CSI: Cyber (2015–2016): Season 1, Episode 10 - Click Your Poison - full transcript

Special Agent Avery Ryan and her team investigate when a man dies after taking medication he purchased from a hacked ad on a medical website.

My name is Avery Ryan.

I was a victim of cyber crime.

Like you, I posted
on social media,

checked my bank account
balance online,

even kept the confidential files

of my psychological practice
on my computer.

Then I was hacked,
and as a result,

one of my patients was murdered.

My investigation into her death
led me to the FBI,

where I joined a team
of cyber experts

to wage a war against
a new breed of criminal



hiding on the Deep Web...

infiltrating our daily lives
in ways we never imagined...

...faceless...

nameless...

lurking inside our devices,

just a keystroke away.

Ripped By mstoll

Coffee, thanks.

Okay.

(phone ringing,
distorted and distant)

WOMAN (distorted, distant):
Here you go.

(distorted, distant):
Hey!

Watch it, man!

(car horn blares, tires screech)



(distorted):
Hey! Get out

of the street, man.

(woman screams)

MAN:
Get an ambulance!

MAN 2:
I'll call 911.

ORTEGA:
Cleveland coroner sent this scan

of victim Carl Bruno:

Male, 36.

C.O.D. Was blunt force trauma
from vehicular impact.

Witnesses described him
as being disoriented

and possibly hallucinating

just prior to the accident.

How did Mr. Bruno's death get
on the FDA's radar?

This prescription bottle
was found at the accident scene.

They're drugs purchased

from an online
Canadian pharmacy.

The Federal Drug Administration
has been tracking this pharmacy

for about two weeks
based on complaints

coming in
to our MedWatch hotline.

The callers all have
similar stories.

Bad reactions to drugs

they've purchased online.

No one's died until now.

The FDA has
an investigative arm... OCI.

Why come to Cyber?

We believe there
are fraudulent ads

on the medical Web site,
ScrollMD.

Over 800,000 people visit
the site a day,

most seeking a second opinion,

searching for general
health conditions,

others for specific drugs.

The site users are being lured

RYAN: The ads are redirecting
site users

to what could be

a fictitious pharmacy.

Sounds like
a click-baiting scheme.

Tramizor is the drug
Carl Bruno ordered.

It's used to treat
heart disease, but...

the victim's

arterial walls show
considerable plaque build-up.

The drug was ineffective.

Because it had little to no
pharmacological ingredient.

Carl Bruno was duped into buying
what he thought

was real Tramizor, when,
in fact, it was a placebo.

Not just a placebo.

There's signs of inflammation
in the brain.

Tox report revealed
trace amounts of aflatoxins.

Fungus?

ORTEGA:
Along with oxycodone...

a pain reliever, mood enhancer.

So the victims felt
like they were getting better

while they were taking
the drugs,

when, actually, they weren't.

Carl Bruno's death
wasn't an accident.

It was homicide.

What's the latest
on the ScrollMD Web site?

HTML injection.

Check it out.

Someone hacked a curtain ad

on the ScrollMD site.

Looks like a normal ad, right?

And this is the code for the ad,

but peekaboo.

(gasps)
There's actually two codes

written right on top
of each other.

NELSON:
A click-baiting scheme.

- KRUMITZ: Right.
- MUNDO: Like Avery predicted.

KRUMITZ:
And if you toggle between them,

the fake ad
is masking the legitimate ad.

The target had to breach
the ScrollMD servers

to inject this code.

So ScrollMD wasn't aware
of the intrusion?

No, and it's not just
about the ads.

It's about how people
are getting to the ads.

So if you search
"heart disease,"

like our vic,

you get
the heart disease info page.

Fine, okay,

but if you search
general symptoms like "fatigue,"

or "nausea" and you click
around long enough,

you end up...

At the heart disease info page.

NELSON:
Yeah, I tried it, too.

Got this rash on my elbow.

It... it's not on his elbow.

NELSON:
Look, I searched "rash,"

then it took me down some
wormhole of related symptoms,

and then, eventually,
I ended up on a page

- that said I had cancer.
- The algorithm was designed

to take any symptom
that you type in...

"fatigue," "insomnia,"
"dizziness"...

and you get "heart disease."

