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Die Kindermorde von Atlanta

Originaltitel: Atlanta's Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children
  • Miniserie
  • 2020
  • 1 Std.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
1671
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Die Kindermorde von Atlanta (2020)
Wahres VerbrechenKriminalitätDokumentarfilm

Ein nie zuvor gezeigter Blick auf die Morde an mindestens 30 afroamerikanischen Kindern und jungen Erwachsenen, die sich über einen Zeitraum von zwei Jahren in der Hauptstadt von Georgia ere... Alles lesenEin nie zuvor gezeigter Blick auf die Morde an mindestens 30 afroamerikanischen Kindern und jungen Erwachsenen, die sich über einen Zeitraum von zwei Jahren in der Hauptstadt von Georgia ereigneten.Ein nie zuvor gezeigter Blick auf die Morde an mindestens 30 afroamerikanischen Kindern und jungen Erwachsenen, die sich über einen Zeitraum von zwei Jahren in der Hauptstadt von Georgia ereigneten.

  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Mary Welcome
    • Monica Kaufman Pearson
    • Tony Axam
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    1671
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Mary Welcome
      • Monica Kaufman Pearson
      • Tony Axam
    • 22Benutzerrezensionen
    • 2Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 2 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Episoden5

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    HöchsteAm besten bewertet1 Jahreszeit

    Fotos11

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    Topbesetzung59

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    Mary Welcome
    Mary Welcome
    • Self - Defense, Wayne Williams Trial
    • 2020
    Monica Kaufman Pearson
    Monica Kaufman Pearson
    • Self - WSB News Anchor (1975 - 2012)
    • 2020
    Tony Axam
    Tony Axam
    • Self - Wayne Williams' Pre-Trial Attorney
    • 2020
    Jim Procopio
    Jim Procopio
    • Self - FBI Agent (1969 - 1998)
    • 2020
    Clem Richardson
    Clem Richardson
    • Self - Journalist
    • 2020
    Bob Sirkin
    Bob Sirkin
    • Self - Journalist
    • 2020
    Helen Pue
    Helen Pue
    • Self - Terry Pue's Mother
    • 2020
    Joseph Drolet
    Joseph Drolet
    • Self - Prosecution, Wayne Williams' Trial
    • 2020
    Danny Agan
    Danny Agan
    • Self - Atlanta Police Department (1974 - 2003)
    • 2020
    Angelo Fuster
    Angelo Fuster
    • Self - Maynard Jackson's Director of Communications
    • 2020
    Tyrone Brooks
    Tyrone Brooks
    • Self - Georgia State Representative (1981 - 2015)
    • 2020
    Lou Arcangeli
    Lou Arcangeli
    • Self - Atlanta Police Department (1974 - 2002)
    • 2020
    Sheila Baltazar
    Sheila Baltazar
    • Self - Patrick Baltazar's Stepmother
    • 2020
    Natsu Taylor Saito
    Natsu Taylor Saito
    • Self - Law Professor, Activist
    • 2020
    Michael Simanga
    Michael Simanga
    • Self - Historian, Activist
    • 2020
    David Hilder
    David Hilder
    • Self - Journalist
    • 2020
    Airmentha Williams
    Airmentha Williams
    • Self - Clifford Jones' Aunt
    • 2020
    W.J. Taylor
    W.J. Taylor
    • Self - Atlanta Police Department (1965 - 1992)
    • 2020
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen22

    7,11.6K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    4rizillo

    Not complete.

    This is a documentary series about racism, not about true evidences or investigations. They don't even mention the DNA tests done in 2007, so I couldn't care less about their "hypothesis".
    8cyndibeauchamp

    Very good so far

    Fascinating documentary. Do I think Wayne Williams murdered kids? Yes. Did he murder all of them? no. I've always thought there was more then one killer. A very interesting time in our history. I remember it well.
    4asc85

    HBO Once Again Shows it's Political Bias

    Unlike some others who have commented here, I think they kept most of their political biases out of this documentary for the first 4 episodes. But then came Episode 5, the final episode, which was as slanted an episode on the Atlanta Child Murders as could possibly be done. The last episode was almost completely shown through the prism of the defense, with maybe a minute or two of the prosecution side saying a few things. I wasn't living in the South at the time, but I was following this case when it was happening, and it's certainly a fascinating and very sad story. I said to my wife when this series started that if they want to prove that Wayne Williams didn't do all the murders, I could go along with that. But episode 5 tried to make the case that not only didn't Wayne Williams do any of these murders, but that it was most likely white people who killed all those black kids. Well, that just showed to me how this series was pure propaganda. I won't spend the time detailing this case in this review, but there are many, many reasons why Williams was convicted. And all these conspiracy theories about trying to prevent a race war and/or keeping Atlanta's image clean and wholesome were just ridiculous. Do the people who subscribe to these theories still think that OJ didn't do it too?
    7paul-allaer

    A true crime story AND racial tensions reassessed, now 40 years later

    "Atlanta's Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children" (2020 release; 5 episodes of about 55 min. each) is a documentary mini-series about the slew of young black kids who were murdered or disappeared in Atlanta 40 years ago. As Episode 1 opens, it is "March 21, 2019", and Keisha Lance Bottoms, Mayor of Atlanta, and then Erika Shields, Atlanta Chief of Police, address the press, informing them and the public at large that they are reopening the investigations into the many unresolved cases, all of which took place between 1979 and 1981. We then go back in time, as we are introduced to Atlanta's background, becoming a mecca for blacks, and electing a black mayor for the first time in 1974. "Is the black mecca a myth or a reality?", asks the voice-over. It leads to the first case, when on July 28, 1979, two decomposed bodies are found in remote southwest Atlanta... At this point we are 10 minutes into Episode 1.

