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Detroit detective dug deep for long-buried answers to missing person cases
Detroit detective dug deep for long-buried answers to missing person cases

CBS News

time5 days ago

  • CBS News

Detroit detective dug deep for long-buried answers to missing person cases

Kristina Morris never knew what happened to her father. He disappeared in 1995 when her mother was five months pregnant with her. All she had was faded photographs, family stories and endless questions. She yearned for answers to her father's mysterious disappearance. As a child, she even fantasized that her father worked undercover for the FBI and couldn't disclose his whereabouts. "'Unsolved Mysteries' became one of my favorite shows," Morris said in a recent interview with CBS News. Then in 2018 she got a call from Sgt. Shannon Jones of the Detroit Police Department. Her father's remains were found at a cemetery just north of Detroit in a grave shared by other unidentified crime victims. Morris's father, Bryan Fleeman, had been murdered. Kristina Morris wanted to know what happened to her father, who disappeared in 1995, a few months before she was born. CBS News Solving that mystery might never have happened if Jones hadn't found inspiration five years ago while staring at photographs of missing loved ones. Jones, who runs the Detroit PD's Missing Persons Unit, thought that perhaps clues to her overwhelming case load were buried underground. Literally. "When I first said it, I thought it was crazy,'' Jones told CBS News. She knew Detroit had historically buried unknown crime victims in so-called "paupers' graves" in cemeteries across the city. There were a total of about 200 cold cases in Detroit that Jones had documented that went back to as far as 1959. To Jones, these cases weren't just about police work. They were about restoring the victims' humanity. "Giving them their name," she said. "And for families to be able to have somewhere to go now and talk to their loved ones." Jones's plan: dig up the missing and run their DNA to search for matches. But she needed assistance in executing her plan. That kind of large-scale exhumation project required technology and resources Jones didn't have. She turned to FBI Special Agent Leslie Larsen, an expert in evidence recovery at the FBI Detroit Field Office. "My first thought was I'm all in, let's get organized and let's go dig,'' Larsen told CBS News. "Why not use the resources that we have in our criminal laboratories, which are phenomenal, to take science and apply it to old cases." The veteran FBI agent said, to her knowledge, no one in the country had done a mass exhumation project of this scale. The two women, Jones and Larsen, were intent on being the first. They pored through dusty case files in the basement of the Detroit PD trying to learn as much background as they could about the unidentified bodies they were digging up. Some of the cold cases dated back 30 or 40 years, long before DNA analysis was available. Investigators in Detroit exhumed the bodies of unidentified victims to obtain DNA to help solve cold cases. The FBI techs took DNA from the unidentified remains and ran them through online databases of at-home genetic testing firms or compared them to DNA samples that relatives provided directly to law enforcement. "When you get that lab report back with someone's name on it, that is absolutely a powerful feeling, for sure,'' Larsen said. The two women named their operation UNITED, which stands for Unknown Names Identified Through Exhumation and DNA. To date, Operation UNITED has resulted in 33 positive identifications of people whose disappearance had left family members in anguish. Other cities across the country have reached out to them, wanting to launch similar projects. "I've had people reach out from all over the country asking to bring Operation United to their cities," Larsen said, noting she's gotten requests from departments in Texas, Colorado and Minnesota. Kristina Morris's father was one of the victims identified through the UNITED project. His remains had been buried in one of the shared unmarked graves. Now there is an active homicide investigation into his murder. "It's a lot easier to breathe … [knowing] he didn't up and leave,'' Morris said. She mourns his loss, but found solace that he had not abandoned their family. If it hadn't been for the work of a committed Detroit police sergeant, Morris said, "I would've gone my whole life drowning in the unknown."

