The episode opens with a flashback to
the league of assassins, so it looks like they won't be dropping the
ball on this the way they did last year! We see scarface being taken
in to see Derek. He wants a nicer prison experience in exchange for
giving up his league associates! He claims there are four of them,
and writes down contact info. This was easier than one would expect!
Derek wants to know who the 'dirty
dozen' are, and scarface responds that it's actually a 'what'. Before
he can explain what he meant by that, Scarface dies from the poison
he was given! Well, I assume poison, he starts coughing up blood.
It's JJ's first day back in Quantico!
Everyone's having a party, and JJ's desk is now filled with pictures
of what I can only assume is AJ Cook's real-life child.
We get a debrief from Greg - scarface
was poisoned by a guard, who was found shot to death in his car the
same day! Wow, these guys are good at this, huh? Derek thinks that
the 'dirty dozen' could be an element of the league's infrastructure,
which would fly the face of the guy confirming that it was 'who they
were going to kill next' in the first episode of the season.
Consistency has never been the show's strong suit, so who knows?
Just then Joe's daughter arrives - she
has a case to talk to him about! She's been writing an article about
rape on campus, and found signs that coeds have been kidnapped up and
down the east coast, one every two years! And the latest woman has
just been grabbed! Joe runs the case by Greg, and of course he signs
off on it!
We then see the killer getting his
victim out of the trunk of his car and knocking her out so he can
bring her into his house! Are they doing the case of the guy who kept
women locked in his basement for years? Let's find out after the
opening credits!
In an amazingly lucky twist, the latest
victim was abducted right nearby, so Derek and Reid can drive right
over there. Derek wants to know why the case wasn't already on their
radar, and we're told that it's because the women were taking two
years apart in different states 'using different MOs'. Was it a
different MO, though? In each case the women just flat-out
disappeared one day, so you really don't have enough of an MO to be
comparing to anything else.
Garcia finds out that the victim had
put in a request to withdraw from school, and they immediately assume
that the disappearance is related to that! The woman's sister assures
them that it was a misunderstanding, and she was going to cancel the
withdrawl on Monday! Um, she left her phone and all her possessions
in her apartment. Even if she was fleeing school, she'd have taken
something, guys.
In the victim's room Derek and Reid
find two chemistry textbooks, one of hers, and one belonging to a
friend. Clothes were laid out like she was trying on outfits before
going out, but that still doesn't explain why her phone was left on
the desk.
In the killer's house, he sneaks the
victim upstairs past his old, drunken father who's asleep on a couch.
Then he threatens her with a knife and forces her into a trunk! Oh,
villainy! Because she's kind of dumb, she immediately starts shaking
the trunk and trying to escape the moment she's locked inside of it.
She doesn't even wait for him to leave, and instead gets him angry
enough to stab the trunk over and over again! It's big enough that
this isn't a threat to her, though.
Derek and Reid talk to the victim's
friend, and discover that she had brought the victim to a lame party
where they both got drunk, and then the victim walked home alone!
They didn't have phones because they didn't bring purses, and their
outfits didn't have pockets! Wait, if their outfits didn't have
pockets, why didn't they bring purses? This is circular logic, and
it's kind of nonsensical.
Now that they know where the victim was
that evening, they can check her route back to the dorms - which
allows them to find footage of the killer lurking in an alcove and
then following her when she walked by! There was no camera footage
covering the half-a-block where she was assaulted, though, so they
don't know about his car just yet.
They do have a pretty darn good picture
of his face, and the fact that he was reading something on a cell
phone when she walked by, so hopefully they can check the phone
records of everyone in the area against the picture and get to him
fairly quickly!
Joe goes to talk to his daughter about
why she's so interested in the case - it turns out that she was at
school with the first woman abducted! They didn't know each other or
anything, but it stuck with her. All of the stuff about writing an
article about campus rape was a lie, I guess?
The killer takes his victim out of the
truck and puts a leash around her neck - warning her that if she
makes any noise to alert his scumbag father, he'll kill her! She's
understandably upset by the news. He also turns on a camera in the
room, so she won't be able to use one of the many, many, many pieces
of wood in the room to saw through her collar without him noticing.
Unless she waits until dark, I guess.
JJ and Reid go to check out the
abduction zone, and are surprised to find that there's an alley in
the middle of the area that's not covered by cameras! Did they not
check google maps before coming out to the scene? Alleys can be seen
from space, after all. Also, given the high amount of security
cameras in the area, don't they now have footage of the guy's car?
Even if the alley isn't on the camera, all you have to do is look for
a car that appears going left or right without appearing on the
camera down the street first, and boom, you've got it!
