Criminal Minds (2005–…): Season 1, Episode 16 - The Tribe - full transcript

The massacre of students using Native American rituals leads the team to consult the reservation policeman, who is also an activist.

It's so cool we got in here.

Okay, you two have fun.

Where you been?

Where did you say the bathroom was?

Upstairs. Second door on the left.

I'll be right back.

MAN 1: There's our girl.

MAN 2: That's her.

Ingrid?

Ingrid?

Have you guys seen Ingrid?



(CLEARING THROAT)

What are you doing out of your bunker?

I was on my way to file
the things that I file.

-Excuse me.
-Hey.

-I'm looking...
-Sean?

Hey. Derek.

-You must be looking for your brother.
-Yeah.

Right this way.

"Brother" as in... That's Hotch's brother?

Maybe Hotch is adopted.

So, Georgetown Law.
You're doing big things.

-Congratulations.
-Thanks.

Top of the stairs.

(KNOCKING AT DOOR)



Come in.

Sean. Hey, let me call you back.

Hey! This is a surprise.

Haven't cut your hair since Thanksgiving.

-That's what you said at Christmas.
-Sorry.

It's your first time here.
Let me give you the tour.

Yeah, I can't stay long.
I'm working the lunch shift.

Well, not for long. Congratulations.
You must be pretty excited.

I'm not going to Georgetown.

-What?
-I changed my mind.

I got this job offer to work
at this restaurant in New York.

It's not as chef,
but it's under the right one.

-So, I can learn from him.
-What are you talking about?

I made up my mind.

Sean, you've always wanted to be a lawyer.

Just like Dad, just like me.

And look what it got Dad, huh?
Heart attack at 47.

Well, I think I'm doing okay.

Look, if it's about being in New York,

NYU's got a great law school.
Columbia, Fordham...

I don't think you're hearing me.

All I'm asking you to do
is think it through. You know?

The logical thing is for you
to go to Georgetown.

I have to trust my instincts.

Look, Sean, it's typical for someone
who lost his father at a young age...

You know what? You're not him.

Then why are you here?

That's a really good question.

Here he comes.

-That's Hotch's brother?
-Uh-huh.

-I don't see it.
-Sean, listen to me.

All I'm saying is
you're 25 years old and it's...

You know what? Don't profile me, Aaron!

Now I see it.

Terra Mesa, New Mexico. Five dead.
All from Mesa University.

No signs of sexual assault
and no sign of theft.

Five 19-year-olds.
Minimal defensive wounds?

One of them was impaled on
a six-foot wooden pole.

Who'd want to torture
five college freshmen?

They weren't tied up and no one escaped?

No single UnSub could have exerted
this much control over so many people.

So, you think there was more than two?

I think we're looking at a pack.

-A pack?
-Three or more that kill in unison.

As in nature, the group dynamic
dictates that the pack's survival

is dependent on their ability
to hunt successfully.

And, as in nature,
a pack will keep on killing

-until it runs out of prey or is stopped.
-Stopped by what?

A stronger pack.

HOTCH: Nietzsche wrote, "The
individual has always had to struggle

"to keep from being overwhelmed
by the tribe."

I say this is one for the Feds.

-Sheriff, I'm Special Agent Hotchner.
-Hi.

-These are Agents Reid and Gideon.
-I was hoping there were more of
you.

The other agents went straight
to the station house

to look at the victims' files.
Has forensics had any luck?

The county CSU went through
for prints and trace evidence.

They said with all the workmen
tramping through here,

looking at footprints would be a waste.

Come on.

The bodies were almost completely skinned.
Yet, there's so little blood.

I think I know why.

The UnSub avoided areas of
skin on the wrist and throat,

areas where the veins and arteries are closest to the
surface.

Why would they do that?

They didn't want them to bleed out.

These kids were skinned alive.

Two cases of beer. Two sleeping bags.

There's a third sleeping bag upstairs.

Everything you need for a
night of teenage romance.