Next thing you know, you're
paranoid, self-diagnosing,

thinking you have symptoms
you don't even have.

Taking advantage of the closet
hypochondriac in all of us.

MUNDO:
Exactly.

Except in your case, Nelson.

I'd get that, uh,

elbow rash checked out.

What?

Our phony pharmacy is
not just selling Tramizor.

We've discovered
nine other drugs.

I got Damitrol
for high blood pressure.

Anfedril, that's diabetes.

Lindrexia, that's that
miracle cancer drug.

How do you know so much
about prescription drugs?

Ah, just research.

You know
I like to stay informed.

(chuckles)
You're a hypochondriac.

- No.
- Mm.

As much as I love
being psychoanalyzed,

we've got a target
that needs to be profiled.

Okay, he, like you,
is organized,

ambitious, sophisticated,
tech-savvy.

The drugs he's chosen
to distribute

are the most expensive

and sought-after
in their categories.

SIFTER:
Modern day snake oil salesman.

You know, it used to be these
guys were selling their wares

out of car trunks, and now...

Well, this guy's masquerading
on the Internet.

He could have links
to organized crime.

Gangs and cartels already have
distribution networks.

SIFTER:
Well, the penalties

for counterfeiting
pharmaceuticals

are less severe
than trafficking narcotics.

You think he's trying to lure
people into the Deep Web?

You know, that's the scary part.

He doesn't have to.

He's operating almost entirely
on the Surface Web,

where he can reach millions
of everyday citizens.

Well, does that give us
a better chance

of drawing him
into the real world?

Not necessarily.
Guys like him

know how to operate out in
the open without getting caught.

Which, in a way,
makes him more elusive

- (phone rings)
- And more dangerous.

Sifter.

Wait, who?

She's here now?

Uh, escort her up.

(elevator bell dings)

Mrs. Bruno,

I'm Assistant Deputy
Director Simon Sifter.

This is Special Agent
Avery Ryan.

The FDA told me you were
handling my husband's case.

Right, I am so sorry

for your loss, but I'm afraid

we don't have any answers yet.

I had... I had to come.

RYAN:
It's all right, Mrs. Bruno.

It's only natural
you'd have questions.

It was me.

I'm responsible
for my husband's death.

I was the one who bought
the Tramizor for Carl.

Last summer,
he had a heart attack,

and his doctor prescribed
Tramizor to prevent another one.

Our insurance plan changed.

They didn't cover
this particular medication.

We had to decide.

Pay for Carl's meds
or buy groceries.

So I went online.

When I saw the ad for the
pharmacy, I was so relieved.

I just assumed that
because it was on ScrollMD,

it was safe.

Carl was skeptical.

He thought it was
too good to be true.

But we were desperate,

and when the pill
looked identical

to the real thing...

SIFTER:
Did you ever speak

with anybody or attempt

to contact the pharmacy
by phone or?

My only contact was online.

I was so stupid to trust
this Web site,

and I printed every receipt
and e-mail.

I looked for anything
to help your investigation.

JPB Pharmacy.

We were on a monthly plan.

They delivered
that package yesterday.

Hmm, no return address,

but there is a return zip code.

NELSON:
This is what we got?

562 IP addresses on a map?

To hunt down one zip code
on a postmark?

Yep, Avery wants us
to filter this down

to the one machine
that stamped this package

by the time she lands
in San Antonio.

Okay.

Tell you what.

We'll take turns
filtering the data.

First one to get stumped

takes the late shift
for three weekends straight.

Okay, I'll go first.

Let's nix all the machines
with IP addresses

associated
with big corporations.

Executive assistants
and guys in the mail room

probably aren't
counterfeit drug lords.

218 gone.

The machines record the weight
and postage of each package,

so let's just eliminate all the
ones that only sent out letters.

Bam! Beat that.

Okay.
Package cost $1.82.

We just eliminate any machine

that didn't record $1.82, okay?

Okay, big bro,
let me run with that.

The meter stamp also has a date,

and since we already
know the postage...

- $1.82.
...we can eliminate

any machine that didn't record
that amount

on this same date.

NELSON:
That's only four left.

I got this...

I got this, I got this.

Package weighs 5.3 ounces.

