Law & Order: Criminal Intent (2001–2011): Season 1, Episode 11 - The Third Horseman - full transcript

Goren and Eames investigate the murder by sniper attack of an abortion doctor--a subject close to Eames' heart.

Narrator: In New York
City's war on crime

the worst criminal offenders
are pursued by the detectives

of the Major Case Squad.

These are their stories.

Let's see what the birds
are doing in the park.

- Can you see them?
- Yes, they're playing in the trees.

- (laughs)
- (Buzzing)

Oh, time for Daddy
to go to work.

- Good morning, everybody.
- How are you doing?

Watch Movies, Series & LiveTV
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Good morning. First
patient's prepped in room two.



She's 19, single,
in the 10th week.

- Name is Patricia.
- Who's here with her?

One of her friends. Her boyfriend was
supposed to drive her but never showed.

- How is she feeling?
- Scared.

Let's see what we
can do about that.

- Lunch time.
- All right, children,

let's close our books
and put our pencils down.

Somebody want to
help me with these?

- Put them on the floor.
- Kids: Thank you.

- Everybody ready?
- Kids: Yeah.

Let's give thanks.

Thank you, God, for your
bounty, today and every day.

- Amen.
- Kids: Amen.

Oh, and thank you,
Dennis, for making lunch.



Kids: Thank you.

- Doctor: And what's a baby cow?
- A calf.

- That's right. And what's a baby chicken?
- An egg.

I'm going to make some tea.
Does anyone want anything?

Girl: Juice.

- What comes out of the egg?
- Baby chicks.

Yeah.

I want to see the cars, Daddy.

Okay. Come here.

Lord, steady my hand

and let Thy justice
find its mark.

- Can you see the cars?
- Yes.

(whistles)

Honey, are you sure
you don't want any...

Get into the bedroom now. Quick.

Quick, quick, quick. Oh
my God, Leo, hold on.

Hold on.

Hello, my husband's been shot.

Our address is 845
Central Park West,

apartment 4A. My
name is Marie Cavella.

Hurry. Oh my God, Leo, hold on.

They're coming,
honey. They're coming!

Hold on! I love you!

Hold on!

(theme music playing)

It looks like he was 80
to 100 feet into the park.

That makes it about a 200-yard
shot. This guy had practice.

Make sure you cover him up.

In our own living room,

in front of our baby.

These people that say
they love children so much...

Your husband get threats?

There was this website,

his name was on a hit
list of abortion providers,

with our old address
in Dobbs Ferry.

It's why we moved to
the city... To be safer.

Our phone's unlisted, the
condo's in my maiden name,

we have a post office box.

- Where was your husband's clinic?
- In Bethel.

Two hours each way, every day,

because he wanted
to help people...

They have no right.

(sobbing) Oh God, Leo.

We're very sorry, Mrs. Cavella.

According to the calculations,

the shot came
from this tree here.

- Any footprints?
- Ground's too hard.

Would've put his knee down here.

He tied his rifle to
the tree to stabilize it...

so he'd have a
shooting platform.

He was an experienced hunter

or he had military training.

How we doing on witnesses?

We got one homeless
lady, calls herself God,

said she saw a male,
white, going into the woods

about a half an hour
before the shooting.

Put "God" together
with a sketch artist.

Keep the witness canvass
going for the next week,

double up in the evenings
around the time of the shooting.

Eames!

(camera shutters clicking)

It's a Remington 700 30-06,

with a Burris 3x10 scope.

He brought it here
piece by piece,

assembled, buried
it until he needed it.

I can already tell catching this
mutt's going to be a walk in the park.

There are killers and there are
people who kill abortion doctors.

There's two types
of those: the martyr...

He kills without a lot of
planning in broad daylight,

in front of witnesses, with
a shotgun or a handgun,

doesn't care if he gets caught.

Then there's this guy.

Months of preparation,
stalks his target,

plans his escape,
kills from a distance,

no intention of getting caught.

He's in it to create fear.

You know, kill one,
scare a thousand.

Three witnesses, including
God, saw a male, white,

come out of the woods near
the 97th Street transverse.

30s, medium to
tall, baseball cap,

maybe a mustache,
maybe brown hair.

Maybe we put up flyers in the
park, maybe we get better witnesses.

Take a look at this website.

"The New Killing Fields."

Lists abortion
doctors in every state.

Here. Leo Cavella.
Still his old address.

Any guesses what the slash
through his name means?

