Almost Human (2013–2014): Season 1, Episode 13 - Straw Man - full transcript

Detective Kennex and Dorian investigate a string of murders by a copycat of a serial killer whom Kennex's father put in jail. As the investigation unfolds, biotechnology from the future sheds light on crimes of the past. Meanwhile, Dorian receives his performance evaluation since being reactivated.

(Intercom beeps)

Man (Over p.A.): May I have
your attention?

The shelter will be closing
its doors in ten minutes.

I repeat: The shelter will be

closing its doors
in ten minutes.

If you are not assigned a pod,

you will need to exit
the building premises.

Have a good night.

Automated voice: Welcome.
Please place index finger

on the blue pad.

(Clicking, whirring)



Automated voice: Your
personalized meal supplement

has been dispensed.

Welcome. Please place index
finger on the blue pad.

Hey, gorgeous.

If they're running low on pods,

what do you say
we share one, huh?

Yeah. No, thanks.

Are you sure you don't
want to change your mind?

Automated voice:
Please take your pill.

Don't you know it's rude
not to answer

a question when
you're asked? Huh?

Where you think you're
gonna sleep tonight, huh?

I asked you a question.

Man: Hey!



She gave you an answer!

Are you deaf?

(Woman sobs quietly)

Why don't you leave her alone?

(Sniffling)

Thanks.

That's the last thing I needed.

He's right about
the pods, though.

They just ran out.

Great.

Hey, listen...

There's a shelter over on Abbot.

It's smaller; Not as nice.

But sometimes,
they have beds open.

I'm gonna head there
after I get my pill,

so... if you want
to go together...

Are you sure they have beds?

Never been turned away before.

And on good days,

they serve real food, too.

You know, the kind you eat?

That'd be good for a change.

Why not? Yeah!

(Both laughing)

What's your name?

Abby. Abby.

Automated voice: Welcome.
Please place...

Looks like you're up, Abby.

Index finger on the blue pad.

Automated voice: Welcome.
Please place index...

Your personalized
meal supplement

has been dispensed.

Man:
So where are you from, anyway?

I was born in Tampa,

but then my mom dragged
me to new Pittsburgh.

Something tells me

you're not here because
you like new Pittsburgh.

Actually, it was her
boyfriend I didn't like.

Hated, to be more accurate.

How long you been out here?

Six weeks.

Does it get easier?

Once you get used
to scrappin' it.

Sorry. I didn't mean to stare.

That's okay.

When you're sick, you do what
you have to do to get well.

You never told me your name.

It's Glen.

The shelter's this way.

Ouch! Oh, sorry.

My ring must've caught you.

It's fine.

How much further is it?

Just a little bit up ahead.

By the way, how tall are you?

Whoa...

Five-six, I bet.

Whoa, I don't think...

Sit down.

It's okay. It's okay.
(Weakly): Please...

Woman: The year is 2048.

Evolving technologies
can no longer be regulated.

Dangerous advancements forever
alter the criminal landscape.

Police are not prepared.

Law enforcement combats
this corruption

with a new line of defense.

But not all are created equal.

Rudy: The idea behind the drns
was to be as human as possible.

They were based on a program
called synthetic soul.

John:
That's one of the crazy ones.

I'll lead you in? Let's go.

Woman: Now all cops...

human and manmade together...

take on the battle
to watch over us all.

Woman: Captain maldonado...

As part of the department's
yearly review

of our android officers,

we've spoken to your detectives
about their mxs,

but I'd like to ask you
about your drn...

Drn-0167.

Dorian has been exceptional.

Man: I see that
the drn was scheduled

for reassignment
to the space station,

but you were adamant
about recommissioning it

for police service. Why is that?

Maldonado:
It seemed appropriate.

And how has drn-0167 been
in the field?

He's a good shot.

He's good in interrogation.

Uh... knows how
to handle himself.

You seem nervous.

Me? No. Not at all.

Should I be?
We're reviewing the drn,

not you, Dr. lom.
Yes, of course.

I have no personal
stake in this.

No feelings one way
or the other.

Sorry, what...
What are you writing there?

Woman 2: You chose
drn-0167 specifically...

is there a reason?

I thought that Dorian
and detective kennex

needed each other.

And that's as much as I can say.

Man: As you are aware,

the drn line was given
the luger test

to determine its abilities

to cope with
the emotional realities

of police work.
Many of them failed.

Do you believe that drn-0167
needs a luger test?