    Couple of comments: as I didn't move to the US until 1983 (from Belgium), I was completely unaware and unfamiliar with this story. It absolutely blows the mind when you think about it: over a period of 23 months, 30 black kids (most of them in the 9 to 16 age range) met their demise or "were disappeared", and most of these cases were never resolved. Say what?!? Based on Episode 1, this series is a two-for-one: of course there is the question as to who committed these crimes (and why), but in a separate yet clearly parallel path, we look at the troubled history of racial tensions and the civil rights movement is Atlanta, the self-proclaimed "Empire City of the South" and "The City Too Busy To Hate". Of course the late 70s and early 80s are also a point in time when urban decay was at or near its peak, and we get to witness this as well, courtesy of the archive TV and film footage of that era. I can't wait to see the remaining episodes.

    "Atlanta's Missing and Murdered: The Lost Children" premiered this weekend on HBO and is now available on HBO On Demand and other streaming services. New episodes air Sunday evenings at 8 pm Eastern. If you are a fan of true crime stories or of the underlying racial tensions that were (are?) found in big cities like Atlanta, I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
    10classicalsteve

    One of the Strangest Murder Cases of the Late 20th Century Gets Superb Treatment from HBO

    About 30 African-Americans were abducted and murdered in and around Atlanta, GA from 1979 to 1981. Of these 30 cases, about 22 were under the age of 16. The victims were often found killed by asphyxiation, sometimes stabbing. Often, they would disappear, sometimes from a very public place, such as a video arcade. Most of them were found in woods near Atlanta and then in rivers near Atlanta, such as the Chattahoochee River. A few bodies were found near dumpsters.

    About mid-1981 they found a plausible suspect, Wayne Williams, 23 years old. At the time, the evidence against him seemed pretty compelling. He was caught driving his station wagon on one of the Atlanta bridges over the Chattahoochee River shortly after a loud splash was heard at about 3:00am in the morning. The car had turned around on the bridge and was driving very slowly, almost as if the driver was trying to be silent. When asked to tell police why he thinks he was stopped, his first statement was about the child murders. When asked about what he was up to, he claimed he was going to verify an address for a prospective appointment or audition the next morning. Really? At 3:00am in the morning? Williams was involved in music recording, media and television b-roll footage. They let Williams go. Later it was determined the person he claimed he was going to see in the morning was a fiction.

    Two days later the body of a 27-year-old was found floating in the Chattahoochee River. Authorities also found fiber evidence at Williams' home which supposedly linked Williams to some but not all of the murder victims. Carpet fibers and the fibers of a dog. The police had created a profile of the possible murderer, and law enforcement felt Williams checked all the boxes. He had made some idiotic statements about black children, their mothers, and even about asphyxiation. After his arrest the murders stopped.

    But I don't believe the circumstantial evidence mainly convicted Williams. His behavior after his arrest before his trial was beyond irresponsible. It was reckless, and he acted as if it was a joke. He called law enforcement names and didn't take the trail seriously. Maybe down deep he didn't believe he would be convicted, assuming he didn't commit the murders. He was in a sense, his own worst enemy, and he blew up at the jurors when he was on the stand at his trial.

    When asked about the murdered children, he would say things like "their mothers are letting their children run wild." That's not what you say in the midst of a murder case, one of the largest in US history which was getting both national and international media attention. It goes without saying, Williams was convicted of two murders in 1982. Atlanta law enforcement decided that if he did two of them, he had done all of them, even though he wasn't put on trial for even half the child murders. The two victims he was charged with were 21 and 27 years old.

    Late in the documentary, new evidence, particularly of another covert investigation, gets covered up. Turns out the police were also investigating white Klu Klux Klansmen who were also suspects. After Williams was arrested, many of the evidence gathered about KKK suspects was suppressed and wasn't offered to the defense team. Apparently there were even tapes of Klansmen which may have had bearing to exonerate Williams, but they were destroyed. Why would they destroy this evidence?

    A developing theory, not proven, is that members of the Klan actually perpetrated the murders. There may have been sufficient evidence. However, the government, possibly from pressure as far away as DC, covered it up fearing if a Klansman was arrested there would be race riots across the states. If true, it would mean that Williams was a kind of sacrificial lamb to prevent a nationwide race war. But I don't believe that justifies convicting an innocent man and letting murderers get away with their crimes.

    The other thing which is strange: that supposedly Wayne Williams, a guy about 5'7" in height and not known for using guns or engaging in combat, supposedly killed two people not only bigger but one was significantly older. The last victim found in the Chattahoochee River was far taller than Williams and 27 years old. Williams was convicted of killing a 27-year old and a 21-year old at the age of 23. The children could be more plausible, but other grown men? It's seems hard to swallow. Also, law enforcement decided, upon Williams' conviction, that the other 5 young adults and 22 children were also killed by Williams, sort of by default. Really?

    Two things I gleaned from the documentary. Firstly, the evidence against Williams is pretty shaky at best and the state barely proved maybe he killed two people, one older and larger than himself. Secondly, Wayne Williams is not the most likable person. Even in interviews later, he sort of rubs me the wrong way. However, just because someone is a bit of a jerk, regardless of their race, that is not enough to convict someone of possibly killing 30 people. Well maybe his conviction stopped a race war! I don't think the conviction of an innocent man is ever justified. The trouble is, it could happen to someone else. If a member of the Klan was killing children, they should be charged and hopefully convicted, regardless of the consequences outside.

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      The case of these murders was also the basis for the semi-fictionalized Mindhunter series (season 2, Netflix).

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 25. März 2022 (Deutschland)
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      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
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      • HBO Documentary Films
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