At a nice house somewhere, a group of
sexy teens are having a raucous party! Well, maybe it's not teens -
with Hollywood casting it's almost impossible to tell the intended
age of any actors under 25. Point is, they various youths begin
wrecking the place, while their leader watches passively, enjoying
the violence! Later, when everyone is passed out, he goes to the room
where the house's owners are tied up, and murders them for no reason!
In Quantico, at dawn - which is
introduced by a whole new set of establishing shots of Washington DC
- Steven gets into work first and enjoys some alone time working on
his Mr. Scratch file! Will he ever be able to catch that guy? Will we
get filled in on the methods he's using before they do another
Scratch episode, or is this it? Then he gets a phone call about the
home invasion murder!
The team goes over the case, talking
some nonsense about group dynamics, and wondering why they're killing
instead of just robbing. No one mentions the fact that the crooks'
DNA and fingerprints are definitely all over the crime scene, since
only the leader was wearing gloves. They also don't mention why no
one reported or noticed a raucous party with loud, blaring music and
the whole house getting wrecked with crowbars and spraypaint. Also
the strange vehicle that all of the killers must have arrived in.
Which you'd think would stand out in the so-called upper-class San
Diego neighbourhood.
While the team is flying out to
California, we see the three female killers knocking on doors,
pretending that they're raising money for cancer treatments for a
sibling with cancer! Naturally, this is a ruse so that they can get
inside to case the joints! Only one gets inside, while the lady of
the house goes to get her chequebook. Based on her flashbacks, she
can't wait to get back to murdering!
On the plane, Garcia lets the team know
that the victims had no dirty laundry, and nothing in common beyond
being well-to-do! Still no mention of fingerprints, though, even
though traces of cocaine and meth were found all over the place.
Seriously, how is a group of drug-addled reavers getting in and out
of these neighbourhoods without anyone noticing? Given how
upper-class people are, why aren't the cops being called on the girls
asking for donations for their sick brother?
We see the scout go back to the vehicle
that her gang is waiting in, and it's a VW van painted pale lime!
Yeah, that would stick out like a sore thumb in this neighbourhood,
especially if someone connected it to the women walking around
begging for money.
Eric and Joe go to the morgue and look
at the victims - they assume that the leader of the gang had to be
completely sober, because no drug-addled person could possibly have
the self-control necessary to execute someone by pushing a gun into
their forehead and pulling the trigger. Seriously, that's their
rationale.
While JJ and Emily walk around the
crime scene, trying to gauge group dynamics based on the kind of
damage done, we keep getting shots of all of the bottles and cans in
the foreground that definitely have all of the killers' fingerprints
and DNA on them. Come on, show, at least tell us that they're not in
the system - that wouldn't be believable, but you should have said it
already!
Then Emily and JJ wonder why the killer
is using a silencer when he's killing people in a back room, where
the sound wouldn't travel outside the house! The only conclusion? The
rest of the killers must not know about the murders! Which wouldn't
be too hard to keep a secret, so long as he's able to keep them away
from the news for a little while.
Can the ballistics people really tell that a silencer was used, though? I looked it up, and while early silencers and home-made models would frequently leave marks on bullets, the kind of professionally made, machined to precision silencer the killer is using almost certainly wouldn't, so this is a piece of evidence the team shouldn't have.
We'll call it a mistake by the
propmakers, though, and just move on.
As JJ and Emily walk out of the house,
talking about how the killers might have gotten into the house, we
get a look at the neighbourhood and find out that the nearest house
is like thirty feet from the death house, so yeah, there's no way
they wouldn't have heard the blaring music and house-wrecking. JJ's
idea is that because many houses have 'no soliciting' signs, that
suggest that there's soliciting in the area, which might be how the
killers are finding their victims. Except, you know, the kind of
people who put up those signs are the kind of people who call the
cops on girls walking door-to-door and ringing strangers' doorbells,
so how could this possibly have not led to them already being caught?
What, no one noticed the VW van in the
area during the post-murder canvas of the neighbourhood?
Emily thinks that the door-to-door
thing could work if the killers looked young and innocent enough, and
they'd have plenty of time to scope out the house if they were let
inside! Except they wouldn't be let inside. Even if you felt sorry
for someone and wanted to give them some money, who in this kind of
neighbourhood is letting anyone inside their house? Emily says she'll
call the police and have them re-canvas both areas, specifically
asking about people going door-to-door in the neighbourhood! Would
she really have to do that, though? Like, when the cops went to every
house already and asked if anything out of the ordinary happened on
the day of the murders, why would they not have already mentioned the
lady who came the house, begging for money? Most people slammed the
door in their faces, so it's not like they'd be too sentimental to
mention it to the cops - and it's such a weird thing to have happen
in the suburbs that they couldn't possibly forget it, either!
