Deep in the woods somewhere, a man is
stalking a deer. No, not Sherlock Holmes, a different man. The point
is, he gets shot by another hunter. One pursuing... the most
dangerous game!
At Quantico, Eric goes to check on
Garcia, who is crying in her office! I know that he's got his own
show, but I really feel like Derek should be dropping by to help out
with all this nonsense. It's really straining credulity to see all of
these scenes and not have him even being mentioned!
She's worried because Reid got beaten
up - and he thinks that being in protective custody will make the
situation worse? How, though? Like, yeah, it would suck being locked
up 23 hours of the day, but no one would be trying to kill you, so...
Oh, and Eric immediately recognized
Harold's character's name. Maybe they know each other from back in
the day?
We get a breakdown of the case - in
Vermont, for the past three weeks, once a week a dude has gotten shot
in the woods. Then, a couple of days later, a woman is stabbed to
death in her home. Is it the same killer? Is a woman getting stabbed
soon? The team will rush to Vermont to find out! First, though, Emily
has started just saying 'wheels up in 30' again, so I guess they
noticed?
Then we check in with a guy who loves
working out! He hears someone trying his door, so he grabs a baseball
bat and goes to confront them. He doesn't see anyone outside his
house, though - which leads to him getting stabbed in the chest by
someone who was crouched against the wall next to the steps. Wow,
this guy is incredibly unobservant!
On the plane, they run through what
little they know about the killings. They're assuming that the guy
shooting hunters is an eco-terrorist, while the stabber is a
run-of-the-mill psycho! Oh, and Garcia tells them about the new
murder that happened while they were in the air.
That's right, the night time scene happened after 'wheels up in 30', meaning that they're flying overnight for this case. Neat! They don't go straight to a crime scene, though - no, they need their sleep, and check out the woods the next morning. They learn that the sniper left no traces behind, and that all of his victims were hunting off-season! So does this killer have something against poachers?
At the other crime scene, we learn
nothing! Well, nothing that required a journey to the crime scene.
Seriously, all we learn is that there were fingerprints all over the
crime scene, and that the victim was killed with a single stab wound
to the heart. Just like the hunters! Except, you know, they were
shot. Which brings up the possibility that it could be the same
killer after all!
But why did he only stab this guy once,
while he stabbed the women multiple times. Probably because he's
straight. Just saying. Also, why has he switched to attacking men in
their houses? No theories yet from the team.
In prison, Reid and his friend
commiserate about their beatings, and Reid hears that it's likely to
get a lot worse, very soon!
Emily goes to the morgue to talk to the
ME, and learns that all of the sniped hunters were scumbag poachers
that no one liked! Also, she identifies the bullet as being 'high
calibre, single-action'. Which isn't something you can know for sure
- while 30-06 are mostly used in a bolt-action hunting rifles, there
are plenty of semi-auto rifles that use it as well. The biggest clue
that it's a single-action weapon is that you didn't find a shell
casing at the crime scene.
Is Burlington really such a small town
that the ME knew all three of these jerks by reputation? More the 40K
people live there, so that seems like a bit of a stretch.
Then Emily gets a call from the lawyer,
who's trying to get Reid into protective custody now that he's been
beaten up! I still haven't gotten a straight answer about why he
wasn't already in protective custody. He's an FBI agent. Does Richard
just not like him? Is that really enough to get him kept out of the
place he belongs, or is he also working with Harold who's pulling
strings?
Eric makes it to the prison, and
instead of visiting Reid, he goes in to talk to Harold - they don't
know each other, but Eric is up to something!
The team goes over the strange mix of
MOs. Perhaps the killer is so freaked out by shooting people that he
then stabs people to blow off steam? More importantly, with all this
murdering he can't be living a real life or sleeping much, so maybe
eliminate people with steady jobs from your profile? Also, any leads
on the ammo? I'm sure everyone in town buys ammo, but from the
bullets they can figure out brand, and narrow their search down quite
a bit.
Eric wants to threaten Harold into
keeping Reid safe! He's figured out why Harold turned himself in!
He'd gotten his CI pregnant, and murdered her to keep her from
ruining his life, but then, when his wife gave birth, he started
feeling guilty and turned himself in! It's weird that people didn't
already know about this, but Eric explains that because the woman was
shot in the uterus, there was no evidence that she was pregnant,
other than the pregnancy hormones that were all over her blood and
urine.
