
Former Amsterdam police detective Floris Wolfs has been transferred to the police department of the south-Dutch country town Maastricht. His metropolitan experience nicely complements the local expertise of his new country colleagues, who know the folks. Slowly he fits in, while solving countless crimes together with his female partner Eva van Dongen.

The lifeless body of a young woman is found in the Jeker river near Maastricht. The only clues are a small box of resin and an expensive necklace. For the young, spirited detective Eva van Dongen, this murder is a new challenge in her dynamic work. Then Floris Wolfs appears at the crime scene.

Eva and Wolfs end up at the Maastricht market, literally among the fish of fishmonger Jack Smits. Smits is a big guy and is in the process of beating up a Moroccan man when Eva intervenes. The fishmonger claims that his fish has been doused with chlorine and that he is being blackmailed. Eva and Wolfs don't trust Smits at first, but when it's not just the fish that's being targeted and his car is also vandalized, Eva and Wolfs spring into action. Wild chases through the narrow streets of Maastricht and exciting scenes on the water follow. Romeo and Marion are visited by Gertje's wife and children at their desk. Gertje did not come home last night. Something serious must have happened. His wife has no idea where he might be. It's a difficult case, and Romeo throws himself into it when it turns out that Chief Inspector Flamand knows Gertje well and wants him to return to his wife and children.

A lottery played by people you'd rather not meet. Hans van Baeren is one of them. He plays but can no longer afford it, so he sees only one way out: to end it all. But did he really take his own life? His daughter Aimée is convinced he was murdered. Wolfs falls for Aimée's charm and wants to do a little investigation. Eva is busy with other things and doesn't see any point in it. Eva's brother Maurice is in trouble. Maurice is arrested in a warehouse with stolen electronics. He resisted so much that he almost beat Romeo into the hospital. When it turns out that Van Baeren's case involves international fraud, Eva has to get to work. While her brother Maurice is under arrest, Eva has to go undercover. She encounters a Nigerian gang of con artists who don't shy away from a little violence.

Pufferfish is a very dangerous poisonous fish that is officially not allowed to be served, but for Japanese people, the fish is an exclusive delicacy. Bridget is found dead with pufferfish in her body. Poisoned or suicide? When it turns out that she was in the process of closing a deal with Geert, the owner of a Japanese restaurant, the suspect quickly emerges. When it also turns out that the relationships between the parties involved are very close, not only professionally but also privately, it becomes a very complicated case for Wolfs and Eva. On top of that, Eva has other personal issues to deal with. Her brother Maurice is arrested again, this time drunk and with a bunch of stolen watches in his pocket. Eva feels compelled to help Maurice. She is torn between work and her personal life. Which is more important? Is she making the right choices?

Wolfs is having a hard time in Maastricht. His daughter wants nothing to do with him, and things aren't exactly rosy with his new colleague Eva van Dongen either. When Wolfs meets two men in the bar who are facing the same problems, life seems pleasant again for a moment. The blow is all the greater when he goes home and encounters the two men again, next to a burnt-out car wreck that has crashed into a tree. One is dead and the other seriously injured. Marion hands the case over to Wolfs, and suddenly he has even more problems than before. His private and professional lives become intertwined, and before he has solved the case, he is called in by Flamand. Romeo's career is taking off. He is so eager to learn that after completing his Integrity course, he even fines Mayor Leers.

The Van Bladel family: father, mother, son, and daughter. An ordinary family. Nothing wrong with them, that much is clear. Crystal clear. But Marion has been promoted to community police officer and has a strange feeling about the Van Bladel family. What is going on with them? Broken glass at the front door, their son caught smoking a joint, their daughter hitting her doll. Something is wrong, but what? Will Marion find out in time? Does Marion still have time for her own family? Her son Frits also has his problems. But mom Marion is busy with her police work and doesn't see that things aren't going smoothly at home either. Fortunately, her colleagues Eva and Wolfs are investigating burglaries in Marion's neighborhood. Romeo is the detective at the office and he eventually finds the burglar, who can then be arrested. Will everything turn out all right after all?

Alfred Thielen, Maastricht's biggest and most powerful mafia boss, suddenly reappears. He is pulling the strings. Elusive and unreachable for the justice system and police. Until he wants to make a deal with the Public Prosecution Service. Why? What is going on? Flamand is assigned by the Public Prosecution Service to take him into protective custody and interrogate him. Wolf doesn't trust Thielen at all and wants to give him a rough time. Eva, on the other hand, takes a different approach and tries to get to know him better. Alfred makes a crushing impression on Eva and, according to her, she develops a special bond with him. Will this help her get more information about the organization, or will he keep quiet and play games with her? Romeo is in seventh heaven when he helps Susan, Dennis's mother, with an alleged shoplifting incident involving Dennis. Unfortunately for Romeo, all is not well at Susan's home. Dennis turns out to have more on his conscience than just stealing candy.

A pool of blood measuring six liters. Blood splatters on the wall. A painting that has disappeared. Where is the body? Who is the perpetrator? Johan de Jaegher, the owner of the gallery, has been missing for a few days. When it turns out to be a Breugel painting worth three million, his brother Gerard quickly becomes a suspect. The painting is discovered at the airport, where it is waiting to be transported to the Philippines. Can Eva and Wolfs catch Gerard in the act? And will Romeo make a mistake? He's not exactly the best boy in the class. But when he accepts "bribes" and comes into contact with weed, things turn out very differently for him than he had hoped. Fortunately, Romeo has the support of his girlfriend. Until Wolfs finds out who his girlfriend is.

There are violent clashes in Maastricht's nightlife district. Ambulance personnel are threatened by a group of youths while trying to help a girl wearing unusual boots. Romeo and Marion, on their mountain bikes, are called in to assist. Calm seems to have returned to Maastricht when suddenly, out of nowhere, Romeo is beaten to a pulp. There are no CCTV cameras and no one is willing to testify. Romeo pretends that nothing has happened and just wants to get back to work. Wolfs, as a B-O-T (Policy Support Team) member, is going to help Romeo come to terms with this incident after Romeo almost beat up an arrestee. Eva and Wolfs discover that a private security company does have cameras installed at the place where Romeo was beaten up. This company actually does more than just camera surveillance. Eva and Wolfs find the girl in question through this company. She runs away, and so does Wolfs' daughter! This puts the father-daughter relationship under pressure again.

Wolfs' daughter Fleur goes with Romeo to arrange things for her theater performance. It is supposed to be a special performance in an old factory hall. But it becomes very special when she and Romeo stumble upon a drug deal. Romeo manages to make a phone call just before he and Fleur are taken hostage by Denie. Denie turns out to be an old acquaintance of Romeo's. Flamand takes the lead as negotiator. Wolfs is sent home because he is too emotionally involved, while Eva experiences tense moments with the arrest team. When Romeo is released, Wolfs is still not home, and the sniper is ready to fire, Flamand's team experiences intense moments in Maastricht.

Maurice, Eva's brother, is not receiving enough attention and is at risk of getting back on the wrong path if Eva does not make time for him. Fortunately, Frank comes to the rescue by offering Maurice a place to sleep. Marion's son gets into serious trouble when he tries to "fit in." Marion is torn between her roles as a mother and a police officer. What do you do when you suspect your own son of leaking police information to his "friends"? A car crashes into the water, resulting in a fatality. Is it the result of an illegal street race? What does Marion's son have to do with all this? And what do you do as a police officer when your own son is involved in something this serious?

A highly aggressive gang of art thieves is active in the Netherlands and Belgium. When a robbery with fatal consequences takes place in Maastricht, Belgian police officer Britt joins Flamand's police team. They are looking for Danneels, a Flemish man who appears to be the mastermind behind the robberies. When they discover Danneels and his Hungarian accomplices at a bungalow park, they decide to eavesdrop on and observe the gang. Romeo and Marion are dealing with a neighborhood dispute that turns out to be very different from what they initially thought. Eva is still trying to dig up information about Wolfs. Unfortunately for her, Wolfs' file is confidential. But when she has to go to Amsterdam, she seizes the opportunity with both hands to get more information. But will that make her happy? Her brother also causes problems when he smashes up the kitchen at Pension de Ponti and Frank's place. Eva no longer knows how to deal with her feelings.

The Flikken Maastricht team still has its hands full with Danneels and his Hungarian accomplices, an aggressive art gang. Observing the criminals becomes very complicated when Maurice, Eva's brother, turns out to be involved. Maurice wants to talk to Danneels, the mastermind behind the art thefts. Wolfs enlists the help of Marion and Romeo to take over the surveillance and to tell Eva himself that her brother is involved. Emotions have run so high that Wolfs and Eva are no longer really talking. When they decide to arrest the gang, the crooks have already fled. Now they understand why Maurice was brought in: he serves as a guide in the caves of the Zonneberg. Kilometers of passages, where it is pitch dark, no telephone communication possible, various entrances and exits... The perfect location to store the stolen art treasures. The arrest team is called in and they overpower the Hungarians. But where are Maurice and Danneels? Wolfs goes after them on his own. Eva is not to be deterred either and takes another entrance.

Wolfs ended up in the hospital after being shot while chasing the criminal Danneels in the caves of Zonneberg. Eva is worried; only when Wolfs wakes up will it become clear whether he has suffered permanent brain damage. She is also concerned about Maurice, who has been arrested by the federal police investigating the shooting in the caves. To make matters worse, she is also disciplined for ignoring the order not to enter the caves. And then Danneels is still on the run. When Wolfs finally wakes up, everything seems to be returning to normal. But then a dehydrated, unconscious German man is placed in the room next to Wolfs. When Wolfs finds out who the man is, he can't resist doing police work and, in his pajamas, sets off in pursuit.

