Looks like they're doing more with
Eric, since the episode opens with a flashback to his injured friend
and him dating that woman! Yup - the first scene has both those
characters (as well as the dog) over at Eric's apartment! His injured
friend is even walking again! They chat about their lives! The friend
encourages Eric to set he and Garcia up! He's able to dodge all
inquiries when a call about a case comes in!
At the office, it turns out Garcia
actively wants to be set up with the friend, and Eric isn't doing it
for some reason! Weird choice, Eric.
We get the details of the case - the
killer has shot three middle-aged men in the back of the head with
the same pistol. And he seems to be moving south in a straight line
towards their neck of the woods. Could it be an assassin? Are they
witnesses in some kind of a crime? Or does the connection exist only
in their heads?
Hey, you know what no one says in this
scene? "If there wasn't something shady in their past, they
wouldn't have ended up with a bullet in the head." Weird that
it's only female victims that Aisha is into blaming, huh?
Then we get a scene of the next killing
- only this time it's a much younger guy, and he has bleach poured
into his mouth while tied to a chair! That's a twist!
JJ and Matt go to the newest crime
scene, and discover that the man was shot inside of a panic room.
This puzzles them, because why would a middle-class accountant have a
panic room with a huge safe in it? Is he involved in crime, and
that's why he's been targeted? They also note that the crime scene
was carefully cleaned up, which suggests a professional killing.
Weirdly, they point this out based on looking at how neat the crime
scene was, rather than mentioning the overwhelming stench of bleach
that must be in the air. We saw the guy dumping it liberally, and
this is a barely-ventilated panic room. I'm shocked that they can go
inside without their eyes watering.
At the morgue, Eric and Emily talk to
the ME about the victim's wounds. He was shot in the head twice, and
marks on his wrists suggest he was bound to the chair first - Eric
can't understand why the killer would tie a man up before shooting
him. Maybe he wanted information, and he interrogated the guy before
killing him? Tying up victims is maybe the least-surprising thing
I've seen a killer do on this show.
Then Eric hears about the bleach, and
immediately recognizes the MO! It's weird that we didn't hear about
the bleach from the other crime scenes. Is Garcia bad at her job
full-time now?
Eric goes back to base and announces
that this is the signature of a Mexican hitman, one that he'd tried
to arrest some years ago! Which means it's time for a flashback! Is
this the mission where his buddy's legs got screwed up? It would be
weird if it wasn't, but who knows?
Then this episode establishes that it's
basically Narcos, but for the weak-minded. Eric and buddy are
partnered up with a Mexican police officer when they spot the hitman.
The officer thinks they should just shoot the guy, because he's a
mass murderer, but Eric wants to arrest him, because it's important
to get justice, even in lawless places. That poor, naive man.
Anyhoo, they get ambushed, but they
have sniper cover, so it works out for them, and Eric is able to
arrest the hitman! Then, when discussing the mission with team, Eric
wins himself a Prentiss Award.
Um... Silva's point was that the system
was corrupt, and the guy wouldn't pay for his crimes, so it was
better to just kill him now. Then, after being arrested for 4 dozen
murders, he was able to escape just three years later and kill a
bunch more people. Of the two of which, which one is more wrong?
Eric thinks that the hitman is after
his old cartel, because the tip that got him arrested came from
inside it! Which suggests some kind of intra-cartel squabbling. I
can't wait to find out more!
Then, a mechanic working in a garage is
attacked by someone, but we don't see who, so they could be
completely wrong about the killer!
Eric's buddy Paul says that while the
first three victims aren't familiar to him, the new guy was known to
be someone who helped smuggle drugs from the American side of the
border! The two of them call the Mexican officer from earlier to see
if he has any information, and he does! The hitman they thought they
were looking for is, dead - murdered in Mexico over a week ago, using
the same MO as the new victims!
Eric then calls DRGF, but does not warn
her that there's a guy killing people connected to a case he worked
five years ago, and maybe she should keep her head down. No, instead
they just talk about an ugly tapestry Garcia got them.
Then they hear about the new murder,
and it's off to the crime scene! It seems that the new victim was
also a drug smuggler, but this time there's a clue! The two men got
into a fight, and some of the killer's chewing tobacco wound up on
the wall! Eric immediately recognizes that as the signature of the
special forces sniper he worked with in Mexico, who agreed with the
Officer that cartel hitmen should just be gunned down! Weird that he
didn't wash that tobaccoo away with the bleach he brought with him,
huh?
It seems that the hitman murdered the
sniper's family, and so now the sniper is murdering anyone involved
in the cartel. Which is, you know, fair. You'd have to be a monster
to question him for that. Or even to try and stop him, really.
But try they must, because, again,
they're weak hypocrites. When they're murdering people to avenge
loved ones, it's justice, when a sniper does it, he's a monster who
needs to be stopped. The DEA comes across with some more names of
possible targets in the DC area, because they're assuming he'll stay
local, even though it's only by moving quickly out of the area that
he's been safe in each previous situation.
Eric then gets a call from the officer,
but discovers that it's the Sniper, who cloned that guy's phone! And
he's already at Paul's house! He announces that because his family
was killed due to his involvement in the hitman's arrest, he's going
to kill everyone involved in the hitman's arrest.
