User:Catysnowblaster5000/Crimewatch

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Crimewatch 1986 Intro Title.jpeg

Singapore Crimewatch 1986 Intro title screen(Full episodes from around 1986-1992 are completely lost)

Status: Partially Found(3%)

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This article has been tagged as Needing work due to its this article is not finished yet, I'm writing it during my free time.



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This article has been tagged as NSFL due to its older episodes contain weapons and homicide. The article has images of blood and violence for referencing purposes.



Crimewatch is a Singaporean television series(not to be confused with Crimewatch UK) produced by the "Singapore Police Force" and the programme is broadcast on television by "MediaCrop TV Singapore".The documentary-drama focuses on how actual Police officers who had attended with a real case did their part by reconstructing the scenes in the shows. In older episodes, the programme may also promote and showcase the jobs or behind-the-scenes movements of Singapore police officers. Crime Watch’s modus operandi would typically comprise the following: (1) sourcing of crimes for featuring in the next episode; (2) scripting for filming; (3) filming on the actual scene (no sets were used); (4) post-production work involving stitching, editing and sound editing; (5) internal reviewing; (6) re-editing work including narrating and sound-mixing; (7) external screen tests; (8) actual broadcasting on national TV; (9) manning the Crime Watch's hotline to receive and act upon tip-offs; and (10) collating data on viewership figures for the episode screened in different languages(for example, "神之以法"--the Chinese version).

The idea of Crime Watch was conceived when two unnamed senior police officers from the Criminal Investigation Department learned of the successes of "Crimestoppers" in the United States and Canada and "Crime Watch"(警訊) in Hong Kong. These police-sponsored televisual productions were broadcast on free-to-air public television networks in the respective countries with the aim of seeking public assistance in the solving of criminal cases with little or no leads. Buoyed by the popularity of these foreign programmes and needing to secure the help of the public in the prevention and solving of crimes, the leadership of the SPF actively pursued the option of starting a local variant of Crime Watch in Singapore.


The first few iterations of the 20-odd minute docu-drama focused exclusively on public appeal and crime prevention. Typically, a re-construction of an unsolved case would be staged by a motley cast of former and currently-serving police officers supplemented by semi-professional actors supplied by Mediacorp, and this would be followed by an emotive appeal for eye-witnesses to contact the police non-emergency line with the assurance that all identities of tipsters would be kept strictly confidential. Crime prevention segments featured basic crime prevention advisories. Such cases are: robbery in homes, theft of and from vehicles, snatch theft, outrage of modesty and housebreaking, and the murder of an individual. These segments will consist of a mixture of a short-length re-enactment of solved or unsolved crimes, advisories given by the on-screen presenter(Police officer and Host for the show), interviews with members of partner organisations on crime prevention, and presentation slides highlighting crime prevention mnemonics in bullet-point form.


The charge of indifference was levied against the population in the pilot episode of Crime Watch (Episode 1;1986). A 20-year-old Chinese guy, Ng, was out on a romantic date with his girlfriend at a park bench. He was abruptly, brutally and fatally physically assaulted by a group of youths in a public area next to the void deck of a public housing flat at a location called And Mio Kio in Singapore. Despite the occurrence of the crime at the coordinates of public and prime-time visuality, no witnesses had yet come forward to provide the police with workable leads on the case. This public passivity necessitated steps taken by the police to re-trace the victim's footsteps on screen. The producers opted for a realistic reconstruction of the scenes leading up to the commission of crime, detailing with disturbing realism how a romantic landscape was fractured and transformed into a landscape of death in the space of a night. The re-enactment ended with a cut to a real-life interview with the victims’ grieving parents who emotively appeal on behalf of the police for eye-witnesses to come forward. The civic outrage at witnessing this public inaction subsequently translated to several calls to the police hotline following the broadcast of the pilot, which eventually led to the arrests of the culprits. This episode provided not only a glimpse of the potential investigative successes of an extended run of Crime Watch but also provided a window of understanding to the authorities on the need for civic engagement. Additionally, it supplied the basic framework for the reconstruction of unsolved cases, which would be re-used for the remainder of the first phase of Crime Watch.
<Source:(Crimewatch 25th Anniversary Special) on MeWatch>