TV reviews: week's top picks are Dept. Q, Stick, Guy Montgomery's Gut Mont Spelling Bee
TV reviews: week's top picks are Dept. Q, Stick, Guy Montgomery's Gut Mont Spelling Bee

Daily Telegraph

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Telegraph

TV reviews: week's top picks are Dept. Q, Stick, Guy Montgomery's Gut Mont Spelling Bee

We've sifted through the latest offerings from TV and streaming platforms to find the best shows you should be watching this week. Matthew Goode as a traumatised cop in Dept Q on Netflix. DEPT. Q NETFLIX British actor Matthew Goode's traumatised but talented Edinburgh copper Carl Morck in this nine-part crime thriller is a thoroughly unlikeable chap – think Jackson Lamb from Slow Horses but with less farting and more showering. And like Gary Oldman's character, Morck has also been tasked with running a department staffed with misfits and rejects and held together with string and paperclips. After Morck's arrogance and carelessness at a murder scene left a young officer dead, his partner paralysed and him with PTSD thanks to a bullet passing through his neck, he's been banished to the basement and told to investigate cold cases for a department vanity project. With the help of his mysterious new assistant Akram, formerly of the Syrian police, Morck sets out to discover the fate of a talented but prickly prosecutor who hasn't been seen for four years and left behind a brother who was rendered mute by a brutal beating. The hunt will send them to a remote Scottish island and deep into the corridors of power as they start to expose long-buried secrets and cover-ups in a dark, twisting and captivating journey full of broken and cruel characters. Guy Montgomery and his spelling pals are back. GUY MONTGOMERY'S GUY MONT SPELLING BEE WEDNESDAY, 8.35PM, ABC Who knew that spelling could be so fun? The first season of this ridiculous concept of competitive comedians testing their abilities proved to be one of the most reliably funny shows of the year. Smartly retro-dressed host Guy Montgomery is back – alongside his even more resplendent sidekick Aaron Chen – to tempt a who's who of the Aussie stand-up scene with his Coward's Cup (easy words), Person's Purse (medium words) and Bucket of Bravery (hard words) while dishing out and being on the end of plenty of spelling-adjacent zingers. First up this week are Lloyd Langford, Nina Oyama, Hannah Gadsby and returning season one champ Tom Walker – their spelling results are patchy, but top of the class for laughs. Owen Wilson and Peter Dager in the golfing comedy Stick. STICK NEW EPISODES WEDNESDAYS, APPLETV+ It's been billed as the golfing equivalent of Ted Lasso, which is a big swing but one that lands not far from the pin. With his trademark blend of hangdog enthusiasm and whiny snark, Owen Wilson is spot on as former golf pro Pryce 'Stick' Cahill, who has fallen on hard times since a 'full psychotic break' on live TV, in which he punched out his playing partner, saw him booted from the game and is now trying to make a living in a sporting shop while hustling punters in bars with his former caddie and only friend (a very funny Marc Maron). But when Stick discovers a freakishly talented teen from a broken home who claims to hate the game – but can't stay away from it – he resolves to take him on the road to qualify for the US Amateur and the potential riches that come with it. James Nelson-Joyce as Michael in This City is Ours. THIS CITY IS OURS WEDNESDAY, STAN Crime thriller fans with a MobLand-shaped hole in their lives following last week's excellent finale can get a fresh fix of British villains and geezers – with a healthy side serving of The Godfather and The Sopranos – in this nine-part series from the creator of The Last Kingdom and set on the even grittier streets of Liverpool. Sean Bean is in quietly terrifying form as gang leader Ronnie Phelan, who is looking to transition out of the drug-dealing game, but wants to build his bank balance before he goes. He charges his loyal 2IC Michael – who also dreams of one day going legit and starting family – with renegotiating the deal with their Spanish suppliers, but with higher rewards comes higher risk. When a delivery goes wrong, it becomes clear there's a rat in the ranks, and it might throw the succession plan into bloody disarray. It's all go at Melbourne Airport on reality show Airport 24/7 AIRPORT 24/7 THURSDAY, 7.30PM, CHANNEL 10 Plane travellers might look at airports in an entirely different light after watching this new homegrown doco that goes behind the scenes to spotlight the staff who keep things (for the most part) running smoothly so you get where you need to go safely and on time. Narrated by Susie Youssef, the producers have been given incredible access to Melbourne Airport – the country's biggest, with enough people to fill the MCG passing through each day. Whether it's the operation centre dealing with a blackout before its repercussions cause travel chaos around the country, the