In the next scene we learn that the
canvassing did turn up mention of the beggars, but we don't have a
great physical description yet. Did none of the houses have security
cameras? That's a little weird in such a rich area. Then Steven comes
in and announces that the first woman who was murdered came back from
vacation the day before she was murdered. First they talk about how
that means the killers wanted someone to be home before attacking -
which is a crazy thing to say, because you just established that
their MO was to knock on doors and attack people who let them inside.
It's not like they were specifically targeting the first woman, and
patiently waited for her to get home before starting their spree.
They then assume that the killers must
come back multiple times to talk to the people in the house so that
they can build a rapport, and convince them to open their door after
dark. Except that can't have happened, since the first woman just got
back from vacation the previous day. Didn't you just say that like
one sentence ago? Anyhoo, Eric goes to check if they killers were
stupid enough to cash any cheques they might have gotten. Why does he
need to do that? Wouldn't any financial weirdness have been caught by
Penelope's background check?
Then we see a family getting murdered!
It's the next day, apparently? And the killer comes back - in broad
daylight - to knock on the door and ask for her scarf! Then her whole
gang charges in through the front door, wearing ski masks! Which
means there had to be a gang of youths standing out on a public
suburban street, gathered around the front door of a house in broad
daylight, for at least a minute. How is no one noticing this?
Hey, if this is 24 hours later, why
doesn't this victim know the killers are coming? In the previous
scene - set one day ago - we learned that it was the villains'
all-but-confirmed MO to go around begging for money for a sick
brother, and then come back and murder people sometime later.
Shouldn't that have been all over the news, leading to this woman
knowing that people were coming? Unless, of course, they didn't
bother to put out a press release and demand it go out to everyone in
town. Of course, if they were too negligent to do that, then these
murders are totally their fault!
After some partying, the other guy
wants to leave - both men are wearing gloves, while the three women
aren't, but they're also all leaving DNA everywhere - but the killer
says no. He has the goon bring out the homeowners so that he can kill
them in front of everyone! Two of the three women are understandably
not psyched about this, but the head lady is totes into murder!
While stopped in a parking lot, the
three non-crazy people discuss whether they should quit the gang,
what with mass murdering being a lot harder to get away with than
robberies. Insanely, the one who wants to leave says that she'll do
it in 'a couple of nights'. What's stopping you from walking away
right now? You're about to get into a van with a couple of
psychopaths and their weak-willed stooges. Just flee, moron. You can
call the cops from anywhere, and they will come and get you
immediately.
She gets into the van.
In the murder house, JJ and Joe notice
a giant void in the blood spatter on the wall, meaning that the
killer murdered people in front of the gang this time! Does it mean
that he's losing control, and wants to implicate them further in his
madness? Yes, obviously, but will that help you catch them?
Over at a motel, the gang is relaxing
in the room, when the leaders confront them about the plan to leave!
The leaders give a speech about how they, a group of former homeless
drug users, are getting a life for themselves by taking it! The only
other option is to wind up back on the street! Or, you know, call the
cops and collect the reward, which has got to be pretty huge by now.
The leader is too good of a Manson to let that happen, though.
We get a follow-up at the crime scene -
someone (probably the lady leader?) burned the faces out of a family
photo. I guess someone wants to kill their own family next? Also,
they didn't take any cash or electronics this time - which kind of
puts the lie to the killer's claim that they're buying their way off
the streets. Why didn't skeptical gang member flee while the leaders
were having sex in front of everyone in the last scene?
Back at the motel, the killer sends the
girls away, then goes to murder the goon because he can't be trusted
any more! One of the girls returns unexpectedly, which distracts the
killer long enough for a
fight to break out! The goon still gets
shot, though.
The next morning, Joe and Emily is
already at the motel crime scene, although I'm not sure exactly why.
A guy is found shot to death, sure, but is that necessarily involved
in their case? There's no evidence at the scene suggesting the
murders, and when Eric comes in, he announces that the dead guy is
the one who rented the room, saying it was just for him, while the
others presumably hid. So why would anyone see this dead guy in a
motel and automatically think 'oh, this is definitely one of the
Manson Family killers, and the rest of the gang turned on him -
better call the FBI!
Seriously, I have no idea why they're
the ones doing the first walk-through of this crime scene.
The goon's license is lying around,
allowing Garcia to do a background check on him! It turns out to be a
fake ID, but Garcia does the facial recognition search, hoping to get
lucky! They do - he's an ex-con who's spent a lot of time in the
southwest, so Emily asks her to check his known associates against a
list of 70s-era vans in the entire southwest! Garcia acts like this
is an ordeal, but is it, really? Like, aren't you just checking all
vehicle registrations for his known associates and possibly their
family members? It's not like you're pulling up a list of every 70s
van in the southwest and then manually checking that against his list
of his known associates, are you?
Over in said van, the skeptical lady
wants to know what happened to the goon! The killer says that he just
left without talking to anyone, which she thinks he wouldn't have
done. Killer demands she prove her loyalty by finding the next hose
for them to go into. At this point, if she gets someone to open a
door, shouldn't she just tell them to call 911 and arrest everyone in
the van?