Meter machine is accurate
to a tenth of an ounce.

So which of the remaining
four machines

sent out a package costing
$1.82, weighing 5.3 ounces,

on this exact date?

NELSON:
Mm-hmm.

(grunts)

- Yeah!
- That's what

I'm talking about.

Go ahead and pull up that
Internet service provider, man.

Okay, I'm getting
the hard location

for the IP address now.

Looks like you're gonna be

enjoying the late shift,
my friend.

- Who, me?
- Yeah, you.

- Uh-uh.
- Uh-huh.

(computer blips)

Oh, got an address.

(line ringing)

Avery, it's me.

545 Oakland Way, San Antonio.

FBI! Open up!

(gun cocks)

RYAN: Show me your hands!

Turn around, slowly.

RYAN:
I have a theory, Paul.

You tell me
if I'm in the ballpark.

You're involved with an illegal
prescription drug ring,

scamming people
over the Internet.

You're not the boss,
you're just a middleman.

You took this job
not for the money,

but because you need access

to the same drugs
you're distributing.

I'm assuming Lindrexia?

You have cancer?

Oh, congratulations.

You get a gold star.

MUNDO:
Paul, the drugs you're taking

are counterfeit.

They're full
of toxic contaminants

that are making you sicker.

That's not true,
I'm feeling better.

That's because they're
also laced with oxycodone.

That's what's
relieving your pain,

making you feel euphoric.

I'm getting better.

I know I am.

Have to be.

How were you first contacted
about this job?

I met a guy on a cancer support
chat group online.

Said he had access
to black market Lindrexia,

and said I could have some,

if I helped him distribute it.

Did you ever meet
with him in person?

No. Never.

It was always a dead drop.

No one was ever there.

Lung cancer.

Kicked it twice.

Came back a third time.

I asked my doctors
for Lindrexia,

and they said no.

See, the thing is,
it's a miracle drug,

but that miracle's only approved

for first-
and second-line patients.

If you're a third-timer like me,

well, you're crap out of luck.

Doctors say I'm a lost cause.

Well, it's not just
phony Lindrexia

that you're shipping out.

There are nine other drugs,

one of them a heart medication.

Killed a man in Cleveland.

Well, the packages I get
are already sealed.

My job is just to stamp 'em
and ship 'em out.

Look, this is, this is
just supposed to be

a way around the drug companies.

I just wanted to help people.

(crying):
Just wanted to help people.

And now you're telling me
I killed a man?

Guy who died...

...how old was he?

He was about your age.

Figures.

Death always finds a way.

(coughing)

Are you okay, Paul?

I'm fine.

I'm gonna get you some water.

I just need a minute.

(thud)

(glass shattering)

No, no, no, no!

- RYAN: Aah...
- We need some help in here!

Someone get first aid!

Yeah, I need an ambulance.

545 Oakland Way.

PAUL:
Ah... no...

RYAN:
Stay with me, Paul!

Stay with me, Paul,
stay with me.

Paul, stay with me!

♪ I know you've deceived me,
now here's a surprise ♪

♪ I know that you have, 'cause
there's magic in my eyes ♪

♪ I can see
for miles and miles ♪

♪ I can see for miles
and miles ♪

♪ I can see
for miles and miles ♪

♪ And miles... ♪

♪ Oh, yeah. ♪

(indistinct radio chatter)

(siren wails)

You okay?

Yeah.

Our target's a twisted
son of a bitch.

He's not just
cheating sick people,

he's using the most desperate
ones to do his dirty work.

Why hire a guy like Paul?

Because he was hopeful.

Paul wasn't doing it
for the money.

He wouldn't ask any questions.

He just wanted to live.

He just wanted everyone to live.

Which tells me that
our target is a sociopath,

lacking empathy and remorse.

He didn't care that Paul
was a cancer victim;

he just saw him as a pawn
that could be manipulated

and controlled.

You still think
our target's part of

- an organized crime ring?
- If he were,

he'd have a member of his crew
doing that job.

Our target is running
a much leaner operation.

Yeah.

So lean our only lead
is on his way to the ICU.

Well, maybe Paul's phone
could do the talking.

Paul mentioned something
about a dead drop,

where he was picking up pills.

I'll pull up his
"Frequent Locations."