quick-thinking, stressed-out tower control staff juggling a plane every minute in the busy periods, or an international flight forced to turn back and dump its fuel over the bay, there's never a dull moment. Lisa Blari braves the elements in Ice Maiden. ICE MAIDEN THURSDAY, 8.30PM, SBS VICELAND Sailor Lisa Blair's quest to become the first woman to sail solo around Antarctica in 2017 was nothing short of extraordinary. Facing fierce winds, raging waters and frigid air, she displayed not just extreme skill but also poise and resilience in the face of deadly danger, even with the closest help three days away. But just as impressive in this documentary is the drive and ambition that got her there in the first place, and the hard work for sponsorship and fundraising that made it possible. Through her trip vlog and interviews with family and fellow adventurers such as Dick Smith and Jessica Watson, it paints a picture of an inspirational individual prepared to face extremes to realise her dream. Costa Georgiadis and the Gardening Australia gang are powering on through winter. GARDENING AUSTRALIA WINTER SPECIAL FRIDAY, 7.30PM, ABC As the irrepressible host Costa Georgiadis observes early on, growing might be slowing down over winter, but he and his team certainly won't be this year. Naturally enough, the emphasis is on the colder months, both the plants that can provide a burst of colour for your garden, as well as what you can do right now to maximise spring and summer. An addition to visiting some extraordinary gardens around the country – including a 120 year old camellia nursery in South Australia and a stunning spread in Victoria masterminded by a passionate wheelchair-bound plant enthusiast – Costa also visits a boffin at Sydney's Macquarie University whose innovative frog saunas are helping to eradicate a fungus that has wiped out 90 species so far. Simon James Bailey from Toast the Host. TOAST THE HOST SATURDAY, 5.30PM, SBS FOOD If the thought of hosting others is enough to send you into a blind panic – or it putting you off from doing it at all – journalist Simon James Bailey has some simple advice to make it achievable 'with minimum stress and maximum enjoyment', whether it's having a couple of friends around for lunch or a bigger spread like a poolside engagement party. Most of it's not rocket science but it's certainly practical, from modern invitation etiquette to devising menus and calculating budgets, right through to easy-to-follow recipes and demonstrations, as well as health-conscious food tips. There's pranks aplenty with the return of The Inspired Unemployed. THE INSPIRED UNEMPLOYED (IMPRACTICAL) JOKERS MONDAY, 9.40PM, CHANNEL 10 Now that they have stopped terrorising the world and threatening a diplomatic incident with their recent travel show The List, Jack Steele and Matt 'Falcon' Ford are back on home turf and reunited with their pranking partners Dom and Liam for another season of ritual humiliation and cringe-worthy comedy. Thomas Jefferson once said 'travelling makes men wiser, but less happy' and the lads seem keen to prove him wrong on both counts – they still look like complete idiots trying to crash dinner tables in restaurants and posing as flamenco instructors, but they look like they are having an absolute blast doing it. Jessica Biel and Elizabeth Banks in The Better Sister. THE BETTER SISTER PRIME VIDEO The latest entry into the ever-growing, bad-things-happening-to-beautiful-rich-people genre is adapted from Alafair Burke's best-selling 2019 thriller and will appeal to fans of Big Little Lies, Gone Girl and the recent Sirens. Jessica Biel and Elizabeth Banks star as sisters – the former is Chloe, a successful media boss with a luxurious lifestyle and a teenage son, while the latter plays estranged older sister Nicky, whose former addictions have left her struggling and embittered. When Chloe's high-powered and possibly shady lawyer husband is murdered, the investigation will reunite the pair to bicker and air old grievances from their shared traumatic childhood as the eight episodes weave together courtroom drama, family secrets and dollops of jet-black humour. Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne in The Theory of Everything IN CASE YOU MISSED IT … THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING Now streaming, Tubi Eddie Redmayne deservedly won the quadrella of accolades – an Oscar, Golden Globe, BAFTA and SAG – for his performance as Stephen Hawking in this 2014 biopic. Based on Jane Hawking's memoir about her marriage to the renowned physicist, the film chronicles the couple's relationship as they navigate the joint strains of Hawking's meteoric rise in the scientific world and his physical decline from early onset Motor Neurone Disease. Just like Daniel Day Lewis did with his heart wrenching performance in My Left Foot, Redmayne does a remarkable job of capturing the physicality of Hawking's disease. Felicity Jones also shines as Hawking's devoted and underappreciated wife.