Another luger test?
No. No. No, no, no, no.

Dorian is saner
than most humans.

I'd trust him with my child.

I don't have a child.

I'm currently single, but, uh,

always on the lookout
for the proverbial one.

Sorry... I'm not saying you're
the one... maybe you are, I...

Does that answer your question?

There's nothing else
you can think of?

He flipped a van once.
Pretty cool.

Didn't know he could do that.
Rudy: But if I did

have a child,
I would want Dorian to raise it

instead of me.

Woman: You mean...

Drn-0167.

Call me Dorian.

Okay. Dorian.

Can you tell us
about your experience

being back on the force?

When I found out my line was
to be decommissioned,

I didn't know if I'd
ever be reactivated,

and if I was,

if I'd ever be a cop again.

The fact that I get
to suit up every day,

do this job and help people...

Is the best thing
that's ever happened to me.

Thank you.

We'll let you know if we require
any further information

before filing our report.

Oh. Good. You're done.

That took a long time.

Did it?

Like, longer than usual?

Way longer.

Come on, we got a case.

Dorian: So, tell me,

what did they ask
about me in the interview?

Tell me what you told them.

Wish I could, but, you know,
peer reviews are confidential.

Department policy.

Seriously? You're not
gonna tell me anything?

I told them the truth.

Okay. Yeah.

That's good.

All right, thank you, my friend.

I told them you have no concept

of personal space

or boundary;
That you scanned my balls,

that you abducted a
drn from a hospital

and caused millions of dollars
worth of damage.

I befriended that drn...

Befriended? You abducted him.
I...

And that you like
to expose yourself

while riding shotgun
in the cruiser.

You asked to see it.

I didn't ask.

You showed it to me.

I apologize
for scanning your balls.

You did ask to see...

I'm just kidding.
I'm messing with you.

I didn't tell 'em any of that.

Should've.

John: What do we got?

Dorian: The body was found
less than an hour ago.

Drone picked it up
on a routine sweep of the wall.

Victim been I.D.'D? Not yet.

No blood, no signs
of a struggle.

She was killed
in another location,

and the body was dumped here.

That's strange.

What's straw doing
so far outside an ag zone?

She's been sewn up.

I've seen this before.
This is a copycat.

How would you know that?

Ten years ago,

a serial killer named
Michael Costa

was arrested.

It was his mo
to stuff them with straw,

just like this.

Press called him...

"Straw man."

Michael Costa...

Currently serving
a life sentence in the cubes.

It gets more interesting.

Look at the investigating
officer.

This was your father's case.

The collar of his career.

Right before he was killed.

Damn it.

What's wrong?

My dad's case notes are sealed.

It's strange.

John, your father was
still under investigation

for stealing seized

robotic tech
from the evidence locker

and reselling it
on the black market.

Allegedly.

Paul: What? No fanfare

for my return, kennex?

Detective Paul.
Great to see you.

Hey, they, uh, they
want you outside.

Oh, yeah? Who?

Everyone in here.

Maldonado: Okay, everybody,

listen up.

Victim is Abigail McKenzie,
age 16.

The manner
in which the corpse was found

is indicative of serial killer

Michael Costa,
aka "the straw man."

Ten years ago,
Costa killed 21 people.

He would remove
all of their internal organs,

including the brain,
and replace them with straw.

We never found any
of the organs.

He targeted teenage runaways,

transients, male and female.

But since Costa is serving
a life sentence,

it appears we're dealing
with a copycat.

Copycats tend to see themselves

in the killers they emulate.

Costa was a schizophrenic
psychopath.

We could be looking for

another mentally ill person.

Dorian: It's common for copycats

to contact the original killers.

We should go see Costa.

See who he's been talking to.

Maldonado: Do it. Paul...

look into the straw that was
used to stuff the bodies.

See if there's anything
unique about the material.

I'll try to trace it
back to a purchase.

Valerie: I'll look at
mental institutions

for any recently
released patients

that fit the profile.

Sounds good.

Captain...

I just tried to access

my father's original case notes.

They're classified.

I'll take care of it.

Go see Costa.

Warden:
Like a lot of guys in here,

Costa failed his genetic
profile as a child

and based on his brain scan,

put on the red list for
psychopathic tendencies.

Eventually, he developed
paranoid schizophrenia.

John: What kind of
prisoner has he been?

He's been a model inmate.

He's on meds now.

We put in an e-shunt

that delivers them
to his bloodstream.