Show me "Journey Mode."

You're checking for a pattern.

Yeah.

There.

On the days that
Paul left his house,

he never left before noon.

Looks like he averaged

five or six stops.

MUNDO: Except right here:
Once a week, he'd leave

the house,
make one stop at 9:00 a.m.,

drive directly back.

RYAN:
That's got to be

the address of
the dead drop location.

MUNDO:
According to this schedule,

next pickup's not
for another three days.

RYAN:
We don't have time.

We have to pull the traffic cam
footage of the area.

If Paul was picking up drugs,

someone was dropping them off.

Do you think this is where

our target surfaced
in the real world?

There's only one way
to find out.

And you're sure about this?

Yeah. My techs
confirmed it today.

It's an HTML
injection on your site

that's causing site visitors
to access malicious ads.

Well, my network security
is top-notch.

We'll have to look into this
and make sure it's accurate.

Marcus,

all due respect... it's accurate.

Your security has gaping holes.

Look, I'm here as a friend.

I could have called,

but I just felt this
was something best explained

in person.

Well, pardon me
if I hesitate to thank you.

Look, I don't want ScrollMD
to face any undue embarrassment,

so just, please, take down
the infected ads immediately

and have your techs
scrub your servers

for any other malicious code.

Sure, fine.

Anything else?

Uh, yeah, actually.

Consider reaching out

to the victim's wife,
Jane Bruno.

Extend your condolences.

Most importantly,

issue a public warning
on your home page.

That's the most efficient way
of reaching people

who might have these drugs
currently sitting

in their medicine cabinets.

No, that's a step
too far, Simon.

Talk about embarrassment.

A-A public warning
saying that we were breached?

It would create
a PR nightmare for us.

Not to mention
it opens us up to liability.

The widow could sue.

I could lose millions
in sponsors.

A man died because
of your Web site.

And I feel badly about that.

But ScrollMD was a victim, too.

Our Web site was attacked.

I can't issue that warning.

You can't or you won't?

(sighs)

I won't.

That one.

It shows the entrance
to the dead drop location.

Take me back to the time
of the last pickup.

(quietly):
Okay.

MUNDO:
There's Paul.

9:00 a.m. On the dot.

Okay, take the footage back.

We're looking for anyone else
going in or out that door.

There. Rewind that.

Play that back.

MUNDO:
You gotta be kidding me.

The target's using
an IR LED array.

Makes his license plate
unreadable to cameras.

Can we make an I. D?

Let's see here...

No.

Can't see his face.
Too far away.

What is it?

Our target was driving
a newer model SUV,

probably equipped
with Bluetooth,

phone, radio...

MUNDO: All four tires give off
Bluetooth signals

to report when they're
low on pressure.

RYAN:
What are you thinking?

See that little
white box right there?

It's a Department
of Transportation

traffic monitoring system.

Picks up Bluetooth signals
to report traffic patterns.

The D.O.T. Keeps a record

of every Bluetooth device
it pairs with.

That's our digital fingerprint.

We match that
to the SUV's VIN number,

and we get the driver's ID
and registration from the DMV.

Yeah, only one problem...

the D.O.T. Only keeps
the data for 20 minutes.

(chuckling):
You really believe that?

Bluetooth is
a hacker's best friend.

What time was the
IR LED flash detected

by the traffic cam?

6:49 a.m.

SIFTER: Can you put the newscast
on the big screen?

Okay, these are the Bluetooth
devices that paired

with the D.O.T. Traffic
box at the same time.

170? We making another wager?

Looks like it.

You should be able to trust
the Web sites you visit.

They should be responsible

for the content of the ads
that are on their sites.

My husband is dead because
someone was negligent.

Today I went
to ScrollMD headquarters.

No one would talk to me.

They escorted me out.

They say they're
all about helping people,

but all they care about is
the bottom line.

KRUMITZ:
Hey, I've got something here.

All right, talk to me.

KRUMITZ:
We just ran the VIN number

of our target's SUV

through the Texas DMV database
and got a hit.

All right, get Avery
on the phone.

Nelson, I've got a job for you.

Come see me
in my office after this.

You don't want Krumitz
to come, too?

I mean, because we've been
tag-teaming everything.

Just you.