Oh, and Reid gets a call because his
mother (TV's Jane Lynch - although she hasn't been on the show in
YEARS) is doing poorly. JJ suggests that he go to Vegas to help her
out, but he's too busy working the case!
Speaking of, based on nothing, they
assume that the killer had been stalking the victim for a while, and
took his chance when he saw her wandering drunk and alone down the
street. Isn't it just as, or even more likely that he just saw a
drunk woman walking down the street and pounced?
Back at Quantico, they talk about how
the important thing is to make sure that the killer sees his victim
as a person - hopefully that will buy more time. Garcia also says
that she's going to search out DC-area guys with stalking and peeping
records, to compare to their full-face photo of the killer!
Why do you think he lives in the DC
area? The whole point of Joe's Daughter's story is that this guy
isn't on anyone's radar because he's been grabbing women from
different states up and down the East Coast. Why would his fifth
victim be the one closest to his home?
Seriously, have the writers already
forgotten the premise of their own episode?
We see a press conference, and the
killer sees it and starts to freak out, which the scumbag father
doesn't like! Also the victim hears it through the poorly-insulated
floor and door, and it makes her cry. Ooh.
In a surprising twist, a man (not the
killer) claiming to be the guy from the video comes down to talk to
the FBI to talk to the team! But is it him? He looks similar and has
similar clothes, but is that enough evidence? Also, is he working for
the killer? Did her grab her for someone else? That's probably not a
well they're going back to.
The guy claims that he's a cabbie that
drives drunk people home, and he was waiting for a fare, when he saw
a dude escort the victim into an alley. They have one question,
though - if he thought she might be a good fare, why did he duck back
into an alley and hide when she was coming, then follow her out?
Could he have been planning to murder her, when another guy go there
first?
Wouldn't it be weird if he were the
actual killer they're looking for and then, by complete coincidence,
a stalker grabbed her when he was about to make his move?
Joe's Daughter is disappointed that the
cabbie isn't the killer, but apparently he doesn't have a history of
violence, and has an alibi - he's on camera five minutes later,
driving someone away from the area! Of course, there's no reason the
victim couldn't have been in the trunk of his car during that ride,
but whatever.
At the killer's house, the victim tries
to disable the camera, but she doesn't wait until the middle of the
night, so the guy sees her and beats her as punishment. Lady, don't
wreck the camera until you've got the rest of your plan figured out.
Joe discovers that his daughter has
left, and he's worried that she's investigating the cabbie! Could she
be investigating him on her own? Why would she have to, can't she
just ask Garcia? Speaking of, Garcia finally does get around to
checking into the cabbie's background, and discovers that he was at
NYU at the same time as the first victim and Joe's Daughter!
Um... why didn't you already know that?
Apparently they went in to interview the cabbie without first doing a
full background check on him? Is everyone terrible at every part of
their job? Like, you suspect this guy of being a serial killer, and
you didn't do the most basic background check to see if he could
possibly have done it before going in to talk to him?
Joe's Daughter goes to meet the cabbie,
and he confesses that he saw the woman being shoved into the trunk of
a car. She asks him why he didn't tell anyone, or report it at the
time, and he says that he'll only tell her if she follows him down a
dark alley!
Joe's daughter is officially the
dumbest person in the history of the show, BTW, because she does, in
fact, follow him down that dark alley. And immediately gets attacked
for her trouble. She confronts him with the fact that he killed the
lady from NYU, but before he can confess, the team shows up to arrest
him!
Joe yells at her for going down a dark
alley, and she explains that a week before the girl was killed at
NYU, she was attacked coming home drunk from a party! She didn't
report it, though, and so she blames herself since it was probably
the same guy who killed the next woman!
Very good reasoning, Joe's Daughter. It
almost certainly was your fault! Except you had no information about
the killer that the cops could have used to catch him. And, honestly,
would the university have in any way increased security or warned
people based on a single person's claim of an assault that they had
no evidence of?
Joe assumes that it wasn't the same
attacker, since the guy who attacked her didn't have a plan, and the
guy who killed the first victim had a secondary location to take her
to! Which is one heck of a rationalization, I mean, couldn't the guy
have changed his MO when the ski-mask attack on Joe's Daughter
failed, and instead of clubbing her over the head he lured her to a
car?
Going over the tape, they find out that
the cabbie hesitated when JD asked him about whether the girl was put
into a car. That must mean that she was! They call Garcia and ask her
to run the plates of every car that was around campus the night of
the abduction!
Um... couple things...
First off, how are they getting the
license plates of all of the cars that were around campus? Do you
have to register your car when you drive into withing a ten-block
radius of the school? Are people driving around, just taking down
licenses everywhere in the city and putting them in the database?
Maybe in this city red light cameras are actually filming constantly,
and entering every car's license plate into a computer somewhere via
AI?
