The episode starts outside a mini-mart
in Milwaukee, where a lady is laden down with packages. My first
thought is, honestly, "is this the same mini-mart from two
episodes ago? I know they reuse locations, but that would be crazy,
so probably not." It's night, and she's wearing a short skirt
and light jacked, so I guess it's weirdly warm in Wisconsin this
April? Wasn't there slush everywhere and people in Parkas just three
episodes ago?
The lady hops on a bus, where almost
nothing bad ever happens. Except for, you know, a creepy weirdo who
won't stop ogling her. Then, when she gets off the bus, he disembarks
as well, trailing her down a dark alley! Is this the least amount of
mystery ever, or is there about to be a surprising twist as she kills
him, or they're both killed by a third party?
Creepiness slightly defused, when it
turns out he just got off the bus to give her an item she left on the
bus seat! Still creepy, though. Then show then follows the guy down
the street, where he's murdered by a hobo! Or perhaps... someone
pretending to be a hobo? I mean, we don't see the guy's face, so who
knows?
Then it's over to a running track,
where Garcia and Reid are training to pass the field fitness test!
Which apparently involves an 8-minute mile! Which isn't especially
daunting, but they're both extremely out-of-shape, it seems. Which I
believe from Garcia, since her job is typing, but it's weird that
Reid can't manage this. Garcia points out that the whole thing is
pointless, since he's never had to run a mile quickly in the field,
which I'm pretty sure isn't true. If he'd been a better runner maybe
Van Der Beek wouldn't have caught him and got him hooked on heroin.
That might a low blow.
Time for a briefing! Three bodies were
found in the woods by a park ranger, two men and a women, all showing
signs that they'd been tied up for long periods of time before being
murdered! Not that they'd be able to tell that yet, if at all.
How do I know that for sure? Simple -
the bodies were found THIS MORNING. I know I spend a lot of time
harping on the ridiculous timelines of this show, but this is just
insane. I did some quick research to explain just how crazy this is.
The episode aired on March 12th, and we
can assume the episode is set on that day as well, since that's just
how Criminal Minds works - it's why we were robbed of that evil
Santa episode all those years ago.
On March 12th, sunrise in Milwaukee is
at 7:15CST. Garcia received her call about the case at:
Which is 6:09 in Milwaukee - a full
hour before sunrise. Of course, she didn't get a call when the bodies
were found. She got a call from Greg, after he got a call from the
Justice Department, after they got a call from the Milwaukee FBI,
after they got a call from the Milwaukee Police Department, after
police officers confirmed that there were bodies in the woods, after
they were called by the park ranger.
What's the minimum amount of time all
of those calls could have taken? Two hours? And an hour for the cops
to get out to the dump site in the woods, confirm that the corpses
are real, and report back to their superiors. So that's three hours,
which puts the time window for the ranger to have found the bodies
somewhere around 3AM local time.
Also, the bodies were under a couple of
inches of dirt:
Which makes it even more incredible
that they were found in the pitch darkness.
I know it's weird that I bring this up
every episode, but it's truly strange - what do the writers think
they're accomplishing by not having the characters just come into
work and finding out that they have a case because a body was found a
couple of days ago, and the FBI has decided they should work the
case? I say 'The FBI' since they no longer have someone deciding what
cases the team works on. Garcia obviously isn't doing it. Is Greg?
He's the one calling everyone in, but even he seems to just be
getting word that they're working the case from someone else.
Where are these cases coming from? Does anyone even know?
Okay, back to the show - the newest
body is of a sex worker who was killed six weeks ago. So maybe the
creep was just locked away somewhere, rather than being killed by the
hobo?
That theory is confirmed in the next
scene, where it turns out that the killer has an actual jail that he
keeps people in!
Well, possibly a kennel, but in any
event, it's a pretty impressive setup just for keeping people
captive! The killer sets up a video camera and sprays the creep with
water, telling him to drink so he won't get dehydrated... yet. Is
this some kind of a study the killer is performing? Does he want to
document the effects of starvation and thirst on humans?
I suppose we'll find out after the
credits!
On the plane, we already have IDs for
the two other bodies in the grave (they'd identified the female sex
worker already)! I'm confused as to how, though. This is, at most,
three hours later, and the bodies have been in the ground for weeks.
