We're finally there! It's the two-part
season finale, where they'll once again look into the whole copycat
situation! Although they may not solve it, due to the show's
occasional fondness for end-of-season cliffhangers. I guess we'll
see!
Not this time though, since this is just part one.
The story starts in a classy New York
bar, where Greg's younger brother is tending bar! Wait, wasn't he a
chef? Am I remembering that episode from seven years ago incorrectly?
A waitress needs a manager's card, but Hotch doesn't have it, and
directs her to another staff member, who's busy in the bathroom with
a woman!
In the bathroom stall the couple is
furiously necking, but then the woman complains about being hot and
thirsty - has she taken an overdoes of MDMA? Hotch comes in for the
supervisor's card, and in the twenty seconds the guy is distracted,
his lady starts bleeding from the eyes and nose! So it was tainted
MDMA?
Hotch rushes back in to help, but the
woman has already stopped breathing - and the supervisor is too
shocked to do anything! Probably worried about having given her
tainted MDMA.
Meanwhile in another part of New York,
Greg is in bed with his girlfriend, who he and his son are visiting!
I'd forgotten she moved to New York. For some reason I'd remembered
it as being further away.
Hotch calls Greg's cell phone, asking
him to come down to the crime scene. Greg, being a solid G, obviously
heads right out. In doing so, he reveals that he was - in an amazing
coincidence - already in New York, which is definitely going to cause
some friction, because Hotch clearly did not know that.
Hotch fills in Greg on the news. His
restaurant didn't work out, so he's a bartender now! The cops think
the woman OD'd on MDMA, which is a strange reaction, considering the
blood pouring out of her face. Hotch also tells him about a woman who
died in a similar circumstance a week earlier. That woman? His
girlfriend, who he worked with, and was definitely not on MDMA when
she died! I don't want to tell Hotch how to run his life, but your
brother is a nationally famous cop, when the local guys didn't
believe you about your dead girlfriend and wrote it off as a
preposterous OD, maybe give him a call then rather than waiting for
another victim?
Now for the big question: Could there
be a serial killer poisoning drugs in Manhattan nightclubs?
Probably, or the episode wouldn't have
opened this way.
Greg loops Erin, Joe, and Garcia in on
the crime - apparently there have been five deaths! The cops think it
was bad MDMA, but the cause was actually such a high dose of the
stuff that it caused their bodies to boil over! I'm not a scientist,
so I won't offer a comment as to whether that's remotely possible.
They compare it to the 'Tylenol
Poisoning' of 1986, and suggest that this could be another case where
someone is targeting a specific person, but poisoned a huge number of
people to cover it up. Kind of unfair to assume that, though, since
absolutely no one knows the motive of the Tylenol poisoning, since no
one was ever caught for it. Recent theorizing suggests that it might
have been the Unabomber!
Erin announces that she's going along
on the case - is she going to get murdered? Will the copycat up his
war on Jeanne by murdering the woman who ruined her career? Or will
Jeanne do it, because she's working with the copycat?
That's right, I haven't let my dumbest theory ever go!
Then we cut to a rave, where a bunch of
people are dying from a mass poisoning! Who could be responsible?
Let's find out after the credits!
You know, it's becoming clear that this
isn't a two-part season finale at all, but rather two individual
episodes that the network elected to air back-to-back at the end of
the season. Perhaps we'll get a copycat check-in at the end of the
episode with Erin being kidnapped or murdered or something, but for
now, we'll just dive back into the poisoner!
Hey, if the killer is really covering
up a targeted killing with mass poisoning, is it significant that
Hotch's girlfriend wasn't on drugs?
The team discusses the possible motives
for mass murder on the plane, but then the focus in on the non-users
who still wound up dead, as they probably should. We notably do not
get a body count from the rave massacre, which is strange,
considering it looked like at least six people were going to die.
Were the producers worried that the audience would realize that there
would be a gigantic law enforcement response/national media interest
if something like that had happened?
Greg gets on the phone with his
girlfriend, and apologizes for saddling her with Jack for the entire
day while he's off solving crimes. We also get a number on the rave
massacre - it actually was six people! Realistically the mayor and
probably governor would be all over this case.
After getting off the phone Greg goes
to interrogate Hotch about the case. Which is the biggest conflict of
interest possible. The rest of the team is going to be there in half
an hour Greg, let them talk to your brother. Hotch claims he knows
nothing about drugs, Greg accepts that and leaves.
