NCIS (2003–…): Season 20, Episode 20 - Second Opinion - full transcript
NCIS works to solve the murder of a senator's daughter who has a rebellious reputation and large online following: Jimmy gets competitive with an old college rival.
(pop music playing)
(indistinct chatter)
You get a spot right up
front, all right? Thanks.
Okay, everyone.
If I could have your attention.
All right.
Detective Grizz is just
wrapping up a case.
He should be here any minute
now, all right? KIDS: Aw.
Okay? All right, thanks so much.
Just give me one second,
please. Excuse me.
Joe, what the hell are you...
Aw, come on, man.
There are kids here.
What, man? I'm hydrating, okay?
It's like a frigging
sauna in this thing.
Put the head back on
and get out there.
Isn't there some other type of
community service I could do?
Sorry, pal, you drew
the short stick.
You're Detective Grizz
for a whole month.
I hate Detective Grizz.
The suit is really itchy
and it smells. Bad.
You should have thought of
that before you got a DUI.
Now come on, let's go.
All right, give me a minute.
(sighs)
(groans)
What are you looking at?
(sighs)
(muttering)
Okay, kids, gather around.
There you go. Okay,
without further ado,
please welcome Detective Grizz!
JOE: It's a... There's...
In the w... in the woods...
It was right there!
There's a... It's...
in the woods.
There's a dead
body in the woods!
(kids screaming) There's
a dead body in the woods!
♪ ♪
Wait, explain to me
again. He's a bear...
That solves crimes,
yeah. Detective Grizz.
Yeah, he shows up at
schools, teaches kids to...
(gruffly): stay away from crime.
Or else what... he mauls them?
Didn't you have Detective
Grizz when you were a kid?
Nah, not where I grew up.
Wait, so this dude puts
out forest fires too? No.
That's another bear. What?
How many bears they got working?
No ID on the victim.
First on the scene
saw her Navy tattoo,
which is why they called us.
Well, McGee, they don't need us.
They got Detective Grizz,
so he can solve it.
Detective Grizz is too
busy puking his guts out.
(coughing)
Yeah, looks like the contents
of her coat fell out.
PARKER: Anything interesting?
Uh, a torn valet stub.
Could be where she last parked.
Valet company's
number's on the back.
Run it down. JIMMY: Sorry.
Sorry, I'm late, I know.
You oversleep, Jimmy?
No, my car wouldn't
start. Again.
No, not the Man Van.
Yeah, the Man Van. In hindsight,
not the best purchase.
And to top it all off,
the handle to my
bag finally broke.
You know, my tools
spilled everywhere.
I love this bag.
Dr. Mallard gave it to me.
Jimmy, why didn't you fix
all that stuff already?
I'd love to, Nick, but
Victoria needs braces,
and money's a little
tight at the moment.
Tell me about it.
It's criminal.
Speaking of. Our victim?
Oh, right. Sorry.
Well, uh, based on decomp,
I would say that she's been
here for a couple days,
which is gonna make
establishing a time of death,
uh, challenging.
What about cause?
Also challenging.
Got so many wounds here
it's hard to tell
which ones were fatal.
All in all, I'd say it's
gonna take some time.
So we got nothing. Yeah.
Come on, guys,
you're making me look bad
in front of Detective Grizz.
KNIGHT: Well, this
might make you happy.
Valet company gave me an address
where the car was last parked.
Where is it?
Nice digs.
You sure this is
the right place?
Yeah.
Came up registered
under a trust.
Happy to help. Anytime.
It was great meeting
you. Thank you.
Take care. Thanks for
your help. Yep. Thanks.
Ma'am.
Can I help you?
NCIS. Is, uh...
is this your house, sir?
No, this is Senator
Grayson's residence.
I'm her chief of staff,
Douglas Pritchard.
Uh, can I ask what
this is regarding?
We'd like to have a
word with the senator.
Well, she's just
finishing up a meeting,
but if you care to wait inside.
I'll tell the
senator you're here.
