East West 101 (2007–2011): Season 3, Episode 2 - Heart of Darkness - full transcript

A Somali teenager is found viciously bashed to death in a lonely railway tunnel. The investigation leads Koa and Malik to a Somali man who is rumored to be recruiting Somalis to return to Africa to fight for Al-Shabaab. Meanwhile, Internal Affairs investigates the shooting of Mahmoud, an accessory in the armed robbery, which causes conflict between Malik and Travis.

Stop! Police!

What a shitstorm, eh?

According to my source,

Ashiq Fakrhi was a
high-ranking officer

within the special forces unit
of the Iraqi Republican Guard.

Corporal Sally
Wilson is a soldier

with an impeccable
military record.

Is she? Well, Sally is
married to Ashiq Khalid.

He was gunned down in the street

pulling a $36 million robbery
where four people were killed.

We think the car that hit Amina
was involved in the robbery.



We tracked the car
down to a smash repairs

owned by Jason Rizk.

Rizk denies all knowledge
of the car and how it got there.

But he spoke with
this man this morning...

Mohammed Mahmoud.

He was driving the
car that killed my son.

You killed my son!
You killed my son!

Talk to me! Who
are you working for?!

What'd you do that
for?! I had control!

Are you kidding? I
just saved your life.

We got nothing!

What have we got?

Victim's name's
Hassan Dahir Galaid.

He's a Somali national.



He's got a deep trauma
wound to the back of the head,

and he's got severe bruising
to his arms and his face.

Still had his wallet
in his back pocket.

He's got a student I.D.
for Broadway TAFE,

a weekly travel pass, and $35.

The killer wasn't after cash.

He's hard up for shoes, though.

- Found a weapon?
- Only this.

Was found in the underpass
where he was attacked.

Crime scene think it's Hassan's.

Traditional.

Keep a piece of
the Koran inside.

Need a word, Malik.

- Got an address?
- No, we're still working on it.

Wake up TAFE if you have to.

Let's not have his family hear
about this on the morning news.

Sure.

What did you say in your
statement to internal affairs?

Why?

They want to reinterview me
over the Mahmoud shooting.

Mate, I'm not gonna
discuss this with you.

- You sold me out.
- You shot a suspect.

What did you expect
me to do, cover your ass?

I'm not expecting you to lie,

I'm expecting you
to tell the truth.

And the truth is, Malik,

Mahmoud was gonna
stick a knife in your guts,

so I shot him in the head.

That'd be easy for
I.A. to write off, then.

That'd make things
real simple, wouldn't it?

It was self-defense.

Was it?

The problem I have is how
two of my senior officers

ended up alone with Mahmoud

in a warehouse, where you
should have contained him,

set a cordon, and
called for backup.

We had no idea the layout of
the building, how many exits.

It was either go in
or risk losing him.

If he was part
of a terrorist cell,

he would have
had a fake passport

and been on the
next plane to Pakistan.

My objective was
to talk to the man.

I had control of the situation.

Yeah, and now he is dead!

So you explain to me
how that's a better result.

Well, we're both
alive, for starters.

That is enough!

Do you have any
idea of the shitstorm

that's coming
down on this office?

Especially when, from
an outsider's point of view,

it appears that two of my
senior detectives have conspired

to execute the man
that killed your son.

I can see how that'd be
bad for career prospects,

particularly if there's
a promotion in it.

You really don't want me as
your enemy right now, Travis.

So get out and sort this out

before one or both of
you end up on charges.

Hassan Galaid died from
a subdural hemorrhage.

He had a severe brain bleed

caused by a
depressed skull fracture

consistent with blunt
instrument injury.

Any clues as to the weapon?

Square in shape, with two
small ridges on the leading edge

1.5 millimeters apart.

Is that it? You want
to take a guess?

And lead you down the
wrong path if I'm incorrect?

Hassan also had severe
premortem bruising

to his arms and torso.

It's my conclusion that
he was hit on the head

from behind in
the railway tunnel,

causing him to
fall to the ground,

where he was kicked
and stomped on.

