Criminal Minds (2005–…): Season 5, Episode 20 - ...A Thousand Words - full transcript

The BAU team must profile a serial killer covered in tattoos who commits suicide, but leaves clues to the whereabouts of his last victim.

911. What's your emergency?

Ma'am, you need to calm down.

Yes, sir, we have units on the way.

Please stay on the line with me

and give me your full name.

Stand by, Charlie 2-5,

I still have the complainant on the line.

911. What's your emergency?

Ma'am, the police are knocking
on the door, right now.

911. What is your emergency?

Yes, that is a real police officer outside.



911. What's your emergency?

Ma'am, you need to calm down and stop yelling.

Yes, sir, we have a unit on the way.

Please stay on the line and
please give me your full name.

911. What's your emergency?

There's a dead body in the warehouse.

Excuse me, sir?

There's a dead body in the
warehouse, in Crawfordville.

Can you be more specific about
the location of that warehouse?

West of Crawfordville Highway, South of Woodland.

A dirt road.

Do you have an address?

No.

Charlie 44, roll to location
of possible dead body.



Is someone on the way?

Yes, but I need you to stay
on the line with me, sir.

Are you sure the victim is dead, sir?

He will be in a second.

Excuse me?

Sir? Sir!

Charlie 44, we have shots fired, now.

I repeat, shots fired. I'm not
sure what's going on in there,

but I no longer have contact
with the complainant.

Advise and use extreme caution.

This is Charlie 44. We're on scene.

It's quiet out front.

We're moving in.

10-4. Use caution. EMS is on the way, too.

Eyes open, Ray.

State Police!

State Police! Open the door!

Police!

You, in the chair!

Stand up and let me see your hands.

Last chance, man! Stand up!

Lord have mercy.

Do not blow dinner, Ray.

I'm OK.

I mean it. You need to outside, you go.

I said I'm fine.

This is Charlie 44. You can cancel

that EMS out here, Dispatch.

Are you sure, 44?

Oh, yeah, I'm sure.

This looks to be a successful suicide.

10-4.

What the hell...

Got a light.

Oh, man, take a look at this, Tommy.

These women all dead?

It doesn't say this one's ever been found.

I recognize that name.

She only went missing 3 weeks ago.

This is 44 again.

Uh, we're gonna need bosses, detectives,

crime scene out here, on the double.

Ah, hell, just...

send everybody.

Tell me what the dress is about.

Hey, have a good weekend, JJ.

Sorry.

There goes my beach house rental.

And my non-refundable Sin to Win weekend

in Atlantic City.

Sin to Win?

Yeah.

And I always win big.

I didn't have any plans.

Hey, uh, these were just faxed to me.

I talked to a Tallahassee Detective,
who's been working a missing coed...

Rebecca Daniels... she went missing while jogging

near the FSU campus, 3 weeks ago.

Who's this?

Florida State Police responded

to an apparent suicide, an hour and a half ago.

Middle-aged male. Those are
photos of him postmortem.

What's with the tattoos?

Yeah, he's covered in them, almost completely.

That's why they requested our presence.

The tattoos are portraits of
previously missing women,

with the years of death, or the years
the remains were recovered, anyway.

The tattoos correlate to faces
on a wall, next to the body,

with information on the
women, going back 10 years.

Rebecca is also shown on that wall,

but there's no image of her on the body.

The Detective thinks that that may
mean that she's alive, somewhere.

He called in his own suicide, didn't he?

Yeah. How did you...

He staged all this.

No reason to put on a show without an audience.

Tell them to leave the body where it is.

We need to see it exactly how he wanted it seen.

If this girl's still out there,

the only one who knows where she is may be dead.

"A sincere artist tries to create something

which is, in itself, a living thing."

Painter William Dobell.

Oh, this heat is brutal.

You know, it isn't so much the
heat as it is the humidity.

At some point it, doesn't
matter how you look at it.

It all sucks.

- FBI?
- Yes, sir.

Hi, John Barton, Tallahassee PD.

I'm the primary on the missing
girl, Rebecca Daniels.

I got my files in the car, if you need them.

I'm Agent Hotchner. This is
Agent Rossi, Agent Prentiss,

Dr. Reid, Agent Morgan, Agent Jareau.

Yeah, we spoke on the phone.

Yeah, hey, thanks a lot for coming out

so quickly. I appreciate that.

I've also confirmed that all the women

are victims from around the southeast...

Florida, Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama.