There's no way they have fingerprints any more, and their faces can't
be in good enough shape that they could have used facial recognition
software. Did the killer bury them with ID? Why, it's almost as if
this should have been set a few days after the bodies were found, so
there would have been time to realistically identify those bodies!
I promise I'll stop bringing this up.
The other victims were a homeless guy
and an unmarried truck driver, neither of whom were missed right away
- could the killer have stalked them, or did he just get lucky? Also,
the victims were two men and one woman, two white and one black. What
could his lack of preference mean! They have no idea!
JJ and Derek head out to the dump site,
which turns out to be two hours away from Milwaukee, making the
timeline even more - wait, I just promised, sorry. They also mention
that there's no sign of the people being murdered here, so it must
just be a dump site!
But how would you know that? At this
point you have no idea how they were killed. Who's to say he didn't
bring them out here at gunpoint, then strangle or poison or stab
them, or whatever? Nevertheless, they assume that the killer was just
dragging bodies from his car to the dump site, some 300 yards from
the road. Which leads to a very dumb observation from the two of
them, with JJ suggesting that they might be super-close to where he's
holding the victims, because it would be so risky to drive bodies all
the way from Milwaukee.
Would it, though? You're assuming
they're dead in the trunk of the car, and so long as the guy obeys
the rules of the road, and has current tags and working tail-lights,
why would driving from Milwaukee to the dump site be significantly
more challenging than driving from a spooky cabin just a few miles
away.
Reid and Joe head over to the morgue,
where they discover that all three victims died of heart attacks!
Which is an amazing thing to be able to determine given that the
oldest victim is decomposed to the point that he looks like beef
jerky, and the newest one doesn't have a Y-incision, suggesting that
an autopsy hasn't been performed yet!
Weird note, the first victim has animal
bites, and the second and third victims have human bites! The team
wonder if the killer might be a cannibal, but that's only because
they don't know the title of the episode, which I guess is literally
accurate? The killer got a rabid animal to bite the first victim,
then waited until he went zombie and had him bite the second victim,
and so forth - and now there's a fourth victim turning rabid and the
bus stop guy is in danger, or he's starting over because the sex
worker died too soon?
Does rabies literally make people bite
other people? I've heard it can make them violent, but isn't the
biting thing mostly with animals, because that's mostly how animals
attack? Wouldn't a rabid human just attack without all the chomping?
This might call for some research!
Now it's time for a check-in with the
creep, who hears a woman talking a few cells over - yup, the chain
has not been interrupted. When she finds out he's there, she starts
threatening to eat him alive! Which suggests that yes, the killer has
isolated a strain of rabies that makes people into ghouls!
Reid's ready - as usual - with some
completely garbage geographical profiling - I swear I could give each
week's Prentiss Award to the geographical profiling scene and it
would always deserve it.
The blue marks indicate where the
victims were last seen, and the red marks are where they lived - one
was homeless, remember? Greg's observation based on Reid's work? The
killer must live in the area. What area, Greg? Milwaukee? Because you
already figured that out, and the victims literally lived/were last
seen across the entire city.
Then there's some chatting about
cannibalism, but since we know that's not relevant, we can just move
on to the next scene, where the creep is being assaulted by the
killer! He begs for his life while the killer drags him into the
common area where the ghoul can attack him! Which is what happens.
The killer films all of it, because I guess this is science?
Also, the killer leaves the room, and
leaves the creep hog-tied on the ground for the ghoul to attack.
Presumably this is what he does every time - how can he be sure that
the ghoul won't just tear out his throat, ruining the experiment?
Garcia calls the team about the first
victim's backstory - he only recently became a truck driver, before
that he was an animal control specialist, dealing with dangerous wild
animals! That's all Reid needs to figure out that they're dealing
with a creep who purposefully infects people with rabies. Which seems
like a stretch, but okay, let's just get to the profile!
The profile is, as usual, pretty
useless, and for the first time in a long while, especially when they start wondering how the killer could have possibly gotten ahold of rabies. Umm... Don't you think he
definitely has some connection to the animal control outfit where the
first guy worked? Maybe a disgruntled former co-worker who wanted to
get back at him? Doesn't it seem like an inconceivable stretch that
the first victim working in the rabies control field is a complete
coincidence?
Also, Jeanne gets maybe her first line
in the episode when she points out that the word rabies is derived
for a word for violence! Thanks, Jeanne! I have no idea why you're
here!