Wolfs is recovering, has been discharged from the hospital, and still needs to take it easy for a while. However, he can't stay away from work and, still somewhat weakened but in good spirits, he walks into the police station. Before he has even had a chance to say hello to his colleagues, a phone call comes in. The picturesque village of Sweikhuizen in South Limburg is shaken by a chase, and two boys who are being pursued panic and call for help. Before Wolfs and Eva can respond, the line goes dead. Marion and Romeo are in the middle of the lives of a couple of teenagers. Drugs, rape, and social media make it difficult to figure out who is lying and who is not. And Marion actually has something else on her mind, but it has nothing to do with work.

After a night out in Maastricht with her friends, a woman from Amsterdam is found dead in the Maas River. None of her friends have any idea what happened to her. Wolfs and Eva investigate the woman's movements. The only clue seems to be a brief encounter she had with a man on a terrace on the Vrijthof, after which the man quickly disappeared. Wolfs and Eva discover who the man is. But why was he startled by the victim if he didn't know her? Wolfs wants to talk to Frank about what happened between him and Eva. But that conversation turns out very differently than he expected. And Marion is in for an unpleasant surprise when her husband visits her at work.

A student reports to the police station. She claims that she was raped by acquaintances during a party, but her friends say that she wanted it. Just as Wolfs and Eva are able to prove that she was raped, the girl withdraws her report. Romeo and Marion also have to deal with a victim who does not want to file a report. They are not satisfied with that.


After shooting Luca, Wolfs seems to have disappeared with the money. But then he suddenly reappears, with the suitcase. He is then suspended pending the investigation into Luca's death. While Wolfs is at home, the Maastricht police are busy. A particularly valuable Fabergé egg is on display in the city. Hoeben has arranged security. There is also a lot of commotion due to the crowds attending André Rieu's Vrijthof concerts. Marion and Romeo stop a driver who is not using a hands-free device. The driver has no intention of stopping; he floors it and drives off. When the driver is apprehended after a chase, the police find traces of explosives in the car. A list of employees and dates of André Rieu's Vrijthof concerts is also found. Is an attack being planned against him? The detectives talk to Rieu's security team and it soon becomes clear that a deranged fan has threatened to blow up Rieu.

A local politician is shot while hunting. Eva and Wolfs investigate whether it was an accident or murder. The detectives soon discover that the man was not well-liked. He used his political position to further his own interests, which earned him many enemies. Even his friends and family did not always support him, but they are reluctant to talk about it. That changes when a second person is killed. Romeo and Marion investigate a number of cases of debit card fraud. They quickly identify a suspect, but when they arrest him, he appears to have a strong alibi. Romeo and Marion are suspicious and continue to observe the man.

The entire team is busy conducting a relentless manhunt for Daan de Vos. But Daan appears to have many more tricks up his sleeve, and it remains to be seen whether they will be able to catch him.

Eva and Wolfs investigate the murder of a young man who was severely tortured before his death. The trail quickly leads to the coffee shop where he worked. But the owner is uncooperative, and the boy's parents are also withholding information. Romeo is assigned to work with a new colleague, Esmee. They are confronted with a series of bag snatchings. After the attack on Pension de Ponti, Wolfs and Eva have been given temporary accommodation in a hotel. Fleur has another plan: she asks her father if he would like to live with her. Eva befriends Joes, a bartender at the hotel.


The half-burned corpse of a young man is found at Caroseer, a trailer park in Maastricht where the famous folk singer Frans Bauer is about to perform. Eva's new partner is convinced that the campers are involved, especially when he hears that the daughter of one of the richest camp residents has a boyfriend against her father's wishes. He antagonizes all the camp residents. Ultimately, the murderers are found in a completely different circle. Along the way, the daughter gets her boyfriend back and Eva comes face to face with her old partner.

After a Chinese girl is beaten up in a massage parlor, a customer takes her to the hospital. There she disappears before the doctors have had a chance to examine her properly. Shortly afterwards, the girl's severed head is found. Investigations reveal that a Chinese restaurant owner abducted the girl from the hospital. Soon, this Mama Wong is suspected of being a snakehead, a large-scale human trafficker.


Because they unlawfully arrested Daan de Vos, Eva and Wolfs are reassigned. They are no longer detectives and must now patrol the streets in plainclothes. There, they encounter the murder of a young cocaine dealer and a new detective team. Meanwhile, Daan de Vos comes to Mechels to get his story straight and demands that Wolfs and Eva no longer have contact with him. But what if Daan himself doesn't stick to that... Marion tries to persuade Romeo to join a COSA circle, a group of volunteers who support sex offenders in their return to society. However, Romeo is not sure if he wants to do that.

Eva and Wolfs try to make the best of it as ‘ordinary' police officers on the street. When they are confronted with the murder of a young hairdresser and her father threatens to take revenge on the perpetrators, Mechels and her team have to pull out all the stops to prevent that from happening. However, the threat comes from a completely different angle. Risking their own lives, Wolfs and Eva end up at a school, and the big question is whether disaster can still be averted. And then there is Daan de Vos, who has turned harassing Eva and Wolfs into an art form. Romeo has decided to get to know the COSA circle, a group of volunteers who assist sex offenders in their return to society.

Wolfs faces a dilemma: he must choose between saving Eva or his daughter Fleur. An impossible choice that becomes even more difficult when Public Prosecutor Jens Bols shows up. He is convinced that it is not Eva but Wolfs who is responsible for De Vos' murder. Bols leaves no stone unturned in his quest to catch him. As a policewoman, Eva's life in prison is not safe. Then Bols suddenly appears before her and proposes a deal. Romeo and Marion are called to the scene of an assault on a young woman. They catch one of the perpetrators, but he refuses to talk. This ultimately has major consequences for the team.

After Eva helped and betrayed Public Prosecutor Jens Bols, she has to return to prison. There, she faces the danger of being attacked again, which puts her under enormous pressure. Meanwhile, the hunted Wolfs is still determined to get Fleur to safety. He even goes so far as to ask his ex, Fleur's mother, for help. His plan seems to be working, but Bols is doing everything he can to find him before that happens. It leads to a cat-and-mouse game at Brussels airport. Romeo and Marion's lives are also in danger. They are taken hostage by the father of the beaten girl. He corners Mechels; he wants her to hand over the perpetrator who is in prison in exchange for the lives of her agents.

The agency is in shock over the attack on Wolfs, Eva, and public prosecutor Jens Bols. The National Criminal Investigation Department takes over the investigation into the attack and the leak at the agency and proceeds energetically. Romeo is suspended and Marion comes under the scrutiny of the National Criminal Investigation Department. Is she the leak they are looking for? Wolfs is assigned a case: a young woman has been fished out of the Maas. She has been severely beaten and tortured.

The agency is fully committed to hunting down Tony Verwoerd. Forensic evidence on the body of the tortured woman leads to Liège. But where in that city can Tony be found? Will they find him in time to prevent a fatal outcome?


On an industrial estate, a man witnesses a brutally executed professional robbery at a cash office, involving heavy weapons and leaving one person dead. Wolfs and Eva quickly arrive on the scene and a wild chase ensues. After a fierce firefight, the perpetrators escape and Wolfs and Eva discover that the dead young man was previously involved in a clumsy, failed robbery attempt. Since this does not fit in with this professional robbery, they have to pull out all the stops to find out who the boy robbed the cash office with and how they got their heavy weapons. Two brothers from the criminal underworld who hate each other's guts meet for the first time since their quarrel at their mother's funeral. The family is afraid that this will get seriously out of hand. Romeo and Marion go to check it out.

The girlfriend and model of a well-known Maastricht artist is found dead in her parents' bathtub, with a plastic bag over her head. Everything points to suicide, but her father, a former police officer, is convinced it is murder. The case takes Wolfs and Eva into a world of art, big egos, jealousy, and lots of alcohol and drugs. Then they discover that the dead girl in the bathtub is not the only model who has died under suspicious circumstances. Are they dealing with a serial killer? Marion meets an old school friend at the police station. They hit it off right away, until she hears what he's there to report: aliens have abducted his favorite cow. Laughingly, she promises to take a look at the farm, where Romeo loses count among the cows and Marion thinks there's more to it than that.

Wolfs is on the run because he is wanted for helping his daughter Fleur escape. He makes the shocking discovery that Eva has disappeared while guarding public prosecutor Jens Bols. Wolfs confronts Bols at the safe house. Wolfs manages to escape and, hunted by his own colleagues, begins a search for Eva. Romeo becomes the contact person for a returnee from Syria.

While Eva is being held captive, Wolfs makes a gruesome discovery. When the weapon used to murder Bols' two bodyguards is found in the Ponti with Eva's fingerprints on it, things look bleak for Wolfs and Eva. Marion and Romeo risk being fired if they help them. Romeo's returned Syria fighter gets involved in a fight. Is he the peace-loving boy the other aid workers think he is, or is there more to him than meets the eye?


Wolfs has left Maastricht, looks a lot different, and is out for revenge. Eva gets a new partner, Peter Mooy, who doesn't seem to be a good match. She is investigating a conflict between criminals from Maastricht and Amsterdam.