This room is nicer than
my entire apartment.
You know what I'm
thinking, don't you?
That I have a crappy apartment?
Senator. Dead body.
We could be looking
at another, uh,
Chappaquiddick-type dealio.
Parker.
That looks just like...
Our victim, yeah.
SELENA: I take it you're here
about Amanda?
All right, what, uh
what did my daughter
do this time?
I'm sorry. Um...
I'm afraid your daughter's dead.
I can't believe she's gone.
We're sorry for
your loss, senator.
I always feared
this would happen.
Amanda was a troubled person.
How so?
Well, she was self-destructive.
Always acting out.
Do either of you have children?
No.
You think running a government
is hard, try parenting.
I guess it was my fault that
she was the way she was.
Amanda probably needed
more attention
than I could give.
If I'd only been
there for her...
Hey, hey. Don't do that
to yourself, Selena.
You did everything
that you could.
When did you see her last?
Two weeks ago.
I hosted a dinner.
She just showed up.
Did this dinner have a valet
service? PRITCHARD: Yes.
It-it was a fundraiser
for the senator's
reelection campaign.
And how did Amanda seem?
Surprisingly upbeat.
And then she just
slipped back to
her old ways and...
started drinking and
became loud and belligerent.
I tried to order her a
car to take her home,
but she just ran off.
That was the last
time we spoke. (sobs)
Well, thank you, Senator.
That's, uh, that's
enough for now.
If we have any more
questions, we'll be in touch.
You'll be in touch
sooner than that.
I want to be updated
on this investigation
every step of the way.
That's normally
not how we handle...
My daughter was
murdered, Agent Parker.
And I'm gonna use
everything in my power to
catch the person responsible.
Do you understand?
Yes, ma'am.
KNIGHT: When the senator
said that Amanda was
troubled, she was not kidding.
I checked her record.
Multiple DUIs, vandalism,
disturbing the peace,
and all before her sweet 16.
Teen delinquent. I can relate.
Though I doubt she
did time in juvie.
Well, she was shipped to
Rosewood Center in Utah,
which is like, uh, a boarding
school for troubled teens.
And when that didn't work
her mom signed for her
to join the military
as a last-ditch effort.
I take it that
didn't work either?
I talked to Amanda's CO.
She recently got
disciplined for misconduct.
Not her first time.
It sounds like the Navy
was planning on discharging her.
So what was she mixed up in?
I might have an answer.
Looked into Amanda's finances.
Turns out she was
running a side hustle.
She was posting
videos to CurioCam.
You say that like
I'm supposed to know
what you're talking about.
It's an online
subscription service
where people record
private videos
for their subscribers.
You know, sex
videos, kinky stuff.
So I've heard.
Uh-huh. KNIGHT:
There are a lot of
shady characters on CurioCam,
so she could have met
the wrong person online.
JIMMY: I'm sorry, uh,
braces are how much?
And that's for the
whole mouth, right?
Okay, all right.
Uh, let me see what
I can scrounge up
and I-I'll talk
to you later. Bye.
Sorry, Director.
Problems, Dr. Palmer? No, no,
I just... Victoria
needs braces.
I'm learning they
are a tad expensive.
Oh, yeah, I remember.
When my kids needed braces,
I practically had to
refinance the house.
I am this close to telling
her just not to smile
for the rest of her life.
It'd be so much cheaper.
(chuckles) So, how's
the autopsy coming?
I've just about calculated
Amanda's time of death.
I would have had it sooner, but
given the state of the body,
it's taken longer than
I would have liked.
Actually, that's why I'm here.
Senator Grayson
has been pushing
to get some answers
as soon as possible,
and she has now
demanded that we take on
a forensic pathologist to
assist with the autopsy.
Wow, I haven't worked with
anyone down here since, uh,
well, since Dr. Mallard.
Yeah, and I understand
it's an imposition,
but the senator's
got SECNAV involved
now, so it's a...
Uh, no, no, no,
it's fine, Director.