- It's a damn hit list.
- Protected by the First Amendment.

- Of course.
- Ballistics report on the rifle.

Figures, no fingerprints.

Rifle traced to a gun
dealer in Pennsylvania

who sold it at a gun show in
Honesdale eight weeks ago.

- No ID on the buyer.
- Honesdale... that's just
across the state line

from Cavella's clinic in Bethel.

My husband drove Leo's van.
He never noticed anyone following.

What about the people with
the signs? They regulars?

Every day since the clinic
opened four years ago.

- We videotape them.
- We'll need those tapes.

Those people are horrible,
always calling us names,

yelling at the patients.

Who on Dr. Cavella's
staff had his address?

I did, in my address book,

which I kept locked
up in my office.

Doctor Cavella's check register.

Checks to Con Ed,
to his condo board.

After he paid his bills,
what did he do with them?

Some he took home, some
like his power bill he threw away.

- Any problems with
his trash bin outside?
- A couple months ago.

The police said it was raccoons.
We bought cans with animal-proof lids.

How'd that work out?

Two weeks later, they
got broken into again.

Animal-proof lids. Nobody ever
gives raccoons enough credit.

Your money's still
on the raccoons.

I just can't imagine anybody
scrounging around for a Con Ed bill.

Cavella's address
would be on a Con Ed bill.

What did your
investigation turn up?

Well, not much.

Somebody saw a car parked
across the street, that was about it.

A car is something.

Well, the plates traced to Mr. and
Mrs. McLeish in White Lake.

They're a nice
couple in their 60s.

I don't figure they climbed that
eight-foot fence around those trash cans.

Any history of
anti-abortion activity?

They chained themselves to
the door of the clinic last year.

Got 12 months’ probation.

Well, I'll bet that included
a restraining order

to stay away from the clinic.

Well, yes, it did.

Sounds like they
violated their probation.

Please! For the last time,
you don't have a choice here!

You got to let us in.

(muttering voices)

You ain't going to need those.

You didn't see the
hole in Cavella's chest.

Woman: Give us this
day our daily bread.

Forgive us our trespasses as we
forgive those who trespass against us.

Mr. and Mrs. McLeish, we have
a bench warrant for your arrest

for violation of your probation.

They're not going anywhere
without the radiator.

The locks are laced through it.

- forgive those
who trespass against us.
- Hallowed be Thy name.

Eames: Hey, Bobby.

The neighbors say they had somebody
staying with them six weeks ago.

Male, white, mid to late 30s,

brown hair, beard.

They saw him driving their car.

- Damn.
- What's the problem?

Blade's stuck.

Somebody put steel
pipes around the locks,

then stuck metal
rods inside the pipes,

so my blades are just spinning.

I got to change blades.

You all better get comfortable.

What'd they use when they
chained themselves to the clinic?

Just a padlock and a bicycle chain.
We cut them loose in a minute flat.

Deakins: Nine hours to cut
them out. That's just great.

We have a sketch of Ma
and Pa Kettle's houseguest.

We tried one without the beard and
showed it to the Central Park witnesses.

- No definite hits, but it's close.
- Got him.

The old couple
didn't have the tools

or materials to make the locks.

I figured the
houseguest made them.

I did a search for protesters

who blockaded abortion clinics

by chaining
themselves to the doors.

The longer it takes
to remove them,

the longer the clinics
have to shut down.

One guy got famous in Wisconsin

for teaching people how to make
locks that took up to 12 hours to remove.

He did it with steel pipes,

metal rods, abrasives...

Meet Dennis Griscom.

From locks to lock 'n' load.

Next stop for
Mr. Griscom is lockup.

Griscom has two convictions

for anti-abortion activities

in Wisconsin and Florida.
He served 60 days.

He's been off the
radar the last four years.

And there's fiber evidence. A
hair on the stick left at the scene

matched a hair from a
blanket in the McLeish's house.

A probable match,
not conclusive.

What's the old
folks' involvement?

They're being transported
here for questioning. We'll see.

Goren: He's done with them.

He'll seek support
from other zealots.

He's a terrorist, with
a profound dedication

to an over-valued idea,

one that's his
sole focus in life.

Zealot, terrorist...

Loaded terms, Detective.

I hope you're not suggesting
he represents a movement.

Well, I'm suggesting
he might think he is

and act accordingly.

This is a murder case.

Let's not turn into a
litmus test on abortion.

Sounds like it already is.

I couldn't sleep
the night before.