Reid, JJ and Derek are over at the
club, talking to the survivors. Apparently the dead people were
annoyed that the liquid MDMA they bought was taking too long to kick
in, so they doubled their dosage, while a guy who took a single vial
ended up fine. The guy also claims that one of the dead people was
the dealer, although I don't know how much we can trust the man, he
has blue highlights in his hair.
They call up Garcia to ask if there are
records of slow-acting MDMA that kills people, and she turns up
'Doctor Death', or PMMA, a drug that's half meth, half MDMA.
Apparently people frequently overdose one it because it takes too
long to kick in! But I'd have to imagine it would be a pretty good
high once it worked, right? Or who would still be buying it?
Again, I know nothing about this drug,
but that scene suggested that if you took twice the recommended
dosage of PMMA then all your internal organs would melt. That seems
excessive.
Then we cut over to a restaurant or bar
(perhaps the one where Hotch works?), where the killer is using a
syringe to put an overdose of the drug into a wine bottle? Who's his
next non-club-kid target?
Erin checks with the DEA, and they say
that this is the first time PMMA has been seen in America. Is it
being shipped in? Produced locally? They talk about how it's lucky
that Hotch was involved, because if he hadn't alerted Greg, they
might never have noticed the connection!
Really? You had eleven bodies full of a
combination of X and meth drop within two weeks, six at the same
time. I think the DEA would have taken notice whether or not Greg's
brother put in a call.
Finally remembering the existence of
the concept of professionalism, they send Joe in to talk to Hotch.
Joe badgers Hotch until he admits that he and his girlfriend broke up
over his MDMA use. But he didn't mention it because he claimed he
quit, and they were getting back together! Yeah, that definitely
needed to be mentioned, Hotch - the lady who convinced you to give up
MDMA suspiciously wound up overdosing on it? Once again, time to call
Greg.
Speaking of, Greg bursts in the room to yell at his brother about how he shouldn't be doing drugs. Which, you know, fair enough. Hotch reveals that he gets his drugs from his boss - so the British Guy in the opening scene did give her the drugs that killed her! - and Greg points out that he could be a connection to the killer!
Then Jeanne checks in with the sister
of the other supposedly clean victim. They never did drugs, but they
did drink wine! She drank the red, he drank the white, and that was
obviously the spiked bottle! It seems she didn't keep it, though, so
it might be a dead end.
Or not, since we then cut to a dinner
party where a couple are drinking white wine from the presumably
spike bottle! There's also a young daughter there, who gets to watch
her parents die horrible deaths! Groovy?
I'm completely unclear on how much of
this drug you have to take before your internal organs explode. There
are four glasses of wine in a bottle. Even though they're just
starting dinner, the parents have each had one glass already, leaving
two full glasses on the table after the refill that emptied the
bottle.
So each of these people had a quarter
of what the killer injected through the cork. Meaning that he put -
at least - four times a fatal dose into the bottle? Doesn't that seem
excessive? And even though both parents have completely different
body weights and tolerances, and presumably drank wine at different
rates, they managed to die at the exact same moment? Come on, show,
there's trying to arrange arresting visuals, and then there's
nonsense, and this is the latter.
When Joe and Reid arrive at the scene,
they notice the half-finished wine and come to the only logical
conclusion. I'm just amazed that the parents managed to flop over
dead without disturbing the glasses at all.
Gracia tracks the two bottles that were
poisoned - I guess the sister did save it, after all? - and finds out
the bottles were in a shipment going to the bar where Hotch works! So
obviously that's at the center of all this, as we surmised. They
question why the killer would use two completely different M.O.s -
spked wine and liquid MDMA? Could someone at the bar have been buying
the PMMA and using it to kill people, while the rest of them are just
actual overdoses?
Also, given the alacrity with which
this drug kills, what was Hotch's girlfriend doing right before she
died? Was she poisoned with wine as well, or was there another
vector? As the team assigns Garcia to figure out how the wine bottles
got from the bar into private hands, no one seems to remember the
third non club-kid victim. My suggestion for how they got there? The
killer placed them on a shelf in a wine store where they sold that
brand, Tylenol killer-style?
JJ acknowledges that the club is the
key, but doesn't address Hotch's girlfriend more specifically.
Whether or not she drank wine and who she was near before her death
is a potentially huge clue, people!