It's unlikely that two couples
brought a fifth wheel to take notes.

Sheriff, it's possible there was
a third girl here. A sixth victim.

I'll get my deputies to canvass
the area. See if anybody saw a girl.

You said there was another one outside?

Yeah.

He was like the others.

Coroner said from the amount of blood

he was alive when they impaled him.

I know this is going to sound strange,

but the way the victims were flayed alive,

mutilated, and now the impalement display
of this last victim...

What?

These were all war rituals of
the Native American Plains Indians.

Does that mean something to you, Sheriff?

I'll say it does.

Everything you see around us
is Apache land.

This whole basin is a sacred burial ground

and was the site of a number
of massacres as I understand.

-So, this development is on their land?
-It was their land,

but they didn't have the money
or the inclination to build on it.

So the town seized half of it.

Yeah, last year the Supreme Court ruled

that cities can use
eminent domain authority to seize

and repossess undeveloped
private land for private development.

And now the town is looking for
investors to build on the other half.

The Apache are fighting it,
of course, in court.

There been any violence until now?

Nothing like this.

You know anybody on the reservation
capable of this?

I don't know.
Reservation's federal jurisdiction.

Sounds like where we need to go.

We'll call Garcia. See what she can find.

Okay, one order of bad guys on the
Apache reservation coming right up.

Let's hear it.

Apparently, there was a militant group
there in the '70s called the IRM.

-Any of them still around?
-No,

but there's a guy on the reservation now,

who's been locked up more than
a few times for demonstrations,

resisting arrest,
mostly political protest type stuff.

Get this, his father was killed
in a shootout with federal agents

at Wounded Knee.

His name, Benjamin Blackwolf.
The son, John Blackwolf.

Thanks, Garcia.

-Blackwolf?
-John Blackwolf?

You know him?

Indian activist.

He's been in a little trouble related
to his activism,

but nothing violent. And not around here.

Should we call the reservation police
and alert them?

-I don't think that's a good idea.
-Why not?

Blackwolf is the reservation police.

Jane Bear, these are FBI agents.

-Gideon.
-Hello.

-Hello.
-Hotchner.

-How do you do?
-Hi.

-And Reid.
-Hi.

Miss Bear is the president
of the tribal council

and principal of the reservation school.

A president and a principal?
Must be a busy woman.

We're out here on our own,
Agent Gideon. We all do our part.

Is John inside?

This about the Terra Mesa killings?

They just want to talk to him.

John Blackwolf has done more to help
his tribe than anyone.

Hell, Jim, how many times have
you called him in to find lost hikers?

How many drunken campers has
he tracked down for the park service?

John is a peaceful man...

Who would not hesitate to defend
this tribe with force if attacked.

What does this have to do with Terra Mesa?

Well, a lot, if John considers

the building of the Terra Mesa development

on Apache land to be an attack.

The developers have paid a lot of
families to leave the reservation.

So many families have gone now
that we can barely fill a single class.

Forcing the Dene, the Apache nation,

to abandon their homes
and live in government controlled

internment camps.

Does anybody know
the last tribe to surrender

to the American government?

(WHISPERING) Chiricahua.

It was the Chiricahua Apache.

And does anybody know the name
of the last leader of the Apaches?

-GIRL: I know.
-(WHISPERING) Geronimo.

SAMUEL: I know.

-Geronimo.
-That's right.

He was caught by the US army five times.

But the Gahe
had given him so much strength

he escaped each time.

-Samuel.
-Yes?

Tell the men from the FBI
who the Gahe are.

The Gahe are mighty spirits
who dwell in desert caves.

Reid, is your name Samuel?

(CHILDREN GIGGLING)

Sorry.

Are the Gahe good spirits or bad spirits?

They're both.

Like men.

I'll take over for you, John.

Mr. Blackwolf, I'm Agent Gideon.
These are agents Hotchner and Reid.

You look like a college professor.

You look like his student.

You, you look like FBI.