We'll need to see
all of his correspondence:

Who he met with
and who he sent holos to.

Of course. It's all in his file.

There aren't many.

A prison bunny here and there.

A couple people wanting
to write books about him.

This is him.

Detective, I've been
meaning to ask you...

Are you Edward kennex's son?

Yeah, I am.

Hell of a thing he did,
putting this guy away.

Michael...

There are two detectives

here to talk to you.

(Computer beeps off)

Warden: That's close enough.

Costa: They let me watch
news, and I'm assuming

that you're here to talk about

the murder of that young girl.

Looks like you got a copycat.

Who you been talking to, Costa?

I never killed anyone.

How could I be copied?

Right.

Someone else
killed those people,

cut out their organs and
put their DNA all over you?

Before my medications,
I would, uh, have blackouts.

I'd lose time.

They said I did it,

but in my heart,
I know I didn't.

After the fifth
appeal, I gave up.

John: You finally figured
out no one believes you?

Someone did. (Sighs)

Detective kennex... he did.

John: The detective
that put you in here?

Yeah, I was just as
surprised as anyone

when he came in saying that

he believed in my innocence.

He said I was framed.

Right before he died.

Check the visitor
log for march '38.

There were only three visitors.

Stephanie bragg, Tony ferraro

and Alan mcdowell.

Costa: I don't know
who's in your log, but

I'm telling you,

detective kennex came to see me.

All right.

For a second, let's just
say I do believe you.

What did he say to you?

He said something like,
he was working on an angle...

Something about robotics.

And crooked cops.

He didn't know
who he could trust.

Two weeks later,

he was killed in
the line of duty.

Coincidence?

Why didn't you say something?

The proof died with
detective kennex.

Besides...

I'm just a paranoid
schizophrenic.

Who would've listened?

John: "Tony ferraro" is
a name my dad used.

It was a pizza joint
in the old town,

before the wall went up.

My dad used to take
me there as a kid.

So your father did believe
that Costa was innocent.

Something's going on.

There was a reason
my father came here

and didn't use his real name.

If your dad's
suspicions are correct,

we're not looking for a copycat.

The original killer is back.

John: We have to get
into his case notes.

(Coughs)

Those supplements go down
a lot easier with clean water.

The shelter over on Abbot
usually has some.

I can show you the way
down there, if you want.

Really?

All right, guys,
what do you got for us?

Valerie: This might sound crazy,

but I compared the stitching

on the original victims

to our latest victim,
and the technique

isn't similar, it's exact.

Our copycat had to have
extensive contact with Costa.

Or we're not looking
for a copycat at all.

Paul: Wait... you're saying
we got the wrong guy?

Valerie: He's always
maintained his innocence.

Did you get anything from Costa?

John: We're working on it.

Maldonado: John.

A minute?

Your father's case file.

The files were sealed by IA.

I got you access.

Just keep it quiet.

See if there's anything
useful in them.

Are you gonna be okay with this?

Yeah.

Thanks.

You didn't tell them
what Costa told you.

My father used an alias

and he went and saw him alone.

Which means didn't trust
anyone in the department.

That was ten years ago, John.

Yeah, and some of those
people are still here.

He's not.

So let's starting looking
through your father's case.

Listen, I'd like to go
through my father's notes

myself.

I need you to go to Rudy's.

I sent the victim's body
over there for his analysis.

Let me know if
you find anything.

Dorian:
Rudy, take a look at this.

There seems to be
a small puncture wound

at the tip of her index finger.

Looks superficial,
but I'll do a DNA sweep.

So have you heard anything
back from the review board?

Actually, yes,
I-I have some news.

You got a callback.

A callback?

Is that a good thing?

Yeah.

It's a little unorthodox.

Do you think someone said

something bad? No.

No, no. Not me.

I know I didn't.

I mean, they might
have misunderstood

what I said when I mentioned...

You having my baby.

Oh, look, now
you're doing it, too.

Let's not overreact.

It's probably just
that the board

hasn't seen a drn for a while.

They don't know
what to make of you.

What can I do?

You got to make
them comfortable.

Give them something
they're familiar with.

Act like an mx.

That's what they want to see.

Everyone loves mxs.

Edward kennex:
December 21, 2036.

Case number 38-14.

Investigating officer:
Detective Edward kennex.

Shawn parks, Caucasian male, 16,

found in an abandoned lot

200 meters from the wall.