Greg then wins a Prentiss Award for the
following exchange with Hotch:
Um... no, they couldn't be using it as
a date rape drug. The drugs were syringed through corks and then put
into the hands of (presumably) random people. Who is looking to
date-rape people yet super-concerned that people think he's going to
date-rape them, so he has to make sure that the drugs are already
inside the wine when it's opened? More importantly, won't it look
weird if you open a bottle of wine and pour someone a glass, and then
carefully avoid drinking any of it yourself? Doesn't that just make
it look more suspicious?
Murder is the only possible motive
here. Hotch offers to wear a wire to get info about where the bar
owner gets his drugs, but it feels like they could just arrest and
grill the guy. He's running a bar whose wine (and/or drugs - we don't
know about his lady friend) were used to murder at least four people.
Threaten him with jail and financial ruin, I can't imagine he
wouldn't talk.
But no, they go with the other
solution, because this isn't a show about professionals.
Hotch goes in and starts talking to his
boss and the business partner - it's the partner who's in charge of
drug dealing at the bar, as we're shown in a montage. Hotch tells
them that the cops know about the tainted wine, and both guys look
extremely surprised/concerned. Also one of the waitresses looks over
significantly when she overhears them talking about dumping the wine
just in case.
Is she the killer? If so, why? Was it
all to kill Hotch's girlfriend because of a romantic obsession, and
the rest have been to cover her tracks?
No, that would be crazy.
The boss asks Hotch to help him dump
the wine, and while they head out the waitress comes over to ask the
business partner how much Hotch knows! So she's in on it, just not in
the way I'd randomly assumed!
Okay, things just got a lot less
complicated. Boss starts panicking when he discovers that a case of
the white wine is missing. Hotch asks why he's freaking out, because
he's the one who poisoned the wine! He thought it was just MDMA, and
he was going to play a merry prank on the bargoers! And I guess
someone sold off the second case for some quick cash, and that's what
caused the other clean kid and random couple to die? So there really
isn't a Tylenol poisoner, just a guy making PMMA that's too strong?
So... wait, Hotch told Greg that his
boss probably gave the drugs to the blonde woman, killing her,
shouldn't they have just brought him in and sweated him until he
revealed his drug source? After all, he could have been charged with
a serious crime for giving her drugs that killed her, whether he knew
they were deadly or not. Couldn't this have been mostly wrapped up
fifteen minutes ago? Also, after two people died because he drugged
them, why did he continue spiking bottles? The first time could have
been a coincidence, but the second time someone died it has to be the
drugs, doesn't it?
Finding out that his boss murdered his
girlfriend puts Hotch into a murderous rage, and he attacks the guy,
which, naturally, leads to his wire being exposed! Greg and Derek
bust in to arrest the boss just then, so no harm, no foul.
While the team arrests everyone who
works at the club, Hotch pulls a disappearing act, leaving his wire
and recording device in the van! But why?
We then cut to the business partner,
who seems like he's trying to get while the getting's good. But as he
gets into his sedan, he's rammed by someone in an SUV! Does Hotch
want revenge, or is the drug cook finally entering the plot?
The team shows up at the crime scene -
after being stunned by the car crash, the partner had the PMMA
mixture poured down his throat. And the, I guess the guy held him in
place for the ten minutes it takes to kick in?
In any event, Derek, Reid, and Greg
debate whether Hotch could be the killer. He probably couldn't, is
the result. Reid's theory is that the cook, annoyed that someone used
his killer drugs to poison wine, is getting revenge on the people
responsible for doing so! I guess he knows the partner was involved
because that's one of the main people he sold the drugs to?
In an amazingly silly scene, the show
intercuts between the boss and the waitress getting the same pitch
from two sub-teams. They point out that since the partner was killed
for his involvement in the wine-dosing scheme, they're probably next!
If they don't spill everything the know about drug sources, the FBI
will just let them go, and the cook will doubtlessly have no trouble
tracking them down and killing them as well!
I don't know about these two dummies,
but I'd take that deal. Joe tries to make the cook sound formidable
by suggesting that it was some feat killing the partner. Only the
partner was an unarmed guy in an empty parking lot outside of his own
building, where he would be easy to find. There's no reason to
believe the cook has any significant information, resources, or
abilities to find and kill people who don't want to be caught. Hell,
the boss definitely has a UK passport, based on his accent.
Seriously, kids, take your chances.
But no, both of them cave, demanding
protection.
Time for a heart-to-heart with Joe and
Greg! It turns out Greg cut Hotch out of his life when he didn't show
up for the wife's funeral! Which, yeah, fair enough.
