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- Observational documentary series following the work of dedicated enforcement officers across the UK as they crack down on crooks and con men.
- Archaeologists search for information about how Stonehenge was built and what that can tell us about the people who built it.
- Documentary series looking at some of the ways in which the very latest technology, combined with some clever police work, is helping in the battle against the crimes that blight our communities.
- Britain faces its biggest challenge since World War II. This series takes a look at how people from all walks of life have responded to extraordinary times with kindness and resilience whether during the Blitz or the Coronavirus pandemic.
- Officers inspect takeaways in Oldham to ensure food is safe, including for those with food allergies. They ensure everyone gets home safely after a Westlife concert in Newcastle and investigate a gold bangle scam in Birmingham.
- DVSA officers catch a learner driver using a tiny Bluetooth device to cheat on his theory test. Officers are on the trail of a wealthy businessman selling unlicensed medicines. In Swansea the team crack down on an unscrupulous call centre.
- Officers tackle a second-hand car dealer who sold a death-trap to an unsuspecting customer. They crack down on a dodgy driveway company targeting pensioners. They pursue a fish merchant who has been illegally harvesting shellfish.
- Fly-tippers are caught red-handed dumping waste at a school for children with special needs. Officers track down a man who sold defective brake parts to motorcyclists. A couple involved in a copycat website scam have their property seized.
- Officers uncover a trade in counterfeit airbags. Environmental health officers launch a crackdown on rogue landlords. In Nottingham, there's a race against time to discover the source of an infection that's affected 160 people.
- Undercover officers identify shops illegally selling knives to children. They expose a car parking scam where vehicles are being left in muddy fields. They crack down on the sale of dangerous skin-whitening creams.
- Officers check hygiene in Oxford takeaways. In Studley, they tackle a butcher's shop cheating customers by claiming meat from overseas is British. They take action against a cowboy builder spending customers' money on holidays abroad.
- Officers are on the trail of fly-tippers caught on camera dumping waste in the Rhondda Valley. They raid an address in Lincoln where dogs are being kept and trained for illegal dog fighting. They track down an online fraudster.
- Officers tackle a water company after sewage pollutes a river. They catch up with the boss of a travel company ripping off holidaymakers. Officers team up with the parents of a girl who died after an allergic reaction to a takeaway meal.
- Officers catch up with a fraudster with so many aliases he loses track of who he is supposed to be. They take on a rail company after a boy suffers catastrophic injuries. Officers check retailers selling knives.
- Officers search the home of a loan shark and find a safe containing thousands of pounds. They also force a rogue builder to pay compensation to his elderly victims. Officers are on the trail of a drug gang.
- Officers crack down on rogue landlords housing families in squalid conditions. Police track down a con man posing as a collector for a children's cancer charity. Officers set up an online TV programme to name and shame local fly tippers.
- Officers go undercover to stop retailers selling acid to teenagers. They also track down crooked lettings agents who are pocketing their tenants' money. Police stop-and-search vehicles suspected of carrying fake goods to car boot sales.
- Enforcement officers close a filthy takeaway infested with mice. They also investigate a salmonella outbreak at a wedding. Officers are on the trail of fraudsters targeting people's bank accounts.
- Officers crack down on illegal and dangerous vehicles. They also discover an illegal puppy farm in Cannock that is putting profit ahead of care. A rogue kitchen trader that has swindled customers out of thousands of pounds is shut down.
- Officers swoop on an illegal sweatshop suspected of being a major supplier of counterfeit clothing and track down a cowboy builder who almost destroyed a family's home. Enforcement agents catch up with a fly-tipping gang.
- Officers crack down on coach drivers who are driving when they are too tired. The new technology being used to stop garden sheds being illegally rented out as homes. Plus, two fraudsters running a sim swap scam.
- At Felixstowe docks, enforcement agents are on the hunt for counterfeit and dangerous goods. Officers tackle a gang bullying elderly people into having unnecessary building work done and a gang who dumped waste next to a motorway.
- Officers in London investigate a tenant sub-letting his council flat. A criminal gang running a multi-million-pound diesel fraud are busted. Over 150 dogs being kept in squalid conditions at an animal centre in Lincolnshire are rescued.
