The episode starts in Boston, where a
woman is being driven home by a man! He walks her to her door, and
then when he's not invited inside, he attacks her with a TASER!
At Quantico, Aisha drives up in a white
sports car, and she and Joe chat about classic cars for a moment!
Then they're called in for a case! It seems that two women have been
decapitated and had their headless bodies left in public places!
Also, their phones were missing. Does that have something to do with
how he's connecting with the victims?
Then it's over to the killer's garage,
where he cuts the latest victim's head off with a guillotine! Which
the show depicts with way too much detail, because wallowing in human
misery is what the show is all about!
Fun fact, doctor Guillotine didn't invent the beheading device, he's just the doctor who was consulted on the most painless and quick way of killing a person, and he advocated this as the best solution!
In case you were wondering, still no
Aisha in the opening credits.
On the plane, they go over some history
of beheading, but it's not relevant to the case, so Joe focuses on
the most important point - why is he killing now?
Actually, no, that's not the most
important point, that's irrelevant. The most important point is how
did he find his two low-risk victims who disappeared right after
their jobs?
Garcia chimes in with the latest
victim, a bartender whose corpse was found on a bench in Boston
Common that morning! If you're not familiar with Boston Common, it's
essentially Boston's 'Central Park' Fun fact about it - you can't
drive into the park, so if you wanted to get a body in there at some
point you'd have to park on a street, get the body out of your car,
and carry it over to the bench. In Boston, a city that's busy day and
night.
You could also go into the parking
garage, I guess, but that place is full of cameras, so the killer
would already have been caught. Yeah, not sure how the killer hasn't
already been captured.
Derek and Reid go to look at the body,
which is, in fact, on a park bench in full view of the road, fifty
feet from the sidewalk. There's got to be footage of this. They
notice that the head probably wasn't cut off at the dump site,
because of the lack of blood! Also, you know, it takes a lot of work
to cut a head off, so doing that in public would be even more deeply
stupid than the rest of the crime.
They notice the TASER marks on the
woman's chest - the other two victims had them as well! The local
detective wants to know how a killer could have possibly gotten close
enough to someone to hit them with a taser.
Literally any way. It's not like you
have to pull some clever maneuver or have a ruse. You walk up to
someone, say excuse me, and when they turn, hit them with the taser.
There's no information that can be gleaned from his method of
abduction.
The killer is off cruising for his next
victim! He sees a woman standing on the sidewalk in broad daylight
and swerves over, but before we can find out his brilliant way of
convincing women to get in a car with him, her ride picks her up!
Foiled!
JJ and Joe go to check out the bodies
in the morgue! All of them have battered knuckles, like the killer
was beating them there for some reason. Is it catholic ruler
discipline time? While two of the bodies' heads were cleanly
servered, the first victim's head was sawed off! So it was only when
he had all of that trouble the first time that he built the
guillotine! The ME then tells them that the women weren't drugged or
sedated (why did you use two words to describe the same thing, in
this context?) and therefore must have been aware of their
decapitation!
I mean, yes, we know that's true, but
it's a weird conclusion to jump to. The women were also stunned with
TASERs, isn't it possible he stunned them again before executing
them? Or that they hadn't woken up yet?
Joe goes to talk to the latest victim's
father. It seems that the victim's mother had died a few months back,
and she'd been having trouble since! She called him from the train on
her way home, and that was the last he heard from her! So, who was
she on the phone with in the opening?
I'm sure Garcia will drop by with that
info soon!
It's the next scene, in fact! Garcia
hasn't checked the phone numbers yet, but she will! More importantly,
they find out that the last woman failed to take the train - there
was a line disruption! But then somehow she got home in 20 minutes
anyhow! She called an Uber, but then canceled it. So is the guy
another gypsy cab killer?
I guess so, because while the killer is
driving around, looking for a new victim, a guy runs out into the
street and flags him down! The killer is annoyed, because he'd rather
be killing a woman than driving a man!
Back at the office, they discover that
all three of the victims had done something shady - except not
really. The latest had been shoplifting, the middle victim had been
in trouble with the SEC over trading irregularities, but the first
was just getting bad grades in school. That's a real one of these
things is not like the others type of situation.
Garcia calls up with a list of everyone
who's bought a sword in Boston recently, which seems like it would be
a hard thing to get, since it's not like they're licensed items, but
whatever. It doesn't matter because Reid thinks that they were killed
with a guillotine! After all, the public display of a body suggests
that this could be a private version of capital punishment!
Speaking of, the killer listens to the dude talking to his mistress, and decides that he's got to go! So he drives the guy into an alley and shocks him into submission! In each previous case, the person killed was on the phone right before their phones were shut off. We were told that Garcia was going to look into that, but she still hasn't, instead going with the 'sword' angle. How is 'what the person was doing right before they were attacked' not the obviously vital lead to follow?
Now we've found out that the killer
listens to his fares' phone calls and murders them if they're found
unworthy, so we know how important the calls are. But even without
that information, the team really needs to be prioritizing tracking
down the people on the end of the lines.
While the first two victims were just
attacked in the cab, the bartender was walked to her front door - but
why? The team thinks it sounds like the kind of thing a ride share
driver might do in order to get a better review. Has no one working
on this show ever been in a ride share? Especially given the famous
association between ride share drivers and sexual assault, wouldn't
any woman be incredibly weirded-out by the driver following her to
her house? That's a rocket ride to a low satisfaction score,
freakshow.
Also, they know that these women
weren't being driven as part of a rideshare, because they have their
phone records - so what does this line of thought even mean?