Seventh victim in 18 days.

Same m.O. As the others...

body cavity and cranium

stuffed with straw and sewn.

November 14, 2037.

Arrest made.

Michael Costa.

39-year-old
paranoid schizophrenic

found wandering in a park

near where the victim was found.

DNA and blood
from multiple victims

found on his hands and clothing.

He was carrying
a surgeon's knife.

An expert witness testified

the stitching found on the body

was done with
surgical precision.

Based on evidence
I'm currently reviewing,

I'm starting to feel
that Costa was abducted

the night before
the final murder,

had the victim's DNA
planted on his person

and was transported
to the last crime scene.

I believe I might have
put away the wrong guy.

Maybe Michael Costa
was not the straw man.

But if he's a patsy...

Then, for who?

Who is really
killing these people?

Further details will be
in my next transmission.

Why did you circle the feet?

(Phone ringing)

Dorian: It's me.

Dorian, what's up?

We need to show you something.

Sometimes, the absence of
something is everything.

Yeah, I read that in
how to be a detective.

Everybody has something
under their fingernails.

A particle, molecule of dirt...

This one has nothing.

That's because the killer
cleaned the bodies.

It's part of his m.O.

True. But these kids

were living on the
streets, right?

No matter how well
somebody cleaned,

there'd always be

some atomic trace of dirt.

Tell him your theory.

This might sound crazy,

but I don't think this body
is the real victim.

I think it's a replica.

A replica?

Look, according to her parents,

she was only on the
streets for three weeks.

That's not enough time to abduct

and clone someone. Yeah.

That's sort of where
my hypothesis ends.

In the original case files,

my father circled the feet
of all the victims,

like they had
something in common.

Dorian: She's flat-footed.

John: What are you looking for?

Rudy: My old organic printer.

Now what are you looking for?

Cupcake batter.

When you print organics,

a natural settling occurs
as the raw material sets.

So if you're printing
from bottom to top,

on a flat surface,
the materials naturally conform

to that surface.

It works for cupcakes,

but if you're bio-printing a
human body who's standing up...

there'd be no way to maintain
the arches in the feet.

Leaving you flat-foooted.

I mean, th-the new bio-printers
have corrected that flaw,

but it's quite common
in the old ones.

It was my birthday last week.

Thanks for remembering.

How old?

Perpetual 39, I like to say.
(Laughs)

No, I mean how old
were the bio-printers

before they corrected the flaw?

About five years ago.

So he was using an old printer.

He must be.

Why go through the trouble of

trying to copy your victims?

Why not just abduct them?

Rudy: To hide them.

John: If someone goes missing,

the department has drones
that never stop searching.

If someone turns up dead...

Nobody's going to be
looking for them anymore.

So, whoever's doing this

wants to keep his victims alive.

Yeah. Why?

(Printer whirring)

(Whimpering, gasping)

(Screaming)

Let me go!

He's using
a modified organic printer.

He can print the skin
with bio-ink...

skeleton, musculature...

The old bio-printer couldn't
print the organs to scale.

A medical examiner
would have noticed right away.

That's why he uses straw.

This wasn't the ritualized need
of a serial killer,

this was a way to hide
that the bodies

were bio-printed copies.

Paul: That means his victims
could still be alive.

Maldonado: Your father was the lead
investigator at Costa's trial.

If he knew he was putting an
innocent man behind bars...

he knew he made a mistake,
and he was gonna own up to it.

Why not tell someone?

My father was investigating
new evidence

before he was going
to come forward.

He never had a chance to.

Look, this is bigger
than a serial killer.

Costa was set up.

The arrest was designed
to cover up the real case.

Which is what exactly?

I don't know yet,
but Costa told me

that my father could
prove he was innocent,

and that the cover-up
involved stolen robotics.

And he mistrusted everybody,
including the police department,

and then he was killed.

And I don't think
it was a coincidence.

(Knocking on door)

I'm sorry to interrupt, captain.

They found another body
near the wall.

What do you got?

The victim has been identified
as vaishali jain, age 17.

Last known address,
418 Sully road, Seattle.

Parents reported her missing
to the local pd last month.

It appears she ran away.

You're telling me this is a
bio-printed copy of the victim?

That's right. The real vaishali

could still be alive somewhere.

Why does he want 'em alive?
What's he doing with them?

I don't know, but this is
the second victim in two days.

Look at this... the bio-printer
copies the skin perfectly.