Which is, you know, proof positive that
she was pregnant. Also, it's literally impossible that the bullet in
the uterus could have completely destroyed all traces of fetal DNA,
meaning the ME would have had to have been terrible at his job not to
have found it.
Anyhoo, with that bleak story laid out,
Eric says that if Harold doesn't keep Reid safe, his son won't ever
be able to visit him again!
Just to interject here for a second -
there's no way that Eric would have had to 'figure this out'. The FBI
would have put 2 and 2 together when they saw that the guy's CI was
pregnant, and then he later confessed to murdering her. Yeah, they're
slow on this show sometimes, but they're not that slow.
That night, a couple is watching a
horror movie when the knife man starts knocking on their door!
Naturally they both get stabbed to death. Why weren't they more
nervous? Burlington isn't a big down, and someone is going around -
every night - stabbing people in their homes. I guess we're supposed
to assume that because they were expecting a pizza they'd just open
the door?
Here's the thing - I don't live in a place where people get stabbed every night, and I still check who's on the other side of a door before I open it.
At the crime scene, we find out that
the killer stepped on some glass and bled everywhere - so he wasn't
wearing shoes! And we saw him wearing just a t-shirt. Then we see the
killer waking up in bed, and being puzzled by his sliced-open foot!
Is he sleepwalking? Is this a sleepmurderer?
It can't be, because he snuck up on
that one guy like a ninja, though. That's not something a sleepwalker
could do. The 'knock on door, stab whoever opens is' thing, sure. But
pressing yourself against a wall to keep someone from noticing you?
Of course not.
Hey, why did all of his victims just
open the door? Are people really so trusting in Vermont that when
they hear someone knocking on the door in the middle of the night,
they just go and open it without checking who it is?
They can't all have been expecting
pizzas or been macho assholes.
Profile time! They tell the cops to be
on the lookout for a sleepwalker who might be limping, what with the
cut-up foot! Again, I don't know much about Burlington, but isn't
this a case where geographic profiling should help a lot? How far
could he possibly be sleepwalking to commit these murders? Also, is
he killing the first people who open doors, or are there others who
don't open the doors, and he moves on? I need to know more about
what's happening because none of this makes sense!
No one saw a guy wandering around in a
t-shirt and pajamas with a knife in his hand?
Oh, and we get a dream sequence from
the killer, where he imagines himself hitting a large man
ineffectually. His abusive father who was a deer hunter, maybe?
In prison, Reid's friend announces that
the goons are going to start killing if they don't act as mules to
move drugs from laundry to the goons. I'm sure Reid can figure out a
way to manage that, right? In Vermont, Emily and Steven commiserate
about Reid!
That night, the killer goes walking
down the middle of the road, knife in hand, which apparently didn't
alarm anyone? Even though it's early enough that most people still
have their lights on and are fully dressed? He knocks on another
door, which once again is opened without any hesitation by the
denizen, but this guy is able to fight the killer off and grab a
shotgun!
The sound of the shotgun blast wakes the killer, and he flees into the night, leaving his superficially-wounded victim behind! The team interprets his as him feeling guilty about the people he kills at night, as opposed to feeling justified by his daytime murders! Or, you know, maybe he was just freaked out by waking up with a shotgun going off next to his head.
In case you were wondering, no - they
don't bring a dog to track the killer, even though he was a barefoot
man running frantically through the woods, mostly likely on a
panicked beeline to his own house. Seriously, how has this guy not
been caught? Two nights ago he slashed open his foot and didn't wake
up. The bleeding was so bad that he left bloody footprints leading
through his house and up to his bed.
Would you have even needed a dog to
find him? Could you not have just followed the bloody footprints with
your eyes? And maybe a flashlight?
Aisha has something interesting to
offer - the killer probably knew all of the locations he murdered
people in, because sleepwalkers always go to place they recognize!
But wait, didn't you already say there was no connection between any
of the stabbing victim locations?
We see the killer burning all of his
bloody clothing. Of course, that won't help you with the bloody
footprints you once again left back to your house. Then, while in the
shower, he has a dream about his abuser frantically knocking to try
to get into his room!
Then he finds out about the
sleepwalking killer from the news, and when he can't reach his
psychologist, he decides to save the day werewolf-style, and lock all
of his knives and guns away! But will he also tie his feet to the
bed, I wonder? That's a pretty helpful option as well.