And Rebecca's the only woman on the wall

who's not represented on his body?

Yeah, she's the only one.

Hope you have a strong stomach.

The chair was turned like that?

This is exactly the way you found him?

Yeah.

Talk about staging.

Talk about ego.

There's also a couple boxes with journals

or composition books. They're
filled with writing.

We haven't been through them yet,

other than to dust them for prints.

Have you identified him?

We're working on it.

Uh, we got a rush on the DNA and the prints.

He's cleared locally,

but it's gonna take some time
to get the national records.

What about property records?

I talked to the owner.

She said she rented it, a couple weeks ago,

to a quiet, normal-looking
guy, named Bob.

He said he wanted to store some equipment

and he paid in cash.

They're always normal.

No lease?

Uh, month to month, no. Out here in the boonies,

you don't get a lot of, uh, record-keeping types.

Especially when it comes to
cash transactions, I bet.

He's no kid, yet the missings go back

only 10 years?

As far as I could tell.

Late bloomer.

You see this a lot, uh,

These guys killing themselves?

Most serial killers, who commit suicide,

do it in prison, after they're caught.

JJ, gather as much information

about the prior victims as you can.

Morgan and Prentiss, take the journals.

Dave, you and Reid, the tattoos.

See if he left any clues

about where Miss Daniels might be.

You think there's a chance

she might still be alive?

It's probably better not to speculate.

May I take a look at the case files
you have on Miss Daniels, please?

Yeah, yeah, no problem.

He was on the phone with Dispatch and then, boom.

Must be what, 15 feet?

Consummate overachiever.

Oh. Right.

Right.

Why is it, when men kill themselves,

it gets everywhere, but women don't leave a mess,

like they were never there?

Women worry about who has to clean up.

Men don't give a damn.

JJ, what have you found?

The earliest clipping is from 10 years ago,

and they're in order, oldest to newest.

Brenda Carlyle first, Rebecca Daniels last.

That was thoughtful of him.

One victim a year, for 10 years straight.

Each girl's remains were recovered

in a well-traveled, wooded area.

Strangled, repeatedly sexually assaulted,

and then, about a week later,

another woman goes missing.

Did the new abductions happen

before the previous body's been found?

No, never.

So he has a year-long cycle.

He uses them up and he gets a newer model.

But he won't take another girl

until the last body's been found.

He's telling a story and he can't start a new one

until the old one's over.

Look at that. At the turn of the 16th century,

rose tattoos were put on men
who were sentenced to death.

Really?

Yeah. If they escaped, it
served to identify them.

But now, roses pretty much symbolize pure love.

Pure love. Right before he kills them.

Hey, have you read, "The Illustrated Man"?

Nope.

Oh, it's amazing.

It's a collection of short stories

by Ray bradbury, based on the metafictive device

of a man who's covered in tattoos,
drawn by a woman from the future.

Uh-huh.

At nighttime, the tattoos come to life

and tell a story. It's pretty awesome.

These do tell a story.

Oh, you want to see something?

Huh. A space in the tree.

And there's no date on that one.

Why would he leave that space blank?

Maybe this guy's just a psycho.

If it were that simple, we'd all be out of a job.

Hey, Reid.

What's up?

Our man here was a prolific journaler.

With teeny tiny handwriting.

He probably had counseling at some point,

when journaling was part of his therapy.

That's what we were thinking.

And?

And, uh,

well, you know, the two of us,

it would take us like, 3 days

to read all of this stuff.

You guys owe me.

It's no wonder no one ever connected these cases.

They're from different states,

different jurisdictions.

It's probably no accident.

He knows the system.

Why kill himself now?

He wasn't on anyone's radar.

Something changed.

Let's gather everyone.

So what do we know so far?

He wanted the police here.

He wanted us to see all this.

And he was definitely a sadist. From what we saw,

his journals were graphic and meticulous.

Covering himself with his victims' likeness

is methodical, possessive.

He'll always own them.

And the suicide shows commitment.

He's organized and compulsive.

The crimes are on an annual cycle.

Computer printouts on the board,

they were all printed on the same day...

2 weeks ago.

That's when he rented this building.

And proceeded to move everything into it.

It's a history of his crimes.

So he did all of this in 2 weeks.

He got away with it for 10 years.

He could have kept going.

But he decides to end it all

and hand everything to us.

That's it... everything.

- Everything!
- Reid?

Everything. His body, the tattoos, the clippings,

the printout, the journals. He
moved it all into one room.