And then he dragged
himself into the street to die.

All at a railway station,
and no one saw him.

His father was killed
by Ethiopian militia.

His mother died of cholera
in a Kenyan refugee camp.

But still Hassan's smile
could light up a room.

His dreams for the future.

A Somalia with no guns.

When we came to this country,
we thought the violence would end.

Samiira, I promise you,

we're gonna do
everything in our power

to find who did this.

They will do nothing.

White laws are for whites.

If we want justice,
we have to take it.

These men are here to help.

Yusef and Hassan
were like brothers.

Yusef, I know you're
hurting over Hassan.

You want to hurt back,
you're gonna make it worse.

If you know anything, tell us.

Tell us now. Help
us find who did this.

Yusef. Does this
belong to Hassan?

Never seen it before.

When was the last
time you saw Hassan?

After school. We went
to the prayer room.

- He said the library.
- He lied!

- Which prayer room is that?
- In Lidcombe.

I say they cannot go there
because of his hard-line ideas.

His name is Asad, and you
should show him respect.

Do you know this man?
Have you met him?

I don't need to.

I see changes in the boys

and wild talk of returning
to fight in Somalia.

What time did Hassan
leave this prayer room?

Maybe 8:00.

He argued with
Asad and left early.

He was like you. Weak.

- Hassan believed in peace.
- And look where it got him!

Two months ago,

he would not have
said these things.

This Asad is turning my
brother into my enemy.

Help build a new Somalia and
you can stand proud, as men,

and as Muslims.

You will have the
respect that is due to you.

That is your birthright.

And when one of our
proud Somali brothers

is beaten to death
in the streets,

and receives no justice,
then it is up to you to take it.

Hello. I'm Zane Malik.
This is Sonny Koa.

We're investigating the
death of Hassan Galaid.

We just want to ask you a
few questions, if that's all right.

I'll speak to the boys.

You know this vigilante
justice you're talking about?

It's just gonna create
more pain for more families.

A boy has died, Detective,
and they blame us.

You're better off
helping us find the truth.

When was the last
time you saw Hassan?

Yesterday, after evening prayer.

Did he seem
troubled by anything?

Did he seek your guidance?

Hassan did not fit in here.

He struggled with our teaching.
He spoke his mind and he left.

So he disagreed with
coercing young men

to return to Somalia and fight.

- Is that what you're saying?
- Hassan was weak, Detective.

That's what Yusef said.

Yusef will one day
be a strong leader.

He understands the need to unite
Somalia under the laws of Islam.

Under Sharia law.

If that is what it takes
to defeat the clans,

the Ethiopians and
their Western backers,

to bring peace, yes.

Right, so where were you
after evening prayers today?

I stayed here. I live
in a room at the back.

Is there someone
who can verify that?

Allah is my witness.

Can Allah vouch for the
blood on your sleeve?

Hassan got angry.
He had a nosebleed.

Like I said, he was weak.

I'm gonna need to take
your jacket in for testing,

if you don't mind.

I'll need to get a blood
sample from you as well.

Techies have unlocked
the iPhone for us.

Head of the River.
Boating for the born to rule.

The boy with the trophy,
his name's Abraham Wiley.

He's the registered
owner of the phone.

Nothing on record.

Just a move along order
on George Street in the city.

So if Hassan's
such a boy of peace,

how's he end up with
Abraham Wiley's iPhone?

Abe, can you tell us when and
where you last had your phone?

Last Saturday, after training.

Went to take a leak, and when
I got back some dreg stole it.

- You report it?
- What's the point?

When he's got his father
to fork out for a new one.

Ever had any trouble with
the Somali community, Abe?

- Why? One of them take it?
- Just answer the question.

No, I steer clear, mate.

You take on one of them,
you take on the whole tribe.

End up with a
machete in your head.

Abe's been brought
up to avoid trouble.

So that move along
order three weeks ago,

that was you avoiding
trouble, was it?

One of the African kids
threw a beer can at Seth.

So, yeah, I gave
him a bit of lip.

Where were you last night, Abe?

I went to the
movies, me and Seth.