The lawyer goes to visit Reid, and
tells him there's a good news/bad news situation - the good news, his
trail will be next month! Bad news, someone his blocking his transfer
into protective custody! Why are favors not being called in for this
guy, given the amount of good he's done? Unless someone powerful
wants him dead? Is Scratch blackmailing someone? Also, trial in a
month is not good news. You want to postpone this until you've found
evidence that he's innocent. Because right now, you have none.
Do none of the characters realize how bad this situation looks? There were two people in a room. One of them got stabbed to death, the other one is covered with her blood and his fingerprints were on the knife. Yes, we've been told he didn't do it, but all available evidence points to him committing the crime. How do they think this trial is going to go, when they can't even bring in evidence of Scratch because there's no proof of his involvement.
Also, are they one hundred percent sure
that Reid didn't do it? Because Scratch's entire thing is drugging
people, getting them to stab other people, and then forget that they
did it. All I'm saying is, if Reid had actually done it, the evidence
would look exactly the same.
I'm so frustrated that they haven't
kept us better apprised of the investigation into Reid and the doctor
- the woman knew that she was meeting him in Mexico to set him up,
because there's no other reason to have done it. So why aren't they
looking hard at everyone she talked to, as well as her financial
records?
Over at the killer's place, he's trying
to stay awake, rather than just tying himself to something. How does
he think this is going to play out? Also, he's having a weirdly large
amount of trouble staying awake considering that this scene is set
during the day. He finally nods off, and we reveal that he forgot one
combat knife, which is lying on a windowsill as a display piece! How
did he miss that?
Reid goes to talk to Harold, and
announces that he wants his friend Luis looked after as well - Harold
is not too happy about that! Reid figures that because Harold is
looking out for him, they can just put Luis in his cell, and he'll be
fine, since Reid's protection will be good wherever! Except Luis was
already in a private cell when he was getting tuned up. Yeah, they
moved him out and it got worse, but they can get to him during the
vast majority of the day when he's not in prison.
Back to the case! Garcia has found a
connection between the murder sites! They were all houses of
prostitution or drug use years ago! They find a scumbag poacher who
was arrested at a few of them, and discover that he had a son the
approximate age of their killer! Who also has a lot of mental
problems.
I find it a little hard to believe that
this part of town has only recently 'gentrified'. I checked it out on
a mpa, and the neighbourhood where three of the killings took place
literally abuts a country club. One of the murders was directly
across the street from a huge public high school. Most importantly,
this is an incredibly densely-packed area - there's no way someone
didn't notice a guy walking around in pajamas with a knife in his
hand, even after dark.
There's one house left on the list that
he hasn't revisited yet, so the team rushes over, assuming that he's
on his way there! I don't know why they're in such a hurry - it's the
middle of the afternoon, and he only kills at night.
Somehow, though, by the time they get
there, it's pitch black out! Just in case you were wondering, there
is no place within Burlington that is more than fifteen minutes from
any other place in Burlington. We're told that the crimes are
happening in the South End of town, and the police station is less
than 10 minutes away - without using sirens.
Still, as they drive over it's pitch
black - creating the impression that they paused for a meal on the
way there - Emily calls the lady to warn her about the killer, but
it's too late, he's already opened the door, which she didn't bother
locking, despite the brutal stabbings that have been happening every
night this week to people who live within a kilometer of her!
Jesus, Criminal Minds. Come on. At
least try a little.
You know, if you'd just had Garcia call
her while you were putting the convoy together, this wouldn't be
happening!
Anyhoo, the team shows up and arrests
the killer without incident before he kills the lady.
THE END
Back at Quantico, Eric keeps chatting
with Garcia, because they're desperately trying to push the 'new
Derek' thing!
Then, in prison, the goons slit Luis'
throat because Reid intervened to try and protect him! Also, they
still want their drug stash delivered!
At this point, how will he not get into
protective custody? I mean, he's going to report that man for murder,
right?
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
They did manage to discover signs that
the killer was a sleepwalker, which proved vital to solving the
crime, which might make this the most psychology-y episode of the
season!
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
The killer literally left a trail of
bloody footprints from his crime scene to his house. Anyone awake
could have caught him. Also, he definitely would have been reported
by the many, many people who noticed him walking down the street in
bedclothes, a knife clutched in his hand.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
4/10 - Gosh, the Reid storyline gets
more and more preposterous every week, doesn't it? Why is the team
not working this case a little more aggressively? When was the last
time Steven even mentioned Scratch?
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