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Episode 3 of Crimewatch aired on 25 July 1987. It was a re-attachment of a case about a week before Christmas in 1985. The case was about a crime detective, Goh Ah Khia, who was fatally shot by Ah Huat (also known as Lim Keng Peng). The episode showed two victims who had escaped from their residential unit when their tenant from downstairs, who was later found to be Ah Huat, had been drunk and turned aggressive towards the victims. After returning to their units, the victims found out that their handbag had gone missing and Ah Huat had driven off with his friend around nine o'clock. When the police approached a suspicious individual who was running away, Detective Goh Ah Khia was fatally shot and soon passed away. After an island-wide search for Ah Huat's whereabouts, the police received a tip-off and tracked down Ah Huat at a coffee shop. Ah Huat did not cooperate and took out his gun. Due to the police's quick response, Ah Huat was shot to death and was brought to justice.
Ah Huat had also robbed and shot a restaurant owner before Detective Goh Ah Khia passed away. </gallery>



Other scenes for reference(1987,Ep3)



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From 1989 onwards, Crimewatch began to spot a new third segment: ‘Police in Action’. This would feature re-enactments of crimes successfully solved by the police, to demonstrate police professionalism at work. The production process would be nearly identical to the unsolved crimes segment, featuring police officers as part of the cast. However, a notable difference was that officers were now mostly called to play themselves on screen since the depiction of successfully solved crimes was deemed to be beneficial to the morale of the investigators involved. Asking officers to play themselves was an act of recognition for their valued contributions to the force, and reduced the likelihood of misrepresentations of officers in action. This move towards securing the image of the police also came in the wake of concerns that the police were being portrayed as insufficiently robust law enforcers on Crime Watch. Within the new political-economic order, public imaging became crucial to corporatised state organs, and the police would be seen as the precursors of institutionalised image management. (-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------)


Here are some additional scenes from 1986-1988:


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In the opening sequences of each episode in the first phase(Pilot) of Crime Watch, scenes from a call operations centre are interspersed with shots taken from a fast response car patrolling the streets, as male frontline officers are seen communicating expediently with female call operators (Episode 01/1986). This professionalised image of the cordial police family is used to frame the seamlessness of computerised communications, highlighting the twinned objectives of image and informational management, even whilst reaffirming the contemporaneous gendered division of labour. The implementation of the non-emergency/ Crime Watch police hotline in anticipation of the premiere of Crime Watch is hence a means of establishing a further point of contact with the public. The flow of information through this hotline is most likely to be unidirectional from the public to the police, but it nonetheless satisfies the conditions required of the programme: of activating the member of the public to take responsibility as a witness by producing a cathartic sensation through the act of reporting; and of generating more information on criminal activities. Even when an individual is not a police officer, one can do his/her part in the fight against crime.

Here are the intros for the Lost Seasons from 1986-1992

Reference: (There are still additional clips)

(Low quality) Crimewatch 25th anniversary special from 2012 (PART 1)

(Low quality) Crimewatch 25th anniversary special from 2012 (PART 2)

The only full Crimewatch episode(Mandarin)recorded on a VHS tape from June 1991.The reenactment parts are in English with Mandarin subtitles. (The intro music that was used was "State of the World" - 30 seconds verse) source: https://dewolfemusic.com/search.php?id=27695048&code=z96UCb 3)

Crimewatch 35th anniversary special(which shows a partial clip of the intro of the lost episodes){Orginal Quality/Source: https://www.facebook.com/singaporepoliceforce/videos/10155144675889408/}




===== Here are the known/recorded recordings details from The National Archives Of Singapore (NAS): ===== (Older seasons are known to only have 4 episodes per season in both Mandarin and English)

