The episode opens in Silicon Valley,
where people at some kind of tech office are partying, because that's
the culture of SV - ping-pong, not unions! Two of the guys are
planning to head back to work, but then they notice the pretty lady
masseuses that the company keeps on staff, and head over to harrass
them!
Before they can get there, someone is machinegunned in the lobby! Everyone ducks, and then the security guard gets machinegunned as well! Then a couple of other people, including one of the introductory characters!
Over at Quantico, Emily brings Eric in
to talk about how he murdered Scratch! He confesses to the whole
thing, and Emily says that he followed protocol - had he tried to
grab Scratch, Scratch would have pulled him down as well. Apparently
it's the FBI's policy to let people die if they're dangling from
roofs. Good to know!
As the scene ends, they get work about
the mass shooting, but it's hard to care because the company is named
Ori-Gamey, and I can't focus on anything but that. The team is
scrambled to respond! Wouldn't it be hilarious if the killer was
already shot to death by the cops right after they took off, and then
they have to decide whether it's worth going to San Francisco since
all they'll be doing is going through his creepy hand-written
manifesto?
Also, Emily offers her most ridiculous
Wheels Up moment yet. She claims they'll be going in 10! Of course
you won't.
I've already explained the whole
'distance' thing, but this is so much worse. When Aaron said 'Wheels
up in 30' it's because they were already planning on leaving. Five
minutes ago Emily didn't know they were going to California. No one
was planning on flying today. They have to get the pilot to go to the
airport, do a full check of the plane, and then file a flight plan
before they can get in the air.
It's going to be at least an hour,
silly.
Then, back in SV, we see the killer
watching footage of the massacre's news coverage while reloading his
assault weapon!
On the plane, we learn that the
introductory character was, in fact, the last person shot, and that
there were only three victims! We also hear that the video cameras
were 'jammed' so there's no footage of the shooter.
What? How? These aren't wireless
cameras - this is a place of work, you can't just 'jam' them. If the
security computers were tampered with, that's a lead, because it had
to be someone with access to the building - or if those computers are
hooked up to the network, then the hacking would have left traces.
Also, when did the 'jamming' start, and
when did it end? Not to mention that this is Silicon Valley, so there
are cameras simply everywhere. How could there be zero footage of the
killer?
This is some sloppy writing, show.
Then we get a look at the bodies, and
Garcia wanrs everyone to prepare themselves, because the victims were
hit with 10-20 bullets each! Only we know that's not true, each one
was shot by a very short burst of 3-4 bullets. Which apparently
didn't even go through their bodies, leaving the corpses looking
surprisingly clean! Feels like someone could have edited the script
when the makeup people decided they weren't going to bother doing
hugely messed-up corpses.
The first victim was a Pakistani Muslim
- could this be hate crime oriented? The fact that the killer shot
two other people of different races and then left without incident
suggests that it probably isn't.
At the crime scene, Emily is puzzled to
learn that the security guard was shot in the front without returning
fire. If he'd been ambushed, that would be one thing, but why didn't
he get a shot off? They act like this is a mystery, and perhaps the
security guard recognized the shooter, causing him to hesitate. Or,
you know, the security guard was at a huge tactical advantage, since
he didn't know who he was looking for, and the killer was free to
just shoot anyone. The moment the guard takes to try to assess a
threat would be fatal if the killer was already aiming a gun at him.
Eric talks to a woman who thought she
saw the shooter in the opening sequence, but as we saw when playing
the scene in slow-motion (okay, maybe only I did that), it was just a
guy in a black shirt, running for a fire exit. Then one of the
masseurs tells Reid that the killer told everyone to get down, and
ran to the conference room. She specifically said that she didn't see
him, so why would you assume the person trying to help people find
cover was the shooter?
Matt confirms that the masseur was
wrong, but strangely, they have it be a woman who yelled 'get down'
and ran into the conference room. Feels like the masseur, even while
panicked, couldn't have made that mistake.
Emily and Eric notice that the guard
and final victim were shot from strange angles for one person to have
done it - perhaps there were multiple shooters? Otherwise the killer
would have had to have been running through an open space, and
someone doubtless would have seen him! Then again, that's just
supposition - since we didn't see anything clearly in the opening
sequence, and there's no reliable trajectory information or timing on
the shots, this guesswork is all based on very little.