Yes, I know, his motivation makes zero
sense. That said, he makes a strong point that if Eric had let him
shoot the hitman five years ago, his family would still be alive. So
Eric's the real villain here. He rushes home to check on DRGF,
because he assumes that she was the target. Weird, because I assumed
that Paul was the target. Huh. Then again, I shouldn't have thought
that, because it feels like Paul and DRGF both should have been in
protective custody until all of this was over.
Eric gets to Paul's house way too late,
and is then grabbed by the police responding to the shots fired call.
Rough Day for Eric. Rougher for Paul, though.
Emily takes Eric aside and tells him
that he can't keep working the case, because he's a possible target!
They're putting a protective detail on Eric's house, rather than just
taking DRGF into custody, which seems strange, but then Eric talks
his way out of getting a protective detail by saying that he has to
go and talk to all of Paul's friends!
Wait, could he not do that with FBI
agents waiting outside the door? It seems like he might just be lying
so that he can keep working the case.
In the next scene, Emily announces the
sniper will be extra careful because he knows everyone will be
looking for a man who killed a Federal Agent. Wait, Paul was a fed?
Oh, she means retired fed. Gotcha.
Then it's over to Eric's apartment,
where he announces that he's sending her to stay with friends in the
middle of nowhere, so that the sniper can't find her. We don't
actually know that the sniper knows she exists, but this is still
probably a good move. He says he's going to try and take the sniper
down, and then he's out of there!
Emily figures that Eric is off on his
own, trying to kill the sniper, so he has Garcia track Eric's secret
phones that no one knows about. How's she supposed to do that, Emily?
He'd have paid cash for them and would have no clear connection to
the numbers. No, she's operating under the impression that he'd use
phones from when he was undercover, that the FBI knows about!
Is he an idiot, though?
Luke heads to the storage unit that he
and Paul shared, where they kept their automatic weapons and stolen
drug money! Oh, and it turns out the forger that Paul used to make
their fake passports was referred to him by the sniper, so that's
where Eric's headed next! Although, really, if I was the sniper, I'd
have gotten all of my business in DC out of the way before I started
killing people there, but hey, this isn't a show about people who
make smart decisions.
At Quantico, Reid, JJ, and Joe discuss
all of the ways the sniper could be getting out of the country. Will
he be on a plane? A bus? A boat? For some reason they're 100% sure he
isn't just driving a car. I have no idea why, though, since he seems
to be moving around the states quickly enough.
Eric beats up the forger, demanding to
know where the sniper went! The forger tells him, even though I have
no idea why he would have that information. You go to forgers for new
passports because you're trying to escape from something. Why would
you tell him where you were going?
Down at the Baltimore docks, which are
literally acres of containers arranged in a mazelike fashion, Eric
manages to stumble into the Sniper by complete chance! He tackles the
sniper, but before he can shoot him, the team shows up to stop him!
Emily puts him on restricted duty for disobeying orders - although no
one mentions that they had already failed to find the sniper at the
docks, and he would have gotten away if Eric hadn't gone after him.
Also, it's kind of rich that she's mad
at Eric for almost killing a guy. As if she doesn't remember the time
she tried to kill Ian Doyle and his entire crew. Seriously, isn't
this entire episode a remake of the Ian Doyle storyline? The only
difference is that Ian's son was actually still alive.
THE END
Back at his apartment, DRGF threatens
to leave him! So he tells a story about being in war with Paul, and
loving him like a brother! She accepts his weeping, and takes him
back!
1 - Was profiling in any way helpful in
solving the crime?
Nope. There's no way to sugarcoat it,
Eric knew 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?
Honestly? Probably not. The guy was
good at his job, and Eric found him because he had inside information
the police wouldn't have had.
So, on a scale of 1 (Dirty Harry) to 10
(Tony Hill), How Useful Was Profiling in Solving the Crime?
1/10 - I cannot stress enough how
frustrated I am by Eric's refusal to accept responsibility for the
events of this episode. And I'm especially mad about the murder of
Paul - the writers have the sniper nonsensically go after Paul
because they want to make him seem like a bad guy - when there's no
reason to think that the sniper would blame anyone for his family's
death but the cartel.
Also, the team really screwed up by not
putting everyone in protective custody immediately. The moment they
realized that the killer had a close connection to Eric and Paul, why
wasn't everyone called in and put under guard?
And I have zero idea why the sniper
continued using the hitman's MO. I get why he used it to kill the
hitman, but beyond that, why would you? Fundamentally, his behaviour
makes no sense - after the hitman is dead, the sniper would be mad at
one of two people or groups: A) The cartel, under whose protection
the hitman plied his trade, B) Eric, who made the stupid decision
that got his family killed. The idea that he would go after people
tangentially involved with the faction within the cartel that sold
the hitman out is just nonsense.
1 comment:
Surprised you didn't mention the hypocrisy of Prentiss reprimanding Luke in this episode for going rogue but not doing so when Matt did it in "Ex-Parte". That was the most glaring fault in this episode for me.
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