I felt like I had a lead
weight in my chest,

and the closer I got to
doing it, the worse I felt.

I didn't feel brave, I
didn't feel full of fire.

Providence spoke to you,
Dennis. You had no choice.

When I looked
though that scope...

it was like the Lord slipped
his hand inside mine,

like a glove, you know?

And put his finger
around the trigger.

That's exactly what he did.

He helped you save the babies.

I just...

I can't shake this
sadness I'm feeling.

You're not alone in
this. People will help you.

Okay?

Here's $500.

If you need any
more, send a message.

- Thank you.
- Hey.

Thank you.

We have witnesses who
saw him near the shooting,

forensic evidence
linking him to it.

How can you protect him?

I saw books in your home

by Gandhi, Martin Luther King...

Apostles of non-violence.

I know that you follow
in their footsteps.

Conscientious
objector in the '50s.

Voter registration in the '60s.

You marched against Vietnam,

apartheid, abortion.

Always by non-violent
means, right?

Yes.

I found these in your home.

You and your wife
at candlelight vigils.

You oppose the death penalty.

Any kind of killing.

I have a lot of respect for
that position, Mr. McLeish.

There's no hypocrisy to
it, no double standard...

even for doctors
like Leo Cavella.

Even for him, right?

Mrs. McLeish: God forgive us.

We didn't know
what he was planning.

How'd you meet Griscom?

At a movement conference
in Memphis last spring.

There were old friends
from Operation Rescue,

and some people we didn't know,

radicals who said
the Lord wanted us

to pick up the sword
and kill more abortionists.

Was Griscom one of the radicals?

No. He just listened.

He never said anything
about Dr. Cavella,

or buying a rifle.

What did he do all day?

- Did he have a job?
- No.

He had savings, he said.

Mostly, he helped
around the place.

I took him bird watching.

There's a bald eagle
preserve near Goshen.

Even gave him an
old pair of binoculars.

- What kind?
- Zeiss.

He was a serious young man,

who didn't know what
direction he was supposed to go.

How did he end
up staying with you?

We invited him to visit.

One day he showed up.

Goren: Did he talk about
any friends in the movement,

people who might help him?

No. Only people he talked
about were his parents,

his father mostly.

And what did he say about him?

Well, he told me
he was an engineer.

He said his father
was proud of him.

And that mattered to him?

Sure.

His father sounded like
a hard man to please.

Any idea where he
stayed after he left?

- I think with family.
- What makes you say that?

Before he left, he came
with me to the Wal-Mart

to buy some gifts
for his nieces.

Is that who he
said they were for?

No, but he bought two key chains

with kittens on them and
the initials "K" and "R,"

so I assumed that's
who they were for.

Dennis doesn't have any nieces.

He has a nephew... my
daughter's son, in Seattle.

When was the last
time you talked to him?

Maybe six months
ago, I'm not sure.

I see your husband was
a marksman in Vietnam.

Is this him hunting with Dennis?

Yes.

They look like they're
good pals. Are they?

My husband died a year ago.

Dennis looked up to him.

He told people his
father was proud of him.

- When was this taken?
- Maybe last year.

Zeiss binoculars.

This was taken two months ago...

in the area where
Dr. Cavella had his clinic.

He didn't shoot that doctor.

10 years ago he became a
missionary to help people.

He couldn't hurt anyone.

He won't be safe
unless he talks to us.

Please, how did
you get this picture?

(sighs)

I found this on the
porch a month ago.

It's just books and letters.

- Was there a note?
- No.

He just left it on the porch,

he didn't even
ring the doorbell.

I found that picture inside.

Did you recognize any of the
people in these other pictures?

- No.
- Do you know Lori Carlson?

- No.
- This is addressed to Dennis.

"Dear Dennis, we
hope this finds you well.

Yesterday we took Katie and
Ruthie to the Botanical Gardens.

They love going there and
witnessing the Lord's wonders.

We all miss you. Please
call." Signed, "Lori Carlson."

It's postmarked last
October in Brooklyn.

K and R... Katie and
Ruthie Carlson in Brooklyn.

It's a start.

(doorbell rings)

- Lori Carlson?
- Yes?

- This is a warrant allowing us
to search your house.
- What's going on?

- Stay in here with your children.
- Two upstairs. You two with me.

Are there any adults
here besides yourself?

- No. Why are you here?
- Officer: Clear!

We're looking for
Dennis Griscom.

Mrs. Carlson, we're conducting
a murder investigation.