- What'd you watch?
- Ah, that vampire thing.

Still got the ticket?

I chucked it. It was crap.

- What cinemas?
- Broadway.

I dropped them there.
- 30 session.

Now, what's this about?

Two senior detectives
asking bullshit questions

about a stolen iPhone?

Mr. Wiley, we're trying to
work out how your son's iPhone

ended up in the
pocket of a dead boy.

Boys, get in the water.

- That's a really nice canoe.
- Boat.

If you have further questions,
you come to me personally.

Or better still,
contact my lawyer.

Appreciate your
time. We'll be in touch.

This is Mohammed
Mahmoud. All right?

Driver of one of
the getaway vehicles

for the $36 million
armed robbery.

We also know he was
connected to this man.

Jason Rizk. 35 years
of age, Lebanese.

Involved in extortion, car
rebirthing, drug dealing.

We know that he met with Mahmoud
the morning after the robbery.

We also identified calls made

from Mahmoud's
mobile phone to Rizk.

It turns out Rizk and
Mahmoud are cousins.

Are you kidding me? How
the hell'd you miss that?

Well, they're Lebos,
Malik. They're all cousins.

Oh, you're very funny, Neil.

So Rizk lies to protect Mahmoud.
Who else is he protecting?

The man who killed
your son is dead, Malik.

Men! Men killed
my son. Six of them.

Hey, back up. We've
got two of them.

Get it through your head,
man. That's not good enough!

Listen, we've got
Rizk's phone, right?

We've got LDs in his house,
in his business, in his car.

He's not gonna do anything
without us knowing about it.

What we should be
concentrating on is Sally Wilson.

She was married to Khalid.
Khalid knew Mahmoud.

Right? She's the best
link to the rest of the gang.

All this other shit
doesn't mean anything.

Corporal Wilson, your
husband was involved

in a violent armed robbery

in which three innocent
men were killed.

All of them had families.

All of those now
wanting answers.

I don't know
anything about that.

Sally, can you tell us
where you met Ashiq Khalid?

At an army function in
Sydney at a restaurant.

He was seated at the next
table. He took an interest.

So he approached you, yeah?

And how long after
that did you marry?

Six weeks. Ashiq
was a passionate man.

He wanted us to
marry before I flew out.

Look, I already told
all this to the army.

Did Ashiq ever mention the
name of Mohammed Mahmoud?

I don't know. There
were a lot of Mohammeds.

This man. Do you recognize him?

I might have met
him once at a garage

where Ashiq took
our car to be repaired.

Met anyone else at this garage?
Any of Ashiq's other friends?

No one who's involved in this.

And how did Ashiq
make his living?

He was setting up
an importing business.

Tribal rugs.

Did your husband ever express
views against the war on terror?

Yeah.

He blamed the war
for making Arabs

the universal enemy of the West.

As opposed to
something like 9/11?

Corporal Wilson, what
was your role with the army

in Afghanistan?

Intelligence gathering
on the weapons trade

between the Russian
mafia and the Taliban.

And do you believe in
the war in Afghanistan?

- I believe it's futile.
- So you're opposed to the war?

I've learned battlefield
interrogation too.

- Do not try and twist my words.
- Let me tell you what I think.

I think you were sent
to a shithole country

to fight a war you
didn't believe in.

All of a sudden,
along comes Khalid

with his Arab passion
and his charm.

You think I'm involved?

You think I'm responsible
for these men?

What I think is, your husband
needed a contact in the army

to continue his terrorist
activities, and you sold out.

Screw you. I love my country.

Then help us, Sally.

You've had plenty of
time to think about this

on the flight from Kabul.

Is there anything in hindsight
that causes you concern?

There was a post office box.

Ashiq asked me to fill out
the forms just in my name,

and I asked for a key.

He said he'd keep it.

Malik.

Might want to keep
your ear on this.

It's a copy of a letter

delivered to Khalid's
post box two hours ago.

PKD Shipping.

Confirmation of
goods in transit.

- One standard reefer container.
- What's the port of departure?