Secondly, if you had this list of cars,
why weren't you already running it? Did you think that the guy
carried his victim out of town over his shoulder? That she was
slumped over the handlebars of a bike? There are two options here -
either the victim or her body are still on the block where she was
grabbed, or she was shoved into a car and driven away.
This is one of the lamest excuses for a
'Eureka' moment I've ever seen.
At the killer's house, he brings her
some delivery food! He knows it's her favorite, because he's the
delivery guy for the food place she likes! That's how he's become
obsessed with and started stalking her!
The guy cuts her hands loose so she can
eat, but makes the mistake of leaving her with a bottle of water and
a container of super-hot peppers, so she can make pepper-water to
blind him with! What a maroon!
Garcia checks the list of all of the
cars on campus, and finds that one of them was the delivery car from
the place that the victim orders from all the time! And the driver is
a pervert! They're off to rescue the victim!
Speaking of the victim, she sprays the
pepper water in the killer's face, but doesn't have a plan for the
next step. Because she's terrible at this, I guess? The noise of
their fight attracts the attention of the scumbag father, who thinks
they should kill the victim and dispose of the body so the son won't
go to jail! Once a scumbag, always a scumbag. The son murders his dad
to save her though, and moments later the team rushes in to save the
day!
Although, you know, it had kind of
already been saved by the killer?
Joe and JJ go back to see the cabbie,
who proclaims that the tape of him won't stand up in court, and they
should know that! It will, though - Virginia is a one-party consent
tape, she didn't have to tell him she was recording him. The bigger
problem is that he said nothing incriminating on the tape. Joe then
responds that they were able to use the tape to get a search warrant
for his house, where they found trophies from all of the girls he'd
murdered!
How did they manage that? Here's what
was on the tape - JD mentions a woman's name, and the cabbie says 'I
remember her'. That's it. What judge is going to sign a warrant based
on that?
Literally the first time in years
they've bothered to get a warrant, and it's based on nothing, thus
ensuring that this case is going to be thrown out of court? Wow,
you're all terrible at this.
THE END
Except for a scene where Joe offers to
help his daughter with therapy! Then he discovers that she's started
going by his last name professionally. This melts his heart, because
she's started exploiting his fame to find success as a writer, the
same way he exploits the real-life victims of the serial killers he
catches to make money!
Like father, like daughter!
Then Reid calls his mother, but still
no Jane Lynch!
And Derek goes to talk to Garcia, and
finds her hiding in an office. She's been working on the 'Dirty
Dozen' and has a lead! It's her! She used 12 programs to search for
the killer's targets, and now his team are after the FBI asset, and
she thinks they can't be stopped!
Except, you know, the FBI has literally hundreds of data analysts and they have no idea which one worked on their case. And targeting an FBI agent would put so much heat on them that they could never hope to get away with another crime in the future.
So yeah, I'm not as concerned about Garcia as she is.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
It literally didn't help at all. To
like, a shocking degree.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
All they had to do was check the cars
that were in the area that night, and they immediately found someone
who was stalking the missing woman. The other guy turned himself into
the FBI, and a basic background check revealed that he lived in the
areas where the other victims were kidnapped at the time they were
kidnapped. This is all basic police stuff.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10 - Okay, here's the thing - this
episode is built around the most preposterous coincidence in the
world. A killer has been abducting coeds up and down the coast, and
JD has been tracking him. She has no idea where he's going to strike
next, or if he's still alive or active.
Then, a woman gets kidnapped in
Alexandtria Virginia, and despite there being no connection between
her and the other victims, JD immediately assumes that it's the same
killer. Then, miraculously it turns out that she was right - sure,
the killer didn't do it, but he was literally five seconds away from
grabbing her when the real kidnapper turned up!
I know that we're fine giving writers a chance to use coincidences in their stories, but this one is so far beyond the pale that it's impossible to accept.
Also, and I can't stress this enough -
how was 'he might have driven a car onto campus' an amazing
late-episode revelation?
This was a terrible episode.
3 comments:
You missed one of the big mistakes in this episode which would have allowed the victim to escape.
When the collar is first put round the victims neck (around 19:10 - 19:20) and the padlock is added to stop her removing it you can clearly see that it is not actually doing anything to lock the collar on, you can see where it should be put but the collar has not been correctly tightened to allow this.
however in later scenes where the lock is visible (for example when the victim hears the sister on TV) it has been been re-positioned to actually lock the strap in place.
You're right! I just checked the scene and it's crazy how easy that would have been to take off!
Love how Penelope says the guy who has Bahni has a clean criminal record, then Reid tells her to check the juvenile records and suddenly she finds something. Doesn't she know to do that for everyone by now?
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