Wolf infiltrates the organization of Amsterdam criminal Sjon. Eva, who doesn't get along with her new partner Peter Mooy, is with him on a case in Amsterdam. The victim in question turns out to be an old acquaintance of Eva's, Bea Middelkoop. She appears to have fallen from an apartment building. Marion and Romeo are dealing with a possible drug case.


A woman comes to report the kidnapping of her child by Maastricht drug dealers. It soon becomes clear that there is much more to the report than meets the eye, and that the victim and perpetrators are inseparable. Romeo and Marion are faced with a missing person case. An alcoholic woman has disappeared after being evicted from her home.

A young girl falls from an apartment building. Accident, murder, or suicide? Marion, who knows the girl from the street, thinks it's murder. Wolfs thinks it was suicide; the girl was addicted to drugs. Romeo is on a leadership course. Eventually, Marion and Wolfs unravel the events, but whether they have solved the case is questionable. The suspect they arrest is immediately deported to Belgium.


The fight of Floris Wolfs and Eva van Dongen against the Virtus et Justitia society seems to be lost. Eva and Wolfs are arrested with at their feet the corpse of Louis Dearden. Romeo and Marion have to deal with very serious odors.

After Wolfs and Eva manage to escape the dance again with the help of a mysterious ally, they corner the bosses of Virtus et Justitia. Marion makes a gruesome discovery that nearly kills her.

An attack on two residents of a house seems like a rip deal, but why didn't the perpetrators take drugs. Romeo and Marion are called to a burglary; a stock of expensive watches has been stolen from a safe.

While Eva, trapped with a number of young women in a truck, is about to disappear to the Middle East, Wolfs is in the burning house of Lies Dewulf. In the meantime, the computer system at the police station has been completely disrupted.

A young student is found dead near a dumpster. He died of suffocation. It turns out that the boy's father has recently become the victim of a drug war between two Limburg gangs. Is the boy also a victim of this liquidation sequence or is there something else going on? Romeo and Marion record the report of a young woman who says she has been attacked. They find the perpetrator who soon gives in, but is shocked when he learns that the charge is rape.

















Complete episode guide for Flikken Maastricht with detailed information about every season and episode including air dates, summaries, ratings, and streaming availability in United States.
This episode guide is organized by seasons, making it easy to track your viewing progress or find specific episodes. Use the episode information to plan your binge-watching sessions or catch up on missed episodes.

A young gambler is found murdered in Maastricht's city park. The investigation leads Eva and Wolfs to a world where money is made in many ways. A woman reports to Romeo and Marion that she has been threatened by her ex-husband, who has just been released from prison.

Despite security measures in place, a business executive is murdered during a party at a music center in Maastricht. When Eva and Wolfs discover drugs during their investigation, the atmosphere becomes explosive. Meanwhile, Romeo and Marion try to catch a burglar in a residential neighborhood.

At the request of the Criminal Intelligence Unit, Wolfs and Eva tap the phone of wealthy Pierre van Brunssum. What seems like a boring job in the context of a fraud investigation turns into something else entirely when it turns out that Van Brunssum's son has disappeared without a trace. Their colleague Romeo also has to deal with a disappearance.

Eva and Wolfs must rescue an unwilling girl from the clutches of a dangerous pimp. Romeo and Marion are surprised by a hit-and-run driver during a traffic stop. But he's not off the hook yet; they're going after him!

When a young boy goes missing during a holiday camp, everyone immediately fears the worst. Wolfs and Eva spring into action. Romeo and Marion are confronted with an old disappearance. The person who failed to solve the case back then is now getting in their way. Frank runs into problems with investors.

A shootout between drug runners on the highway near Maastricht has fatal consequences. A Belgian businessman is shot and dies on the spot. A witness who was sitting next to the man has disappeared without a trace. Eva and Wolfs quickly arrest a suspect. When they finally find the witness, they think they have solved the case. But that turns out to be too easy.

During a reenactment of the storming of Maastricht by French troops, someone is killed. It appears that live ammunition was used. The victim is the patron of the militia. A wealthy man, but during the investigation into the murder, it emerges that he did not always acquire his money honestly. This earned him many enemies. Marion also makes no friends when she finally breaks up with her lover.

Wolfs is dealing with the murder of a homeless man. But he is more concerned with Eva, who is investigating Frank's involvement with criminal money launderers. Then Wolfs receives a phone call informing him that Eva has been kidnapped. If he wants to see her alive again, he will have to cooperate with the gang. Romeo has to remove a dirty homeless man from the library. It seems like a routine job, but then the man finally loses it.
While Eva and Frank are preparing for their wedding, she and Wolfs are confronted with a Maastricht resident who has been shot. Afterwards, he cannot remember anything about the shooting. Wolfs and Eva must investigate what happened, and the trail quickly leads to illegal prostitutes and human traffickers. Marion and Romeo are searching for a missing girl.

It's going to happen after all; Eva and Frank are getting married. Wolfs has no choice but to accept it. Just like Aeisha, an Afghan girl who is threatened with being forced into marriage. But not everyone accepts the way things are. And that leads to murder and manslaughter.

Eva is on leave and trying to come to terms with her husband's death. Romeo is allowed to assist Wolfs in the murder of the chef of a Michelin-starred restaurant. The collaboration between Wolfs and Romeo is not as pleasant as that with Eva. Nevertheless, Wolfs and Romeo get a glimpse into the world of haute cuisine, where ambition, jealousy, and ambition play a major role. Marion has to deal with a video camera stolen from the hospital by a junkie. It contains the last message a dying girl made for her family. Marion and Chief Inspector Hoeben do everything they can to find the camera before the images are deleted.

Eva is still at home and is getting tired of it. She wants to go back to work, but the company doctor and Chief Inspector Hoeben have their doubts. Wolfs is assigned to the case of a dead neo-Nazi. The trail quickly leads to a group of neo-Nazis and their sympathizers, but the group refuses to talk to the police. Even the CIE, which has a source within the group, cannot help them further. Despite Wolfs' protests, Eva ultimately decides to try to join the group incognito. She attends a meeting and manages to win the trust of one of the boys. She is invited to attend a survival camp. Wolfs is vehemently opposed, but Eva thinks the opportunity is too good to pass up. They know where the camp is being held, so they can keep an eye on Eva while she finds out who killed the boy. Marion has since started working as a community police officer and immediately gets to work. After a number of warnings, an antisocial family is evicted from their home. And that doesn't happen without a fight.

A businessman is found murdered in a part of a park known as a gay meeting place. The businessman led a respectable life with his wife and son, who are both shocked when they realize that their husband and father frequently visited gay circles. The case leads Eva and Wolfs into the shadowy world of male prostitutes and escort boys. Marion, as a community police officer, talks about criminals who invest their money in Maastricht's hospitality industry. She runs into trouble when Romeo's girlfriend turns out to have a business that may not be entirely above board. And then she also receives anonymous threats.

A bank robbery keeps Wolfs and Eva busy. The perpetrators have taken the bank director's mistress hostage and forced him to open the vault containing millions of euros intended for the Tefaf art fair. The robbers manage to escape cleverly. Wolfs and Eva conclude that they must have had a lot of inside information and investigate the social circle of the bank director and his mistress. They quickly find the perpetrators. But where have the millions gone? Eva also appears to have a strange money problem, which puts Frank's death in a completely different light. Marion argues with Romeo about her investigation into his girlfriend's bowling alley. And the anonymous threats against her continue.

Frank's killers contact Eva. They want the money Frank stole from them back. Eva refuses to cooperate, of course, but the criminals have taken that into account. They have a way to force her to hand over the money. Eva then has a problem: she needs a code to withdraw the money from the Luxembourg bank. And that code is missing from Frank's papers. Marion's blackmailer is finally arrested; he appears to be a business partner of Romeo's girlfriend. Romeo therefore feels compelled to break up with his girlfriend.

Eva falls into the hands of Frank's killers. Wolfs discovers that Luca is abusing his daughter to blackmail Eva. Marion is also missing, but no one except Romeo has time to look for her. He discovers that she is being held hostage by the person who has been threatening her all along, and who now intends to carry out his threats. Luca turns out to be playing a double game in order to get his hands on some of Frank's money.

At a boarding school, a Dutch teacher is found dead after a picnic with her favorite class. The cause of death is initially a mystery. The case becomes even more complicated when the detectives discover that the victim had assumed someone else's identity. So who is this woman? When it turns out that she died from a strange combination of hallucinogenic drugs, her ex-husband, a local pharmacist, comes into the picture. But the school principal and the girls in her class also have their secrets. Romeo and Marion encounter a quack who defrauds vulnerable patients. At least, that is the story of the person who comes to file a report. But Marion begins to have doubts when the self-proclaimed doctor manages to alleviate her symptoms, which no one else has been able to treat. Romeo informs Wolfs about Fleur's drug use.

A municipal official is found dead. When Marion goes to inform the family, she finds his young daughter home alone. Her mother also died recently. Marion must find a place for the girl to stay. Wolfs and Eva have to find out whether the man committed suicide or was murdered. They soon discover that the man was responsible for construction projects on behalf of the municipality. Romeo has to train a new colleague, Daan de Vos, an Amsterdam native who is joining the police force as a lateral entrant and will become a detective after completing an accelerated course. A job that Romeo himself aspires to, incidentally. Their collaboration is therefore not exactly smooth sailing.