Karachi, Pakistan. Previously
overland from Kabul.

What's a man like Khalid
importing from Afghanistan?

I'll bet my alimony
it's not tribal rugs.

You got any idea what an Arab'd
be bringing in from a war zone?

I'd be asking who's gonna
collect now that Khalid's dead.

Who's our Armani Arab?

Yassin. Yasser.

I don't know which.

Ashiq called him the architect.

- He had attitude.
- What kind of attitude?

The kind that hates the
West for invading his country.

- The ungrateful kind.
- He's Iraqi?

Hey, listen.

Hey, listen, I need to know

if he's from Afghanistan
or is he Iraqi?

He's Iraqi.

Same as my lying
bastard husband.

They were doing some
kind of business together.

What kind of business?

How should I know?

Look here, okay?

This man and your
husband, all right,

were importing something
from Afghanistan, right?

The same shithole you
were stationed in the army at.

If you love your country,
what were they bringing in?

My husband's entire
life was a total lie to me.

What makes you think he
would tell me these things, huh?

Sally, if you can
think of anything, okay,

just give me a call.

Get onto counter-terrorism.

See if they've got
anything on Yasser.

I found out about
you, Detective Travis.

I still have one or two
friends left in the service.

You're ex-army, served in Iraq.

One of the elite.

You of all people

should understand
the meaning of patriot.

My whole life is army,

and they're gonna
take that away from me!

She should get
together with my ex-wife.

Be a hoot.

This is Kasim Muhammad Yasser.

He's 36, Iraqi-born.

Upper-middle-class
family, well educated.

According to counter-terrorism,
after a brief stint in the army,

he obtained degrees
in both architecture

and structural engineering
from the University of Baghdad.

Good to know how to build
them if you want to blow them up.

Yasser's parents are
both university lecturers.

The mother in physics,
the father in bioethics.

On April 2, 2003,

they received a fatal
dose of shock and awe

from the coalition forces.

Which gives Yasser strong
reason to hate the West.

Miraculously he survived this.

Two years later, the
pacifists across the ditch

welcomed him with open arms,

and in 2006 he enters
Australia through the back door.

At the time, no one was really
interested in hiring an Arab

to build large buildings,

so he started an
investment business,

gaining a reputation
as an hawala broker.

Yeah, it's an honor-based
transfer system.

- No records, no paper trail.
- That's right.

Which is a winner with
terrorist organizations.

Knock on his door.

See what he knows about
our dead robber, Khalid.

And try not to shoot him.

Ashiq Khalid asked me to
invest some money for him.

- I agreed to do so.
- How much money?

He said in the millions, but I
guess I'll never know how many.

So you never received any money?

Difficult from a dead man.

I want you to take
a look at this photo.

His name's Mohammed Mahmoud.
Do you recognize this man?

I heard about this man.

He was shot and
killed by police.

According to the papers,

there is a cloud of
truth over his death.

I asked if you'd met him.

No, I did not.

Now, I believe I've
helped you all I can.

I've got a question for you.

As a money man,
have you had any luck

transferring personal
assets outside the reach

of a divorce proceeding?

It is not my field of expertise.

What exactly is your
field of expertise?

I secure finance for
building projects in Iraq.

Yeah, and you'd have the,
uh, necessary paperwork

to prove to say your money's
being spent where you say it is?

My funds are used to rebuild
what the West destroyed.

Housing estates,
power plants, hospitals.

Did Khalid ever tell you where
he was getting his money from?

Do you ask where
the oil comes from

each time you fill up your car?

So you'll take money from
anywhere, good or bad?

No matter whose blood's
been spilled getting it?

Iraq was destroyed on the
lies of dishonorable men.

Thousands died so that the
West could quench its thirst for oil.

So if any man comes
to me with money

to help those who have suffered,

I will gladly invest it.

If he's got the 36 million,

it'll be out of the
country by now.

Question is, is he
gonna use the money

to fund the insurgents in Iraq,
or bring the war back here?

I.A.'s scheduling interviews.

They're gonna
want to see you first.

We still agreed
on what happened?