- Officers crack down on a callous travel agent that is ripping off British holidaymakers. They also investigate a crooked builder who befriended a pensioner to take his money. In London, DVSA officers spot check luxury limos.
- With retail crime on the rise we see how some stores are using cameras with AI to catch shoplifters while others issue staff with body cameras. A police team crack down on burglaries in Bristol. A drone helps catch a burglar in Nottingham.
- Body camera footage helps convict a violent offender who assaulted a policewoman. A London wine bar uses cameras with facial recognition software to put pickpockets out of business. Passers-by film a ram raid on a jewellery shop.
- A police officer looks at burglary patterns to predict where they will strike next and he's waiting for them. A doorbell camera captures footage of a key-less car theft. Dyfed-Powys Police train traffic officers in the latest tactics.
- A mother fights back against car thieves as her baby is on the backseat. Hi-tech security helps catch statue thieves. The hunt is on for thieves who broke into a cathedral. Mobile fingerprint scanners help police check identities.
- Police track the spending habits of a man who brutally assaulted a D-Day veteran. Voice recognition software helps banks tackle online fraud. A special West Midlands Police unit is targeting illegal off-road motorbikes.
- A team of 'super recognisers' - police officers with an extraordinary ability to recognise faces - could be the key to catching criminals who commit multiple offences. New camera technology could identify criminals by their gait.
- Armed robbers burst into a jewellers in Hinkley, Leicestershire. Even though they wear masks and gloves to hide their identities, they leave behind a single footprint.
- A Premier League footballer's house is targeted twice by two professional burglars of high-value properties - but they are quickly caught thanks to a helicopter fitted with heat-seeking cameras.
- Two ram-raiders target a jewellers in Northampton. They think they've gotten away with it, but with the help of automatic number plate recognition cameras, they are soon behind bars.
- Residents create a network of CCTV to protect their neighbourhood. An elderly woman has her handbag snatched on her way to bingo, but the robber doesn't get far. Police follow a digital trail of evidence and put him behind bars.
- Trading Standards Officers investigate a multi-million-pound driving school after hundreds of learner drivers are left out of pocket. Meanwhile, police close in on fraudsters who are taking advantage of the Covid-19 pandemic.
- The cases of a company selling fake devices that supposedly reduce a car's toxic emissions, and a cleaning company that falsely claimed they could reduce customers' heating bills.
- The cases of a crooked tradesman dubbed the worst builder in Wales, and a serial fly tipper who flees the country to escape from the environment agency.
- The investigators take an estate agent to court for failing to tell buyers their new flat was a fire risk. The £200,000 flat had the same cladding as Grenfell Tower, but the buyers weren't told until half an hour after the sale was completed. By then, it was too late to pull out. Plus, a special police unit investigates a cruel new scam targeting the elderly.
- Investigators discover text messages and videos in which a gang of cruel con men mock their victims, many of whom are elderly and vulnerable. Trading Standards Officers also investigate a second-hand car dealer creating fake service histories for the cars on his forecourt, as well as traders selling knives to children.
- A BMW driver is caught on camera dumping bags of rubbish in a fly-tipping hot spot, and pension regulators close in on a charity boss who helped himself to the company pension fund.
- The officers investigate the death of a five-year-old girl following an incident at a children's playground. They also clamp down on traders selling sub-standard face masks.
- A major incident is reported when several canisters containing the deadly chemical weapon mustard gas are dumped in a lake and the race is on to find them.
- The causes behind a fatal road traffic collision are investigated, as it becomes apparent that someone may have fallen asleep at the wheel. Plus, Trading Standards officers get justice for a vicar who was tricked into paying tens of thousands of pounds to a cowboy builder.
- The causes of a £1.5million collision involving a party boat on the River Thames are examined. Plus, investigators put a stop to a medical scam that could put lives at risk and crack down on bogus immigration advisors. Last in the series.
- An archaeological quest reveals the oldest stones of Stonehenge originally belonged to an earlier sacred site -- a stone circle built on a remote hillside in west Wales.