During a house viewing, a dead body is found. It turns out to be the real estate agent who was supposed to conduct the viewing, but who did not show up for work that day. Through the agent's diary, Wolfs and Eva discover a mysterious buyer who had appointments with the agent not only that day, but several times a week for quite some time. The detectives discover that a married woman is hiding behind the buyer's name. Is this a crime of passion? Daan and Marion are sent out on a "white feet" campaign to make citizens aware of open doors and windows that make it easy for intruders to break in. But that turns out very differently than they expected.

A half-naked, abused student is found in the city. She is terribly confused, but Eva and Wolfs quickly realize that she has been raped. Eva fears that a rapist who terrorized the area a few years ago is active again. After analyzing the rapist's signature and the evidence found, it appears that she is right. Chief Inspector Hoeben decides to set a trap, and Eva volunteers to be the target for the perpetrator. Wolfs is put in charge of the operation. The trap seems to work; a man who attacks Eva is arrested. Meanwhile, Romeo and Daan go to a known drug den after receiving complaints about noise pollution. There they find Fleur unconscious. She has taken an overdose. Romeo immediately informs Wolfs, who rushes to the hospital. He abandons the operation to catch the rapist. Then Eva discovers that the arrested man is not the rapist.

A police officer is found dead on the Maastricht golf course. Wolfs does not want Eva to work on this case, because she is already having a hard time coping with her rape. But Eva does not want to sit at home feeling sorry for herself and simply rejoins the investigation. The deceased is a well-known community police officer. In his spare time, the man was investigating young people who hang out on the golf course at night. The question is whether that proved fatal for him. The investigation takes a different turn when a car with two bodies inside is found in the water near the golf course. The detectives quickly suspect that the community police officer witnessed a settling of scores. And they discover that there must have been another witness. But when they finally find him, he refuses to cooperate. Marion and Romeo have their hands full with a compassionate local resident who wants them to take care of a disabled homeless man. But finding shelter for the man is not easy. The local resident then decides to help the homeless man herself. And she shouldn't have done that. Meanwhile, Wolfs also has his hands full with his daughter, who is being forced to go through rehab in a clinic.

During a tour of the Maastricht casemates, the future son-in-law of Uncle Will, a well-known financial genius who invests a lot of money for the happy few in Limburg, disappears. A massive search is launched, but to Wolf and Eva's surprise, the young man has vanished from the casemates. Hoeben doesn't immediately see this as a case, until it turns out that the boy had an appointment with the police on the day of his disappearance. Uncle Will knows what that was about: the boy had swindled him. Uncle Will had agreed with him that he would turn himself in and return the money, but now it appears that he has run away. When Will's much younger wife also disappears, the picture seems complete: the boy and the woman have run off with Will's money. Will and his daughter are inconsolable. Can Wolfs and Eva find the two? Daan has his first case as a detective; a girl has reported the theft of her expensive iPhone. A ghost from Eva's past reappears when she finds a small portion of the money that was in the explosive suitcase in the Ponti's kitchen.

During a fight between two girls in a schoolyard, knives are drawn. Both girls end up injured in the emergency room. When Eva and Wolfs come to pick them up for questioning, the attending physician points out to Eva that Loretta, one of the girls, is probably being systematically raped and abused. That could also explain her aggressive behavior. Eva and Wolfs go to talk to Loretta, but she doesn't want to talk about anything. Wolfs and Eva identify the possible perpetrators: her boyfriend, who may be her pimp, and her stepfather. Daan and Romeo are assigned to trace a cell phone number that is used to call 911 several times every night. They quickly find the owner of the phone: a man with two young children who admit that they occasionally dial the number. But when they call 112 again the next night after being reprimanded by the police, Daan suspects that there is more to it than meets the eye. Loretta's case also takes an unexpected turn that unpleasantly surprises Wolfs and Eva.

Wolfs is in prison, accused of murder and rape. Eva and Daan cannot believe that Wolfs has gone that far. But the money that turned up in the suitcase makes Eva have her doubts. What do they really know about Wolfs? When Eva visits him in prison, Wolfs asks her to trust him. He did indeed have an argument with Loretta's boyfriend, but he did not kill him. According to him, there is a witness who saw that the boy was unharmed when Wolfs left. However, the national criminal investigation department cannot find this witness. Eva and Marion try to find him themselves and eventually manage to locate the man. Wolfs is released but remains suspended, and according to Hoeben, he cannot remain with the Maastricht police force. The question is, who did kill the boy and try to pin it on Wolfs? Or does Wolfs have something to hide after all?
At a care farm, the owners' nightmare becomes reality. The body of Melcher, a boy with Down syndrome, is found in the barn. Eva and Wolfs must find out what happened, which is not easy with the unusual witnesses they have at their disposal. Marion does not trust a move out of her neighborhood. She goes after it with Esmee. Eva investigates the missing money from the briefcase; she must and will prove that Wolfs had nothing to do with it.

Wolfs and Eva are confronted with a missing asset manager who claims to have lost a significant amount of his clients' money during the crisis. Did his clients seek retribution, or did he abscond with their funds? Esmee experiences physical violence for the first time when a man loses control in a computer store. Senseless violence, or is there more to it? Eva suspects that Luca may have had an accomplice when he went to get the money out of the suitcase.

Wolfs and Eva investigate the death of an elderly woman. She was stabbed on her farm. Her husband has dementia and was found with the murder weapon in his hand. It seems like a family tragedy, but Wolfs and Eva discover that there is more to it than that. Marion, Romeo, and Esmee have their hands full with a quarreling ex-couple. Fleur is going to live with her mother in Barcelona.

During the wedding reception—a boat trip on the Maas—the bride's father is murdered. It soon becomes clear to Wolfs and Eva that the two families do not get along. And that the murderer must still be on board. The case affects Eva more deeply than she is willing to admit. With Joes' help, she makes a drastic decision.

During the grape harvest at a Maastricht winery, one of the pickers is found murdered. Eva and Wolfs investigate her death and quickly conclude that the girl was not well-liked by everyone in the picking team. Esmee and Romeo encounter a group of wayward youths who are exploiting younger children. Eva makes a discovery in her search for the missing money.

After rudely arresting a man for mild verbal abuse, rookie Esmee is run over by a car and remains in coma. The culprit gets away and murders a squatting junkie, presumably just to cover his tracks. The only trace is a prepaid cellphone, but he's hard to identify for audio shopkeeper Jonkers. Romeo and partner are rudely kept away from Esmee's sickbed by her bitching mother, as as is her father, neighboring city cop Serge van Rooy, who was finally getting to know her.

During orientation week for new students, a girl reports her friend missing. When her bag is found on the street, Eva and Wolfs start looking for her. They soon discover that on the night she disappeared, she went off with a boy while drunk. The boy claims to have left her alive in a park. Meanwhile, Romeo and Marion try to get a homeless man with mental health issues off the streets. Eva finally makes a breakthrough in her investigation into the missing money, and Wolfs also makes a discovery.

The team attempts to apprehend a notorious gang of drug runners through targeted traffic checks. Meanwhile, Eva tries to find out what happened to the stolen money through Rebecca, Luca's girlfriend. But she is not cooperating. Then there seems to be a breakthrough; a girl has spent money from the suitcase in an expensive boutique. She matches Rebecca's description. They search her house and find more money from the suitcase. The case seems to be closed, but then Eva makes a gruesome discovery.
An asylum seeker with a residence permit is found dead in his home, murdered with ricin poison. The question for the team is whether the perpetrator should be sought in the asylum seekers' center where the victim was taking an integration course. The investigation then reveals that the man had a rather promiscuous lifestyle. Could it be that a jealous neighbor took revenge for an alleged affair? The investigation takes a different turn when it turns out that several people have been murdered with ricin after a date arranged through a dating site.

A baby belonging to an irresponsible teenage mother disappears from a car. The girl, who refused at the last minute to give the baby to a gay couple, was allowed by her guardian to live on her own. The girl's boyfriend quickly becomes a suspect; a man who is no good and who would even sell his mother for a few cents. The girl herself is also a suspect. She loves her baby, but refuses to accept that the child limits her freedom. And she always needs money. Or does the gay couple who saw the baby slip through their fingers have something to do with it? A difficult investigation for Eva, who is pregnant herself.

A doctor of German descent reports to the police station that he is being threatened by a former college friend. The friend spent more than twenty years in prison for a cannibalistic murder. He has since been treated and released, but the doctor has been receiving strange threatening notes and has also seen the cannibal a few times in Maastricht. Eva feels sorry for the doctor and decides to investigate.

MVV, Maastricht's professional soccer club, receives a threatening email demanding that a player not be selected for the team. Investigations reveal that the man is being blackmailed. Detectives delve into the world of illegal gambling, where everyone hopes to cash in on sports matches. But the trail does not lead to the big gambling syndicates abroad; the danger lurks closer to home.

A well-known kickboxer is found beaten to death. Investigations quickly reveal that he had been charged with assault. Was this an act of revenge? Further investigation also reveals that the man had been spending a lot of money recently. He was also the director of various fraudulent healthcare foundations that showed no signs of activity. The question now is whether he was the victim of revenge or whether fraud proved fatal for him.

Marion and Romeo are asked to remove a difficult customer from a bank. Before they can remove the man, a woman takes everyone present hostage. She demands the release of a prisoner convicted of murder and threatens to kill Romeo and Marion if her demands are not met. Negotiations are complicated because no one knows who the woman is. To discover her identity, Wolfs and Eva begin a race against time.

