The episode opens with a shot of a man
loading a shotgun - presumably for nefarious purposes! I mean, sure,
he could just be going hunting, but if that were the case, would he
be loading the gun in an unlit room at night?
We see the gunman take the shotgun out
to his car and climb in - it's a security vehicle for a private
community! He waves to everyone as he drives. Little do they know the
evil he has planned! Or this is just a misdirect. Either way.
It is a misdirect! He finds a guy
standing out in the middle of the street, covered in blood! He runs
into the guy's house, and finds his wife dead, presumably stabbed to
death in the bathtub. But did the guy do it, or did he just find the
body?
Over in Quantico, Greg has news for
Aisha - the attorney general wants a comprehensive review of all
serial criminals in prison. And he wants Aisha to put together the
team that's going to do it! This would mean leaving the BSU, though -
could she do that for such a huge career opportunity? Aisha's first
instinct is to say no - though she claims to value the psychological
investigation part of the work, she's obviously obsessed with the
hands-on portion of the job. I mean, she already destroyed her
relationship to be here, why wouldn't she screw up her career as
well?
Garcia then enters with a case! It's
the first murder, but it turns out the small community is a planned
neighbourhood for sex offenders - so they can live with dignity away
from the public at large. Aisha wrote a psych questionnaire that
people have to fill out to get a slot there!
It seems that Santos, a reverend, was
arrested at 18 for impregnating his 15-year-old girlfriend. Shocked
by the stigma that sex offenders receive, he's devoted his life to
building a safe place for them to reside. Oh, and he married that
girl, and they're still together. So it's a whole community full of
sex offenders and their families, all trying to support one another
and not re-offend. What a nice idea! How has it gone so horribly
wrong!
Aisha thinks that it's a great idea for
the sex offenders to self-isolate - but Garcia says that the
isolation has 'backfired', since a woman was killed the previous
night! Except, you know, people get killed all the time, all over the
country. You talk about it every week.
The only way that this has 'backfired'
is that it's harder for you to zero in on a suspect because your
entire suspect pool are all sex offenders.
Oh, and the husband from the murder had
an alibi - the blood was from trying to resuscitate his dead wife.
Who was wearing a cheerleader outfit when she was murdered. Some kind
of age-related roleplaying?
Over in the community, we see kids
daring one another to drive through its streets, since they know
that's where all the sex offenders live! Then we get a scene of a
bunch of guys standing around, eyeing the kids creepily!
On the plane, we find out that the
victim was a teacher who assaulted a student, and married someone she
met in the community! They finally mention the cheerleader uniform,
which she bought. Was it for her husband's fantasy, or was she having
an affair? Aisha thinks that they shouldn't jump to the conclusion
that a resident is the killer. Although it's really, really hard to
imagine someone from outside the neighbourhood to get in and out
without being noticed, since they're insular by design.
It's obvious that Aisha doesn't want to
be proven wrong about her profile, but will the episode justify her,
or reveal that she's naive? What would it say about her if the
security guard were the killer?
Also, why are you bringing a shotgun with you if you're a security guard for a tiny community of sex offenders. How serious can the crimes you're called to deal with possibly be?
They suggest that the killing could be
revenge-motivated against one of the people in the town! Probably
not, unless it was against the victim or husband. Killing a random
person who lives in a community where a person you don't like also
lives is way more abstract that revenge killings tend to be. Unless
you're attacking the concept of sex offenders?
When talking to the husband, the team
drops the reveal that the killer put the costume on her post-mortem.
Which would make sense, because it's got no blood on it, and based on
the shocking amount of blood all around the bathtub she was found in,
she was probably brutally stabbed or slashed. I'm not sure how the
killer got it on her without getting blood everywhere, but at least
the post-mortem dressing seems to track.
Wait, I'm sorry, I was wrong, they're
saying that the killer dressed her up 'before' taking her life, which
is obviously not true. There was blood everywhere in that bathtub
except for her uniform, and if the show is saying she was killed with
stabs to her stomach and chest it would be completely soaked in
blood, which it wasn't at all.
I've got to stop assuming the show is
being smart about something. They never are.
Also, their first assumption is that
the killer 'dressed up' the woman before killing her. Why would you
assume that she didn't just happen to be wearing that when she was
attacked? The husband confirms that he would frequently send her a
chat message to be waiting for him in costume when he gets home. It's
not mentioned whether he did that on the night in question, though.
They mention that they could only chat
with each other about pervy stuff, because the reverend who started
the community searches their text messages to make sure they're on
the right path!
We see Greg and Aisha talking with the
Reverend and Security guy - who it turns out is a legit sheriff,
despite how weird his car looks! Who knew? There's two thousand
people in the area, and almost no serious crime - how is that
possible? I'd imagine because the people are desperate not to get
sent back to jail?
It turns out that it's way more than
that! In order to live in the community, the Reverend makes people
give him the ability to search their files, and have a tracker
implanted in their arms! That should make this crime weirdly easy to
solve. Unless the Reverend or Sheriff did it - they're the only ones
we've met without trackers.