I've got no reason to
change my initial statement.

Look, if you think I.A. are
gonna be your friend on this,

you're wrong.

You had motive, Malik,
and I fired the weapon.

They're gonna be looking
for conspiracy to murder,

so if one of us go
down, we both go down.

The suspect, Mohammed Mahmoud,

was also the man responsible
for the death of your son.

Mahmoud was our
only link to the men

who committed an armed
robbery in which four men died.

He was also the
man driving the car

that caused the
death of your son.

That wasn't foremost on my mind.

What was in your mind?

Capturing an important suspect

and supporting my colleague.

Explain how you got
separated from your colleague.

We entered the warehouse,

and I must have taken a
wrong turn or something...

So you're saying
it was a mistake?

Or because you wanted

to confront Mahmoud
and take revenge?

No, that's bullshit.
We got separated.

Mahmoud came out of nowhere,
and I was forced to defend myself.

Before Detective
Travis fired his weapon,

did you hear him issue a
challenge to the suspect?

No, I did not.

In your original statement,

you said you had
control of the suspect

when Detective Travis
discharged his weapon.

- Do you stand by that?
- Yes, I do.

Did Detective Travis have any
prior history with the suspect?

Not that I'm aware of.

Did he discuss the suspect in
relation to any other matters?

No.

Do you know of any
reason why Detective Travis

would deliberately kill
Mohammed Mahmoud?

I'm done.

- How'd you go?
- Fine.

Something you two ought to see.

I've been checking all
recent incident reports

on the Lidcombe line.

This was Tuesday afternoon,
two days before Hassan was killed.

Looks like Abe Wiley had a
bit of trouble with the Somalis.

Hassan trying to break it up.
Cops an elbow for his trouble.

Explains the nosebleed.

All right. Let's bring Yusef in.

Find out why he
lied about that phone.

Yusef, why'd you tell us you'd
never seen this phone before?

We know you took it off this boy

two days before
Hassan was killed.

A Somali boy is dead,

and you are worried
about a white boy's phone?

Sir, you're in here
as a silent observer.

Just to make sure
nothing improper happens.

What is improper
is Hassan is dead,

and his killer walks free.

Why'd you attack
this boy, Yusef?

Don't look at Asad. He's
not gonna answer for you.

Why'd you attack him?

Because he always
insults my sister.

So you've had trouble
with this boy before?

Every day. Him and his friends.

They say Samiira is a slut,

that we carry disease
and do not belong here.

They kick our bags
off the railway platform

and throw things at us.

This day we have enough.

So after this
fight on the train,

did this boy threaten you
or Hassan in any way?

You think Hassan died
because of this fight?

You think I am to blame?

I'm asking you, did Abe Wiley
make any threats against Hassan?

No, he learned his lesson.

He has to respect us.

If a warrior draws a knife,
he better be prepared to use it.

Okay. That'll be all, thanks.

You know, you teach Yusef
the world's against him,

he's gonna grow up full of hate.

They want us in their
basketball, their soccer team,

but they do not want us
in their home or school.

Why is this man here?

Yusef is a minor.

He's nominated Asad
as his person of interest.

But I do not want him
anywhere near Yusef.

Wait for me outside.

A sister does not
tell her brother...

I said go.

Who are you to poison
my brother's mind

with your teachings?

We are all one clan here.

I said, what region?

Hiran. A long time ago.

I want to take Yusef home.

First I need your permission
to get Yusef's fingerprints

and DNA for elimination

Do whatever you need to. I
need to get him home now.

Let's go.

I saw how you reacted to Asad.

Do you think Asad
is capable of killing?

Yes, many times and over.

He has killed and killed again.

So you know him from Somalia?

Yes.

When I was 14.

In my village in Hiran.

It had rained and I was
playing with my friend Rashid

in the mud puddles

when we saw the soldiers
coming through the banana trees.

Some were just boys.

More arrived in trucks.

Then the shooting started,

and the puddles
turned red with blood.

A young soldier put a
gun in Rashid's hand

and ordered him to shoot.