Garcia digs up a possible suspect - he
was fired recently, and complained online about foreigners getting
work permits and stealing jobs from Americans! Not only that, but he
was at the office that day! They put out an APB on him, and with the
entirety of Silicon Valley's police forces searching for the car, in
what can only be describe as an absurd coincidence, it's Matt and JJ
- who last we saw were still at the crime scene - who happen to see
his vehicle and give chase! What are the odds?
That's right - they have to give chase.
The guy sees the cops following him, and he goes on the run! Is he
guilty? That would be weirdly easy - although workplace shooters
often post about it online before committing the crime, so it
wouldn't be unrealistic.
So, I haven't mentioned it here in the
reviews, but I've been keeping a record of all of the license plates
that are attached to the front of the SUVs that the team uses.
They're obviously the same real-life vehicles every week, but since
the episodes are taking place in different plates, there should be a
constant cycle of new plates - it's just another way I'm testing how
good a job the production staff is doing.
Apparently they've given up on that
part of their job, though, because starting this year, the two times
I've seen the front of the team's SUVs, they haven't had front
license plates.
While it's legal for cars to not have
front license plates in 19 states, federal vehicles should always
have them. Still, from here on out, I'll just be cataloging whether
it's actually illegal for the team to be driving around in unmarked
SUVs. Since this episode is set in California, it is illegal.
They pull the man over, and he
announces that he's completely innocent, only fled because he was
panicked, and has a small daughter in the back seat of his car! Oof.
But then he explains that he scratched his boss' car on the way out
of the premises, and that's why he panicked and fled. So yeah, the
guy's just really, really, stupid.
Strangely, he doesn't ask why the FBI
is pulling him over. Actually, it's not that strange - he probably
would have heard about the mass shooting by now. Although you'd think
that knowing that would make him more likely to pull over, rather
than less, since he'd have to assume he was a suspect.
Back at the field office, the team goes
over what they can glean from the crime scene, since they have no
witnesses, and apparently camera footage is no longer a thing.
Weirdly, no one talks about the possibility of tracing a weapon,
since this is America, and automatic weapons grow on trees there.
That night, another video game company
is shot up! They try to play cute with the premise, by having various
workers getting shot in sequence without knowing anything is going on
because they're all listening to music on headphones while they work.
This is a scene conceived of by someone who has never been anywhere
near a rifle going off. They are jackhammer-loud, and no matter how
noise-cancel-y your headphones are, you're going to hear them firing.
When the team arrives, they find no
evidence of a break-in at the crime scene, and there's a broken
window 12 feet in the air! Reid comes to the conclusion that the
killer must be flying a drone with an assault rifle strapped to it!
Oh, dear lord, did this just get
stupid.
So, first off, you wouldn't need to
figure this out based on the lack of entry through the front door -
there would be a pile of shell casings outside next to the broken
window. More importantly, though - drones are really, really, loud.
If a drone large enough to carry an assault rifle (which weighs over
10 pounds, remember) were flying around inside of a building, it
would be impossible not to hear it.
Then there's the issue of recoil.
Rifles have a lot of it. A drone that fires single shots from a rifle
and then auto-stabilizes is entirely plausible. The idea of a drone
firing a dozen rounds in two seconds without 11 of those bullets
flying wildly in all directions, and the drone crashing moments
later, is completely impossible.
We're told that, once again, the
security cameras at the house where the coders were working had been
'jammed'. Explain what you mean by that, show!
The team is operating on the assumption
that the two first victims (not the security guard, he was just
there) were specifically targeted, but apparently that wouldn't be
possible with this group - the four people shot all worked for a
company that allowed people to set their own hours, so it would be
impossible to predict who would be working that night. Unless, of
course, you had access to the work schedule, which would be another
lead, but if the guy is targeting specific people, why kill all four
workers, the odds of all of them being on a kill list is astonomical.
While the team offers the profile, we
get clips of the killer reloading his drone weapon. Hilariously, the
drone they use is barely able to fly steadily with the weight of the
rifle hanging under it. There's no way this thing could fire more
that a single bullet at a time with any accuracy. It's also quite
noisy! More importantly, it's like two feet tall, with the gun
attached, and would be impossible to miss. Especially if the killer
actually is targeting specific people. What did the drone do - fly in
the front door, then hang out in a corner near the roof until both
people it was looking for wandered into the main room?