What to watch this week: Best crime thriller since Slow Horses; golf's answer to Ted Lasso
What to watch this week: Best crime thriller since Slow Horses; golf's answer to Ted Lasso

News.com.au

time03-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • News.com.au

What to watch this week: Best crime thriller since Slow Horses; golf's answer to Ted Lasso

We've sifted through the latest offerings from TV and streaming platforms to find the best shows you should be watching this week. DEPT. Q NETFLIX British actor Matthew Goode's traumatised but talented Edinburgh copper Carl Morck in this nine-part crime thriller is a thoroughly unlikeable chap – think Jackson Lamb from Slow Horses but with less farting and more showering. And like Gary Oldman's character, Morck has also been tasked with running a department staffed with misfits and rejects and held together with string and paperclips. After Morck's arrogance and carelessness at a murder scene left a young officer dead, his partner paralysed and him with PTSD thanks to a bullet passing through his neck, he's been banished to the basement and told to investigate cold cases for a department vanity project. With the help of his mysterious new assistant Akram, formerly of the Syrian police, Morck sets out to discover the fate of a talented but prickly prosecutor who hasn't been seen for four years and left behind a brother who was rendered mute by a brutal beating. The hunt will send them to a remote Scottish island and deep into the corridors of power as they start to expose long-buried secrets and cover-ups in a dark, twisting and captivating journey full of broken and cruel characters. GUY MONTGOMERY'S GUY MONT SPELLING BEE WEDNESDAY, 8.35PM, ABC Who knew that spelling could be so fun? The first season of this ridiculous concept of competitive comedians testing their abilities proved to be one of the most reliably funny shows of the year. Smartly retro-dressed host Guy Montgomery is back – alongside his even more resplendent sidekick Aaron Chen – to tempt a who's who of the Aussie stand-up scene with his Coward's Cup (easy words), Person's Purse (medium words) and Bucket of Bravery (hard words) while dishing out and being on the end of plenty of spelling-adjacent zingers. First up this week are Lloyd Langford, Nina Oyama, Hannah Gadsby and returning season one champ Tom Walker – their spelling results are patchy, but top of the class for laughs. STICK NEW EPISODES WEDNESDAYS, APPLETV+ It's been billed as the golfing equivalent of Ted Lasso, which is a big swing but one that lands not far from the pin. With his trademark blend of hangdog enthusiasm and whiny snark, Owen Wilson is spot on as former golf pro Pryce 'Stick' Cahill, who has fallen on hard times since a 'full psychotic break' on live TV, in which he punched out his playing partner, saw him booted from the game and is now trying to make a living in a sporting shop while hustling punters in bars with his former caddie and only friend (a very funny Marc Maron). But when Stick discovers a freakishly talented teen from a broken home who claims to hate the game – but can't stay away from it – he resolves to take him on the road to qualify for the US Amateur and the potential riches that come with it. THIS CITY IS OURS WEDNESDAY, STAN Crime thriller fans with a MobLand-shaped hole in their lives following last week's excellent finale can get a fresh fix of British villains and geezers – with a healthy side serving of The Godfather and The Sopranos – in this nine-part series from the creator of The Last Kingdom and set on the even grittier streets of Liverpool. Sean Bean is in quietly terrifying form as gang leader Ronnie Phelan, who is looking to transition out of the drug-dealing game, but wants to build his bank balance before he goes. He charges his loyal 2IC Michael – who also dreams of one day going legit and starting family – with renegotiating the deal with their Spanish suppliers, but with higher rewards comes higher risk. When a delivery goes wrong, it becomes clear there's a rat in the ranks, and it might throw the succession plan into bloody disarray. AIRPORT 24/7 THURSDAY, 7.30PM, CHANNEL 10 Plane travellers might look at airports in an entirely different light after watching this new homegrown doco that goes behind the scenes to spotlight the staff who keep things (for the most part) running smoothly so you get where you need to go safely and on time. Narrated by Susie Youssef, the producers have been given incredible access to Melbourne Airport – the country's biggest, with enough people to fill the MCG passing through each day. Whether it's the operation centre