It's weird that the sheriff is just
finding out about the trackers in this scene. I know that the
Reverend is big on self-policing the community, but how could this
not have come up in conversation before now?
At the morgue, finds out that no, the
woman was dead when she was dressed. Which I was able to glean from
the photographs, but Reid and Derek weren't, somehow, so they based a
line of questioning on the opposite.
Then again, they didn't ask the husband if he'd told her to dress up that way that night, so the characters are kind of acting like they knew the killer did it post-mortem as well. Weirdly inconsistent, writers.
Reid and Derek get an update from the
tracking software - a neighbour was inside the victim's house that
day! At what time, though? Like, you have some idea when she was last
seen alive, and the liver temperature should give you a rough
guestimation at the time of death... so why aren't you checking that
against the tracking info?
We see the sheriff's kids drop by the
station - he lives five miles from the community, but he still
worries about them! They only moved in with him after his ex-wife
died six months ago. Is that important? We see the teenaged daughter
walking with a friend from school - he offers to get her into a
party, but her dad won't let her go out at night due to all of the
perverts?
They talk to the pervert from across
the street, who was arrested for flashing 'married women'. But
surprise - the women were always with their young sons when he
flashed them! Um... if that was the case, he would have been charged
with flashing children, and gotten a much more severe punishment at
the time. This wouldn't be something that the team 'uncovered'. Oof.
Their theory? That he went over to the
dead lady's house for tea every day at 3PM so that he could see the
next-door neighbour coming home from school! Wait, if he was in and
out of her house by three, why do you think he's a suspect? If that
woman had been lying dead for 6 hours I feel like you'd be able to
tell right away.
The perv was desperate to keep the
situation a secret because paedophiles aren't allowed in the
community! Wait, they're not? Then why was the team acting like it
was so strange that families are living in the town - if none of the
people living there were convicted for attacking children, would they
be in much increased danger?
In a truly weird bit of sound effects
editing, when the sheriff and his kids arrive home there's a
'beeping' sound. This is because they established in the opening
scene that the house had an alarm system. Except there's no alarm
system on the walls anywhere near the door, and no one makes any
attempt to disarm it as they walk in.
While editing the episode, they noticed
the mistake in set design, and tried to fix it with a sound effect.
They failed, though, since it just draws attention to the fact that
no one is disarming the system.
On the upside, the sheriff lets her go
to the party so long as she's home by 10:30 and doesn't leave until
he's back from his nightly rounds! What a cool dad!
Meanwhile, in a neighboring town, some
teenaged girls are walking home. One of them, a cheerleader in
uniform, goes into her house alone... what waits for her inside?
Nothing! But once she's inside, a near-feral guy with black hair
knocks on the door hard, and when she opens it - not even bothering
to check who it is - he quickly stabs her to death!
Joe and Derek arrive at the crime scene
- they assume that this was the killer's goal all along, murdering
teenaged cheerleaders, and the woman in the community was just a
stopgap. Since they're ten miles from the community, they can
eliminate all of the people as suspects! Unless, you know, one of
them found a way to tamper with their tracking chip, which wouldn't
be too difficult, I'd imagine. Just dig it out of your shoulder and
wear it in your watch, then take off the watch when you wanted to
travel without people knowing it.
Still, they're sure the community
people aren't involved, so it's time for a profile!
The profile starts on the most bizarre
note imaginable - 'based on the age of everyone without a chip, we're
looking for someone in their later-30s to early 40s'. What? Huh?
What? I mean, I guess there are guys who live in the community
without chips - whose wives or husbands are sex offenders and they've
stayed together, but that's a crazy thing to say. Why are you
assuming that the killer is definitely from the community? Especially
when the next line is literally 'we're also looking into residents
from nearby communities'. Why mention the age at all if it's based on
nothing?
Derek then says that the guy is most
dangerous because he's patient - he's sublimated his desires for a
long time, and has amazing self-control. What are you basing that on?
He's killed two women in two days. One of them in a blitz attack in
broad daylight!
This comment seems like it makes sense
if the killer is from the community, but for all you know, the killer
literally got off a bus a week ago and is just going hog wild!
Okay, we finally get an explanation for
the 'without a tracker' line. Apparently 125 people have had their
trackers removed. I can't wait to hear why!
Joe and Aisha talk about whether she
should take the job. He brings up how rough it is form him to visit
the... ugh... 'Womb Raider' once a year, and thinks that if she can
interview serial killers without destroying herself, she should do
it! Aisha then comes really close to admitting that her life is a
trash fire because of her obsession with serial killers, but she
can't quite get there. He tells her to do the most good for others
while doing the least harm to herself.
Since interviewing serial killers does
zero good for others, I'm guessing she'll pick staying on the team?
They interview the various suspects
without bothering to explain why they don't have chips, and then the
Reverend worries that by making a community for sex offenders, he's
turned them into targets, and he'd have been better off just letting
them move to Montana or live under a bridge somewhere. Aisha tries to
comfort him, and tells him that once they find the killer, things
will get better!