When Rashid could not,

they cut his throat

and gave the gun
to the next boy.

And Asad was one
of these soldiers?

Yes.

I am sure of it.

Okay.

I'll look into him.

I'll make sure he causes
you no more grief, all right?

I hang on to a saying.

Sorrow is like
rice from the store.

If a handful is
removed every day,

one day it will come to an end.

Our Armani Arab's on the move.

Door open, brake
light on, flasher,

indicating right into traffic.

His computer.

There's a wager going that
I.A. are gonna charge you.

Well, I hope you've
got good odds.

I bet the right man is dead.

You saved Malik.

Still worried about high risk?

He's pulling in slowly.

Into Tempe Driving Range.

You inside? Copy?

Hey, Squizzy and
Shifty, you copy that?

Almost done here.

What would Yasser
want with Jason Rizk?

So Yasser knew Khalid,
and he knows Rizk.

Top it off, we found
these on his hard drive.

They're specs for a
nuclear power plant,

same kind of light-water
reactor as Lucas Heights.

If Yasser wants to bring
the war to our doorstep,

then destroying Lucas
Heights would be a good start.

- When's this container arrive?
- Tomorrow.

Customs'll call us
when it's offloaded.

I'll have to inform
counter-terror

and everyone else up the chain.

Something's come
up on the Somali case.

Now, Hassan would have
caught the 9:40 train from Central

to get to Lidcombe, where
he was attacked around 10:00.

So I checked the Lidcombe
line platform at Central,

and these two popped up.

The murder weapon was square.

Check out the
shape of that bottle.

Okay, Abe, you said
you were at the movies

the night Hassan was killed.

That's you and Seth at
Central railway station at 9:30.

So?

We had a couple
of drinks instead.

There's no crime in that.

What'd you do with the
bottle when you were finished?

Don't know. Seth
must have chucked it.

How long have you known Abe?

Ah, since I won the
scholarship to the school.

So it's like a couple of months.

What'd you do with the bottle

when you finished the bourbon?

I I don't know.

I think Abe must
have chucked it.

You also told us that
your phone was stolen

on the Saturday after training.

We know it was used to make a
phone call on Tuesday afternoon.

That's three days later.

Probably by one of
the losers who stole it.

No, you called Seth.

We know because of
this incident on the train.

That's you calling
him right there.

Now why didn't you tell
us about this assault?

'Cause you would
have taken their side.

Everyone does.

Poor black kids from Africa.

You got any idea what it's like

to be attacked by a
gang of these bastards?

I never killed
that kid, I swear.

I never touched him.

Hey, Yusef. How are you doing?

If I'd left the mosque with
Hassan, he would still be alive.

Some things you
can't control, you know?

We all belong to God,
and to him we will return.

Asad said if we want
peace, we have to fight for it.

Yusef, peace comes
when you've got the courage

to believe in it, like Hassan.

When people are
prepared to stop fighting

and lay down their weapons.

Yeah.

All right.

Come with me.

They belong to Hassan?

My old ones.

Hey, Malik, over here.

- What've you got?
- Could be blood.

Soon as you've got prints
and DNA, let me know.

Yeah.

Can I get one of
you guys over here?

That a fact, is it?
Is that what he said?

Right, thank you.

Hey, whatever I.A.'s got
on, you can put on hold.

We just inherited
a bigger problem.

Rizk just told Mahmoud's mother
he's coming after our families.

You told me you
didn't know the driver

of the car that hit my family.

I'm the crazy bastard
who put a bullet

in your cousin's head.

You go near my
wife or my daughter,

I'll forget I'm a cop,
I'll come after you.

You can have my wife
any way you want her,

but you come within
10 blocks of my boys,

and you're not
gonna hear anything,

you won't feel anything,
you'll just be dead.

Do you understand?

Do you understand?!

- Fuck this.
- No! No!

- Go for a beer?
- What was that?

You might have got
away with that shit in Iraq.

You're just pissed off, Malik,

'cause I did what
you wanted to do.

Rizk's phone's been
going off all night,

calling Yasser.

Worried he's had
cops in his face.