dealing with a blackout before its repercussions cause travel chaos around the country, the quick-thinking, stressed-out tower control staff juggling a plane every minute in the busy periods, or an international flight forced to turn back and dump its fuel over the bay, there's never a dull moment. ICE MAIDEN THURSDAY, 8.30PM, SBS VICELAND Sailor Lisa Blair's quest to become the first woman to sail solo around Antarctica in 2017 was nothing short of extraordinary. Facing fierce winds, raging waters and frigid air, she displayed not just extreme skill but also poise and resilience in the face of deadly danger, even with the closest help three days away. But just as impressive in this documentary is the drive and ambition that got her there in the first place, and the hard work for sponsorship and fundraising that made it possible. Through her trip vlog and interviews with family and fellow adventurers such as Dick Smith and Jessica Watson, it paints a picture of an inspirational individual prepared to face extremes to realise her dream. GARDENING AUSTRALIA WINTER SPECIAL FRIDAY, 7.30PM, ABC As the irrepressible host Costa Georgiadis observes early on, growing might be slowing down over winter, but he and his team certainly won't be this year. Naturally enough, the emphasis is on the colder months, both the plants that can provide a burst of colour for your garden, as well as what you can do right now to maximise spring and summer. An addition to visiting some extraordinary gardens around the country – including a 120 year old camellia nursery in South Australia and a stunning spread in Victoria masterminded by a passionate wheelchair-bound plant enthusiast – Costa also visits a boffin at Sydney's Macquarie University whose innovative frog saunas are helping to eradicate a fungus that has wiped out 90 species so far. TOAST THE HOST SATURDAY, 5.30PM, SBS FOOD If the thought of hosting others is enough to send you into a blind panic – or it putting you off from doing it at all – journalist Simon James Bailey has some simple advice to make it achievable 'with minimum stress and maximum enjoyment', whether it's having a couple of friends around for lunch or a bigger spread like a poolside engagement party. Most of it's not rocket science but it's certainly practical, from modern invitation etiquette to devising menus and calculating budgets, right through to easy-to-follow recipes and demonstrations, as well as health-conscious food tips. THE INSPIRED UNEMPLOYED (IMPRACTICAL) JOKERS MONDAY, 9.40PM, CHANNEL 10 Now that they have stopped terrorising the world and threatening a diplomatic incident with their recent travel show The List, Jack Steele and Matt 'Falcon' Ford are back on home turf and reunited with their pranking partners Dom and Liam for another season of ritual humiliation and cringe-worthy comedy. Thomas Jefferson once said 'travelling makes men wiser, but less happy' and the lads seem keen to prove him wrong on both counts – they still look like complete idiots trying to crash dinner tables in restaurants and posing as flamenco instructors, but they look like they are having an absolute blast doing it. THE BETTER SISTER PRIME VIDEO The latest entry into the ever-growing, bad-things-happening-to-beautiful-rich-people genre is adapted from Alafair Burke's best-selling 2019 thriller and will appeal to fans of Big Little Lies, Gone Girl and the recent Sirens. Jessica Biel and Elizabeth Banks star as sisters – the former is Chloe, a successful media boss with a luxurious lifestyle and a teenage son, while the latter plays estranged older sister Nicky, whose former addictions have left her struggling and embittered. When Chloe's high-powered and possibly shady lawyer husband is murdered, the investigation will reunite the pair to bicker and air old grievances from their shared traumatic childhood as the eight episodes weave together courtroom drama, family secrets and dollops of jet-black humour. IN CASE YOU MISSED IT … Eddie Redmayne deservedly won the quadrella of accolades – an Oscar, Golden Globe, BAFTA and SAG – for his performance as Stephen Hawking in this 2014 biopic. Based on Jane Hawking's memoir about her marriage to the renowned physicist, the film chronicles the couple's relationship as they navigate the joint strains of Hawking's meteoric rise in the scientific world and his physical decline from early onset Motor Neurone Disease. Just like Daniel Day Lewis did with his heart wrenching performance in My Left Foot, Redmayne does a remarkable job of capturing the physicality of Hawking's disease. Felicity Jones also shines as Hawking's devoted and underappreciated wife.