Both young women

had pin pricks
on their forefingers.

The city just introduced

meal supplement dispensers in
all major shelters last year.

They prick your finger

to determine what vitamins
and nutrients you need.

The shelter.

Every serial killer has
a hunting ground... that's his.

We need
to get plainclothes assets

in all those shelters
immediately.

The department doesn't
have the resources

for the scope of that operation.

We need to work smarter.

Dorian: How?

We flush him out.

Okay, we have 46 shelters
in the city.

I've ordered all available
uniforms and mxs to patrol

44 of them
and make their presence known.

If you notice anything out
of the ordinary, call it in.

The hope is, the real straw man
will see the officers

and get spooked
before abducting anyone else.

That's where you guys come in.

You're gonna stake out
the remaining two shelters.

We drive the straw man
to one of these,

we're gonna see him
make his move.

Paul: Yeah, this is...

This is the last time
I'm the homeless guy.

You know how long it takes
to wash this stink off?

You sure
that's not your cologne, Paul?

Oh, very funny.

Will you just please
get back to work, please?

Oh, you want to watch
where you're going, old timer?

Hey, easy... easy, kid.
Nice sunglasses.

You do realize it's nighttime.

These things got night vision,
man, so don't try anything.

Who'd you steal 'em from? Oh, your
mom gave 'em to me to say thanks.

(Laughs)

Trying to get
a bed tonight or what?

Yeah. I mean, I was.

They're all out. Hmm.

Catch you later, man.
Take it easy.

Listen, you got a bitcoin stick?

(Scoffs) Bitcoin stick.

There's not much on it, man.

What's it to you?

Why don't you get yourself

a place to stay tonight?

Wait, how-how are you
so flush, man?

Listen, don't worry
about that, all right?

You're gonna need a place to
sleep tonight 'cause I'm staying

at your mom's. (Laughs)

Hey, for real...

Thanks, man.

Dorian: ♪ hello ♪

♪ Is it me you're looking for?

♪ 'Cause I wonder
where you are ♪

♪ And I wonder
where you've been... ♪

Please, stop with
the singing, please.

♪ Oh...

Everyone loves
Lionel Richie, right?

Oh, I wish I could do your
performance evaluation again.

I wish I could do it over, too.

I should have acted like an mx.

They love those things.

John, the stuff they said
your father did...

could it be true?

When I was a kid,

my dad patrolled downtown,

a real tough beat,

gang controlled.

Lot of cops were on the take.

One day, his unit takes down
this dealer,

a real heavy hitter.

They find seven million dollars
in cash under the floorboards.

Now, the task force leader
tells everybody to take a cut.

My dad refused.

So, the guy takes a scatter gun,

puts it to his head and says

if he doesn't take a cut
and get his hands dirty

like everyone else, then,
he's gonna blow his brains out.

Call it in as a
ten-double-zero, officer down.

Still, my dad refused.

Lucky for him,

the guy didn't have the balls
to shoot one of his own.

Then, a month later,
their whole unit got busted

in an IA investigation, and
the only one left standing...

Was my dad.

That's who he was.

He's the reason I became a cop.

There's no way he was dirty.

Hey.

Hi.

If you're looking for a hot
meal, the shelter over on

abbott usually...

Woman: Are you okay?

Yeah. Never mind.

Hey, honey, want
to keep me warm tonight?

Handsome man like you...
I'll give you a discount.

Thank you.

I need an I.D. On a van.

Man (Over radio): Possible
suspect going down Addison

at fourth, drone in pursuit.

Show us responding.

The drone's picking up
two heat signatures.

Looks like the driver,
and there's a body

in the back of the van.

He's alive,

but looks like he's immobile.

He turned South on Patterson.

Valerie: John, the van stopped
outside pier 12.

Drone imaging
is downloading now.

He just left the victim
and went inside.

I think he made us.

And we got close enough
to make him, too.

I'll start running facial rec.

John, I got a hit.
Suspect I.D.'S as Glen dunbar.

Has a record of trading illegal
tech on the black market.

I got a heat signature.

Dorian: His vitals are stable.

John: Alert the emts.

No sirens.

Let's go.

(Computer trilling)

(Whispers): Go.

I've got a body.

It's got some kind
of tech on it.

John, I've got
two heat signatures.

She's alive.

Alert the emts.
Let's get them out of here now.

Come on, move! Move!

(Clatter in distance)

(Gunshot in distance)

Mx (Over radio): Shot fired.