# Episode Title Broadcast/Air date Status Information Known/Description Duration (Without promotional section)
1 Crimewatch Ep 1/Pilot 1986 30/11/1986 Cilp from the 25th anniversary exist Reenactment of Ank Mio Kio murder(Ng's Murder Case)-Public awareness of defending yourself when encountering a suspicious person in an enclosed area (Eng:)00:30:13
2 Crimewatch Ep 2, 1986 06/12/1986 Lost Unknown&No info (Eng:)00:32:49
3 Crimewatch Ep 1?, 1987 1987 Lost Unknown ??
4 Crimewatch Ep 2, 1987 25/04/1987 Clips from the 25th anniversary exists It features a segment about how citizens can prevent themselves from falling victims from robbers (Eng:)00:32:08
4 Crimewatch Ep 3, 1987 25/06?/1987 Clips exists from 25anni Reenactment of Detective Goh murder/Ah Huat's case. This shows how police officers conducted an island-wide search to track down Ah Huat (Eng:)00:32:08
5 Crimewatch Special ??, 1987 25/07/1987? Lost This programme features real unsolved cases that happened in Singapore. The cases are re-enacted and information about the suspect is displayed in English and Chinese. The programme also features tips and reminders from the Singapore Police Force to avoid being a victim of house robbery. The cases featured in this programme include: A house robbery case in Tampines, Blk 259 Tampines St 21, #06-354 on Wednesday, 2nd July 1986;-Jewellery theft at People's Park Centre, #02-09 on Thursday, 5th March 1987;-A missing taxi driver, taxi SH2595S along Orchard Boulevard on Saturday, 31 January 1987 00:40:39(Video in both Eng&Chinese)
6 Crimewatch Ep 6(1988,Ep1) 07/05/1988 Lost Unknown (Eng:)00:27:20
7 Crimewatch Ep 7(1988,Ep2) (Bewteen July to august) 1988 Lost Unknown ??
8 Crimewatch Ep8(1988,Ep3) (Bwteeen September to November?) 26/11/1988 Lost Unknown (Eng:)00:27:06
9 Crimewatch Ep9(1988,Ep4) (November to December?) 1988 Lost Unknown of its existence No information/proof
10 Crimewatch Ep 1?, 1989 (Episode 9) 01/04/1989 Lost Unknown (Eng:)00:29:48
11 Crimewatch Ep 10???, 1989 1 July 1989 clip from the 25Anni exist It features the Adrian Lim murder where real officers and scientists reenactment the whole case which solve a case where innocent children are brutally murdered. ??
12 Crimewatch Ep ??, 1989 30/09/1989 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:26:34
13 Crimewatch Ep 12??, 1989 23 December 1989 Clip from the 25Anni exist It features an educational segment where it educates citizens about the danger of allowing untrusted impersonated people into their house and shows ways to identify and avoid being a victim to a housebreaking robbery ??
14 Crimewatch Ep 1?, 1990 (Febuary to April) 1990 Lost Unknown of its exixtence ??
15 Crimewatch Ep ?, 1990 (May to July) 1990 Lost Unknown of its exixtence ??
16 Crimewatch Ep ?, 1990 (August to September) 1990 Lost Unknown of its exixtence ??
17 Crimewatch Ep ?, 1990 (September to November) 1990 Lost Unknown of its exixtence ??
18 Crimewatch Ep 1?, 1991 (Episode 16) 02/03/1991 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:26:43
19 Crimewatch Ep2? 01/06/1991 Found Reenactment a robbery-murder from 11 April 1991 Wang Run Sheng -Seeking information for 21 May 1991 stabbing of a 21 years-old at Lorong Street 21, body was found at residential flat Block 536. The police need help searching for a 28-30year-old Indian guy, which will provide more information about the case. The reenactment section is about a fake investment scam. A company, "Fu Lin" Company,which tricked Mr Chen(A victim of this investing scam) 100 000SGD by convincing him that the company rarely has losses. "Fu Lin" company had lost their Principal in Japan since 1987 and they lied to their clients about the decrease in their stocks. They used Japanese, which is a foreign language to trick Singapore Investors. As "Fu Lin" had lost their principal, they did not send the Investors' receipt to Japan and another in Hong Kong. -The last segment is an educational part which helps investors to have extra clarification with the business and not be tricked by such investment scams. (Eng:) 00:24:03
20 Crimewatch Ep 3?, 1991 28/09/1991 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:26:41
21 Crimewatch Ep 4?, 1991 07/12/1991 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:19:29
22 Crimewatch Ep 1, 1992 07/03/1992 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:19:00
23 Crimewatch Ep 2?, 1992 13/06/1992 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:27:11
24 Crimewatch Ep 3?, 1992 13/09/1992 Lost Unknown (Eng:) 00:25:19
25 Crimewatch Ep 4?, 1992 07/11/1992 Lost Unknown ??