We're with the Behavioral Analysis Unit.

-Profilers should know better.
-How's that?

We don't do massacres. You do.

-Me, personally?
-Your government.

Mr. Blackwolf, we'd like for you
to take a look at these photos

and help us figure out how
these kids were killed.

You're not asking because I'm a cop.

No, we're asking because you're
an expert on Native American culture.

I don't base my opinion
on pictures, Mr. Hotchner.

I have to walk the ground.

We should start inside.

Forensics says
the outside's been contaminated

from all the construction traffic.

Of all the Native American tribes,

the Apache were most renowned
for their tracking ability.

It was said they could track a man
or animal through any condition

by simply noticing the slightest
disturbance in the environment.

It's profiling the dirt.

I notice you don't carry a gun.

Twenty-one feet.

What?

Ask Agent Hotchner, there.
He's the real gun hand.

-Why do you say that?
-You carry two guns.

The maximum distance
an attacker with a knife

can close in the time it takes to react,

draw your side arm and fire is 21 feet.

Inside 21 feet, I win.

Outside 21, I have
other options besides shooting a man.

Like negotiating.

-Like running.
-Why do you say I carry two guns?

Your right instep print's heavier
than your left.

And since you don't appear
to have a club right foot...

You can't tell that from my footprints.

There's no perceptible difference
between them.

Your problem isn't with your prints.
It's with your perception.

GIDEON: What do you see?

There's a saying,

"Once too much blood has been spilled
on the same ground,

"that ground develops a thirst for it."

This is all consistent with
Native American warfare rituals.

But it's not Apache.

Whoever did this carried out the most
brutal practices of the Apache,

Navajo, Comanche, Pueblo, and Sioux.

No one tribe ever did them all.
Not like this.

Real Indians would know that.
This wasn't Indians.

And if you want to figure out
who did this,

it might help to know there was
a sixth person in the house.

Why do you say that?

Female. Ninety, 95 pounds.
Size six shoe. Fallen arches.

She was walking alone
when she was ambushed by two men.

We also believe there were
at least three suspects.

Three? Yeah.

Two over here
plus at least six over there.

Because while these two carried
this girl struggling to their vehicle

to the east,
at least six others ran single file

to hide their numbers, from the west.

So, you're saying that there were eight?

At least.

And one hostage.

You wanted to see how
I'd behave at the scene of the crime.

You can at least tell me how I did.

Your lack of an emotional reaction
at seeing the carnage

leads me to believe you're innocent.

A guilty man would have feigned disgust?

-Exactly.
-You know what counting coup is?

No.

The Apache knew they could
easily prove their superiority

by killing many of the enemy tribe.

But they also knew killings would start
a fierce blood feud which would result

-in the waste of lives and resources.
-Makes sense.

So the Apache proved their superiority
by counting coup,

stealthily stealing property,
usually horses,

from right under the nose of their enemy.

To the Apache, killing,
unless absolutely necessary,

was a sign of stupidity and weakness.

If this is your way of saying you're
not the killer, we already know that.

So why am I still talking to you?

Hotch.
So, if there was another girl out there,

no one's reported her missing.

None of the papers have received
any claims of responsibility

or ransom demands.

We'd like for you to stay and help
with the profile briefing.

If it'll keep the FBI
off the reservation, I'll stay.

Each torture ritual had
specific religious significance,

but only to the tribe that practiced it.

It's highly unlikely that any one tribe
would mix them all together like this.

-Meaning?
-Whoever did this obviously had

knowledge of Native American culture,

but they had absolutely no
practical understanding of it.

What we know is this pack shares
a singular vision.

Whether they share a religious faith,
racist ideology, or political manifesto

each member of this unit

has surrendered its individual identity
to the group.

It's the act of kidnapping
that reveals the nature of this pack.

From the German Red Brigade, to the
Munich Olympics, to Iraqi insurgents,

the act of kidnapping is a characteristic
of political terrorist groups.