Aisha is convinced by the Rev - what if
the killer started murdering in the community because he knew they'd
be blamed? That seems like a lot of pre-planning for a guy who runs
up to houses in the middle of the afternoon and brutally stabs
teenagers, but sure, whatever.
The sheriff's kids arrive at the
office, and he breaks the news that they're sleeping in the station
that night! The daughter is annoyed because she wants to go to a
party, and thinks she's safe! Why is there still a party happening? A
girl who lived near these kids was stabbed to death inside her house
in broad daylight. I know I'm harping on this, but this is the kind
of crime that leads to curfews and shutting down cities until the
killer is caught.
The daughter immediately gets on the
phone with her creepy friend Adam, who wants to pick her up and take
her to the party! She agrees, because she hates being alive, I guess?
Is it possible that he's the killer, and the first victim
propositioned him because he's the age range she's attracted to -
then things went south in a hurry and now he's got a taste for
bloodshed?
Wow, that's just a crazy guess.
The show takes a turn towards the dumb,
as it's only at this point that Aisha, Reid, and the sheriff decide
to interview the first victim's neighbours about whether they saw
anything strange around the time of the murder. Their first stop? The
paedophile who likes watching the kid next door to the victim!
Oh, and it turns out there wasn't a
party, and the creepy guy just wanted to assault the sheriff's
daughter. She rebuffs him, and he kicks her out of the car while
there's a murderer on the loose! Teenaged boys are scumbags, huh?
Then, when her father calls her, for some reason her phone isn't on!
Because that's plausible.
More with the daughter - another friend
of hers, 'Matt' drives up in his car and offers her a ride. He's got
darker hair than the creep... could he be the killer? Yeah, he is,
and he knocks her out so that he can assault her elsewhere.
The paedophile remembers a 'geek squad'
car stopped at the victim's house on the afternoon of the murder -
just like the killer drove!
Speaking of the killer, he's dressed
the sheriff's daughter in a cheerleader's uniform inside of her own
house! How did he get in without the alarm going off? God, this
episode is idiotic.
Their terrible profiling skills almost
ruin the case, when Garcia can't find any geek squad people in the
age range they specified! It's like they've forgotten that the age
range was 100% percent based on the assumption that the killer was a
community member who didn't have a tracker.
All of these people suck at their jobs.
When that search term is removed, they
find out that the sheriff's next-door neighbour has a history of
stalking cheerleaders, and was accused of murdering one, but they
couldn't find enough evidence to make the charges stick!
While the team rushes over, the killer
menaces the sheriff's daughter! He claims that he's just evil, and
there's nothing to be done about it! You could, I don't know, not
kill people? Just spitballing here. The daughter lures the guy into
the master bedroom because she knows it's full of guns - but can she
get to one?
Nope. She goes for one, but they get
into a fight! The team rushes in and shoots him in the head while he
holds a knife to the daughter's throat! Seriously, why don't they do
that more often?
THE END
Oh, we finally saw the security keypad!
It was at the back door of the house! Yeah, it was even lit up, so I
don't know why the cops weren't here earlier.
Oh, and Aisha looks at the dead body,
and realizes that she feels nothing. So I guess we're really going
down the road of her being a sociopath who took to this field as a
way of figuring herself out! I'm glad the show has the guts to go
there!
Derek talks to Aisha about how this is
the first time she's killed someone, and his mistakes her complete
lack of affect for shock, rather than someone who doesn't at all mind
that she killed someone.
Back in Quantico, Greg offers to let
Aisha spend most of her time working the interview project, and
consult with them whenever she can! So I guess Aisha was just here
for six episodes while JJ was on maternity leave?
Neat!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
They asked the next door neighbour if
he saw anyone outside the victim's house, and he saw the killer. All
of their profiling was wasted on the assumption that the killer was
in the sex offender's community.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
Regular cops would have canvassed the
neighbourhood immediately, and when it turned out that one of the
geek squad guys was suspected of murdering a cheerleader, he would
have been caught right away.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10 - It's interesting - the team's
inability to put their prejudices on hold and just do basic
policework probably delayed catching the killer long enough for him
to murder a teenager and traumatize the sheriff's daughter.
Seriously, did anyone do even the slightest bit of work? Like,
checking the victim's phone and computer history? The Geek Squad
doesn't just show up at your house. You call them, and they come. It
would have taken five minutes to check her phone records, dial up the
geek sqaud headquarters, ask who was dispatched to her house, and
find out that the guy had a history of murdering cheerleaders.
You're terrible at this, team.
Seriously.
1 comment:
I had to read this review. When I watched it, I was laughing at the sublimation and "experienced, patient and organized." I am unsure what about the literal blood bath and frenzied stabbing near a doorway suggested organized or experienced. And the teen's insistence on going out after a schoolmate dies, suggests they only have male writers (or stupid female writers). Teen girls would not act that way. Ever. I suppose I am stereotyping girls, but there are certain behaviors that are just truisms, unless SHE is a sociopath or psychopath.
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