We get an establishing shot of Boston
common, and it's at this moment that I realize that this episode is
set in the dead of winter, so where is all the snow? Also, you know,
because there's no leaves, you can see clear from one end of the park
to the other, and it's crazy that he could have walked up to a bench
with a corpse. There's just no way.
Aisha and Derek go to talk to the head
of Uber - who is coincidentally in Boston! And it turns out that the
victims could have thought they were using a ridesharing app - their
files were recently hacked by a rival company trying to steal a
customer database, and there's a good chance that the killer could
have gotten everything he needed to spoof and steal rides at the same
time!
So I guess the woman at the start of
the episode really did think she was getting a ride from Uber - then
why was she in the front seat, and why wasn't she incredibly creeped
out by him getting out of the car to walk her to her house?
Anyhoo, we check in on the killer's
garage, and he's still got a living victim in there. So that's what,
12 hours of keeping the guy alive after kidnapping? Weird MO, dude.
The killer locks him in some stocks, and says God put them together!
Because, you know, super crazy.
Derek and Aisha have decided that Uber
is telling the truth about the hack, so they're operating under a new
theory. The killer drives around until he sees someone waiting for an
Uber, then pulls up to them, offers them a cheaper ride, and they
cancel the Uber and get in!
Here's the thing, though - the whole
point of Uber is that it offers the facade of security - you get the
name of the driver, and the description and license plate of the car
that's coming to get you. We're expected to believe that all of these
women, while waiting for their car to pull up, see a complete strange
pull up in front of them and say 'sure, why not' and hop in with him
because he offers them ten dollars off?
I know times are tough, but a stranger
just tried to convince you to get into his car. Who would do that?
I'll tell you who - way more desperate and poverty-stricken people
than the ones the killer is grabbing.
Aisha and Derek have Garcia do the
heavy lifting for them - find a list of everyone who applied to drive
for Uber, but was rejected! And all current drivers with criminal
histories! Even though they know exactly when and where all of the
first three victims were picked up, they don't tell her to look for
security camera footage of the area.
They give the profile, and it's all
stuff we already know, so let's move on to the woman who thinks her
husband was kidnapped! How did she get there so fast? They literally
just finished doing the press statement that it was an Uber driver
killer, how could this woman already be at the police station? Was
she watching the press statement live, on her phone, while
coincidentally standing outside of the building?
The wife thinks that her husband was
kidnapped because this is the first time he hasn't come home in ten
years of marriage! But she also thinks he was at a client meeting in
Chinatown, which is well outside of the killer's zone of predation.
Just to be safe, they have Garcia check his phone, and finds that he
was in South Boston, meeting his mistress! They also find that he was
waiting for an Uber, so why did he run out into the street to grab a
different Uber? He'd have to have assumed that guy was on the way to
a fare, right? So isn't canceling on a fare a bad thing for your
rating - why would he assume the guy would do that just for the
promise of a cash payment?
Actually, I take that back - Uber pays
so badly that a cash fare might be worth the hit on your rating.
Time for more torture! He tortures the
guy to confess about his mistress, but he refuses to, and gets
tortured some more!
Finally they get around to talking to
the friends of the victims, and discover that each one was talking
about doing something crooked while they were being kidnapped! For a
moment, they consider that perhaps people confess their sins to
cabbies the way they do to bartenders, before shaking off that idiocy
and realizing that they already have the answer - the people were
talking on the phone in the Uber.
Just as another execution is about to
happen, the guy says that he can prove he never cheated on his wife!
But how? He says he can call a friend to prove it, somehow, but the
killer insists on calling his probably mistress instead! Because
there wouldn't be a show if another woman wasn't in danger!
Joe finally gets in touch with the last
person the guy talked to - it's his AA sponsor! Apparently he claimed
to have cheated on his wife, but maybe he was lying to cover that
he'd been drinking? The sponsor didn't believe him!
While the victim waits for his
maybestress to call back, the team finally realizes that there's some
significance to the badly-beaten knuckles, and checks to see if there
have been any recent Catholic-related scandals that could have
triggered a murder! They discover that a Catholic school principal
just went to jail for child molestation last month! Could there be a
connection?
Okay, things just got dumb again. One
of the kids abused by the Principal (who killed himself right before
the murders started) was recently fired from Uber after a string of
negative reviews, including an incident where he threatened someone
with a hammer! They explain that this didn't show up on Garcia's
background check because charges weren't filed! Why would that have
mattered? Shouldn't the first question to every car company have been
'did you recently fire anyone for being a violent psycho'? If they
didn't ask that, they're completely negligent at their jobs.
Speaking of psychos, the killer hears
the victim praying, and starts monologuing about his motives - he was
mad that the principal got away without punishment by killing
himself, and now he's not going to let other people get away with
their crime! Isn't the principal being punished in hell? Like, you're
Catholic, right? Don't suicided child molesters go to hell?
The call finally comes through for the
victim - the killer asks what the woman's relationship with the
victim is, but we don't hear the answer! Would he really let the guy
go? Of course he's not going to, the guy absolutely was cheating on
his wife! Then the killer shows off his wall of heads just as Derek
and Greg arrive. They tackle him and grab the guillotine before it
can chop the victim's head off!
THE END
Then we get more with Aisha and Joe's
classic cars! She's doing a great job of pretending to care about
people to ingratiate herself to them... but what's her endgame?
Damn, there's a lot of green, leafy
trees for Bethesda in January.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
In the barest sense - although it took
them way, way, way too long to connect badly shattered knuckles to
traditional Catholic school punishments.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
There's definitely video footage of the
victims being picked up, and probably footage of that one body being
dropped off.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
2/10 - They seriously couldn't be
bothered to even ask if any Uber drivers had any behavioural
problems. He tried to attack someone with a hammer and was
immediately fired! How did that not come up?!
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