He wanted us to see all of it. See all of him...

his work... the women, he put
them in chronological order.

He's screaming, "look at me."

We all got that.

No, but think about it.

If you take a step back, it sort of makes sense.

It's just a confession.

A giant, flashy confession.

What would we say if an unsub
turned himself in to the police

before they were even onto him?

That he was trying to hide something.

Or someone.

He made a mistake... in his third book.

I almost missed it, but then I caught it.

"I thought it would take longer,

but today was the lucky day.

She almost walked right by,

almost missed her completely,

but at the last moment,

we found our latest guest."

"We."

He has a partner.

He put everything in this room

so we wouldn't look further,

wouldn't dig even deeper.

If he has a partner, he's still out there,

and he's got Rebecca Daniels.

Oh, I'm sorry. I'm so sorry.

I was calling out,

but I guess your music was too loud.

Are you all right?

I'm fine. It's all right.

Juliet Monroe?

For you. That's me.

If I can get you to sign here.

Thank you very much. Sorry about that.

Have a great day, now. It's fine.

Ma'am. You, too.

My dearest love,

by the time you read this,

I will have gone.

Our life together has brought me more joy

than a man like me thought he could ever know.

My first wish would be to take you with me,

but since you are in our home readying yourself

with the next chapter of our life...

To care for and raise our beautiful child...

my last hope is that you finish what we started.

Please...

Please...

just let me go home.

This is your fault.

This is your fault.

Please...

We just really appreciate...

What's she doing down there?

She's trying to keep the media
from running the story right now.

But wouldn't that help us get it out there,

put some pressure on the partner?

But if the partner didn't know about the suicide,

he might dispose of Miss Daniels and disappear.

If anyone can stop the media
from running something, it's JJ.

So let's profile the partner.

We know that the unsub was
a dominant personality,

an alpha. Can any of you guys think of a case

where a dominant unsub committed suicide

to protect a submissive partner?

No.

So the partner must be an equal in some way,

or, at least, not a competitor,

not somebody that he needed
to feel dominance over.

Maybe it was someone he cared about?

It would be hard for a sadistic
psychopath to care about anybody.

Which would make the partner all
that much more important to him.

What about the tattoo artist?

He couldn't have done those by himself.

Maybe that's the role for the partner.

It would certainly make him important.

What the hell does any of
this have to do with Becky?

I mean, isn't there something
we should be doing, damn it?

Detective, may I speak with you for a moment?

So, we have until the evening news... 6 PM.

How much do they know?

Oh, the troopers told them everything.

Agent Rossi, please tell me you called

because the case is over

and I can erase this freakity-freak

off my otherwise uber-delicious desktops.

Long way to go, kid.

I am into epidermartistry as
much as the next Gen Xer,

but this guy... eesh, I'm just glad

he's not breathing the same air
as you, my fine furry friends.

Agreed. What have you found out
about tattoo artists down here?

That the state of Florida

requires licensing for all skin illustrators,

but... and I am not going to
elaborate on how I know this...

not everyone in the body art lifestyle
goes through official channels.

All right, we'll start with the legit ones

and see if anyone recognizes the work.

I shall send the list to your PDA.

Thanks.

Epidermartistry?

... What is happening. She will get...

Only a girl can fill that empty energy.

Starting to get angry.

I approach your door...

Look, I'm sorry I popped off.

I'm just a little worked up.

I've been over the Rebecca
Daniels case file, your reports.

Do you know her?

What?

Is there a personal relationship?

What the hell is that supposed to mean?

You've referred to her twice as Becky.

I did?

And nowhere else is she referred to that way.

It's always Rebecca.

Now, if there's something that's
gonna cloud your judgment,

I need to know about it.

No. I don't know her.

Then what is it?

Look, I've...

I've been doing this a long time, and...

it usually just washes right over me, you know,

People killing people, depravity, you know?

As long as you make it home at night, right?

But this one...

Her parents...

They're just such good, decent people.

She seems like an amazing girl, and...

it's all just...

sometimes, it's just too much.

You take it personal.

Stupid, right?

Caring about a victim, personalizing them,

can only be stupid if it's reckless.

Don't worry about me.

I'm good.

All right. Let's go and try to bring her home.

Whew. It's like 110 out here

and it feels like a refrigerator,

compared to their warehouse.

How's Reid doing?

It doesn't even seem to faze him.

He's just sitting there, in
the corner, turning pages.

Yeah, Reid goes to another place when he reads.