Now is not the time
to lie to the police.

Dennis left four days ago. I
don't know where he went.

What room was he staying in?

Down the stairs.

Shh.

Eames, I need a bag.

Suspicious dust balls?

It's spun glass.

Commonly used to make silencers.

There was no attachment for
a silencer on the Remington.

No. It's from a second rifle.

He's not done yet.

I don't know where
he was planning to go.

He mention other
doctors or clinics?

No. He didn't talk
about things like that.

I don't believe he
did the things you say.

But if he did, then he must
believe he's doing God's will,

and then it's up to
God to deal with him.

Maybe God's too busy

dealing with Leo Cavella's
five-year-old daughter.

She was standing next to him
when your friend's bullet tore into him.

Goren: I noticed
there are no posters

of pop singers in
your daughter's rooms,

or pictures of athletes.

We don't approve of that.

Well, how about...

soccer and tennis?

I didn't see any equipment.

We don't participate in those parts of
the culture that don't bring glory to God.

Dennis, he dragged
this abomination,

this execution into
your living room.

How can that bring glory to God?

We have every reason to
believe he's going to kill again.

Dennis...

Dennis was on
the computer a lot,

talking to other people
when we weren't home.

Please, don't hurt him.

We found some of
Griscom's e-mails.

Just their tracks. The actual
e-mails were long gone.

Most of the e-mails around the time of
the shooting are to and from one address.

Zach here thinks he
can chase it down.

Zach here has chased him down.

It's linked to a website.

Whoa! This is extreme.

"Stop abortion on demand by
the most direct means possible."

Looks like Griscom
found a friend.

There's a PO box
address in Long Island.

If we find this clown,

any way we can monitor his e-mail
traffic in case Griscom contacts him?

You can.

If you install a spying
application on his computer.

You can look all you want,
you won't find any guns here.

Your website said, "The
most direct means possible."

Everyone knows what
that means, Mr. Cutler.

It means whatever
you need it to mean.

I'm just a truck driver. I
never threatened anybody.

What about the Supreme Court?

I wouldn't hurt a hair
on those gentlemen.

But the two women on
the Court, they're fair game?

Ma'am, God's never
told me to kill anybody.

Eames: But if he
did, I bet you would.

I'd obey him, just
like Abraham did.

- I heard a threat
to a government official.
- The hell you did.

I'm taking you in. Turn around.

- This is bull. You can't do this...
- Shut your mouth.

Maybe you read only the
parts of the Bible you like,

but what I remember
from Sunday school

is God stopped
Abraham from killing.

I'll get downtown
started on the complaint.

Let's step in here, Mr. Cutler.

Hey, Harland, it's me, Eames,

I need you to fill out
a complaint for me.

Suspect's name is Lorne Cutler.

You take orders from that lady?

She's got seniority.

You know these
women on the force,

they come with an
extra set of brass ones.

- Is that better?
- Yes, thank you.

The TPO is the suspect's
home at 428 Powell Street

in Bayside, New
York. Okay, I'll hold.

You admire this man, the
one who shot the doctor?

He killed to
protect innocent life.

He heard God's
command and he obeyed.

Yeah, like Saint Joan,
and the Knights Templar.

I read your website. I get it.

The government is using
these statutes and lawsuits

by pro-abortion groups to
cut off all legitimate protest.

So if you believe that the soul
enters a body at conception...

you have to take the next step.

Shutting down
those killing fields...

it's the only cause left
worth dying for, isn't it?

There is no higher calling.

I'm glad this person
skipped the state.

I don't have to be
involved in his arrest.

Where do you think he went?

Let's just say he's not on
this side of the Mason-Dixon.

We got to kick him.

Downtown won't sign
off on the complaint.

What did I tell you?

Goren: Now Cutler
is writing e-mails.

Eames: "All it takes is for one state
to threaten sedition over abortion

and this thing will turn
around. There's reason to hope.

We have friends in surprising places...
Even in the New York City police.

I met a detective who
thinks picking up the sword

is the only option left to
stop the abortion factories."

- You told him that?
- Mm-hmm. To earn his confidence.

Not to mention his
love and admiration.

True believers expect
everyone to think like them.

(sighs)

What do you really think?

I'll tell you what I think
when I get pregnant.

You're going to have to do
a lot better than that, Bobby.

Okay.

Life is full of uncertainty.

People need to have options.

Abortion has got to
be one of those options.

That's what I think.

He just got pulled
into a private chat.