KRUMITZ:
Simon?

Avery,

we found the driver of the SUV.

Target's name is Randall Fung.

FBI!

Go, go, go!

My side's clear!

Shooters come out.

All clear, sir! Totally clear!

(glass shatters)

FBI!

Hands up, let me see your hands!

FBI! Don't move!

Get down, get down!

AGENT:
Do not move!

AGENT 2:
On the ground!

Hands behind your back!

Randall Fung, turn around.

Hands behind your back.

RYAN:
Mold.

The aflatoxins.

This is what's making
the victims sick.

I've seen some nasty-ass crap,

but this is disgusting.

You keep looking at the pills,
not the computer.

You know what that tells me?

That you're a trained chemist,
not a cyber criminal.

Which means you're
only half this operation.

You're the pill cook.

Randall, we got you
on fraud, conspiracy,

trafficking counterfeit goods,
and a man died

because of what you did.

You're looking at murder and
a hell of a lot of jail time,

unless you can tell us
where your better half is.

Now, if you talk,
maybe we can make a deal.

Bag the computers and devices
and bring 'em back to DC.

We're still looking
for the head of this snake.

(car alarm chirps)

MARCUS:
What the hell did you do, Simon?

Wow, you seem
a little upset, Marcus.

Is this a discussion we should
be having by my parking space?

My entire Web site is down.

Every time my techs
try to get it back online,

it crashes again.

Sounds like a distributed
denial-of-service attack.

Ah, those can take days,
weeks to sort out.

I can certainly have
my team look into it.

Your team? You son of a bitch.

And I'm guessing you
also had something to do

with the media attack Carl
Bruno's wife has been waging?

Hey, look at that,
you do know the victim's name.

What do you want, Simon?

Same thing Jane Bruno wants...

for you and ScrollMD
to be held accountable.

And maybe if you spoke with her,

instead of just
escorting her out...

I am not gonna
negotiate with you.

You know, Marcus,
in the next few weeks,

it's gonna be more than
your site that's crashing.

That's not a threat,
that's reality.

Who knows what's next?

Dirty vaccines?

Tainted antibiotics?

Millions of people visit
your site every month.

And whether they get cured

or they get killed
might just depend on you.

Look, I know they scrubbed
these devices of mold and spores

and whatnot, but, uh, I am
starting to itch a little bit.

Wait...

wait, w-wait. Hold up.

Go back.

Look familiar to you?

Both Paul and Randall had
the exact same online poker site

bookmarked on their devices.

Could be a coincidence.

Yeah, we were
thinking that, too.

Until we checked the
user history on both devices...

we stopped thinking that.

MUNDO: For the last two months,

both these guys logged on

to the same poker site
every Saturday.

Were they playing each other?

No, but look where they sat.

MUNDO:
A no-limit, heads-up table.

Means they each played
an opponent one-on-one.

KRUMITZ: And for no more
than three minutes.

- Three minutes?
- Mm-hmm.

That's barely enough time
to play one hand.

True, but that's
all they ever play.

I mean, you log in, sit,
play a hand, win, log out.

Paul and Randall
weren't playing poker.

They were getting paid
for their services.

This is how our target
pays his crew.

I bet this is also
how our target washes his money.

Hackers love using online poker
to launder funds.

It's hard to track.

But not impossible.

(Sifter grunts quietly)

You still want to argue
you're not a hypochondriac?

This is not about me.

Oh, my wife, she hates shots.

And the doctor put her
on these pills for the flu.

A preventative measure because
of her weakened immune system.

I don't know, just being
cautious, I guess.

Did you really think

Kathryn's doctor
prescribed her phony meds?

Hearing Jane Bruno's story,

I mean, this could
happen to anyone.

Yesterday, I met an
intelligent, qualified doctor

who fell down a slippery slope

and ended up in
the target's trap.

There's a nationwide
shortage of Doxaflu.

Yeah, it's just hard to believe

your only option was
an online pharmacy.

I have high-risk patients...

children, pregnant women,

the elderly.

I wanted to make sure
that my patients were protected.

Yeah, I mean... look,
I know we need to be able

to trust in certain things...
doctors, medicine.

It's just hard when...

When our target's taking
advantage of that trust.