Then Garcia jumps in through a vidscreen with news! Seriously? A vidscreen? Shouldn't she just be calling? She finds out about a 'bodega' (that's what New Yorkers call Depanneurs!) where both of the random victims stopped. That's where the case of wine must have ended up! But who put it there?
More importantly, though, why did they
need Garcia to crack this down? Couldn't they have just asked the
victims where they bought the win? Yeah, the brother is dead, but his
older sister - the one who presumably bought the wine in the first
place - could have just told them where she got it, right? And maybe
the daughter wasn't there when her parents were buying wine, but
obviously two middle-class people could get wine wherever they
wanted, so they only bought the wine at the bodega because it was
somewhere they regularly stop, right? So the daughter should
definitely know about that place, shouldn't she?
It seems that the drug isn't local at
all! It was smuggled from Canada on a plane, then brought into the
city by a courier! For some reason, only the shipment going to
Hotch's bar wound up with PMMA instead of the MDMA they were
expecting! At least, that's what they say. Did we ever establish a
connection between the club kids in the rave and the boss or partner?
Is that where the dead club dealer bought his supply? If not, that's
at least one other case where people ended up with the toxic stuff
that they should be investigating.
When Derek and Reid get to the bodega
owner, he explains that people often bring him stuff they steal from
their businesses, which he then sells in his store! He also mentions
that the guy who brought the wine over a few weeks early came back
the previous night and bought the rest of it at full price. So it's
Hotch's fault that those random people died, and that's where he ran
off to!
Garcia has more clues to offer! A
baggage handler at the airport where the drugs come in died a month
ago, but he's continued making cash deposits into his bank account! I
don't want to lecture that airport on staffing policy, but isn't the
whole point of having zombie workers that you don't have to pay them?
Oh, and Hotch calls Greg to confess
about the wine, but Greg says he already knows, and asks him to come
in, since he's definitely the killer's next target. Although I'm not
really sure that's the case - the killer would have to have some
reason to know that it's Hotch's fault the killer wine was dispersed,
or just be killing everyone who worked at the bar. We have no reason
to believe either possibility is accurate.
The team gathers around to try and
figure out what's going on with the baggage handler's regular
deposits. Obviously his customers still think he's alive, which means
the drops are still being made, and the new courier is the killer! So
obviously it had to be someone who worked with or knew the courier,
because how else would he know about the drug shipments?
Garcia finds that another handler had a
daughter recently die from a MDMA overdoes, and surmise that he must
be their guy! But why is he only targeting that one bar? Was that
where his daughter got the drugs? No, it turns out it was the other
bar that the guy owned. His plan was to attack the guy's other
business, so the killings wouldn't be traced back to him!
Which, you know, is a terrible plan. Because the second the guy realizes that his new drug supply is tainted, he's going to go looking up the chain, find out the real courier is dead, and start looking for who delivered the poison. Since the drugs were picked up at the airport as usual, the killer wouldn't have been too hard to track down, whether or not you ever connected him to his dead daughter.
Then, rather than just have state cops
drive out the airport and arrest the guy, they have Morgan and Reid
drive the three hours out there to do it themselves. How do I know it
takes them at least three hours to get there? When they're dispatched, the sun is still up, perhaps a little close to setting. Maybe. Here's when they get to the airport:
Pitch blackness. Someone could have
handled this faster, methinks. They arrest him without incident, and
during his confession he confirms that yes, he did just want to kill
the partner, and had no plans to go after anyone else.
The End.
Epilogue time!
Greg is finally back with his son and
girlfriend when there's a knock on the door! It's Hotch! He's come to
apologize for being so terrible and stealing the wine! Greg has cops
waiting downstairs to arrest him, and he asks for a recommendation
for a lawyer. Although I don't know if he'll really need a very good
one, he committed petty theft, stealing a hundred dollars' worth of
wine from this workplace. Yes, the wine killed three people, but
they've already arrested the people responsible for that. Also, what
with his bosses being arrested for drug dealing or dead, is there
anyone who's going to bother pressing charges for stealing the wine?
I know that Hotch is going to feel
guilty for the rest of his life over those three people dying, but I
can't imagine he's in any legal jeopardy over their deaths. Hell, did
you know that there's a legal statute (in New York, at least) that if
you donate extra food to a charity and it turns out to be tainted, so
long as there's no reason to believe that you knew it was poisonous,
you can't be charged with a crime? It's true, and it, or something
close to it obviously applies to Hotch's case.
The episode then ends with Hotch being
taken to jail, and I have no earthly idea why. Maybe some statute about selling liquor without a distributor's license?