If so, how did it fly out again
afterwards?
Oh, and the profile is 'a guy is using
a drone to kill people who work for videogame companies, we don't
have any idea who he is, or why he's doing it'. Great use of those
cops' time, team.
Then we're treated so some information
which suggests that there is a specific kill list that everyone was
on, as preposterous as that may seem. All of the tech victims (again,
not the security guard) were unemployed during the same 3-month
stretch the previous year! A concrete connection between them! Which,
again, makes the whole 'all four victims were in one place' thing
kind of super-preposterous.
A woman in a car is talking on the
phone with someone about the fact that four coders from a certain
project are all dead, and it can't be a coincidence. The killer
shoots up her car, but miraculously leaves her unarmed so that he can
talk with her! This is all happening in a parking lot in broad
daylight, mind you. How has he not already been caught?
The team arrives and we learn that the
kidnapped woman works for fake Blackwater, and Eric says that they'd
been working on militarizing drones for a while! The homeland
security guy asks Emily to take over the case. Emily thinks that it's
because he's afraid of pissing off a well-connected military
corporation. Shouldn't Emily be more afraid of that, though? There's
a republican in the white house, and those people love their
mercenaries. It's not like the white house would side with the FBI
over mercenaries who donate to the RNC.
It seems that the project that the
killer was working on was to develop a drone control HUD that made
piloting a drone look and feel more like a video game, so that pilots
would be pre-desensitized to the murders they were being asked to
commit, in order to save money later on burnout and PTSD treatment!
That's actually a pretty good plan! So why is someone killing over
the program?
We learn that all six victims worked on
a specific drone project that resulted in the mercenary drone
operator killing 300 people! Well, no wonder he's upset! How did he
find out who the coders who worked on his project were? It's not like
the people developing the software he used would have ever come into
contact with him, is it?
We get some exposition from the killer!
He explains that he's been unable to cope with murdering hundreds of
civilians, including plenty of children! He found the dehumanizing
language of the soldiers he worked with incredibly troubling, since
all of them were fully down to commit war crimes, but he wasn't! The
woman claims not to know what he's talking about.
Emily asks the HomeSec guy to pull some
strings and find out who the drone operator is. He says he has no
idea, since only Blackwater has that information. Can that be true,
though? Blackwater's American employees fly under US passports on US
planes to war zones. The government would have to know who all of
them are, even if they didn't know what specific job each of them was
doing. Couldn't they already be searching for all of the people that
flew over to Afghanistan in the window when they know this program
was operational, and checking to see who's in Silicon Valley now?
The killer talks some more with the
woman. Apparently when he was mustered out of Blackwater they sent
him a letter congratulating him on the total number of people he'd
killed. Which is just a crazy thing to do, and I hope this is just a
writer's obscene flight of fancy. He was traumatized because the
'insurgent training camp' he blew up was actually... we don't find
out what, because the hostage grabs his gun, shoots him, and runs
off. I'm going to guess... boarding school for war orphans?
Emily goes to see the guy who runs
Blackwater, and it's Wallace Langham! Okay, so that explains why in
the parking lot scene there was a black van with the giant words
"CRIME SCENE INVESTIGATION" on it. Nice shout-out, show!
Emily asks about the killer, and
Wallace refuses to help! He then explains that all of their employees
are sent bodycount letters to prepare them for seeing news reports
about the war crimes they committed. So... yeah, this is just
madness. No company would do this with no attached counseling or
formal debriefing. The idea of a company sending out a letter that
says 'you killed 1200 people... good job!' is just ridiculous. All of
the missions they do should be treated as secret - even from the
people involved.
Then we cut to the hostage, who's
running outside of the house, no longer holding the gun for some
reason! Seriously, why would she drop that?
The team goes to visit the hostage at
the hospital, and she turns over his name and address. Instead of
just rushing out to get him, they ask about the casualty letters. She
denies hearing anything about the letters, because she's covering for
the company! It's weird, the show is acting like if the team can
prove that the guy was motivated to go on a shooting rampage by the
letter, then they'll be able to 'get' Blackwater, but that's just not
the case. You can't charge a company for affecting a guy's mental
state in this way. As inappropriate as the letters obviously are, the
man signed a contract agreeing to go to Afghanistan and murder people
for money - the fact that he felt guilty about those murders later is
not the company's responsibility.
