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“At this stage, we’re only assessing the documents,” said Wolfgang Schmitz, a spokesman for customs. The customs agents made copies of everything in the briefcase, and sent Johnson on his way, presumably to the Daimler-Chrysler plant in Germany to see the new Maybach. Johnson explained that the paperwork was from investors he was in the process of collaborating with for his film production company. When officials searched it, they discovered a briefcase with over $8 billion in receipts, certificates, and credit notes. The seeds of trouble for Johnson were sitting in the trunk of the car.
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Everything seemed legit the customs agents were even fans of Johnson. “I signed some autographs, we joked around,” he told Larry King in 2003. Johnson, along with two other men - his personal assistant and an “ unnamed Swiss financial advisor” - were stopped by German customs officials as they made their way into the country by way of Switzerland. But, in November 2002, it was Johnson who found himself the subject of an investigation in a storyline that resembled one of the narratives he would routinely partake in during his run on the Golden Globe-winning TV series. On Miami Vice, Johnson played Detective James Crockett, who - along with Detective Tubbs (Philip Michael Thomas) - would battle drug dealers, gang members, and other nefarious characters. It features interviews with victims, perpetrators, lawyers and others with first-hand exposure to this growing social concern.Don Johnson was a few years removed from the finale of his most recent TV hit, Nash Bridges, and more than a decade past the ’80s hit series Miami Vice, when a routine customs check on the Switzerland-Germany border turned into an ordeal he would later describe as “…one of the most difficult weeks of my life.” KHJ-TV Channel 9 has produced an hourlong documentary about incest, “The Silent Sin,” and plans to broadcast it April 19 at 8 p.m. It’s about a high school student who has a drinking problem and how three friends try to cope with it. The program is “One Too Many” and is due to air May 21 at 8 p.m. With television under fire in some quarters for running commercials for beer and wine, ABC has decided to move an “Afterschool Special” into prime time because it deals with teen-age drinking. Michael Biehn portrays the husband and Cloris Leachman co-stars as his mother. It stars Madolyn Smith as a young wife who discovers that her seemingly mild-mannered husband has a violent, even murderous side to his personality. Problems arise when a Vietnamese woman (Tina Chen) with whom the husband had an affair 10 years earlier in Saigon turns up in the United States with a boy she says is their son.Įven worse marital problems are depicted in “Deadly Intentions,” a four-hour drama that is in the works for ABC.
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Wayne Rogers and Bonnie Bedelia play a couple whose marriage is put to the test in “The Lady From Yesterday,” a TV movie that CBS is scheduled to air May 7. It’s about a young man who comes into conflict with the ruling family of a small town in the South. Don Johnson of “Miami Vice” and Cybill Shepherd of “Moonlighting” have been set to star with Jason Robards in a remake of William Faulkner’s “The Long, Hot Summer.” The four-hour drama will air on NBC next season.