About Police Diary TV ShowThe Police Diary is a telugu drama TV show, The storyline of the Telugu show revolves around the Host who narrates the dramatized version of crime stories happening in the city. The host also tells the safety measures to avoid getting served by these crimes. The show has a total of 218 episodes each of 22 minutes each.
police diary 2.0 full episodes 2019 free download
DOWNLOAD
https://t.co/abIVf5Faxw
Police Diary is a Telugu crime TV show hosted by Nagababu that showcases different crime stories in a dramatized version. Each episode presents a unique crime story and how the police department solves it. The show emphasizes the importance of being aware of the crimes happening around us and taking appropriate measures to prevent them. Nagababu acts as the narrator and provides insights on crime prevention, criminal behavior, and police procedures. The series aims to educate and empower the audience to be vigilant and cautious, ultimately contributing to a safer society.
Initially, Kurusu has no interest in the title of God; his participation in the Survival Game is an effort to stop the murders that will occur if it continues. He makes an effort to recruit some of the other diary holders into his cause, but his main goal is to capture the ones too dangerous to be left roaming free. He was chosen by Deus to balance out the many criminals and maniacs that are also taking part in the game.
Kurusu is also a family man with deep attachments to his wife and son, almost to a fault. When he learns that his son has a terminal illness, he becomes wholly dedicated to winning the Survival Game in hopes of saving him; this leads to him becoming desperate and angry, taking increasingly drastic and illegal measures to eliminate the other diary holders. The loss of his morals leads to his defeat, but also awakens him to how far he has fallen; in his last moments, he can only ask his former allies to look after his family before he erases himself from existence.
Kurusu uses the Criminal Investigation Diary, a cell phone which predicts criminal activities within his jurisdiction. This is an effective way to track many of the other participants, as they are mostly sociopaths who engage in multiple criminal activities during the Survival Game. However, the diary can only predict the results of Kurusu's own investigation, so he must work to make the best use of the information he can gather.
Being the Chief of Police of Sakurami City, Kurusu has absolute command of the police force. The fact they can fight for him without knowing of his Diary and his participation of the game implies he's a very cautious and manipulative individual if needed. He takes no chances if he can help it, once deploying an entire team of special units (SWATs in the manga & anime) to surround the Sakurami Hospital and almost trap Yuki, Yuno and Minene Uryu.
Kurusu was investigating Takao Hiyama and Minene Uryu's crimes before receiving his diary from Muru Muru. After Hiyama's death, Kurusu turned his attention to Yukiteru, knowing Minene would target him next. In the first meeting of the diary owners, Kurusu was one of the few who didn't immediately target Yukiteru as a priority threat, instead promising to protect him.
During Minene's rampage at Sakurami Elementary School, Kurusu listened in on her demands and learnt of all of her weapons through his diary. As Yuki was surrendered to her by the students, Kurusu made his move and approached Minene and Yukiteru, introducing himself to the First and explaining the boy was merely bait used by Minene to lure him in. Kurusu aims his gun at Yukiteru when Minene threatens to kill everyone in the school, Yuki tearfully accepting his fate to die.
However, Kurusu lowers his gun and tells Yuki to pluck up his courage and stop Minene, advising him to cover up his fear and anxiety with a smile. Yuki follows Kurusu's guidance and manages to defeat Minene by puncturing her eye. Kurusu tells to Minene to surrender, but she uses smoke bombs and her Escape Diary to flee on a motorbike. Later, Kurusu admits he does not wish to play the game; he only wishes to stop the other diary holders from harming each other and innocent people. To this end, he forms an alliance with Yukiteru and Yuno, knowing that the other Survival Game participants will be coming for them.
Kurusu sends Yuki and Yuno on a date to the amusement park so they can act as bait to lure out Minene. However, she does not show and the two go to Yuno's house unharmed. Kurusu has a police guard Yuki's house, noticing a drastic change in his Criminal Investigation Diary after Yukiteru opened a secret door in Yuno's house.
Upon arrival at the temple, Kurusu is shocked when he learns Tsubaki is a diary owner and considers calling for backup before Tsubaki explains that she does not wish to participate in the Survival Game. When Tsubaki reveals she has a Dead End on her diary, Kurusu supports her request to have Yukiteru guard her until her Dead End passes. When Ai Mikami and Orin Miyashiro try to assassinate Tsubaki with an explosion, Kurusu races into the depths of the temple to repair the faulty sprinkler systems. He succeeds and calls for backup, learning from Yuki of the situation upstairs.