In the next scene the team has figured
out at least one of the next two victims, because only two people
have been reported missing in a ten-mile radius of the hunting ground
(so, the entire city of Milwaukee, plus 10 miles) in the past month,
which sounds like a stretch, since like half a million people live in
Milwaukee, but I have no idea how to search for missing persons
incidences, so let's just let them have it. The ghoul is a
43-year-old stay-at-home mom! No one mentions how badly this breaks
the profile of seeking out high-risk victims, but I guess he stopped
doing that almost right away?
Now, I know what you're thinking -
'Count, you say that every killer is a spree killer on the show, but
this guy watches people slowly die of rabies, how can that be the
case here?' Don't worry, the show has got you covered! The killer has
been taking victims more and more quickly, because he's making sure
the victims get bitten closer to the brain, so that the parasite
starts working on them more quickly!
I'm not sure how the killer is managing
this, since his MO is to let the ghoul attack a tied up person, and
it seems like encouraging the ghoul to bite the victim in the neck
would make it more likely that they'd just die, but the show wants
artificial time pressure, let's give it to them!
I say 'artificial', because the show
has already established the actual time pressure of rabies - that you
need the vaccine within one day or you're dead - how is increasing
how quickly the symptoms set in relevant or at all threatening?
Then it's over to the kennel - this
scene confirms that it's a kennel he's keeping them in - where the
killer is editing together videos of the second-latest victim
transforming from scared lady into ghoul.
As usual, Garcia has solved the case!
She found a kid who got rabies fifteen years ago, but was checked out
of the hospital and never had a death certificate filed! How is that
possible? Does it have something to do with his older brother, who
works in pest control? Who, presumably, was one of the people that JJ
said they'd checked and cleared in the previous scene, even though,
yes, he's the killer.
How exactly did they check out every
single person who works in private pest control, public animal
control, and veterinarian's offices all between the profile ending
and JJ walking into a room? That's like... over a hundred people
you'd have to track down, look into the history of, check their
alibis. Was she just lying because she didn't want to do the work?
I'm not going crazy, right? She did claim to have cleared everyone?
So... is JJ lazy and lying, or is she
just terrible at her job? That deserves a Prentiss Award!
The killer goes in to check on his new
victim and film him begging for his life. Is there a scientific
reason for this? Does he want to find a cure? Is his brother one of
the statistically insignificant people who become healthy carriers of
rabies, and he thinks there's a way back for the guy?
Once the killer is gone, the ghoul
chews her way out of her restraints - which is weirdly easy to do,
they're simple buckles, and he's tied her up so that her mouth is
within reach of her wrists. Once she's free instead of attacking the
creep the ghoul just says they've got to get out, and jumps out a
conveniently-placed window inside the cell!
She does this without untying the
creep, for no reason I can think of. Like, she's got the presence of
mind to not attack him, and to untie herself, and to know she needs
to escape, but she can't pull off one of his buckles?
You're the worst, ghoul.
The team busts into the killer's
apartment, only to find it empty! Hey, how'd they get a warrant? I
know that the team doesn't really deal in warrants, per se, but from
a civil rights standpoint, this is pretty horrific - you're literally
breaking into a man's home because his brother caught rabies more
than a decade ago.
There's a weird transition from 'middle
of the night' until daytime, as if it took them six hours to search a
two-room apartment. They come across photographic evidence of the
little brother dying of rabies at home, and an audio tape that the
killer made of the dying process.
Derek explains that the killer was
fired from his last two jobs in the pest control field. Possibly for
stealing, since he's got plenty of work gear in his closet. Although
maybe not, since he's got a website for his own pest control
business, maybe he just bought that? But considering that he kept
getting fired from jobs in the field, it's looking more and more like
JJ did a cartoonishly bad job of clearing people who worked in pest
control.
The ghoul wanders into a coffee shop
and attacks someone, but I'm not sure how she made it that far
without attracting police attention. She's literally covered in blood
and foaming at the mouth - nobody wanted to call the cops?
Greg and Joe talk about how the dump
site was near where the killer's family camped during his youth -
perhaps it was there that he was bitten by a bat? They then suggest
that the little brother might even be buried out there! I'm not
entirely sure why the parents didn't just report the kid's death to
the proper authorities. Were they part of a cult? It's not like they
did anything legally wrong, did they? Wisconsin has to be cool with
letting people die at home if they were allowed to check their
rabies-infected son out of the hospital.