When a girl reports a sexual assault in her own home, Eva is confronted with her own past. The girl lives in the house where Eva grew up. And there are more similarities, forcing her to tell Wolfs about her past with her father. Marion and Romeo go looking for her son, who hasn't been in touch for a while. To her astonishment, she finds out that her son was last seen with her own boyfriend. And he has also disappeared.

As the American president arrives in the Netherlands, his secret service rounds up the anti-globalists who were preparing an attack. But Wolfs and Eva discover that the attack is a diversionary tactic. They believe that the IRA is behind it and that the attacker is already on the grounds of the hotel where the president is staying. But liaison officer Bill Stark doesn't believe that. Then an old acquaintance of Wolfs and Eva shows up.

A high-ranking EU official is accused of rape by a chambermaid. The man denies the allegations and claims that he is being used. It is up to Wolfs and Eva to find out what really happened. This is no easy task, because nothing is what it seems and evidence is hard to come by. At the same time, Wolfs and Eva are trying to get to the bottom of a criminal motorcycle club that is very interested in Wolfs' touring club. Romeo, Esmee, and Marion also encounter violence against women. And there, too, the case turns out to be not as easy as first thought. Daan de Vos has gone from harassment to making threats. Wolfs can just about tolerate that, but when his daughter Fleur becomes a target, all hell breaks loose.

A doctor reports a colleague to the authorities. At the insistence of the desperate parents, he allegedly performed euthanasia on a few-months-old baby without following the correct protocols. But the doctor in question denies performing euthanasia. Wolfs and Eva have to find out what really happened, which paints a very different picture. Romeo and Marion also have to deal with strict rules when they accompany a bailiff during a seizure. However, the victim has no intention of giving up without a fight. Tonja, a former colleague of Eva's late husband, contacts her. She knows more about the criminal activities of a motorcycle club and may be willing to work as an informant. But only if Eva runs her. Then Daan de Vos also shows up at the police station. He has come to report an assault.

When an elderly woman opens the door to her storage room in the apartment building where she lives, she dies in a huge explosion. The woman is killed instantly. When Eva and Wolfs investigate, it turns out she is not the only death in the apartment building. Several residents appear to have died in the days before under very suspicious circumstances. A sinister serial killer seems to be at work, and the team finds itself in a race against time to try to prevent more victims. Marion has been given time off for a family member's funeral. It turns out very differently than expected, and before she knows it, she is caught up in a family feud. While Romeo gets to know a sex offender he is helping to reintegrate into society, Wolfs finally has time to go on a motorcycle tour with his friends. However, his friends turn out to have an appointment with another motorcycle club.

A wealthy retired businessman is found beaten to death in bed by his youngest daughter. The murder leads Eva and Wolfs into a world where people will do anything for appearances and will stop at nothing to achieve beauty. Romeo and Marion also encounter beauty when a graffiti artist treats the citizens of Maastricht to unsolicited works of art in unusual places. Marion sees the appeal, but Romeo and Mechels are not impressed.

Maastricht is shaken by the disappearance of a nine-year-old girl near a busy shopping center. An Amber Alert is immediately issued and the entire police force is mobilized to find the perpetrator. Romeo, still enthusiastically volunteering in a group that helps sex offenders reintegrate into society, fears that the man he is responsible for has something to do with it. But Wolfs and Eva discover that the clues lead to someone else entirely. Meanwhile, Romeo is plagued by guilt. Eva tries in vain to get Tonja and her boyfriend to testify about a crime they witnessed within the motorcycle club. And Wolfs learns that the threat from Daan de Vos is much worse than he first thought.

A barber shop is brutally robbed. The perpetrator escaped through the back door, but left his balaclava and overalls behind. DNA from the perpetrator is found on them. It turns out that the robber has been wanted for fifteen years for a previous robbery that caused quite a stir at the time. Wolfs and Eva finally have the chance to catch the perpetrator of both robberies. While Marion and Romeo try to find a van that was parked behind the shop at the time of the robbery and which the robber presumably used to leave, Wolfs and Eva focus on the most important witness, a woman who came out of the toilet and was the only one to see the perpetrator without a balaclava. But she is reluctant to tell her story. As Eva and Wolfs slowly begin to understand how the case fits together, Eva receives a call on the emergency number. This means that her informant Tonja is in serious trouble. Eva immediately goes to the agreed location and makes a very unpleasant discovery.

A robbery at a store leads to angry reactions from the other shopkeepers. They beat one of the robbers into a coma. The other robber manages to escape. While the police hunt him down, the shopkeepers take the law into their own hands and go after him themselves. Eva feels extremely guilty now that it seems that Tonja, her informant, has fallen into the hands of the criminal motorcycle gang because of Daan de Vos. To her anger, Mechels removes her from the investigation and she finds it difficult to concentrate on her regular detective work. Then suddenly the national police are on the doorstep and Wolfs and Eva are arrested. Daan de Vos turns out to have been murdered and the question is whether they both have a watertight alibi. Wolfs is quickly released, but Eva cannot explain why a print from her boot was found near the crime scene. Wolfs, of course, is not going to let it go and comes up with his own plan.

The police still have no idea where Tonja, Eva's informant, is, and Chief Inspector Mechels gets into a heated argument with the public prosecutor about the investigation methods. Eva continues to deny any involvement in the murder of Daan de Vos, but the evidence against her is mounting. Then Tonja's boyfriend demands that Eva remain involved in the investigation and she is allowed to leave prison for a short period under special conditions. Meanwhile, Wolfs has started his own investigation to prove that Eva is not guilty of the murder of Daan de Vos. It leads him to the leader of the motorcycle gang. The story eventually takes an unexpected turn that puts everyone in danger and leads to a climax from which they do not emerge unscathed.

Wolfs and Eva are confronted with a drug deal involving the Hamza family, heroin dealers from Maastricht. It appears that they have been ripped off by their customers, and the Hamza family's security guard has been murdered. Wolfs and Eva investigate what happened, but are significantly hindered by the Hamzas, who are pursuing the perpetrators themselves. The question is whether they were actually robbed or whether the motive lies elsewhere. Romeo and Marion are called in to help a father whose daughter is afraid to go to school because fake nude photos of her have been posted on popular websites. The perpetrator appears to be a schoolmate who has problems of his own. Eva meets David Boesmeer, a trauma psychiatrist who is treating her. They don't hit it off right away, because she has no desire to open up.

The bass player of a famous singer's backing band dies of an overdose. Wolfs and Eva enter the world of music, where sex, drugs, and money are the order of the day. It's not exactly Eva's world, and she would prefer to dismiss the case as an accident. Wolfs, however, believes that too many people could benefit from the musician's death. The big question is whether it was an overdose or a disguised murder. And was the bass player the intended victim? Romeo and Marion are called to a boat in the harbor after a break-in. The perpetrator is a severely autistic man who cannot tell them anything about who he is or where he lives. The only thing he has with him is a violin.

After visiting a mosque, an elderly man dressed in a djellaba is shot dead in the street. A few indistinct numbers are found next to his body. This is not the first time that a Muslim has been shot, seemingly at random. It has also happened in a neighboring town. When Wolfs and Eva investigate the crime scene, they realize they have another problem: the victim is the father of Coscun Hamza. He is the head of the Hamza clan, a family that trades and supplies drugs. Of course, Coscun also wants to know who killed his father, and Wolfs and Eva do everything they can to find the perpetrator first. The trail leads them to Gabriel, a former commando who served in Afghanistan. Marion and Romeo are confronted with a daughter who calls on their help. She suspects that her father's caregiver is taking advantage of his dementia to embezzle his money.

A man visits a sex club and then reports it to Wolfs and Eva because he believes girls are working there against their will. The duo goes to investigate and finds the man waiting outside the door again. He turns out to be a private detective, but refuses to say what he is doing there. When Wolfs and Eva do indeed find victims of human trafficking in the club, the private detective's role becomes increasingly unclear. The question is what he wants from the girls, and it is also unclear who is the victim and who is the perpetrator. Romeo and Esmee are chasing a scooter thief. Every time they get him in their sights, he escapes. Then they end up in a chase in which the young scooter thief crashes hard. The case seems to be solved, but it turns out not to be that simple. The boy sues Esmee and Romeo. Wolf clashes with Fleur's lawyer, who is preparing for the hearing and does not agree with his ideas for the defense strategy.

A young boy disappears on his way to school. When it turns out that a notorious Belgian pedophile has escaped from custody, alarm bells start ringing. But Wolfs is suspicious when he finds out that the mother is the daughter of Coscun Hamza, the clan leader of the Hamzas. Eva warns against tunnel vision, but Wolfs and public prosecutor Jens Bols believe the kidnapping is related to the clan's drug business. They seem to be proven right when they eavesdrop on Coscun and hear him arranging for a truckload of heroin as ransom to free his grandson. Romeo and Esmee investigate a series of thefts and barn fires in a neighborhood where people are not exactly eager to cooperate with the police. At Esmee's invitation, Romeo goes to a concert with her. What he didn't take into account is Esmee's new boyfriend. Wolfs and Eva argue about the strategy for Fleur's defense. Wolfs wants Eva to testify on Fleur's behalf that she was in great psychological distress. But Eva refuses to lie.