We could be looking for
a domestic terrorist organization

like the Symbionese Liberation Army
that kidnapped Patty Hearst.

But these are Indians, right?

I seriously doubt it.

The torture and mutilation you see here
are very confused imitations

of warfare practiced by
Native American tribes.

You trying to tell us
that Indians wouldn't be so brutal?

No.

I'm saying that Indians
wouldn't be so confused.

Can we really be sure he's right?

Well, I'm fairly certain
Blackwolf wasn't in on it.

But you don't need to be Einstein
to realize these people were Indians,

or they were people
who made it look like Indians.

Why would anyone
want to frame these Indians?

Possibly to turn public opinion
against them.

Sheriff, you mentioned the Apache
were fighting the land grab in court.

Public opinion
would be a significant factor.

Is there anyone besides the developers
who might be vehemently opposed

-to the Indians getting the land back?
-The ADU.

-Who's that?
-The American Defence Union.

Founded by a local businessman
named Roy Minton.

They're like the Minutemen
who patrol the borders.

Only these guys blame everything
on the Indians.

-Who are the members?
-Minton's people are mostly white,

construction workers,
building supply vendors,

working class people that believe

Indians are standing in the way
of progress and commerce.

Whether they feel the Indians
are standing in the way of progress,

or profit or they're just genuine racists.

I think Minton and the ADU
are strong suspects.

Let's bring Minton in.

Mr. Minton, any idea
who might be behind these killings?

The Indians have
a history of violent behavior,

especially the Apaches.

Did you know
that they used to kill white settlers?

Decapitate the bodies.

Put their victim's heads on
wooden pikes outside their houses?

That was a long time ago.
You still seem pretty upset about it.

That was the other night.

My family has been dealing with
the Apache for 150 years.

You know, your rhetoric sounds
just hateful enough to justify violence.

We don't need to stoop to their level.
We're fighting the Indians in court.

Is that right? Then why all the guns, Roy?

Our records show that your
200 members carry over 450 firearms.

We're simply exercising
our constitutional right

under the second amendment.

-We have the right to defend ourselves.
-450 guns, Roy.

I don't think so.

That's not self-defence.
That's plain paranoid.

Not anymore.

If Minton's as fanatical as he pretends
to be, he wouldn't file lawsuits.

Or organize labor unions.

The Indians are keeping
Minton and the members of the ADU

from making a lot of money on
the development and construction

-of the Apache land.
-I agree.

He's using racist ideology
to cover simple greed.

Sheriff, I'd like you to put Minton
under surveillance.

-You think he's guilty?
-Not likely,

but we've just given Minton reason
to believe that some faction of the ADU

may have taken matters into their own
hands and Minton may lead us to them.

(CELL PHONE RINGING)

It's Garcia. Hey. What do you got?

I have a NCIC hit on one of the prints
from the sliding glass door.

Ingrid Greisen, 19 years old.

Family moved her two years ago from Texas

where they require fingerprints
for driver's licence applications.

She wasn't among the victims on the scene.

Okay. Nice job.

Think we might have found
our sixth victim.

How old was Ingrid
when your wife passed away?

-Fourteen.
-And then you raised her on your own?

Why didn't you report your daughter
as missing, Mr. Greisen?

I didn't know she was missing.

She has her own place.

She has her own life at school.
Her own friends.

-When was the last time you spoke?
-A couple weeks ago.

She's been going through a phase
the past couple months.

-Distancing herself.
-Has anyone threatened Ingrid?

Not that I know of.

Have you received any menacing phone calls

or seen anyone in the neighborhood?

I mean, anything that's been
unusual at all?

-No. Nothing like that.
-We have reason to believe

the people who kidnapped your
daughter may be politically motivated.

They killed those kids

and they kidnapped Ingrid
in the name of their cause.

We think the first thing,
well, the best thing,

you can do to help your daughter
is for you to go on the news.

How will that help Ingrid?

If we can personalize Ingrid to the
public, the public will take any harm

that comes to her at the hands
of the kidnappers personally.

