



Topic of the program: Missing persons.
Guests in the studio: Vasily Nikolaevich Fedoshchenko - police colonel, head of the search department of the Russian Internal Affairs Directorate, Yury Petrovich Dubyagin - police colonel, president of the Russian Association of Children's Search, Viktor Petrovich Kosyanenko - head of the search department of Moscow.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of who is considered missing.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of where people disappear.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of what kind of people disappear most often by age, professional, and social characteristics.
Viktor Kosyanenko answers the question of whether missing persons most often belong to criminal structures or not.
Viktor Kosyanenko answers the question of where relatives should contact regarding a missing person.
Video: People on the streets of Moscow, a traffic police inspector regulates traffic, a square near Leningradsky railway station, people with luggage and carts, photographs of missing people, a building and a sign "Accident Bureau", bureau employees answer calls, a bureau employee at a computer, a woman talks about her missing son, documents and applications for searching for missing people, bureau phone numbers.
Albert Klikushin talks about the work of the Moscow Accident Bureau.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of whether it is possible for non-relatives to file a report of missing people.
Yury Dubyagin answers the question of when a criminal case is opened.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of whether the disappearance of people is related to the housing issue or not.
Video: Corpse near car, police at crime scene, homeless person walking down street, man lighting cigarette in underpass, Plot: missing people from risk groups after housing privatization, multi-story residential building, government house, interiors of uncleaned apartment, new buildings, Vasily Kuptsov talks about apartment fraud, man behind bars, Aleksandr Murylev - arrested killer of apartment owners under investigation, man at computer, folders with papers, Sergey Bagayev talks about protection of transactions by real estate company, realtor license form.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of who besides government agencies can search for missing people.
Vasily Fedoshchenko and Yuri Dubyagin answer the question of how long does the search for missing people last.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of what needs to be done to ensure that the search for missing people is carried out as quickly as possible.
Plot: about forensic examination, photographs of missing persons, coffins lying on the street, a morgue employee lifts the lid of a coffin, a corpse in a coffin, unidentified corpses in a morgue on chains and on benches, Vladimir Zharov talks about storing corpses, coffins lying in stacks on the street, a photograph of corpses, a forensic expert measures a human skull, human hair, a forensic expert looks through a microscope, a jaw with teeth and a human skull, Oleg Korovyansky talks about the work of forensic experts, a human skull is examined by a forensic expert, photographs of identified persons, taking fingerprints, a fingerprint under a magnifying glass.
Viktor Kosyanenko, Yuri Dubyagin and Vasily Fedoshchenko answer the question of whether it is true that the corpses of unidentified people are cremated after seven days.
A forensic expert talks about his work.
Yuri Dubyagin answers the question of whether the police know about people who have fallen into slavery.
Story: about a missing child who was enslaved in Azerbaijan, missing boy Vitya, Galina Martynkova talks about her missing son, a man on a snowy road, Vitya talks about how he was enslaved, people playing with a dog on the street, a wooden house, a woman in the window.
A foreign woman in the studio talks about the search for her daughter who went missing in Russia.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of who searches for foreigners in Russia.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of whether the search style is different in America and here.
Story about a child reception center, children during lunch, children talk about how they got lost.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of how effective it is to turn to the media in cases of searching for people.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of how often people from state search agencies move to private investigative agencies.
Vasily Fedoshchenko answers the question of how often people go missing for the purpose of forced organ transplantation.
Vasily Fedoshchenko says that a system for searching for missing persons in Russia exists.
The host says goodbye to the viewers.
Fedoshchenko Vasily Nikolaevich - police colonel
11.04.1995