At the entrance to the former NATO center in a cave system, the body of an old man is found. It appears to be a simple robbery and murder, but the case takes a turn when it emerges that the man was convicted of a diamond robbery in Belgium in the 1970s. It turns out that just before his death, the man had contacted his former co-defendants. When the son of an American who served in the NATO cave in Maastricht during those years shows up, it seems that there is more to the story. Especially when it turns out that the loot from the robbery has never been found. While awaiting the verdict against Fleur, Wolf investigates previous cases involving the Hamza family. He speaks to the ex-commando who murdered Coscun's father, but this only sows more doubt in Wolf's mind. When he tries to speak to Gabriel, the ex-commando's friend, Gabriel suddenly seems to have disappeared off the face of the earth. Romeo and Marion help a girl who is being harassed by a homeless man. He stalks her, and Romeo and Marion find it difficult to do anything for her. Fortunately, she has a neighbor who helps her.

Wolfs chases after ex-commando Gabriel. After a wild chase through houses and across rooftops, things ultimately go wrong for him. The next moment, Wolfs regains consciousness and slowly realizes what exactly is going on. The accomplice is an Italian who knows a lot about the investigation. The question now is whether the commandos have a mole in the department. An additional problem is that Eva and Mechels are in no hurry to investigate Wolfs' disappearance. They think Wolfs can't handle his disappointment about Fleur's conviction and needs time to himself. However, when it takes too long, Eva decides to investigate. But is she still in time to save Wolfs? Esmee and Romeo investigate a report of domestic violence; a son accuses his father of beating him up. And Romeo confronts Tony, Esmee's boyfriend, with the assault charges. Tony is unimpressed and tells Esmee. She is furious that Romeo is investigating her boyfriend behind her back.

Wolfs reported his kidnapping to the police. It turns out that the Italian accomplice was a well-known mafia hitman. It seems that the mafia, in collaboration with Dutch ex-commandos, pushed the Hamzas out of the market and have a leak in the police force. When Wolfs realizes that prosecutor Bols has not passed on certain information to Eva, he wonders whether the leak is really at the police station. Maybe Bols is the one who is at fault. When they keep an eye on him, it soon becomes clear that Bols is indeed involved in a mysterious operation. But who will believe Wolfs and Eva?
A driver comes to report his stolen truck, which has been found with a dead Romanian prostitute next to it. Wolfs and Eva have to find out why the empty truck was targeted for theft. Romeo is told his punishment for illegally using the police computer.

A familiar face shows up at the police station. Singer Jan Smit is in town for a performance at the Muziekfeest op het Vrijthof music festival. He wants to spend a day shadowing Wolfs and Eva to prepare for a role he will be playing in a police film. They are called to an accident at a stud farm. But is it really an accident? Marion has to deal with an enthusiastic intern from the police academy: Joe Verwaayen.

Wolfs and Eva are called to the scene of a young man's brutally mutilated body. It soon becomes clear that some time ago, while driving far too fast, he caused a traffic accident in which a mother and child were killed. When a witness reports seeing the husband near the scene of the crime, it appears to be a revenge killing. Marion tries to mentor intern Joe, but that proves to be easier said than done.

A car is found in a parking lot with the body of a Polish man inside. The case immediately reminds Eva and Wolfs of an earlier, unsolved murder with the same modus operandi. A burglary in the neighborhood, in which a gun has disappeared, seems to lead to a breakthrough in both cases. But the family that was burglarized is not exactly your average family. While Romeo grits his teeth behind his desk, Joe's boisterous approach causes problems.

An amber alert is issued and soon a witness reports an incident at a gas station. He says that a girl had asked to use his phone to make a call. It turns out that she had called the children's helpline to warn that a girl was about to be kidnapped. The Amber Alert is withdrawn when it turns out that the girl has run away from home. But Wolfs and Eva can't get the call to the children's helpline out of their minds. Especially when another call is made to the helpline and a young girl disappears. Joe and Marion are confronted with a mentally disturbed young woman. They offer help, but how can they actually help her?

The financial controller of a charity organization crashes her car and dies on the way to the hospital. A simple accident, until it turns out that she has a lethal amount of medication in her blood. Wolfs and Eva discover that the charity is in financial trouble. It also turns out that the accounts are not in order. Romeo, who is finally freed from his desk duties, and Marion have to deal with a gang of pickpockets. Wolfs makes a discovery in the investigation into the mafia.

When Wolfs and Eva hear that a man has disappeared from a village near Maastricht, they quickly link it to a cold case investigation. Years ago, a child was raped and murdered in that village. They are now trying to solve that case with a DNA test on all male residents. What does the man's disappearance have to do with that case? Marion and Romeo are dealing with an escalating neighbor dispute. Sophia Arletti, an Italian detective, shows up at the station. She wants Wolfs to assist her with an investigation.

A woman kills her husband at night while he is sleeping. It turns out she has too many antidepressants in her blood. The woman is undergoing treatment to cope with the loss of her only child. Her therapist is not a licensed psychologist and is therefore not allowed to prescribe medication. It turns out she is not the only one for whom he has become a kind of guru. Marion and Romeo once again have to deal with Joe's short temper, which gets him into trouble. Eva notices that Wolfs and Mechels are keeping her out of an investigation. Wolfs feels compelled to inform her. This does not remain without consequences.

Eva is furious at Wolfs and Mechels and calls herself sick. But the case comes to her when David Boesmeer senses danger. He has been warned and all the mafia members have disappeared from the radar. Only Eva still has a clue as to where the mafiosi are. But will she share it with the team she is so angry with?

A well-known designer from Maastricht is found dead in her studio. This is strange, because her husband drove her to the airport that evening for a flight to Milan. Wolfs, Eva, Marion, and Romeo arrive at the scene when the cause of death cannot be immediately determined. Only after an autopsy does it become clear that she was poisoned with sarin gas. Her husband suspects his brother-in-law and is furious with Marion because he has already reported the man to her twice. The brother turns out to be a schizophrenic man who has often threatened to harm his sister because he is convinced that she used her designs to tell the world about him. When it turns out that he has the components needed to make sarin in his home, the question remains whether or not he is the perpetrator. Marion is so upset by her husband's accusations that when she is called to a domestic violence case, she acts more harshly than she wants to. This subsequently results in a complaint.

During the transport of a notorious criminal to court, a spectacular rescue operation takes place. The bus transporting him is blocked, and the man manages to escape. In addition to the dangerous criminal, Wijnand de Jonge, the artist and serial killer whom Wolfs and Eva had previously arrested, also escapes. A massive manhunt for the escaped prisoners ensues. Romeo and Marion spot Wijnand in a luxury car, but lose him. Then Wolfs and Eva take up the chase, but they too lose sight of him at a construction site. Then Wijnand contacts them. He claims not to have committed the earlier murders and is now looking for the real perpetrator himself. When Marion and Romeo investigate a complaint from a shepherd about a stray dog, they arrive at a veterinarian's office. Romeo is suspicious because the curtains are closed during the day. When the front door opens, they have to decide what to do in a split second.

Wolfs goes out with an old college friend who tells him that he is terminally ill and plans to end his life soon. He asks his old buddy Wolfs to inform his wife when he is gone. Wolfs tries to change his mind during the long evening, but to no avail. The next day, his friend's car is found abandoned near the Maas River. Wolfs fears suicide and takes his friend's wife in. But what was the car doing near the body of a known criminal found that same morning? Coincidence or is there more to it? Romeo and Marion throw themselves into a series of thefts in a nursing home. Not an easy case, because anyone could have done it. However, a conversation with the director sheds new light on the case.

Wolfs and Eva are faced with a very unusual case. In a beautiful large house where former students from Delft have returned to live together after their retirement, one of the residents is shot dead in his room. The strange thing is that all the other residents were sitting together at the table at the time of the murder. So they couldn't have done it. There is a trail leading to the garden, but the gardener who was working at the time did not see anything unusual. Wolfs and Eva rack their brains trying to figure out who could have committed the murder and, more importantly, how. Romeo and Marion are searching for a missing Belgian boy. His very Christian mother is extremely worried, because her son is not used to wandering around alone in a big city like Maastricht.

A councilman gets a rough time when he fails to arrange extra funding at a meeting of the local soccer club. As a result, the soccer club loses its fields and has to close down. A journalist on the scene wants to know what is going on and whether the councilman is engaging in cronyism. The next morning, the man is found beaten to death in front of his home. Everyone is convinced that it is an act of revenge by supporters. Then the rumor mill starts up and the question arises whether there is more to it than that. Did the councilor indeed favor business associates in municipal affairs and did he perhaps fall victim to an angry competitor? Romeo and Marion are confronted with nuisance caused by young drug dealers.

Wolfs and Eva are confronted with ruthless criminals who have their sights set on a jewelry store. They take the sick daughter of an employee hostage, who lets them in and gives them access to the safe. The men make off with a large amount of expensive jewelry. But thanks to Wolfs and Eva's alertness, they manage to catch one of the perpetrators before he can escape via the airport. They interrogate the man, Serge, but he doesn't budge and even laughs at them. The next day, it becomes clear why. His accomplices have kidnapped the sick girl again during the night and threaten to kill her if Serge is not released that same day. While everyone is searching for the girl's whereabouts, Wolfs and Eva have no choice but to let Serge go. Together with Mechels and Bols, they devise a daring plan to find the girl and recapture Serge. Meanwhile, Marion and Romeo are dealing with a foundling who was discovered at the church. Further investigation reveals that this is not the first time this has happened.