I Live in the City Where Netflix's Thrilling New Crime Drama Is Set. I Barely Recognize It
I Live in the City Where Netflix's Thrilling New Crime Drama Is Set. I Barely Recognize It

CNET

time02-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CNET

I Live in the City Where Netflix's Thrilling New Crime Drama Is Set. I Barely Recognize It

Any well-reviewed crime drama that draws numerous comparisons to Apple TV's brilliant Slow Horses will easily earn a place on my to-watch list, but as soon as Dept. Q hit Netflix last week, I hit play without hesitation. The reason I was in such a hurry to dive in is that I live in Edinburgh -- the city where the new detective show is set. Edinburgh is often used as a filming location, but most of the time it simply provides a picturesque and/or historical backdrop for a TV show or film -- it's more about the aesthetic effect rather than playing a pivotal role in the plot. Dept. Q is different. Jaded detective Carl Morck, played by a grizzled Matthew Goode, who is recovering from a shooting that killed one police officer, nearly killed him and paralysed his partner on a call-out, has been tasked with running a new department delving into Edinburgh's cold cases. The case that Goode picks out, along with the circumstances surrounding his shooting, has complex, knotty links to Edinburgh's justice system and criminal underworld. Here, the city provides more than just a pretty skyline -- it's pulled into the foreground, with the key players moving between the grand courts on Edinburgh's famous Royal Mile and the grimier parts of the city that tourists never see. As someone who calls Edinburgh home, I'm more than familiar with the landmarks, but I don't recognize the side of the city I see in the show at all. That's not to say it's not accurate. Edinburgh Castle is obviously a familiar sight to me. Netflix Sure, Edinburgh isn't exactly a hotbed of violent crime compared with other cities in the UK and definitely compared with cities in the US. In the five years I've lived here, I can remember only one fatal shooting making the news. But I also fully acknowledge that the majority of organized crime is often hidden from the view of those not immersed in that world. Occasionally, violent incidents, police raids or trials spill over, sending ripples of anxiety through neighborhoods and cropping up in headlines. But artistic portrayals, while often exaggerated for dramatic effect, can expose us to versions of places that otherwise might remain hidden from view. As a city famed for its beauty, often thought of as genteel and rather sedate, it's interesting to see Edinburgh portrayed as a place that is so much more than the tourist ideal. Not since the 1996 film Trainspotting has a less romanticized vision of the city been seen on screen. Dept. Q even wasn't originally set in Edinburgh -- it's actually adapted from a Danish novel of the same name -- but as a resident, I appreciated the way it provided a different perspective on the place that I know and love. It was also fun to spot parts of town I'm intimately familiar with appear in a relatively high-production show -- the castle view from outside my favorite indie record store, for example. There are many flaws with Dept Q, from little niggles (what local journalist can afford to drive a Porsche?) to pacing issues -- especially in the first episode. The plot is so meaty that at times it becomes convoluted. But in spite of all of this, I found myself staying up past my bedtime to watch "just one more episode" -- as my husband and I would tell each other with a sideways glance, fully aware that we were succumbing to a full-on binge. Is it perfect? No. Am I already hankering after season 2? Absolutely. Am I hoping Edinburgh will loom even larger in future episodes? I'm asking nicely -- yes, please.

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