Could've been any cops.

Yeah, two big,
dumb bastard cops,

which in the circumstances
seems like an accurate description.

If Rizk and Yasser
go underground

because of your little stunt,

it won't be I.A. you
need to worry about,

'cause I'll have your
balls, both of you.

Yeah, you'll have to
get mine off my ex first.

We've got Russian Kalashnikovs,
AK-47s, automatic RPKs.

20 in all.

Yasser and Rizk are
buying up some big firepower.

But for what purpose?

Enough for a major
assault on Lucas Heights.

But the party doesn't end there.

Customs estimate 500
kilos of uncut heroin.

It's not the first time a
terrorist organization's

turned to drugs to
fund its operation.

Al-Qaeda call it taking
financial advantage

of Western decadence.

Right, I want a
controlled delivery.

You sure you want
to involve the feds?

I want those drugs substituted

and the container
back on the stack

and kept under 24
hour surveillance.

Let's find out who
else was involved,

whether they planned
to blow up Lucas Heights

or poison half of Sydney.

And talk to Sally Wilson.
See what she can add to this.

Sally, we know your husband

visited Afghanistan
on these dates,

two of which coincide
with your tour of duty there,

one as recent as
seven weeks ago.

Now, coinciding with
that most recent visit,

you applied for and were granted
two days' leave to fly to Rome

to "meet your husband."

But Khalid was already
in Kabul, wasn't he?

And you didn't fly to Rome.

- We can check flight records.
- We stayed at a hotel in Kabul.

- What was his business there?
- He said it was to see me.

That's bullshit,
Sally, and you know it.

Who was he meeting there, Sally?

- A man.
- Was he an Arab?

He looked military. I only
saw him from a distance.

We believe your
husband and other men

were planning an act of
terrorism in this country.

You say you're a patriot.

What was Khalid
doing in Afghanistan?

Was he using you
for information, Sally?

Did you supply him with
operational information?

We were gathering
intel for a raid

on a big opium
processing factory.

It was stressful. There
were a lot of lives at risk.

It was good to be
able to talk about it.

It was just pillow talk.

When our troops
raided the drug lord,

the place had already been hit.

Opium was gone, and the
villagers were murdered.

Those drugs are sitting
on a dock at Port Botany.

I think she knew Khalid
murdered those villagers

and she did nothing about it.

In the name of love.

Sorry, boss.

We've got a DNA
result on the Somalis,

and it's not quite what
we were expecting.

Thanks.

The DNA we retrieved
from Asad's sample

was compared with Yusef's DNA.

Asad is Yusef's father?

Yusef is my son.

We'd heard stories

of soldiers attacking
the next village,

stories of men being chained
together in burning huts.

Women, children taken.

And then they
were in our village,

shooting, burning.

They killed my friend Rashid.

They dragged me into my hut,

tore my clothes off.

And when my mother...

and father tried to stop them...

they shot them.

And he...

Asad...

he raped me.

And when I screamed...

he put a knife
against my throat.

Again...

and again I was silent.

- Does Yusef know?
- No!

And he cannot know.

The shame will destroy him.

Okay, why didn't
you call for backup

before pursuing Mohammed
Mahmoud into the warehouse?

The suspect
presented no real threat

other than he wasn't complying.

I didn't really want to
lose my only suspect

in a multimillion-dollar robbery

who might have had
links to a terrorist network.

Shame you shot him, then.

It's not for you to judge or
voice opinions here, Detective,

so just get on
with the interview.

Okay, you said Detective Malik

was only a few
seconds in front of you.

Can you explain
how you got separated

once inside the warehouse?

No.

As far as I knew,
Malik was ahead of me

until I heard the commotion.

Then what happened?

I saw Detective Malik defending
himself against a knife attack,

so I drew my weapon
and issued a challenge.

Well, in his statement,

Detective Malik said
he heard no challenge.

Well, any experienced
investigator will tell you

that people under
stressful situations

can sometimes suffer
from audio exclusion.

He also said he had
control of the suspect's knife

when you fired.

- Did he?
- Yeah.