And now, besides the nine
pharmaceutical drugs

our target was distributing,

he's escalated to
a common flu medication.

He's expanding his business.

Sounds to me like
he's looking for a big payday,

so he can cash out and run.

Yeah, how do we get
to him before he does?

So, based on your previous
psychological profile

of the target, can you build
a physical description?

Well, our target is
most likely male,

based on his tech skills
and his sociopathic tendencies.

He sees people as dollar signs.

He has no empathy,
no conscience.

Age range?

Coders fall into
one of four categories...

young adolescents, college
students, professionals,

or mature and reformed
ex-virus writers.

But our target
is a professional.

Which puts him in the early 20s
to mid-40s range.

He's made an art of blending in.

Hiding in plain sight.

He's average-looking,
inconspicuous.

He won't wear his hair
too long or too short.

He's likely to have
poor social skills.

A recluse.

He won't want to leave home
unless he has to.

He likes to live his life
behind a computer screen.

But if he does leave the house,
he'll want to disguise himself.

But nothing that draws
too much attention.

Glasses.

With thick frames.

He likes to have a barrier
between himself

and the rest of the world.

It gives him
a false sense of security.

All right, what do we got?

Male, 20s to 40s, glasses,
hair medium length.

That is not
a whole lot to go on.

It's enough.

We will know him
when we see him.

Now we just have
to give him a reason

to pop out into the real world.

How do you propose we do that?

Money.

I need $250,000.

Uh, for what exactly, Avery?

A little game of poker.

All right, everybody, listen up.

Time to put your game face on.

Once our target
receives a big payment,

he's gonna launder it using
the same online poker site

he used to pay his crew.

He's gonna be evasive,

and he's gonna be fast,
but we're gonna be faster.

Avery, you sure this is
a good idea?

Our target's gonna know
we're not a doctor's office.

He's gonna trace that
quarter mil right back to us.

Our raid on his pill factory
put him on the ropes.

His operation is crippled.

He's gonna want
to cash out and run,

even if he knows
it's government coin.

He's compulsive,
overconfident and self-serving.

He's always looking
for his next big score.

And you think
he's gonna make a mistake?

A mistake born of greed.

He made a fortune preying
on the weaknesses of others.

And we're gonna catch him

because his weakness
is he's cocky.

(grunts)

Here goes nothing.

We just bought
$250,000 worth of drugs.

Krumitz, you're up.

Okay.

KRUMITZ: Our target uses
a Dollar Dispatch account

for his pharmacy transactions.

No previous history.

It's a one-off account.

NELSON:
Uh-huh.

There's our 250 Gs.

KRUMITZ: Nobody freak out.
It's about to disappear.

NELSON: Our target is opening
a new Dollar Dispatch account

for every drug transaction.

- Nelson?
- All right.

Here we go: So, our target's
favorite online poker site.

Now, we have full
administrative privileges,

which means
we're like the pit boss.

We can see
whatever screen we want.

Pull up the lobby.

Go to the no-limit,
heads-up tables.

The target
should buy in for $250K.

Wait for it.

There he is! Phantom23.

- (laughter, applause)
- WOMAN: We got him!

- See? - Yes.
- Got him. - Got him.

He's at table 26.

KRUMITZ: He's going all in
on that first hand.

He just folded on a full house.

Remember, every time he loses,

he's really losing to himself.

With every hand, he's laundering
the money one step further.

Odyssey45 is just another handle

he created for himself

in the poker game.

All right, he's on the move.

Who's got eyes on Odyssey45?

I do. He's at table 84.

KRUMITZ:
He's on the move again

as Emerald62.

There he is, table nine.

KRUMITZ: Wait, he's not going
all in anymore.

He's only bidding half.

RYAN: Sneaky sucker.
He divided the money

so it's harder to track.

He's jumping tables again.

NELSON: Damn it!

Look, there's,
like, four of them.

Remember, he's playing
against himself.

KRUMITZ:
He's playing at more tables.

NELSON:
That's six.

Now eight...

sixteen...

He's using an algorithm.

Just stay with him.
Just isolate

the games our target's playing.

He's moving too fast.

Do not lose him.

RYAN:
Wait, look at his bets.

He's going all-in again,
there and there.