Goren: Okay. That's Griscom.

I gave Cutler misinformation
about our investigation.

Can you trace him?

He's a guest on
somebody else's account.

The account is registered
with Barbara's Place,

it's a copy store chain.

(chatting)

Susan!

Dennis?

What are you doing here?

The alumni office told
me where you worked.

Are you all right?
How are your parents?

Dad passed away last year.

I'm so sorry.

- Your boyfriend?
- No.

I'm engaged.

I'm getting married
in a few months.

You going to have kids?

Maybe.

I have something for you.

Not exactly a wedding present.

They were my Dad's
when he was in the army.

He always liked you a lot.

- This is very sweet of you, Dennis.
- Have a good life, Susan.

I was so angry, for so long.

But I was angry at
the wrong person.

Yeah, he's been in here using
the computers a few times.

Last night, as a matter of fact.

- How did he pay?
- Cash.

He never stays on
the computer long.

- What did he use for ID?
- This guy didn't have any ID.

I think he's homeless.

I let him leave a meal card
from Saint Mark's Mission.

Buddy, if I were
you, I'd taste it first.

Hey, ease off on him.

There's plenty to
be grateful for, yeah?

Go ahead. Go ahead. Say
grace, preacher. Go ahead.

It wouldn't kill any of us
to have a little gratitude.

Thank you, God, for your bounty
today and every day. Amen.

Amen.

Easy!

- Our Father who art in Heaven,
hallowed be Thy name...
- All right. Stand up!

Goren: You're going
to have to carry him.

Give us this day
our daily bread,

and forgive us our trespasses,

as we forgive those
who trespass against us.

Eames: We have you pegged
every inch of the way, Dennis.

Where you bought the rifle,
how you got his address,

where you stayed in Brooklyn.

The state's got you for
second-degree murder.

That's 25 years to life.

But the Feds also
have jurisdiction.

That's the death penalty.

You don't show some cooperation,

we're going to let them
throw you the party.

Goren: Let's talk about the second
rifle, the one you made your silencer for.

You stashed it,
buried it, whatever.

We need to find it before
someone else does.

Eames: You don't want some
poor kid to get shot, do you?

It won't be incriminating.

You can say you
were throwing it away,

or you saw
somebody put it there.

But you don't tell us, and
God forbid something happens,

you think the big guy's
going to forgive you?

The big guy?

You trivialize him.

You pretend to know what
He will or will not forgive.

I'm a soldier in
the Lord's army.

My conscience is clear.

And you, you have a
duty to protect innocent life.

So you're going to do the
right thing now, aren't you?

You're going to open that
door and let me walk out of here.

In five, 10, maybe 15 years,

people like whoever
killed this Dr. Cavella,

they're going to be
heroes in this country.

- What do we have on him?
- Hindering prosecution.

Nothing that implicates
him in a conspiracy.

And Griscom?

The best evidence
we have against him

is still the hair we
found at the scene.

A single hair?

We have 48 hours to bring
him up for arraignment.

With what we have now, I
might not be able to hold him.

What's he doing?

He's praying.

Speaking of litmus tests,

assuming we get
the goods on him,

how do you try him without
having it turn into a three-ring circus?

By inoculating the jury
against Griscom's defense.

He's going to claim he killed
to protect unborn children.

Inoculate them, how?

By telling the jury you agree
with Griscom on abortion?

It crossed my mind.

You really believe
abortion is murder?

Like I said, long as you
bring me the evidence,

convicting this... gentleman
shouldn't be a problem.

(sighs)

Promise me a margarita
when this is all over.

The copying place sent
over a list of websites

Griscom visited
on their computer.

Look at this one.

Hudson University
Alumni Association.

Goren: The Association
said he looked you up.

When did you last talk to him?

Three days ago.

I was on my way out to lunch
and he just walked up to me.

What did he want?

He had something
for me, from his father.

- He died last year.
- Goren: What was it?

I don't know why Dennis
thought I'd want them.

I was never particularly
fond of his dad.

He was really hard on Dennis.

How long had it been
since you talked to him?

Almost 10 years.

What happened
between the two of you?

Something was eating
away at him all these years.

These mementos
were precious to him,

but he gave them to you. Why?

Dennis had this idea that
we were going to get married

and help the poor
and have a lot of kids.

I respected those
goals and I loved him,

but I had another life in mind

and then I got pregnant.

Dennis was so happy

and I thought it was the worst
thing that could've happened to me.