Hurting her would hurt their cause.

-It will stop them from killing her?
-It might.

Okay.

Hey.

So?

Fathers' blame themselves
when their child is kidnapped.

As irrational as it is, it's typical.
This guy didn't do that. Why not?

Well, in these situations,

innocent parents,
they don't hide their feelings of guilt,

while guilty parents do.

-So we're thinking this guy's guilty?
-Of something.

Ingrid is my only child.

She's my whole life.

Please, return Ingrid to me.

Talk to her,
and you'll see she's a sweet child.

-She's never hurt anyone in her life.
-You have to see this.

Anything you need.

Contact me directly.

-I will try...
-What do we do?

...everything I can to help.

-We get rid of her.
-Whatever it takes.

I'm asking you, please, let her go.

We've got a caller on the line.

Has Greisen been prepped?

The caller doesn't want to speak
to Greisen.

In fact, he doesn't want Greisen
to know that he's even calling.

This is Special Agent Aaron Hotchner.

Yeah. We have Ingrid Greisen.

We'll turn ourselves
and the girl in under one condition.

I'm listening.

You don't tell Greisen about it.

What does it matter to you
what I tell Greisen?

Because he paid us to kidnap her.

-Don't move!
-Hey, don't shoot.

-Where's the girl?
-She's in the van.

Got her! Ingrid, my name is Elle.
I'm with the FBI.

Are you okay?

Just tell me what happened.

Peter Greisen hired us.

He knew about our records,
but he said he'd give us a chance.

Two weeks ago he calls us into his office.

He said he had some
off-the-clock work for us.

-What kind of work?
-He said his daughter was in trouble.

He said he wanted us to follow her,
grab her and take her to the motel.

-You didn't question his motives?
-We... Well, of course we did,

but then he gave us half the money.

And he said if we harmed her
accidental or otherwise

he'd make sure we'd pay for it.

So, he wanted you to kidnap her,
but not hurt her?

Yeah.

So we grabbed her, took her to the motel

and we called Greisen and he said
he'd come by in the morning,

-but he didn't show.
-What about the killings?

We didn't know anything about that. Huh?

We saw it on the news the next morning.

We called Mr. Greisen, he said hold tight,

he'd come around in the afternoon,
but he didn't show,

so then the next night he's on the news.

And he's talking about kidnappers and...

Look, man, we may be dumb, all right,

but we're not stupid.
I made the call right then.

You kidnapped the girl,

but then you leave just minutes before
someone else comes

-and kills those kids?
-We didn't kill them kids.

We was with her the whole time since.
You can ask her.

Well, that's quite the story.

The thing is they're telling exactly
the same one.

I believe it's the truth.

Why'd you kidnap your own daughter?

You kidnapped your daughter
and coincidently saved her life?

Right now, at the very least,

it looks like you had prior knowledge
of the killings

-and, at worst...
-I had nothing to do with the murders.

You paid Leland and Van Owen
to kidnap Ingrid.

-Why?
-I want my phone call.

If what you're saying is true, it seems
likely your daughter was somehow

-involved in these killings.
-She had nothing to do with it.

You stay the hell away from her!

I want the names of all
your daughter's friends at school.

-Boyfriends. I want her class schedule.
-Ingrid's very private.

We have five dead kids.
Tortured, mutilated, and murdered.

And all we have to go on is you
and your daughter.

Do the math.

(CELL PHONE RINGING)

It's Garcia.

I got this.

-You sure?
-Yeah. Yeah.

Okay.

Yeah. Talk to me.

Okay. Okay.

Hello, Ingrid. I'm Dr. Spencer Reid.

I'm with the FBI
and I was wondering if you could...

Greisen, Ingrid. 943239487.

Excuse me?

Greisen, Ingrid. 943239487.

Doesn't look like Minton
or the ADU are part of it.

My men have been looking at him
and his friends,

checking on alibis. Nothing.