Malik was about to
get shivved in the guts.

He should be grateful.

What's your view of
Detective Malik's state of mind

since the death of his son?

He wouldn't be real
happy now, would he?

Come on, you think
he's capable of revenge?

I mean, isn't that what
Muslims believe in?

An eye for an eye?

Anyone's capable
of revenge, Detective,

given the right circumstance.

What's your point?

I suggest that Detective
Malik conspired with you

to kill Mohammed
Mahmoud to avenge his son.

What have you
got to say to that?

I'd say Mahmoud was trying
to kill a highly respected officer,

so I shot him.

And now a good cop
gets to go home to his wife

and what's left of his family.

Are we done?

We're done.

Hey.

You know, at least in Iraq

you knew the guy
beside you had your back.

Malik, forensics report
on the bourbon bottle,

It's definitely Hassan's blood.

Vince confirms it's
the murder weapon.

Prints?

Plenty with nothing on record.
But we did get one match.

Charles Wiley. Abe's Dad.

This is the bourbon
bottle that was used

to strike and kill
Hassan Galaid.

It has his blood on the label.

Also has your
fingerprints on it.

You think I hurt that boy?

You think I'm capable
of killing a child?

Well, what do you think, Abe?

He had nothing to do with it.

I took the bottle from home.

I knew he wouldn't
miss it, so...

That doesn't prove anything.

Anyone could have
picked up that empty bottle

after they threw it away.

Okay, so you left the movies,

you walked to Central
station, is that right?

- Yeah.
- What time was that?

About 9:00.

And that's where you
drank the bourbon?

- Yeah.
- Then what?

- Then we went back to the city.
- What'd you do there?

Chatting up chicks.

Yeah? Couple of
good-looking boys on the prowl.

- Any luck?
- Yeah, a bit.

You get any phone numbers?

- No.
- Come on, eh?

- No, no.
- No keepers?

- No. No way.
- No?

- Who threw the shoes?
- Abe.

The shoes put you there, Seth.

You're in a lot of trouble here.

You know, Seth, you and
Hassan aren't that different.

Hassan came out here
to escape the violence,

to build a better life.

You worked hard
to get a scholarship

into a top school
for a better future.

I know you're a good man.

But you're gonna lose all that
if you don't tell me the truth.

Abe wanted to get even after the
Somalis jumped him on the train.

It was just meant
to be a bit of fun.

Samiira?

Samiira.

Samiira.

Samiira.

I'm not... I'm not
gonna hurt you.

I'm here to help,
okay? I'm here to help.

Give me... Give me the weapon.

Let it go.

It's all right.

Let it go. It's okay.

It's all right.

What happened here?

Why had Asad come to your house?

To take Yusef away.

I had to stop him, so
I told Yusef the truth.

That Asad is his father,

that he forced himself.

Yusef called me a liar.

I told him you have evidence

that proves that
Asad is what I say.

That is when Asad attacked me.

Okay.

And what happened then?

I grabbed the blade
and hit him with it.

And where was Yusef
when this happened?

He had already run outside.

Why would he run outside?

He was afraid.

Samiira, every parent
wants to protect their children,

to keep them safe.

Yusef did not do this.

The fingerprints on the
weapon, the angle of the wound,

blood splatter's gonna tell
us exactly what happened.

If you want to help your
son, tell me the truth.

Please.

He has his whole
life ahead of him.

If Yusef did this, he won't
be tried in an adult court.

He's a child.

If you stand up in the witness
box and say what happened,

what this man did to you,

I believe he'll have a chance.

Yusef's never gonna be strong

if he lets you go
to prison for this.

Sorry, boss, it's urgent.
The drugs investigation.

The container's been collected
and taken to a storage shed.

We've got some chatter on
Yasser and Rizk in their car,

and they're on the move.

So the container's
over in the main shed.

Yasser and Rizk?

They drove in about
15 minutes ago.

We'd better move
before they realize

we've got their drugs.

Shit! What the hell happened?

- I thought you had the eyeball!
- Work it out, genius!

Someone was in
here waiting for them!