Kurusu eventually finds Minene in the temple's dungeon, who tells him about the Twelfth diary holder, Yomotsu Hirasaka, and his powers of hypnosis. When Yuno kills Yomotsu and Tsubaki reveals her true intentions, Kurusu and Minene observe this from a rooftop and form an alliance; Kurusu will give Minene access to police files in return for aiding him in finding other diary owners. Minene is allowed to escape and Kurusu takes control of the temple after Yuki kills Tsubaki. Kurusu and Minene keep in touch over the next few weeks, with Kurusu contacting Minene to rescue Yuki and Yuno from the Fifth diary owner Reisuke Houjou.
Asking Minene to protect Yoi in case anything happens to him, Kurusu investigates the culprit behind the recent animal attacks, identifying him as the Tenth diary owner, Karyuudo Tsukishima. While the dog breeder was monitoring his daughter's battle against Yukiteru, Yuno, and their friends, Kurusu breaks into Karyuudo's house and shoots him in the back.
Framed for Karyuudo's death, Yukiteru and Yuno are taken to the police station for interrogation by his subordinate, Masumi Nishijima. Yukiteru is sent into a room with Kurusu, who quickly forces him into a game of Russian Roulette rigged to kill Yukiteru with the last bullet. Foreseeing this on her own diary, Yuno soon barges in to protect Yukiteru, shooting Kurusu multiple times before fleeing with the First; however, this was all part of the Fourth's plan. He had deliberately orchestrated the entire encounter to further implicate Yuno and Yukiteru, having worn a bulletproof vest to protect him from Yuno's retaliation; unfortunately, he hadn't expected Yuno to shoot at his head in the process. Narrowly surviving with his left ear blown off, Kurusu issues a manhunt for Yuki and Yuno, putting Minene on alert.
Despite his injuries, Kurusu struggles to his feet in an effort to kill Yuno, only for Minene and Nishijima to enter. Nishijima calls Kurusu out for his criminal actions, having legitimate evidence to clear Yuki, Yuno and Minene of their crimes. (In the anime, Kurusu's conviction is extended when Minene reveals she recorded his original request to guard his son. She also mentions that he has been stripped of his rank as a police officer, negating the powers of his Criminal Investigation Diary.)
Realizing the error of his ways, Kurusu asks if his family were saved; Nishijima confirms they were evacuated before Minene's bomb exploded. He then asks Minene to make one last deal with him; continue guarding his son in exchange for his own life. Without even waiting for Minene's agreement, he snaps his diary in two, apologizing to Yukiteru for his actions and admitting that he was not expecting his final act to earn forgiveness. He tells Yuki to survive and win the game before the destruction of his diary erases him from existence.
Reviewed by: Sam Steele: A Biography by Rod Macleod Mark Minenko Rod Macleod, Sam Steele: A Biography (Edmonton: University of Alberta Press, 2018), 432 pp. Paper. $39.99. ISBN 978-1-77212-379-1. The life and times of Sam Steele are once again captured in a well-written and fast-paced book. A pleasure to read, it was difficult to close once I began reading Rod Macleod's contribution to Canadian history as revealed through the letters and diaries of this interesting figure. Rod Macleod's ten years of work with the Sir Samuel Steele Collection at the University of Alberta's Bruce Peels Special Collections has paid off in a book which is a welcome addition to any Canadian Studies, police, or military history library and is sure to develop interest in a number of episodes in Canada's history between 1832 and 1919.
Despite having to rely on Steele's autobiography and other sources to describe Steele's life prior to 1885, Macleod's painstaking review of Steele's post-1885 letters and diaries results in the development of different narratives than those suggested by Harwood Steele's protective portrayal of his father, including that of a man torn between personal ambition and duty. Macleod's use of these diaries also brings to the attention of the casual reader of early Canadian history a number of interesting issues, including the personal conflict in families when Protestants (Steele) married Catholics (his wife Marie), the level of politics involved in the appointment of senior positions in the military and police, and contact between the North West Mounted Police (NWMP) and First Nations. Unfortunately, although Steele was appointed a Justice of the Peace (JP) in Western Canada (as were all NWMP officers), outside an occasional reference to episodes of law and order, little is revealed about how Steele and his fellow NWMP members administered frontier justice. One interesting diary note which Macleod includes is how police officers supplemented their regular pay through the levying of court costs in their capacity as JPs. The more men and women these JPs convicted the more court costs were paid. Steele's admission that he earned $411 in one month in the Yukon from court costs paid by offenders appearing before him leads to questions about the independence of the administration of justice in provinces and territories where JPs were not paid a regular stipend but relied upon court costs.
35fe9a5643