Actually, given how dangerous and
virulent rabies is, why wasn't the brother quarantined? Why, it's
almost as if the hospital acted incredibly unprofessionally just so
the killer could develop a fetish for rabies?
It's not like this was the 40s or
something, and the hospital didn't know what they were doing - the
little brother died in 1999.
Anyhow, the team manages to grab the
ghoul, because somehow they were closer than any of Milwaukee's cops!
They figure she could have only walked a couple of miles in this
state, which is pretty reasonable, so Garcia looks for large isolated
properties where the killer could be holding people! She finds an
abandoned animal control facility, and the team is off!
Over at the kennel, the creep asks to
use the bathroom, and the killer comes in to give him a bucket -
meanwhile, the team is outside, and they decide they can't wait five
minutes for a SWAT team to arrive! Why not? You have no idea when the
Creep was infected, or even if he has been - what is waiting five
minutes going to risk?
Also, not for nothing, did you bring
along a series of rabies vaccines? Because getting those into him
should be your top priority, team.
They bust in and have a chase and a
fight, then subdue the killer!
THE END
Except for a trip to the hospital,
where the ghoul dies, and the creep survives! Oh, and at some point
in the past three hours, someone went out to the dump site with a
shovel and miraculously located the little brother's body, so that
guess turned out to be right as well!
Oof.
Then we see Reid and Garcia continuing
their training. This time, with Derek's help! Adorable!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Not at all! Did their preposterous
guess about the killer's rabies motive help them at all? Nope. While
it led them to the identity of the killer, that had nothing to do
with catching him. It's weird, but in this episode knowing who the
killer was had no relevance to resolving the case. They had a
picture, address, everything about the guy, but only when a victim
turned up in public did they get their first actionable information.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
Well, the case was solved because they
knew the killer had to be holding the victims somewhere, and then one
of the victims showed up with rabies, giving people a starting point
to search. I can't imagine it would have taken them too long to find
the kennel.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10
So, remember how I said that it would
be impossibly preposterous if the first victim was coincidentally
involved in the rabies field, and that the killer most likely would
have targeted him based on a grudge they had when they were working
together? Yeah, turns out the writers were dealing in the
preposterous.
Seriously, what? We're expected to
believe that Reid only got the insight into the killer's MO because
he killed someone who - in a complete coincidence, also worked in
animal control? Even by this show's incredibly lazy writing standards
that's just inexcusable.
How did the killer kidnap the ghoul?
Like, we can figure he just clubbed the homeless guy on the street,
and presumably there's a version of the script where he knew the
first guy and lured him into danger, and the sex worker he just
hired, but how did he get the ghoul? The killer is a creepy weirdo
and she's a stay-at-home mom who people will instantly miss. What
ruse could he have used to grab her? It's not like she would have
been walking alone on the street in the middle of the night the way
the creep was, right?
Also, why did the killer start killing
people? We're given no insight into a particularly horrific
upbringing, and the worst thing up until this point we've heard about
is him watching his brother die of rabies. So he just hung out for
like fourteen years and then one day decided "hey, for no reason
at all I'm going to start giving people rabies!"
The closest thing we get to an
explanation we get is 'maybe encountering rabies was the trigger!',
but he works in animal control. Rabies is a day-to-day fact of life
and threat for people in that line of work. What made this particular
encounter with it so vital that he decided to become a serial killer
out of the blue?
Just awful work, show.
To be clear...he works in PEST control. Which is not animal control or vet services. So he wouldn't have been on JJs lists, and he wouldn't have had regular interactions with rabies. Most pest control workers deal with bugs almost exclusively.
ReplyDeleteI see your point about pests, but the episode suggests that JJ still did a terrible job, considering the guy's business website specifically shows a picture of a raccoon as one of the things they specialize in dealing with, given the connection between raccoons and rabies, it's negligent to have not looked into all related industries.
ReplyDeleteDidn't Garcia say the killer was a resident of Hawaii? Then she sent them his work and home address, presumably in Hawaii right? Yet, all of a sudden they're kicking in doors in Milwaukee? What happened? Also it seems ridiculous that his ruse was to sit around and act like a homeless guy until someone made the mistake of engaging him, especially given his dog seemed vicious as hell...
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