videos, which means that the more you wipe the butt, the more dirty it is, why bother. I can only understand that Frank vented his personal anger, and he thought Hannah was not pleasing to the eye.
The plot is far-fetched, which is considered a flaw in suspense dramas, but it may not really be what I care about the most.
The second half of the play begins with a moral dilemma: there is an irreconcilable contradiction between the practical need to punish crimes and a judicial system that believes in evidence and the presumption of innocence. The White-Headed Trio is a group of hate-hating police and intelligence officers who hate terrorists. They do everything they can to investigate suspicious people and send them to jail with fake video evidence. Seriously, Westerners have limited imaginations about the dark side of the system right now. In this country, the judiciary is only blinded. As long as someone reveals the truth, the innocence will naturally return to the world. I almost burst out laughing when the hostess threatened me to send the footage to the police surveillance department. This picture comes to mind:
and then? Then the white-headed trio were really stunned. It seems that the level of "transferring flowers and trees" is not too high.
The funniest thing is the last episode, but if you talk too much, you will probably be banned, so let's not talk about it.
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