It is evening and a number of students from the Maastricht theater school are rehearsing for a play. Tempers and emotions run so high that a few actors run outside crying and arguing. One of them is found dead in the Maas river in the morning. Wolfs and Eva investigate and encounter a stubborn director. The man is a well-known, up-and-coming talent who does not hesitate to push his actors to the limit, using drugs if necessary. It is clear to Wolfs and Eva that this experiment proved fatal for the young man. However, this proves difficult to prove. Fleur is having a hard time in prison. She is threatened by women who have been sent to prison by Wolfs and Eva. There is even an attempt to murder her. Wolfs does what he can, but the prison management does not seem to take it very seriously.

Contaminated pills are appearing in Maastricht's nightlife scene. It proves fatal for one girl. After studying surveillance footage, the dealer is fortunately caught quickly, but he refuses to say anything. Because there is insufficient evidence, Bols has to let him go, after which Wolfs and Eva keep an eye on the boy. This quickly leads them to the place where the pills are produced. Mechels forces Wolfs to improve his relationship with Bols and go out for dinner together. When a failed attempt is made on Bols' life during that dinner, it becomes clear that he has been under threat for some time. Most likely from the gang of jewel thieves that Wolfs and Eva caught earlier. Fleur's situation in prison is deteriorating by the day and the prison management refuses to improve her situation. Wolfs tries everything, but even Mechels and Bols are unable to help him. He becomes increasingly frustrated and decides to take matters into his own hands.

Despite everyone being on high alert due to the threats against Jens Bols, they are unable to prevent another attack on him. When Bols leaves his house in the morning, his car is blown up. Miraculously, he survives the attack. Eva and Wolfs are assigned to protect him. However, Wolfs is completely distracted by his daughter's situation. When Wolfs is assigned to investigate a counterfeiter, he sees his chance. Meanwhile, Mechels orders Eva to take Bols to a safe house in Amsterdam. Neither of them wants to go, but given the danger, they accept their fate. At the safe house, Eva sees a special police report on TV and tries to reach Wolfs, who turns out to be busy with other matters.
Wolfs, who is still suspended, agrees to help a priest who is suspicious about the last two deaths in his monastery while awaiting his reinstatement. He joins the order. Together with Eva, he discovers that the two men were indeed murdered. Marion and Romeo are faced with reports from young women who have been harassed and robbed by a group of young foreign men. Wolfs returns to his position. Will he follow his daughter or will he stay in Maastricht?

A café owner, who is also chairman of the local political party, is found murdered after his party is hijacked by an old acquaintance of Eva and Wolfs: Bea Middelkoop. She is the woman who was convicted at the time for money laundering and complicity in the death of Eva's husband Frank. Bea has taken over the party with the help of a large number of new members. All of them are soccer players at the local club, which is sponsored by a family with a questionable reputation. Romeo and Marion are dealing with a possible insurance fraud case. A known fraudster claims that all his gold has been stolen. However, his young wife has a completely different story. Romeo wants to fine a girl. The girl uses her charm to get out of the fine. Meanwhile, sparks fly between the two.

During a check, explosives are found in a car. The occupants say they are money mules and know nothing about the explosives. They have to deliver the package to a hotel, but they don't know to whom. Is this related to the returned Syria fighter who is keeping an eye on Romeo? Wolfs and Eva go undercover and take on the role of money mules. It soon becomes clear that the explosives are needed for a major robbery. Will Wolfs and Eva be able to prevent it in time? Romeo's returnee has started a laundry business with a number of others. But Romeo still doesn't know if he can trust him.

The director of a women's shelter is murdered. All the men the women fled from are suspects. Wolfs and Eva soon discover that there is more going on. Romeo's friend who went to Syria is acting suspiciously, which Romeo reports to the AIVD. When he hears nothing back, he decides to investigate on his own. This strengthens his belief that the men are planning something. Despite Marion's warning to leave it to the authorities, Romeo goes after the men on his own.

A popular vlog showing a spectacular murder is quickly taken offline, and Wolfs and Eva are tasked with finding out whether it is a stunt. But when they finally find the vlogger's address, it turns out that the gruesome murder is real. The fans of the vlogger, a boy who had a sex change to become a girl, are devastated. The respectable, well-known businessman who finances the vlog claims to know nothing about it. But why does he spend so much money on the vlog? Romeo is in the hospital, narrowly saved by the services that had an arrest unit ready for the terrorist cell. He is lovingly cared for by his girlfriend Latisha and Marion. Marion also gets into another argument with an old acquaintance, former colleague Joe Verwaayen.

A child disappears from school. His father is a surgeon. Eva and Wolfs quickly find a lead to a former ambulance worker. The worker, a Moroccan man, has kidnapped the child to force the surgeon to help his grandson from Morocco get a new kidney. Wolfs and Eva uncover the circumstances behind the kidnapping and want to arrest the Moroccan man at the private clinic where his child is receiving a kidney from a traffic accident victim. But the Moroccan man manages to exchange Wolfs for the surgeon's child. He threatens to kill Wolfs if he is not given safe passage to Morocco. His colleagues must do everything they can to find him in time.

Wolfs and Eva are assigned a case involving two bodies found in barrels of chemical waste. The bodies are severely mutilated, but Wolfs and Eva manage to find out where the boys ate on the day of their death. The phone number they gave for the reservation leads them to the Vizee family. However, there is no hard evidence of their involvement in the murder. Romeo receives a commendation from the police force leadership. Latisha is in on the plot and will lead him to the police station. However, Marion has her doubts about Latisha when she sees her on the street, dressed very differently than she is used to. She discovers that Latisha may have very different motives for her relationship with Romeo.

The investigation into the Vizee family is being handled on a large scale. The money flows are being mapped out, and during a search of the soccer club, they find the possible weapon used to murder the two chemists from the drug lab. Meanwhile, Fleur suddenly appears in Maastricht with her new boyfriend. She appears to be involved in some way with the Vizee family's money flows. Reason enough for Mechels to take Wolfs and Eva off the case. But it turns out she is too late.
A Bulgarian Roma girl is found murdered. It appears she gave birth shortly before her death. Eva and Wolfs, who is back at work, receive help from Interpol, a Bulgarian detective. But he turns out to have his own agenda. Romeo and Marion have to deal with a strangely helpful stalker.

An old case is reopened when Eva and Wolfs are confronted with the murder of a boy who was convicted 18 years earlier for the rape and manslaughter of a young girl. The detectives who investigated the rape using old methods impose themselves on Wolfs and Eva's investigation. Marion and Romeo also have to deal with old traumas when they investigate a theft in a nursing home.

Old ghosts resurface during the appeal of Jens Bols' family for the kidnapping of Eva. Wolfs tries to track down Bols, but he hasn't lost any of his old tricks. Romeo and Marion deal with a teacher who was assaulted while jogging in a park. However, she refuses to file a report. Marion gets to know her new neighbor better, and it's not exactly a pleasure.

A serial killer who attacks his victims from hiding places in the woods has claimed another victim. But unlike the first few times, there is a surviving witness. Wolfs and Eva are relentlessly hunting the killer, but he has a surprise in store for them. Romeo fines a woman with a sick child in her car. The woman reacts very violently to the fine. Marion wants to find out if there is more to the story.

During a shareholders' meeting of a wealthy family business, a murder is announced. The next morning, one of the sons is found dead in bed. It is up to Wolfs and Eva to find out whether it is murder and, if so, what the motive is. Romeo and Marion also have to deal with alleged wealth when a recognized refugee reports the theft of his lottery ticket, which has won a large sum of money. He is not the only one to report a crime.

A respectable student is found dead. The manner of his death points to a recently released criminal who collected debts for drug dealers. Was the boy involved in the drug world, or was his death related to his thesis? Marion and Romeo take care of a girl who was caught shoplifting.

A young woman, mother of two children, is found dead in a tributary of the Meuse River. She left behind a suicide note, and the police conclude that she took her own life. But her mother, mayor of a village near Maastricht, cannot believe it and calls in Wolfs and Eva. Marion and Romeo investigate Marion's neighbor. Has she disappeared, and if so, what happened to her? Meanwhile, Bols tries to sell a large batch of cocaine and also has a hidden agenda.

During her run, Eva finds an injured woman. When she tries to help her, she is kidnapped and locked up by a drug gang that has a score to settle with Bols. To free her, Wolfs and Bols are forced to work together. Marion and Romeo are given some time to prove that Marion's neighbor was offered on the internet for sexual purposes. Wolfs and Bols deal with the drug gang and Eva manages to escape, but Bols finds her first. During a shootout, Bols loses his life after Wolfs manages to take him out before Bols can take him out. As a result of the heroin previously administered to Eva, she has become addicted to it.
A girl appears to have disappeared. The entire modus operandi is reminiscent of a similar case from years ago. The perpetrator is imprisoned in a psychiatric hospital and now claims that the new disappearance proves his innocence. Romeo and Marion are confronted with a student suffering from amnesia.

On his way back from soccer practice, a boy is sexually abused and murdered. He has a sports sock in his throat, reminiscent of an earlier case in Drenthe. When it turns out that the victim's coach in Drenthe—who was also a suspect at the time—now lives in Maastricht, all the alarm bells go off. Marion and Romeo encounter an elderly woman who is desperately lashing out at people in a supermarket. Is she simply demented and unmanageable, or is there more to her behavior?

Wolfs and Eva investigate the death of a major drug dealer who is found electrocuted on a plantation. The drug dealer's entourage is also investigating his death, led by his furious widow. She wants revenge on the perpetrator. Romeo and Marion are assigned to cybercrime. A young man living alone orders items that he does not pay for.