Who's the pathologist?
From what I hear,
he's actually
quite accomplished.
He's worked a lot of
high-profile cases,
he's written several
bestselling books.
He even has his own docuseries.
(elevator dings) It's
not Miles Bauer, is it?
(laughs)
Jimmy. Can you believe this?
How long's it been? Come
here, give me some love, man.
Oh. Miles. Yeah,
nice to see you.
VANCE: So, wait,
how do you... how do
you two know each other?
Uh, we were pre-med
together back in college.
Oh, more than that.
We were roommates.
This guy... the
smartest guy on campus.
And the horniest.
(chuckles nervously)
Nah, seriously, you look good.
(laughs) You look good, too.
Uh, congratulations
on all your success,
you know? The...
You've made a name for yourself.
What, all the TV stuff? Nah.
That's just Hollywood
phony-baloney.
It's not like what you do here.
Oh... Getting justice
for fallen sailors?
That's truly God's work,
man. So charitable.
Well, it's... I mean,
it's not charity,
it's actually my job.
So, Dr. Bauer, I take it
you're ready to start?
Yes, looking forward to it.
And just so you know, Jimmy,
as I told your director earlier,
I'm here simply to
offer support. This is
your house. I'm just a guest.
I appreciate that.
So where are we?
Time of death? I was...
Going off these numbers,
I'd say our victim
died two days ago
between the hours of
5:00 and 7:00 p.m.
Just about to say
that. Excellent.
This partnership is
working out already.
Good.
Good, let's get to work.
NARRATOR: With the gruesome
discovery of yet another victim...
Hey, Kasie? Shh.
San Antonio police
turned to Dr. Bauer for help.
In order to catch the
San Antonio Butcher,
I knew I had to examine
his original victims.
Every dead body has
a story to tell.
You just need to listen.
Man, he's good. (video stops)
So you've heard.
Oh, I am so excited.
I've read all of Bauer's books.
Have you gone down
to meet him yet?
No, but I did work with him
back in my FBI
days. Not a fan.
What?
Eh, I always thought Bauer
was a blowhard and
a publicity chaser.
He never met a camera
he didn't like.
And good thing, too, because
his docuseries is amazing.
Maybe he'll do one
about this case.
How about we focus on
someone else's videos?
Namely the ones
Amanda made, okay?
I reviewed all the footage
in her CurioCam account.
There was a lot of stuff.
Over four hours worth.
Was it all explicit?
Uh, not exactly.
(soft rustling)
What the hell am I looking at?
(laughs)
Amanda made ASMR videos,
which stands for autonomous
sensory meridian response.
People record themselves
making soft noises
like chewing or whispering.
It's designed to relax you.
People pay for this
crap? Oh, yeah.
It's big on the web.
Amanda had thousands of
dedicated subscribers.
Oh, yeah? Any one stand
out? (video stops)
One guy named
Arthur Vernon.
He watched every
video Amanda made
and always left a
ton of comments.
What kind of comments?
The creepy kind.
"I think about your
smell, your flesh.
My soul burns for you."
Hmm. I know, right?
All this from bubble wrap.
You got an address?
(knocking)
It's open. Entrez vous.
(coughs) Oh.
Arthur Vernon?
No, man. Arthur's,
like, not here.
You his roommate? Mm-hmm.
I'm Agent Knight,
this is Agent Torres.
Do you know when
Mr. Vernon will be home?
Nope.
(laughs)
Hey, you all right if we
look around while we, uh,
while we wait for him?
Knock yourself out, man.
Su casa es mi casa.
Uh, which one is Vernon's room?
Down the hall,
to the left. Left.
(laughs)
We should arrest him
for just being a moron.
Oh, wow.
We have a stalker 101 over here.
Our boy was obsessed
with Amanda.
Obsessed enough to kill her?
Is that...
Amanda's scarf.
Looks like he kept a
souvenir of her murder.
Mr. Vernon.
I understand how this looks.
Yeah?
How does it look?