SIFTER: Yeah, he's recombining
his laundered assets.

He's getting ready to cash out.

Look for a player
who starts to dominate.

I think I got him, Hydrus99.

Earnings just climbed
to $159,000.

Krumitz, trace the
bank account link to Hydrus99.

He'll have to show
at the bank in person

to cash out.

I can't. There's a, there's a
separation of privileges

on this server.

It's like
a traffic light system.

Green's what the players
can access,

yellow's administrator access,

and red's where the
bank accounts are stored.

NELSON:
No, no, no, no.

We should have access
to both yellow and red.

I specifically asked for it.

I know,
but I can't access the red.

There's a whole extra layer
of encryption.

Wait, wait, wait.

I think I can get in, but it's
gonna have to authenticate me.

It's gonna take some time.

MUNDO:
Time we don't have.

He's up to $184,000.

MUNDO: $202,000.

Guys, come on,
he hits 250, he's gone.

Look, we don't have time.

Look, we have to hack it.

- Just do it.
- There's a bridge

between each zone. Krummy,

we have to ride one of them
from yellow to red.

Yeah.

MUNDO: He did it.

He hit $250,000.

Did we get it?

Sorry, we, uh,
we couldn't, um...

MUNDO: Wait a minute.

That's it? It's...

He's gone? It's over?

No. No.

There still might be
a trace of him in the system.

RYAN:
What do you mean, Nelson?

Because his winnings
in the yellow zone

still have to communicate

with his bank account
in the red zone.

That's our bridge.

We need to plant a bug
in that line of communication.

We can ride it into the red

and straight
into his bank account.

RYAN: Infect the firewall
with a virus.

Yeah! Holy crap, we did it.

(applause)

The target's bank account

is at Keymark Bank,
Lexington, Kentucky.

Yes.

(indistinct conversation,
laughter)

(laughing)

Good work.

It's after banking hours,

which means our target can't
cash out till the morning.

Let's be there when he does.

I'd like to close my account.

Your account number?

That's a lot of money.

MAN:
Looking to make a fresh start.

I'd like that in
a cashier's check.

(gasps)

(screams)

(grunting)

Okay, okay.

(sirens approaching)

Shawn Morris,

looks like the last life
you gambled away was yours.

(sirens approaching)

All right, hey!

To an epic win today.

Cheers!

- Cheers.
- SIFTER: Good work, people.

All right, you know
we made the same toast

- when we busted you, right?
- (chuckles)

Oh, you just got to rub it in.

Look, I'm nothing like
the guy we arrested today, okay?

Shawn Morris,
guy's like a sociopath.

Probably still lives
in the basement

with his parents,
never been near a girl,

and uses code for evil.

And hacking the New York Stock
Exchange was any different?

It was.

His code killed people.

My code just made bankers
and stockholders mad

- for a day or two.
- So, then he was a black hat

with bad intentions,
and you were what?

An innovator.

- (Krumitz laughs)
- A revolutionary.

Sounds like you're just a guy

talking a whole bunch of smack.

- Smack!
- See, you got to know

what it's like on the other side
to know what I'm talking about.

Now, don't get me wrong,
it feels good to know

that we did save lives by,
you know, getting over a hundred

contaminated drugs
off the streets.

Yep, stopped it
before it became an epidemic.

That's how we do, son.

- That's right, baby.
- Mm.

Got to go.

I got daddy duty.

- Good work.
- All right.

Man's a superhero with a kid.

- (Ryan chuckles) -Hey, I thought
you drank everything

in those 82-ounce cups.

They're not that big.

MARCUS (on TV):
Today I am proud to announce

that ScrollMD will be
the first Web site

of its kind to issue
a public warning

on its home page alerting users
to the dangers

of fraudulent
online advertising.

We will also lead

an initiative in Congress

to ensure that
all health Web sites maintain

a higher level of security.

That was you, wasn't it?

ANCHORMAN: We'll be following
that story as it progresses...

Well, I did apply

a little pressure.

And how is Kathryn? Is she
still under the weather?

I just texted her.

She's-she's much better, thanks.

Yeah, I may be coming down
with the same thing she's got.

I got kind of an itchy throat.

You know?

Oh, please, don't start.

(chuckles)
To our health.

♪ ♪

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