South side. Check it out.

(Bird flutters)

He's down. Don't move!

Dorian (Over radio):
Suspect is down.

We're at the South exit.

I think I just found
his workroom.

No vitals.

It's a duplicate.

There's an explosive device

inside its abdominal cavity.

It's rigged to detonate.
Clear the area

and dismantle it.

John, do you copy?

Copy that.

(Choking)

(Grunts)

(Grunts)

(Groans)

(Panting)

Dorian: John.

You okay?

Yeah.

You look it.

It's human tissue fused
with some sort of biotech.

He's been made into a cyborg.

This printer was
in police evidence.

Still got the embedded
locker tag on it.

Every victim he ever printed...
they're right here.

All of these parts
have evidence numbers, too.

He was using them on himself.

What is it?

My father was accused
of stealing robotics parts

from the evidence locker and
selling them on the black market.

He said he was investigating
new evidence.

I think he connected the flat
feet to this stolen printer.

Who was in charge of
the evidence locker at the time?

Officer Silas grant.

Where's grant now?

Grant was shot and killed
in the line of duty.

Three weeks after your father.

Coincidence?

Valerie: Glen dunbar had

a degenerative disease that
affected his nervous system.

He thought he could use
advanced cybernetics

to combat his condition. So...

This was all about trying
to rebuild his body?

Valerie: These people were used as
test patients for his cyborg parts.

His experiments worked for a
while, but, after ten years,

the biotech began to break down.

He needed new test subjects

if he was gonna find
a more permanent solution

to his illness.

So he started killing again.

Excuse me.

You got it.

Paul: I'll get started
on that report.

Okay.

I think my father discovered
that the printer

was stolen from police evidence
and he was killed for it.

It could very well be true.
It makes sense

that grant was selling
the parts to the black market

and was trying to pin

the missing tech on your father,
to destroy his credibility.

That way, if anything
from your dad's investigation

came to light, it would
already be cast in doubt.

Did grant have anything to do
with my father's murder?

We'll never know for sure.

Because they believe
dunbar killed him, too.

You got the man who
killed your father, John.

And Costa?

He's being released right now.

He's been cleared
of all 21 murder charges,

and we're getting him
the proper treatment

for his mental illness.

John, do you need
to take some personal time?

No.

I'm good.

John.

You finished your dad's work

and cleared his name.
He'd be proud.

Thanks.

You must be Dorian.

(With mx voice): Affirmative.
Drn-0167 reporting.

Please, have a seat.

Do you know
why I called you here today?

Statistically, the odds are

this is related to
my job performance.

Why are you talking
like an mx-43?

(Regular voice): Don't
you love those things?

Uh, they're fine models.

Anyhow...

I just called you here today
to let you know

your term has been renewed.

You've received glowing reviews
across the board.

I did?

Especially from your partner...

who gave you credit
for still wanting

to be on the force.
Seems you've made

some very positive
impressions here.

You will continue
your assignment

with detective kennex.

(Groans softly)

(Sighs)

Hey.

What are you doing here?

I followed your locator chip.

I need to have
that thing dug out.

What do you got there?

I'm expressing my gratitude.
For what?

The review board gave me
my final recommendation,

based on your glowing review.
My term has been extended.

"Glowing" is a bit
of an exaggeration.

Open it.

(Sighs)

Wow. I wonder what it is.

It's a leg.

Never mind.

This baby's got 20% more
power in the push-off

than the one you have now,
better integrated sensors

in the knee and ankle and an
enhanced neural interface.

This model will not
even be on the market

for the next few months

but I got Rudy
to pull some strings.

I don't...

Thank you.

Hope you like it.

(Sniffles, sighs)

(Sighs)

Listen...

I know I'm not human,

and I could never be
what pelham was to you.

Hey, Dorian... I get it.
I really do.

But I'm glad maldonado
put us together.

Am I really the reason that
you want to stay on the force?

I... uh, no, I never said that.

To the interviewer you did.

Um, no, no, I didn't.

He must have heard me wrong.

That is the nicest thing

anyone has ever
said about me, John.

Dude, don't. Please.
Don't do that.

I was made to feel, John.

(Quietly): Oh, man...

Unbelievable. (Exhales)

(Comm beeping)

Man: One-nine, we got
a robbery in progress

on west 55th street.

Any available units,
please respond.

Show us responding.
(Sighs wearily)

Thank you.

Appreciate that.