When the team gets to the killer's
house, they find that he's dead, lying in a pool of blood!
But he's been shot a bunch! But she
only fired once... the drone is also on the floor, so I guess
Blackwater's goons hacked into it and executed him to keep him from
talking? That's why the hostage kept looking at the blinking green
light on top of the drone? Kind of weird that she would know what
that meant, considering that this homemade gun platform has zero
connection to the kind of work she was doing at Blackwater.
Garcia tracks down some information
about the killer's death count, and yes, it turns out he blew up an
elementary school. Unfortunately, it's at this point that the episode
ceases making any sense at all. The team intuits that Blackwater
didn't call the cops when the woman was kidnapped because they wanted
to kill the guy without revealing that he was involved in the school
bombing, which they tried to cover up - lest it screw up their
government contracts.
Here's the thing, though - how could
the government not already know about Blackwater's involvement? They
know that the school had a bomb dropped on it. PMCs don't have air
forces that are allowed to drop bombs. Only the US government does,
and, for the purposes of this episode's plot, they were letting
Blackwater do a test program where they used drones as well. If the
US army knows that it didn't blow up the school, that only leaves one
suspect, doesn't it?
But hey, let's say that Blackwater was
able to keep the US government from finding out about the bomb being
dropped, because they knew that it could cost them their contracts.
Wouldn't covering up the existence of that mission be of the utmost
priority? Like, if the bombing mission went so badly that you shut
down the entire drone program after it, and now you're willing to
kill people to keep it from coming out that this bombing ever
happened, why did you send out a letter congratulating that guy on
murdering nearly 400 children? Shouldn't editing that letter have
been part of the cover up?
Wow, this episode got dumb, huh?
Anyhoo, they assume that Blackwater is
going to kill the hostage to keep her quiet. Although I don't know
why they would, since she's kept quiet this long. Instead of a
hitman, shouldn't they have just sent an army of lawyers down to the
hospital?
Oh, and by the way, the hitman's plan
was to dress as a cop, relieve the officer on guard duty, and then
shoot the woman with an unsilenced pistol. Yes, they're inside a
room, but it's a busy floor and the door is opened. Also, his face
has been on like a hundred different cameras.
I know 'dumbest episode of Criminal
Minds ever' is a really high bar, but this is getting close.
THE END
The hostage confesses to knowing about
the coverup, and so the team arrests her! I don't know for what,
though - setting up a program that resulted in the deaths of 400
Afghan children isn't a crime in America. Maybe signing her name to
some kind of fraudulent incident report for the mission? Yeah, she
figured out who the killer was and she didn't call the cops, but I
don't think she had a legal duty to report. So what, exactly, is she
being arrested for?
They also arrest Wallance Langham, but
wow, is this not going to stick.
Except this show doesn't know how
anything works, so at the end of the episode Eric walks in to Emily's
office to tell her that the US government has cut all ties to
Blackwater and is charging Wallace with murder and attempted murder!
Yes. The US government is doing that.
The same US government that does all it can to cover up war crimes,
to the point that it just used as much of its weight as possible to
ensure that a special forces operator who made sport of murdering
civilians was cleared by a military tribunal, even though he was so
bad that a bunch of other SEALs actually reported him and testified
against him.
A government led by a president who went on to
pardon a bunch of other war criminals accused of similar crimes.
That American government.
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
No! A woman escaped and told them who
the killer was.
2 - Could the crime have been solved
just as easily using conventional police methods given the known
facts of the case?
Realistically, this crime wouldn't have
happened, and if it did, Blackwater would have dealt with it
internally.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
0/10 - The hostage killed the killer. I
can't give the team credit for the stupid nonsense that happened
after that.
Seriously, every part of this episode was madness. The killer would have started out by targeting Blackwater, whose offices would definitely not be in Silicon Valley. There's no way the killer would have had access to the names of the coders who built his drone software. A giant noisy gun drone can't fly into a workplace without being noticed. The idea that four of the coders were coincidentally in the same place at the same time is absurd. Blackwater wouldn't have given an employee proof of a war crime they were actively trying to cover up. If everything else happened exactly the same right up until the hostage escaped, they definitely wouldn't have sent a hitman to deal with it, they would have sent lawyers with a check for 750K and a stack of NDAs.
This is as dumb an episode as Criminal
Minds has ever done.
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