I've got the addresses of
the major tattoo parlors

in Tallahassee.

That work is pretty detailed.

Someone might recognize it.

You want to go check these out with me?

Sounds fun.

Hey, so, uh, I got a few
more hours out of the media.

Well, we'll take what we can get.

Prentiss and Rossi are going to
check out some tattoo parlors.

Is he OK?

Yeah.

Did you ask him about calling her Becky?

He'll be all right.

Well, I hope so.

Because we still have no indication

that this girl's even alive.

I wasn't able

to tie up all the loose ends.

You would have known what was happening.

So now it's left for you.

Wait for night and take it to the water.

The animals will do the rest.

This guy killed all those women?

Looks like it.

And there's another one missing.

Then he killed himself?

Yeah, he did.

Good. Sort of a public service.

Hmm. I guess that's a good way of looking at it.

We sent it to the ME's office in Tallahassee.

You sign it?

I'll take care of that, later, thanks.

Thanks a lot.

You sure it's OK to move the body?

Well, there's no reason not to anymore.

We've seen this guy's show.

You ever seen anything like this before?

Like what?

Everything. The, uh, suicide,

the clippings, the journal.

I think it's pretty safe to say

that no one's ever seen anything like this.

Man, this is beautiful work.

It's a body suit?

He's completely covered?

Pretty much.

Yeah. "The Illustrated Man."

Second time I've heard that today.

The book?

Reid mentioned it.

Everybody in the body art world knows that story.

You said this dude killed himself?

Did he, like, gash his wrists open or something?

The tattoos... could you recognize who did this?

I wish. I'd hire this dude in a heartbeat.

This looks free-hand.

Trust me, free-hand portraiture is pretty gnarly

to do on skin, man.

Did he shoot himself?

Because none of these pictures have a head.

Can you tell if the same artist did these?

It looks like it.

But they weren't all done at the same time.

Some of the inks are newer.

You know, if I saw the body, I'd
probably be able to tell you more.

Uh-huh. How about these?

These are a lot of portraits.

What do they mean?

That's what we're trying to figure out.

Wait.

That doesn't fit.

What doesn't?

There's something under the rose there.

Looks like... a cross?

A big one.

Where?

Inside the rose.

And the work is sloppy.

See that? They put the rose
over it to cover it up.

Yeah, I see that.

Yeah, that wasn't done professionally.

More like it was done in jail.

If he did time,

that would explain how a 50-year-old unsub

doesn't start killing until he's 40.

This dude's a killer?

And why rapists become killers
after they've been in prison.

They learn not to leave a witness.

Garcia can track this through the
biometric recognition program.

So, there's, like, no chance of
me seeing the dead dude, right?

None.

Hey, PG, I'm gonna send you a photograph

of a tattoo.

You know, that empty space

on his back makes him exactly
like, "The Illustrated Man."

I thought he was covered completely.

In the book.

In the movie, there's an open spot

on his back, so you can see the future.

Rossi and Prentiss think he may have done time

and that one of the tattoos
may have been done in prison.

That's a good bet. I've got
Garcia running everything

through the biometrics database.

Biometrics?

Yeah, it catalogues all the
prison inmates and their tattoos.

They have detailed photos of
every one on every inmate.

What happened?

Shut up.

Please, sit down.

You can tell me.

We can sit down and...

we could talk about this. We could...

Wait! Please...

Can we please talk?

My dad has to be so worried about me.

Don't you have a father?

I don't have anyone anymore.

Please... just let me go

before he comes back.

He's not coming back.

What?

Wait.

You can let me go.

What?

It's just...

I won't tell anyone what happened.

I promise, I won't tell anyone.

You won't tell anyone?

I...

I know you're afraid of him, too.

Aah!

Aah!

You're not going to tell anyone

because you're never leaving this room alive.

I'm sorry.

I'm so sorry...

I was never afraid of him.

I loved him.

I would do anything, I did anything for him.

He was my masterpiece.

Uh...

Oh, no.

You're bleeding!

She will pay with her life.

But she will have to beg for her life to end.

I'll be able to fill in the last space

in my art collection.

The last space... she will beg to die...

Last space... last space...

Oh, no, no, that's not right.

Hey, guys, it isn't the only blank space.

What do you mean?

The spot on his chest where we assumed

- Rebecca's portrait would go...
- Yeah?

In the journal he talks about
filling in the last space,

how once he does that the
artwork will be complete.

- And?
- It isn't the only blank space.