I know about Amanda.
I didn't kill her.
I was a fan of hers.
We saw what was
inside your closet,
Arthur,
along with the comments
that you left on
her video posts.
This one is one of my favorites.
"You and I are meant
to be together,
in this world or the next."
Poetic.
ARTHUR: I was
interested in Amanda.
That's not a crime.
Care to tell us
how you got ahold of her scarf?
She gave it to me.
When? Few weeks ago.
I messaged her through the site
and asked for a piece
of her clothing,
so she sold it to me.
You have any record
of this transaction?
A receipt or...
No, it's not really
tax deductible.
I sent her cash.
I'd like some more water.
When we're done.
McGEE: Where you
were two days ago
between 5:00 and 7:00 p.m.?
I was at work.
I'm a cashier at the
army surplus store.
Anyone see you there? My boss.
He was there doing
inventory. You can ask him.
Oh, we will.
McGEE: Army surplus store
is only about a mile from where
they found Amanda's body.
That's convenient,
don't you think?
Are we almost finished here?
It's getting pretty late.
Have you ever been married?
Arthur?
Yes.
We divorced.
What happened?
She get tired of your
sparkling personality?
She, uh...
she was unfaithful.
Well, that must
have made you angry.
Probably why she
filed a restraining
order against you, huh?
KNIGHT: According
to the reports,
she said that you were abusive,
and that you
threatened to kill her
on multiple occasions.
She's a liar.
If I'd ever lost my temper,
believe me, she had it coming.
Like Amanda had it coming?
(door opens)
So, what do you
think... Is he our guy?
Not sure yet.
I mean, everything about
him screams guilty.
He even gives me the creeps.
But the evidence?
Circumstantial.
We got nothing solid yet.
Damn it.
Senator Grayson caught
wind about Vernon.
She won't stop calling me.
She's out for blood,
huh? Oh, yeah.
She's pressing me
to make an arrest.
Well, look, I know she's
a senator, but, uh,
can't you tell her to back off?
It's delicate. Well, look,
Leon, I'd love to help you out,
but, uh, without any proof,
we can hold Vernon for 24 hours,
but after that, we got to
cut him loose. All right.
Let's just hope
we find something.
Oh, uh, sorry. I was just
gonna check her liver.
Oh, please. Go ahead.
Are you sure? 'Cause
I can wait if...
I insist. There's plenty
of organs to go around.
Yeah, liver looks healthy.
No signs of steatosis.
No steatosis. Check.
How long is he gonna
just stand there?
Who? Kenji?
Nah, don't mind
him. He's just here
in case I ever want to
turn this into a book.
He makes a mean cappuccino,
by the way. You want one?
No, I don't. Hey, Kenji,
Could you whip up two
cappuccinos for us?
Extra foam. Mm-hmm.
No, I don't need the... Kenji?
Kenji? Kenji, I... (groans)
(sighs)
Wish we had that
toxicology report.
Kasie should have
it done by now.
Sorry, she dropped it off
while you were in the bathroom.
Don't bother reading it.
Other than some vitamin B
and Rymodrin in her system,
Amanda was clean.
Rymodrin?
She was taking
medication for ADHD?
Not surprising. Seems
like everyone I know
has been diagnosed
with it these days.
Why didn't you
tell me about this?
I've been waiting
for the report.
I don't know. Just
slipped my mind.
Wouldn't be the first time.
Hey, Jimmy. McGee.
Hi. Have you met Dr. Bauer?
No. No, nice to meet you.
Yeah, same. Listen, I
hate to rush you guys.
We're kind of under
the gun on this one.
Have you found anything?
We determined Amanda's
cause of death
was blunt force
trauma to the head,
most likely from a rock
swung by somebody
who's left-handed.
Huh.
Arthur Vernon is
left-handed, I think.
Have you found any DNA?
Not yet, but we're
still looking.
Every dead body has
a story to tell.
You just need to listen.
All right! You know it. Nice.
(chuckling)
What are these marks here?