The copycat then takes a bunch of
photos of Greg from across the street, because he's back to following
them around! Then it's over to Garcia, whose computer has been
hacked! The copycat sends her all of the surveillance photos, along
with the 'Zugzwang' message which, as we discussed before, doesn't
mean what he thinks it does.
So yeah, they're pulling the trigger on
the idea that the copycat needed to have access to the FBI to find
out about the cases, even though that concept is obviously
ridiculous, as I mentioned a few episodes back. He would, however,
need access to the FBI's computers to know where they were going, and
when, but since he didn't actually need to stalk them at crime
scenes, I don't know how that's relevant.
Also, he wouldn't even need to have access to the FBI - he could have broken into the computer system at the airport they always fly out of. Since their pilot has to file a flight plan, that would likely be the easiest point of access for a hacker looking to stalk the team.
Then it's over to a hotel hallway,
where the copycat is putting on gloves (which means he touched a
bunch of door on the way into the hallway leaving fingerprints
everywhere) as he heads for a room. Presumably Erin's, but I'm
willing to be surprised.
He uses a keycard to get into the room
(he's a hacker, remember?), then approaches the sleeping Erin. If he
kills her, what crime will he copycat? I can't imagine he'll abduct
her, because how would he get a grown woman out of the 8th floor of a
hotel without anyone noticing?
We've already had dolls, lips sewn
shut, amputations, hammer murders... obviously the killer won't make
her play a terrible real-life video game or frame her for killing her
wife and daughter, and somehow a murder-suicide seems like a
stretch... and hotels aren't soundproof, so days of cigarette torture
followed by drowning is probably out. Maybe the chisel in the back of
the neck murder? Has he gotten to that one yet?
The killer gets to Erin's bedside, and
the camera pans up to reveal...
Mark Hamill?!?!?
Okay, that's a twist. I was told that
Mark Hamill played a killer on Criminal Minds at some point, and I
specifically asked the person who told me not to reveal when, since I
wanted to be surprised. This is definitely a surprise, and I'm
psyched to find out his crazy motivation next week!
It will have to be then, however, since
the show ends before we find out what happens to Erin.
Also, just a note, Mark was not wearing
a mask, and he got into whatever high-priced hotel that Erin was
staying at, so there's got to be plenty of security footage of him.
Unless, I don't know, he both shut down the building's security
cameras and somehow did the same for all of the cameras in the
buildings around it, on what must be a pretty high-end street?
I'm sure they'll cover all that next week. Wink.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Not really. The closest they came was,
after tracking down the courier, asking who might have a motive to go
after that one bar with the poisoned drugs. But did they really have
to? Once the knew who the courier was, and that he was dead before
the newest shipment arrived, they'd have to know that it was someone
else who worked at the airport, because who else would have access to
the drugs? Just question everyone there and you'd find the guy fast
enough. Hell, as we learned, he'd just run away the second the cops
showed up.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
The entire crime was solved using
normal police methods. Except for the part where they had a guy go in
undercover instead of just arresting everyone and grilling them about
the drugs, the way they should have.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1
Weak episode, folks. Very, very weak.
Hopefully things pick up with the arrival of Mark Hamill next time!
Seriously, why didn't the club owners
know something was up the moment that the boss gave Hotch's
girlfriend some wine and she died horribly ten minutes later? Did he
think that was a coincidence? Even after the cops announced that her
autopsy showed her dying of a massive overdose of MDMA+meth, the boss
and the partner kept selling the drugs? Why wouldn't their first
instinct be that they got a bad batch, and either toss it or demand a
refund?
Also, where did the baggage handler get
the chemical skills necessary to make murderous MDMA that still
looked exactly like the drug it was supposed to be? And why did he
make it so it would only kill you if you took too much of it? So much
of this episode didn't make sense.
Isn't it an amazing coincidence that the baggage handler worked next to the courier who moved the specific drugs that killed his daughter? I guess she could have found out about the drugs from her dad's co-worker, but then why wouldn't she have gotten the drugs from him, rather than a random bar?
Of, because then her father would just
have one target, rather than a bunch. It's a little funny that his
method for revenge was 'kill a bunch of random people so that the
drug dealer will be blamed', but then he got bored waiting for that
to happen and just hit him with a car.
This was not a good episode.
I just wanted to tell you that in the most recent episode, the BAU fights a werewolf, just like you suggested. No, I’m not joking, the episode is called “Bad Moon on the Rise”.
ReplyDeleteWHAT.
ReplyDelete