In his back, in the middle of that tree

Is a giant open spot. Why would he
talk about completing the artwork

when he hasn't?

I need to see the body again.

I'll go with you.

I'll call the ME and let him know

- you're on your way.
- Garcia?

I ran the covered tattoo through
the morpho tracking system.

Tell me you got something, babe.

Emily, don't get ahead of my dramatic telling.

I analyzed color, design, and texture.

There's a 95% chance it is from
one of 4 major institutions

in the northeastern prison system.

The string of missings began unbroken from 2000,

so I went back from that year,

found 53 similar tattoos on forearms.

Of those 53, 10 were released

prior to 2000. Thank you and good night.

You are amazing.

Of the 10, any convicted rapists?

4.

Do any of them trace back

to Tallahassee?

None.

So, ultimately, I have nada.

Bob.

Oh, the guy, his name, the
guy who rented the property,

just Bob.

OK, OK.

I have a Robert Matthew Burke,

convicted in 1991, 8 years for rape,

released October of '99.

And the missings began in 2000.

Garcia, remind me never to try to hide from you.

Perish the thought, mon ami.

Hotch, we got the name.

The unsub's name is Robert Matthew Burke.

Burke?

You know him?

Burke. Yeah.

I know the name.

Damn it!

He's a registered sex offender.

He's an ex-con out of Virginia.

He got a traffic ticket near FSU
the night Rebecca disappeared.

He's one of my suspects.

I... I went to his apartment,
I don't know, a couple times

in the past 3 weeks to try to interview him,

but I could never catch up with him.

Did he know you were looking for him?

Well, yeah, I talked to him on the phone.

He's scheduled to come down for an
interview and a DNA swab, on Monday.

That's what changed.

He knew it was only a matter of
time before you caught up to him.

And he wasn't about to go back to prison.

- Do you have his address?
- Yeah.

Oh, my God! Oh, my God!

Something's wrong. Something's wrong.

Unchain me.

Ohh...

Unchain me and I will help you.

I am not stupid.

Your baby needs help.

Wait! You can't...

the collar.

You help me and I'll let you go.

OK.

Ohh!

OK. OK.

FBI!

Damn it.

If these tattoos are a fetish,

what enjoyment does he get
out of the ones on his back?

He can't even see them.

You know what? There's something here.

I can feel the raised ink.

Do you have a black light scanner?

Thanks.

Right there. Feel that.

Yeah, what is that?

Thanks.

I've read about this. Tattoos
put on with invisible ink

so that no one can see them.

Oh, man.

Can you, uh, turn the lights down? Thanks.

Whoa.

Look, there's one over here, too.

They're all connected to the faces.

They lead to the blank spot.

Ow, wow. What is that?

It's an embryo in a womb.

The partner's a woman, and they're having a baby.

Oh, my God!

There's more blood. I don't know what I'm doing.

It... it won't stop. It won't stop.

I don't know what to do!

It won't stop. I don't...

Help me.

Do we know if she had the baby yet?

The tattoos have dates, the embryo doesn't.

Dating is prominent in the
tattoos and the journals

and they're calendrical in their abductions.

It's hard to believe their baby's birthdate

wouldn't be exceedingly important to them.

Then she's probably still pregnant.

Well, he didn't live here with a pregnant woman.

This is a males-only SRO.

No, she has to have a house, anyway.

How do you know that?

They kept these women for a year each.

It wasn't in a one-room apartment.

Everyone get back here. We need to update
the profile and narrow the search.

Push. Push.

Push! Push!

It's almost...

It's almost there. Just keep pushing.

I see the head! I can't.

One more time, that's it!

Aah!

Ohh...

Hi.

Please...

Tell me it's a girl.

What?

It can't be a boy.

Please.

It...

you have a son.

It can't be a boy.

Ohh...

It can't be a boy.

Get it away from me.

You need to take him. I don't want it.

He'll hurt me like they all do.

I felt for sure I was having a girl.

No, no, no!

You gotta get me out of here.

You have to get me out of here!

Help us!

Help us!

I know.

I know. I know, sweetheart.

It's OK.

The partner being pregnant can help us.

We should have Garcia try and find her

through doctor visits or medical records.

He basically lived off the grid,

which means she did, too.

Judging by the photographs of
what they did to the victims,

it's safe to say they live in isolation.

We've seen his hatred for women,
and yet he teams up with her.

What kind of woman could change him?

You think they met in prison?

Garcia already went through all of that.

He had no female visitors.