A bank employee is murdered as he drives into the parking garage with his wife. After investigation, it appears that there is nothing illegal in his actions that could explain the murder. Wolfs and Eva discover that a criminal with the same car lives in the same building, so they quickly conclude that it was a case of mistaken identity. As Eva and Wolfs delve further into the criminal's life, things turn out to be not so simple. Marion teaches at school and receives an anonymous report from a child who is afraid of becoming a victim of a family tragedy. The report is anonymous. Should Marion respect that or find out who in the class made the report?

The murder of a debt collector working for a housing association turns out to have far-reaching consequences. The man, a refugee from Bosnia, is not as innocent as he appears to be. While clearing cannabis plantations, Marion and Romeo are approached by a man who claims that his disabled parking space has been stolen by loitering teenagers.

On a country estate, the elderly lady of the house is attacked in her bed in the middle of the night. She suffers a knife wound. Initially, the family is in shock and has no idea who could have done this. But it soon becomes clear that things are not as rosy as the family would have us believe. Who has a motive to kill the old lady? Romeo and Marion are confronted with a man who comes to report a robbery. After visiting a prostitute, he was attacked by a man. When it turns out that the prostitute is still a minor, Romeo and Marion suspect the man of pimping.

Wolfs and Eva are added to an Amsterdam team that is eager to make a big drug bust in Maastricht. Wolfs doesn't trust Eva around heroin and assigns her to work on something else. He shouldn't have done that, because the arrest turns into a shootout in which one of the Amsterdam detectives is killed by a bullet from Wolfs' gun. Romeo has completed the leadership course and has developed a good relationship with the course leader.

Eva has gone into hiding in Liège, where she runs into an old acquaintance, Akua. With Romeo's help, Wolfs comes across a diary describing the gruesome, protracted murder of a woman. The diary belongs to the notorious professor Pascal Bodet, whose wife disappeared without a trace ten years ago. He claims that the diary is fiction.

While Wolfs investigates the murder of a drug dealer, Eva tries to find out what happened to Akua in Liège. When she finds her murdered, it hits her hard and she makes a radical decision. Meanwhile, Wolfs discovers that the murdered dealer also supplied drugs to Alkje, the victim of Belgian killer Carlito Hinch. Was he killed for drugs, or is he also a victim of the society? Journalist Juliette Bison helps Wolfs investigate the society, but it's not without a struggle.

An attack is made on Miss Limburg. Meanwhile, Wolfs has the bottle of whiskey that probably killed Juliette and Mechels examined by the lab. Eva is kicking her habit at the clinic, but has to leave when it turns out that a journalist knows about a possibly addicted detective. The journalist appears to know a suspicious amount, and when Wolfs is accused of rape by a witness, Wolfs and Eva's position becomes untenable. Romeo and Marion discover that Carlito Hinch probably carried out the attack. But their witness is shot dead in the street.

Wolfs and Eva, now detectives, refuse to give up and hunt down the members of the society that murdered Mechels. They discover a Belgian link and, risking their own lives, manage to steal evidence. But just when they think they can bring down the society, something completely different happens.

A well-known Maastricht woman is murdered with a crossbow. She will not turn out to be the only one. What do the victims have in common? Romeo and Marion deal with competing crystal meth producers.

A TBS officer escapes his companion during probationary leave. That same day, his victim, on whose statement he received tbs, is kidnapped. Romeo and Marion stop a diplomat who is driving his car drunk. They quickly regret it.

Wolfs and Eva are confronted with a missing girl from a Jazz club. Kamphuis instructs Romeo to keep a vlog in the context of public information. He is called with Marion in a case of bullying. But who is actually teasing who?

A woman is found dead in a luxury apartment. Did someone take revenge on her? Romeo and Marion witness a traffic row. The cause of the quarrel disappears. When Romeo manages to track down the man, he turns out to have more problems.

Two boys mistakenly steal the mobile of a serious criminal. Wolfs and Eva see an opportunity to catch the drug smuggler. Romeo and Marion are called to a chocolate shop. The owners are threatened, someone wants to poison their chocolates.

A curator is found murdered in his own museum. Just before his death, he had a discussion with a local artist. Romeo and Marion receive a report from a desperate father. His daughter is used by her boyfriend as a drug courier.

A well-known arms dealer is found dead in his mansion. He was killed with four shots to the stomach the night before. Marion falls victim to violence against aid workers. Romeo suspects a man they gave a ticket earlier that day.

During a gymnastics class, the teacher is murdered by a young man. Wolfs and Eva soon suspect that the motive may lie in abuse. Marion can go back to work. Romeo sees on a security camera that Marion is stealing a liquor bottle.

A girl with a barcode tattooed on her arm is found dead. It appears that she was murdered in a horrific manner while on the run. The DNA of an old acquaintance is found on her body: Louis Dearden, president of the court of assizes. Wolfs and Eva visit Lies Dewulf and, with some difficulty, manage to get hold of Louis Dearden's laptop. Later, a second girl with a barcode tattooed on her arm is found. She was being held in a house near Maastricht, along with several other girls. Wolfs and Eva go to the house, but everyone has fled. Unexpected help comes from a Hungarian liaison. Marion finds her sister, who has returned. The sister looks very similar to Marion. Inside, however, they are worlds apart.

Marion discovers her sister had more plans. Plans that could cause Marion's dismissal. Wolfs and Eva want to turn Lies's computer hack against her. With the help of Larry, they see everything that happens on Lies' computer.
A man is reported missing by two women. It turns out that he not only has two families, but also two completely different ways of life. They find the man in a slurry pit belonging to a farmer he visited the night of his disappearance. Was he killed or is there more to it? Romeo and Marion deal with a high-dealing school. Eventually they manage to find a dealer, but the people behind the dealer remain out of harm's way. Donna Martina appears at the desk. What she's doing there must be kept secret from the detectives.

The body of a woman who has been missing for months is found in a car pulled out of the water. According to her best friend, her last contact was arranged through a dating site. Does her date have anything to do with the woman's death? Eva offers herself as a bait date. Romeo and Marion must solve the brutal street robbery that injures an elderly woman. Unfortunately, her criminal son feels that he should do that himself.

Eva receives a phone call in which an old woman reports that she has seen a dead person. The woman seems confused, is talking about someone with a canoe. Eva handles the call quickly. When the woman turns out to be murdered the next day, Eva is committed to solving the murder. A young man can soon be arrested for the murder. He denies and Eva is not comfortable. She comes across the case of the 'kanoman', who turned over on the Maas 8 years ago and whose body has never been found. Is he the one who saw the woman? Marion and Romeo must take action against an elderly couple who have broken a restraining order. That ban was requested by their son, a successful lawyer.

A campsite owner is almost shot in sight of his guests. Everything points in the direction of a drunken guest, with whom he often argued. She herself knows nothing because of her drunkenness. At first glance, a simple thing that Wolfs can do on his own, since Eva is suddenly gone for a few days. Romeo and Marion handle the report of a girl who has been attacked in a supermarket. Is she a victim of sexual assault or is there more to it?

A man who is scolding and yelling in the street is arrested by Romeo and Marion. Romeo takes a few blows. Then it turns out that he has a bag with a considerable amount of money. When he also turns out to be a member of a motorcycle club, Eva and Wolfs go deeper into the matter. While the club doesn't have a bad reputation, there are new members who are not spotlessly clean. The man insists that he is only mentally confused, but Wolfs and Eva suspect that there is more to it. Romeo and Marion face an art theft.

During a bachelor party on a paintball field, the bride-to-be's throat is slit. His buddies know nothing and have no idea who wanted the bridegroom dead. Although the witness to murder has a motive, the bride was first his girlfriend, but denies. The groom owned a cafe that, according to the books, turned in millions. If it turns out that local residents never see anyone, it puts Wolfs and Eva on the trail of money laundering.

Eva receives a call forwarded from a moving van. It comes from a young girl hiding in a closet when she saw her mother arguing with the rogue movers and was thrown down the stairs. The truck - with the girl in the closet unseen - is now driving and the girl has no idea where to go. Wolfs and Eva go after the signal from her phone, but then the signal disappears in an area where there is no signal.

Donna picks up the criminal Eddie in the act. It is up to Wolfs and Eva to get a confession during interrogation. But Eddie is smart, only gives information sparingly. His motive seems clear. Due to a failed deal with the Public Prosecution Service, his family was murdered by the criminals he wanted to testify against. Wolfs and Eva suspect that there is more to his silence. And if it turns out that the daughter of a high-ranking judicial officer has been kidnapped, that will be the case. The girl is in the trunk of a car with a fast-counting bomb. Marion and Romeo find Nick on the roof of a building from which he is in danger of jumping.

Wolfs and Eva are still looking for the location of the girl and the bomb. They discover that Donna has not provided all the information about Eddie and his earlier deal with the Public Prosecution Service. She has concealed her own role in the failure of the deal. Then it dawns on how Eddie wants to use his last bomb. The criminals who murdered his family are on trial in the Palace of Justice in Maastricht ... Then Wolfs and Eva discover that the kidnapped girl is a niece of Donna, who is already on her way to the Palace of Justice. The girl is meanwhile found by Romeo and Marion in a suburb of Maastricht. With her there is no countdown bomb at all. Wolfs and Eva now understand how Eddie wants to get the bomb into the Palace of Justice. Are they still on time ...?

