The only thing I'm certain of
is that Peter Greisen

was trying to protect his daughter.

(CELL PHONE RINGING)

-Hotchner.
-Ingrid isn't catatonic anymore,

but she's answering every question

with only her name
and Social Security number.

Like a prisoner of war.

There's more. Garcia did some checking.

Ingrid hasn't been enrolled in school
for over a year.

She had good grades.

Just suddenly dropped out
and vacated her campus apartment.

She left no forwarding, Hotch.

We have no idea where
or how she's been living.

Thanks.

I need to see Peter Greisen's
phone records.

How long has your daughter been in a cult?

Unit four, I'm still on a code six
outside the Minton residence.

Looks like everyone's gone to bed. Over.

OFFICER ON RADIO: Ten-four, unit 81.

About a month ago you placed a call
to a psychiatrist

in Boulder named Dr. Richard Frank.

He's a deprogrammer,

and his speciality is getting kids
out of cults.

Your daughter joined a dangerous cult
and you couldn't convince her to leave.

So you had her kidnapped.

Now you're protecting her
because you think

Ingrid and her cult killed those kids
and you're probably right.

There's been another killing.

A family of five was slaughtered
in exactly the same way

as the Terra Mesa killings.

And among the dead are three girls.
Ages five, eight, and eleven.

Legally, this could go a long way

in distancing your daughter
from the others.

If Ingrid had a change of heart

a case could be made for brainwashing
or even temporary insanity.

Mr. Greisen, we need you to tell us
what you know about Ingrid's situation.

It's all my fault.

Ever since her mother died,
I've done everything I could for her,

but somehow I left her
vulnerable to these people.

Given the wrong circumstances,
this could happen to anyone's child.

Tell us what happened.

Ingrid was in her first semester.

She started acting strange.

She hardly visited anymore.
But when she did, she was different.

-How? How was she different?
-The way she spoke.

She kept repeating these words,
this jargon.

I didn't know where she was getting it.

Then she just disappeared.

Cults commonly have their own language.

They invent or redefine certain words
only the cult members understand.

MORGAN: It's a way of isolating
the members from outsiders.

It is a very powerful form
of thought control.

If you could help us identify
some of the key words,

perhaps we could get Ingrid talking.

She said I was a "trespasser."

-That I had no right to be here.
-In New Mexico?

In the desert. She said "Grandfather"

taught her the ways of...
What was the word?

-Gahee. Ganjees. Something.
-The Gahe?

Yes.

-That's right.
-Thank you.

We're looking for the cult leader.

Typically men between the age 25 and 35

with a high level of intelligence.

A sociopathic underachiever with
an extremely abusive childhood.

And obviously someone with an interest in,

and an affinity for Apache culture
and rituals.

Look for males with criminal records
for lesser type crimes.

Drug possession, petty theft.

What about school records?

The victims from the first crime scene
went to Terra Mesa University?

-Maybe the leader was there, too.
-That's great.

Look for students who studied
Native American cultures extensively.

We need to do it all.

With this second strike
it could be a spree.

-Sorry about your man, Jim.
-I appreciate that.

That her?

She won't give us anything,
but her name and her Social.

Thanks.

Okay. They're ready. Everybody out.

Come with me.

My friend wants to show you something.

-Ingrid, my name is John Blackwolf.
-I know who you are.

You are the son of Benjamin Blackwolf
of the Chiricahua Apache.

Come with me.

What do think happened here, Ingrid?

(WOMAN SCREAMING)

I think three little trespassers
met the vengeful blade of the tribe.

-What tribe would that be?
-There are only two people.

The Apache,
and those who trespass against us.

-You're not Apache, Ingrid.
-No. You are not Apache.

Not anymore. Grandfather tested me.

He sent me to the desert mountains
to be blessed by the Gahe.

The Gahe have brought
Grandfather back to us,

build his new tribe to reclaim
the sacred land for the Apache.

Where is Grandfather?

Did Grandfather ever tell you
where the name "Apache" comes from?