Garcia finally comes up with something
- which takes longer than it should have, because yes, she really was
checking names manually against lists of van owners. This plan almost
doesn't work until Eric suggests that she search more than just the
handful of states Emily suggested! Why did she need to be told this?
Even in this inefficient manner, it's not like she's doing anything
manually - just set it to be a nationwide search - that's going to
add what, five minutes to the program, maximum?
Of course, just searching 'does anyone
who went to jail with goon own a 70s van' would have gotten her the
answer instantaneously, so I don't know why they faffed around with
all this other nonsense.
Tracking their crimes, the team
discovers that there were a string of burglaries after they got out
of jail - but no home invasions or murders! So it's only after the
killer hooked up with his girlfriend out in Cali that the killings
started, suggesting that she's the real mastermind behind the
brutality! Which we already suspected, given how turned-on she was by
seeing people executed.
Instead of just running away, the
skeptical lady leads them to another one of the houses they'd begged
at previously, so that the family can be murdered! The woman once
again just blithely opens the door, which again suggests that the
news hasn't covered this really specific MO at all? Like, every TV
channel, newspaper, and local website should have a giant warning
reading 'if a lady came to your house begging for money, she's coming
back to kill you, don't open the door'.
How is this still working? Is the team
really this negligent?
Things get dumb back at the police
station, where Steven and JJ talk about how strange it is that two
non-violent offenders suddenly turned to mass-murder. The reasonable
assumption is that one of the women is behind it! What's so dumb
about this? Simple - JJ thinks that the most important follow-up
question is 'which one'? Except that's not important at all. You
still don't know who any of the three women are. After you've caught
them you can worry about which loves murder. Right now that's not in
any way relevant to your job.
In the new house, the killer thinks
that his girlfriend is enjoying murder to much, and tries to stop
her, but then one of the other ladies decides to hold a knife to his
throat, because she's suddenly all-in on mass murder, I guess? That
came out of nowhere. Then the girlfriend murders the killer, and it
turns out that this is her childhood home that they've broken into,
and these are her parents! Shocking! Except, you know, not at all.
Amazing coincidence that her parents
are the super-gullible type and also home in the middle of the
afternoon, huh?
Then we get a weird scene where they
try to profile their way into figuring out who the girlfriend is, but
the only way they get there is that she OD'd a month back and wrote
the killer's real name on her form under 'emergency contact', which
put him into the system. So yeah, a records search of his name would
have had this an hour ago, allowing them to get to the parents home
before the killers arrived, and take everyone down without bloodshed!
Anyhoo, the girlfriend is a bad seed,
and she hates her family for no reason! Inside, the skeptical lady
grabs the killer's gun, and tries to get the girlfriend to surrender!
They trade some shots, and then the team rushes in and arrests the
girlfriend without incident.
THE END
The girlfriend is dragged away,
screaming the whole time, because, remember, she's super-crazy. Then,
on the plane home Emily checks in on Steven's progress with Scratch.
He's made none. He does say something remarkably stupid, though -
that Scratch "waited" more than a year to go after the
team, proving that he's patient.
Except, you know, he was in jail for 14
out of those 18 months. We have to assume that the moment he got out
of jail he started working intensely on his MPD/Serial Killer Hunting
plan and that it took that long to pull off. Then, the moment that
plan was over, he immediately went to work setting up Aisha's
brother. Seriously, like the next day he started on that. While it
took him a while to set up his original crimes, he hasn't been
dormant for a moment since getting out of prison.
Then Emily wins herself a Prentiss
Award for this line:
Who are you talking about, Emily? I
literally can't think of anyone who fits this criteria. Almost no one
has ever tried to 'take down' the team specifically. Occasionally
someone has tried to 'take down' one of your members for personal
reasons, but this is the first time someone has come after the entire
team like this.
The closest anyone came to ever
targeting the whole 'team' was Mark Hamill - and Joe murdered him.
Actually, come to think of it, every time someone has targeted the
team members specifically - Ian Doyle, Frank, or Helo – the team
killed them. The way they'll presumably kill Scratch at the end of
this storyline.
Wait, actually, The Collector did come
after the whole team, but she wasn't on it yet, and he committed
suicide, so that's one other exception. Still, no one is behind bars,
so she keeps the award.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Nope! Seriously, not at all.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
They identified a victim, and heard
about a notable van leaving the crime scene. They used the van and
the victim to find the killer, which led them directly to the
girlfriend. This is all very basic policework.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10 - It's funny, because the show
wants the team to always cut things incredibly close, we can't help
but notice that had they just gone one step further with their search
about the killer - immediately checking to see if he had any
connection to California, they'd have solved this case immediately!
Wait... I just realized something - in
the scene where they're finding out who the girlfriend is, they ask
why didn't the killers just go after the parents, if she hated them
the most - and Garcia says that the parents have been at a work
conference for three days.
Except they've been killing people for two weeks at this point, so that's not an answer to the question.
God, this show is terrible.
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