So I started talking
about having an abortion.

Dennis went crazy.

Yeah. He ordered
me not to do it.

He put pictures
of aborted fetuses

all around our apartment.

Told me I'd be
murdering his child,

as if what was inside me was
more important to him than I was.

So that's when I
made up my mind.

I waited until he went to
work, I packed up and left.

I went to the clinic and I
never saw Dennis again.

I've got to put him in
front of a judge in an hour.

You've got less time than that to
get some kind of admission out of him.

My client has a date
in arraignment court.

There are a few things we
need to clear up with him first.

He's invoking his
right to be silent.

He doesn't have a
right to be deaf, so

he'll have to listen to
what we have to say.

First thing, there's nothing
in your file about children.

Do you have any kids?

No. I took a vow of celibacy.

You never wanted any
kids? You don't like them?

Mm-mm, I love kids.

But that's not what
God had planned for me.

You think you would've
been a good parent?

Better than your father?

There's nothing wrong with
the way my father brought me up.

He thought there was a lot
wrong with you, didn't he?

My dad was proud of me.

Is that why you became...
What is it you called yourself?

"A soldier in the Lord's army"?

To prove to him that
you had the discipline,

or the commitment, the
will to sacrifice yourself

for a greater cause,
like he did in Vietnam?

Well, it was just a thought.

Maybe you were...

one of those special
people who heard...

Heard the voice
of God tell them...

to join the
movement, is that it?

Yes.

It was divine guidance...

not some base human passion,

like anger... or revenge.

Pride.

It was wounded
pride, wasn't it, Dennis?

She defied you,

she killed your unborn
child and it broke you.

- She was weak. It's not her fault.
- Who then?

Nobody held a gun to
her head to go to a clinic...

It's the ones who allowed it!

It's the ones who kept
my baby from being saved!

What is it you told her?
That you were angry

at the wrong person
all of these years!

It was the doctors! They
ripped that life out of her body.

Is that what you were thinking
when you had Cavella in your scope?

Your baby? The life that
might've been your life with Susan?

I don't think about
that anymore.

You think about it all the time.

You've given up hope.

You're giving everything away,

touching base with old friends.

You're closing the book.

You're going to kill yourself.

But not before
you pay them back.

- Murderers like Cavella.
- All right, stop this!

I'm telling you, we
are through here...

- Pay them back for what
they took away from you!
- He is going to arraignment court!

Pay them back the
way your dad taught you!

Come on, Dennis, say it!

You took a life for a life.

(knocking)

His mother put up her
house as bond for the bail.

Soon as the paperwork's
done, he'll be out of our hands.

We'll put surveillance on him and we'll
call Intel to alert the abortion clinics.

I'm thinking he's planning
something closer to home.

- Girlfriend?
- The doctor who performed
the abortion.

The surveillance team followed
him to his lawyer's office.

They waited until the lawyer
went home for the night.

They never saw Griscom
leave the building.

- Maybe he slipped out
through the garage.
- Terrific.

The doctor who did the abortion
passed away two years ago.

I put a trace out on everyone
else involved in the procedure.

This guy has a death wish and he's
going to take somebody down with him.

We can hope he gets the order
mixed up and shoots himself first.

- I need to run Griscom's name
through Westlaw.
- Deakins: Go ahead.

What're you looking for?

He said it's the
ones who allowed it,

the ones who kept his
baby from being saved.

Here we go.

"Dennis Griscom in
Re An Unborn Child."

He sued on behalf
of his unborn kid

to stop Susan Ward
from having the abortion.

- The judge turned him down.
- Judge Adam Yates.

You find him, you find the gun.

Man: How you doing,
Judge? Good to see you.

(gun clicks)

(gun clicks)

Might help if you
had a firing pin.

Drop the gun, Dennis!

- Stay away from me.
- Get off the ledge, Dennis.

Don't come near me!

Why do you want
to hurt yourself?

- Just tell me why.
- I don't answer to you!

I know.

What about your mother,
and Lori and her kids?

- They're going to want to know.
- (panting)

It looks like it's
going to rain tonight.

- What?
- Goren: Yeah.

It looks like we're going to get a
good soaking. What do you think?

I don't know.

I saw some lighting

from over the park.

Can you see anything?

Come on, Dennis,
let's go inside.

- Cuff him.
- Grab him.

I got him.

- Let's go.
- All right, get him up.

Tell the judge we're all clear.

Until the next one.

(theme music playing)

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