What about prison staff,
doctors, religious volunteers?

We went through a long list of all the vendors

who were there during his incarceration.

None of them resurfaced in Tallahassee.

What kind of a woman would go to a prison

to fall in love with a rapist?

Someone vulnerable, emotionally
fragile, drawn to violent men.

Someone in her life made her that way.
Classic abuse cycle.

What if that's who she was there to visit?

It's worth a try.

My sweet.

Hey, you know the visitor logs

from the prison we looked at?

Uh-huh. Still have them at the ready.

OK, great. I need you to check dates for me.

Were there any women who visited
another inmate while Burke was there

but then suddenly stopped
visiting when Burke was released?

Huh. OK, let me hit you back.

It's OK. It's OK.

I can't help you...

Uhh! Uhh! Uhh! Uhh!

It's OK...

Rev your engines, guys.

Juliet Monroe went to visit her father in prison,

once or twice a year, from '92 to '95.

What was he in for?

Rape. And she was his primary victim.

He raped her and she still
went to visit him every year?

She's repeating the cycle she grew up with.

Yeah. She went from visiting
him, once or twice a year,

to once a month, from '95 to '97.

When Burke was serving his time for rape.

And then she increased her visits to once a week,

all through '98 and '99, until
they stopped completely

in October of that year.

That's when he was released.

And if you want me to slip you some convincers,

she owns a house in northern Florida.

Garcia, get us the address.

Rossi and I will take the front. Take the side.

Go.

In here!

Please help. In here!

In here.

The baby. The baby.

She's... she's... she's...

She's dead. She's dead.

All right, give me the baby.

Give me the baby. I got him.

You're gonna be all right.

Help me.

You're safe, you're safe, you're safe.

Becky, are you OK?

I just want to go home.

I just want to go home.

Yeah, you're going home, honey.

You're going home. It's OK.

So I talked to your parents,

and they're gonna meet you at the hospital, OK?

Is the baby OK?

Oh, yeah, he's... he's in another ambulance.

What's gonna happen to him?

Hey, don't you worry. We're gonna
take real good care of him, OK?

Ma'am, we should get going.

Take care.

It'll be OK.

Is she gonna be OK?

I wouldn't bet against anybody
who survived what she did.

How about you?

Oh, yeah, you know, nothing's gonna affect me.

You know, we wouldn't be here if you
hadn't worked the case as hard as you did.

How's that?

It would have been an easy thing

to miss a routine traffic ticket

in the area she disappeared.

You kept the pressure on.

You cleared 9 homicides and
you brought Becky home.

It's impressive work, Detective.

Thanks.

3 cards, please.

3 cards for the lady.

And I'm gonna take one card.

Ooh. One card.

A straight or a flush, Dr. Reid,
what are you trying to fill in?

Well, considering the odds of filling
in an open-ended straight with one card

are 5-to-1 against, while a one-card flush draw

is more like 4.5-to-1,

I guess you'd say if I was smart,

I'm drawing to a flush.

Hmm.

I think I'm gonna go all in on this.

So, are you?

Am I drawing to a flush, or am I smart?

Either.

Well, I'm... I'm provably a genius,

But, uh, actually,

I was drawing to a full house.

8s over 6s.

Ohh...

I always forget you're from Vegas.

Yup.

Ooh, I'm sorry, not so fast.

I, too, have a boat.

Jacks over 3s.

You drew 3 cards to a full house?

That's like 100-to-1 against.

97-to-1.

Looks like you're out.

Hey, Prentiss.

Sin to Win.

I'm sorry, what?

Come on, now, I gotta know.

What the hell is a Sin to Win
weekend in Atlantic City?

Derek, I have a tremendous
amount of respect for you,

but there are some questions,
that if you have to ask them,

it means you probably couldn't handle the answer.

There is a whole other side to that woman.

I never lose.

A whole other side.

I know environment plays a
bigger role than genetics,

when it comes to determining a child's future,

but that baby, I mean, both the parents.

How many other serial killers had kids?

A lot. Manson has like 10 or 11 children.

Albert fish had 6.

Gary Ridgeway had a son.

Fred and Rosemary West

had 7 children living in the home

where they killed 10 women.

Including one of the children.

OK, so, the baby's gonna be OK?

Most likely. If he grows up in a good home.

Loved, cared for.

Good.

Gandhi said,

"I have seen children
successfully surmount the effects

of an evil inheritance.

That is due to purity being an
inherent attribute of the soul."