It comes from the Zuni word "apachu,"
it means enemy.

And if Grandfather knew
the first thing about the real Apache

he would have taught you to refer to us
as the "dene." It means, "the people."

Grandfather said that you
and all the living Apache

are like the Jews of old,
lost and wandering the desert

in search of their Messiah.

-And he has come...
-The dene don't believe in a Messiah.

-You were lied to, Ingrid.
-The Gahe...

Don't use a word you don't understand.

The Gahe are not magic fairies.

They are not gods as you understand them.

This is not the blood of an enemy!

This is the blood of a little girl
just like you are.

You've been fed bits and pieces
of a culture you don't understand.

-You don't know.
-What we do know

is that you've been manipulated

and exploited
by a very disturbed individual.

You are a liar!

You have disavowed your ancestors.

Only those who dwell in
the dead lands deserve to live!

The dead lands are on
the southern edge of the western tract.

You said cults like this
seek out remote places, yes?

They like to isolate their followers

and give them the freedom to create
their own society.

-Okay, got it.
-Well, it doesn't get any more

remote than the dead lands.

-How big an area is this place?
-About a hundred square miles.

-We need to narrow it down.
-We might just have our cult leader.

This guy named Jackson Cally.

He was expelled from TMU
six months before the others.

-What for?
-Drug possession. Peyote.

Terra Mesa,
the last in a string of colleges.

He studied religion
and Native American culture

in every school and he was in
a seminar on Native American culture

with Ingrid Greisen.

That's how they know so much about me.

I've been a guest lecturer in that
seminar for the past four years.

If Cally's our cult leader
we need more information on him.

Have Garcia pull every shred of
Cally's life out of the system.

-She's already pulling.
-Do we know he's still in the area?

He was arrested for trespassing
on a bunch of motel properties.

Breaking into unoccupied rooms,

but his last known address turned up cold.

Most cults don't have any
legitimate means of paying rent.

They tend to seek out abandoned
previously standing structures.

-Like Manson's Spahn ranch.
-Yeah.

There's an abandoned motel off route 29

-right in the middle of the dead lands.
-Let's go.

I'll stay with Reid.
We'll pull as much as we can on Cally.

FBI! Don't move!

Put your hands out to the side
and turn around very slowly.

Jackson Cally?

Grandfather?

There's no one else here, Hotch.

Where are the others?

Hunting.

Jackson Gordon Cally, 32 years old.

Spent most of his childhood moving
from foster home to foster home.

Hang on a second.
I'm going to put you on speaker.

Go ahead, Reid.

Simply another sad,
but unremarkable statistic

aside from the fact that
he had an IQ of 189.

-Any criminal record?
-At 18 he spent 22 months

in prison for auto theft.

I just spoke to the warden at the prison.

Said when he was there he found religion

and began preaching to his fellow inmates.

And that he once convinced
a mass murderer he was doing time

with to beat to death

an inmate that was threatening Cally.

GIDEON: Ever since he was a child,
this guy just survived on cunning,

-force of personality.
-He spent 22 months in the clink.

Was released and then bounced
from university to university

studying, you guessed it,
Native American cultures.

Okay, thanks.

What's his connection to the Apache?

Aside from taking your class?
Nothing that they could find.

With sociopaths like Cally,
there is no connection.

If it hadn't been Apache
he would've found some other culture

to attract and manipulate his followers.

Like Manson, Cally's been forced to
become an expert profiler of sorts.

He reads the people around him.

He finds a way in, and then he
brainwashes them to serve his needs.

And the only way to figure out
his game is to play it.

I'm going to give him exactly
what he wants.

-What's that?
-An audience.

Mr. Cally, I'm Special Agent
Aaron Hotchner with the FBI.

You know, I've spent my whole life
talking to cops and doctors.

There's something different about you.
You're not just a cop. Are you?

You're very perceptive.

So what are you?

I'm a profiler.

So am I.

Your colleagues respect you a great deal.

Looking at you to find all the answers.

Leadership is a grave responsibility.

Well, they don't call me Grandfather.

Well, in my tribe, Grandfather is simply
another word for "teacher."

Did you teach your tribe to murder?

No, I don't teach murder. I teach love.

Love of land. Love of ancestors.
Love of the tribe.

These trespassers poison the land.

The Apache will soon remember who they are

and they will hunt these trespassers
off their land

until no one but the Apache remain.

You think you speak for the Apache,

but you're nothing,
but a coward and a killer.

I haven't killed anyone.

Do you think that your little tribe
is going to wage a war

-with all the white people in this state?
-Pretty soon, we won't have to.

-Why's that?
-What's going to happen

when the angry white men come to the doors

of your children blaming you
for the killing of their people?

What are you going to do? Call the cops?

No. You're going to string them up.

You're going to put their heads
on poles and rape their women

just like the savage animal
you really are.

Like the savage animal your father was
before they shot him down.

No, Blackwolf.

-Enough! Enough.
-I got it.

Let me in with him, alone.
I'll get him talking.

You've done more
than we could have hoped for.

You guys take Cally down
to the Sheriff's Office.

You tell that man he's welcome
on my reservation any time.

I'll give you a ride back.

Blackwolf got Cally to reveal
his true nature. He's a racist.

None of this was
for the sake of the Apache.

Never was. It was always about Cally.
It was about power and manipulation.

Charles Manson claimed that
he ordered his followers to kill whites

in order to initiate a race war.

Something he referred to as
Helter Skelter.

And he believed in the aftermath of
Helter Skelter,

the blacks, who he deemed inferior,
would need a white man to lead them.

There is a large cache of guns missing
from Minton's house.

Why? Why would Cally suddenly need guns?

His whole MO was to fight a war using
the Native American methods.

Maybe he isn't trying to fight a war.
Maybe he's trying to start one.

The first attack was designed
to look like Indians.

In an attempt to manipulate the ADU
to retaliate against the reservation.

But they didn't. How could they?
We had them put under surveillance.

So Cally tried to provoke them further,
by killing the head of the ADU,

-Minton and his family.
-Right, but that didn't work either.

So now he wants to attack the other side.

He's trying to provoke the Indians by
staging an ADU attack against them.

Call Blackwolf.
We need to get to the reservation.

BLACKWOLF: The school's
our most vulnerable target.

HOTCH: Cally likes killing kids.

In '61 Cochise
led his followers to fight...

-Put that away.
-What?

You don't need it.

Use your baton.

There are many paths to the same place.

Trust me.

Just so you know,
you sound like a fortune cookie.

Split up. Find them.

JANE: Hold still. Be quiet.

(COUGHING)

Hey.

Psst.

Big mistake.

Stay down. I don't want to hurt you.

Get down!

-Don't move.
-Don't shoot. I give up.

You okay?

You just had to shoot somebody,
didn't you?

-The children?
-They're fine.

We got them out before they got here.
We took down these four.

Without firing a shot?

Captain America here shot number five.

You're welcome.

Number six is cut up pretty bad.
I don't think he's going to make it.

-At least I didn't shoot him.
-I think I'd rather be shot.

There's an old Apache saying,

"You can take many paths
to get to the same place."

-Be with you in a second.
-Thanks.

What's this?

Paul Norse.
He's in the New York field office.

You ever need anything, give him a call.

He'll take care of you.

This your way of saying
I can't take care of myself?

No, it's my way of saying I'm a jackass.

You know it must be hereditary.

Sean, it's really important
that you do this your way.

You know what you feel is every bit
as important as what you think.

Dad knew that. I forgot.
You reminded me and thanks.

This is a pretty messed up
going away present. You know that?

A brother worries.

-You need to get out of the office more.
-Tell me about it.

-So, I'm starved. How's the food?
-It's pretty good.

-Let me fix you something special.
-I'm in your hands.

-Want a beer?
-Sure. Thanks.