Uh, we don't know
what that is yet.
Uh, it could be markings
from where the body
hit the ground.
Or maybe something
was placed over her mouth?
Of course. How could
I have been so stupid?
I knew those marks
looked familiar.
You've seen this before?
I was working this case
years ago in Chicago.
We caught this serial killer,
real scumbag.
He liked to put a mask
over his victim's face
and asphyxiate them
prior to stabbing them.
Yeah, those are mask
impressions. I'm sure of it.
So, her killer placed a mask
over Amanda's face
before killing her, huh?
You find the mask,
you find the killer.
I was wondering when you
guys were gonna show.
Ever since the news
broke about Arthur,
shop's been flooded
with reporters.
Not that I mind.
Good publicity.
Uh, how long did
Mr. Vernon work here?
Couple years.
What impressions
do you have of him?
You mean do I think
he could have killed that girl?
Heh, I can answer
that real easy.
Hell yeah.
He did it. What
makes you say that?
Arthur was always an odd bird.
You know, kept to himself,
got real sensitive
if you ever touched
any of his stuff.
But underneath, there was this
anger simmering.
Like a guy who was
ready to explode.
And what about his alibi?
Can you confirm that
he was working here
three days ago between the
hours of 5:00 and 7:00 p.m.?
I can confirm that I saw him
for the 30 minutes
I was in the shop,
but what he did
before and after,
who knows?
Okay, well, thank you.
We will be in touch.
Hey, while you guys are here,
you want to buy
some military stuff?
We work with the military.
Want to sell something then?
(chuckles)
Oh, yeah, that's
pretty bitching, right?
Genuine World War II gas mask.
A lot of guys are
into this vintage stuff.
Was Vernon into it?
Well, now that you mention it,
yeah, he was.
You better not be going for
the last jalape o chips.
What's that? Oh, no.
They are all yours. Oh, okay.
Well, what's up?
Shouldn't you be downstairs
with Dr. Bauer, melding minds?
Oh, no, I just needed a
break. What's going on?
You two not playing nice?
I heard you were, like,
friends in college. Uh,
not... not exactly.
I know this face.
There's something going
on between you two.
(laughs) Jimmy.
I'm gonna get it out of
you one way or another.
Okay, all right, okay.
It's not that big of a deal.
Back in college, when
we were roommates,
I was kind of, like, the
star student, you know?
And Miles was a screwup.
He was always turning
in his assignments late,
he was flunking tests.
Miles Bauer was a screwup?
Oh, yeah. Yeah. No,
without my help,
he would have failed
out of school for sure.
Okay, so what happened?
Was he ungrateful or...
No, right before he graduated,
the Mayo Clinic offered
this pre-med internship,
and everybody wanted it.
So, of course Miles
applied for it,
but I was seen as, like,
the shoo-in for it.
And the day before
my interview, the
Mayo Clinic called
to reschedule the
interview time.
Miles took the message
'cause I wasn't home.
I never got it.
Oh, no... You missed
the interview?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, Miles said he left a note
right there, by the phone.
I don't know.
I always wondered if maybe
he intentionally withheld it.
But, either way,
I didn't get the
internship. Miles did.
The rest is history.
That little weasel.
I'm gonna go down
there and kick his ass.
Whoa, whoa, Kasie.
No, no. Hey, hey, hey.
It's water under the
bridge. No, he s...
he sabotaged you, Jimmy.
I could never prove it, all
right? It's in the past.
Honestly, I'm over
it, all right?
So just...
enjoy your potato chips.
If you say so.
Gosh.
I don't know why I buy these.
Mm. They always burn my mouth.
They're jalape o.
They're supposed to.
Oh.
I swear, these give me fevers.
I got to go.
VANCE: Time's up.
It's been 24 hours.
Do we have enough
to arrest Vernon
for the murder of
Amanda Grayson?
Possibly. I was hoping
for something a little
more definitive.
Well, Vernon's got motive
and his alibi is shaky,
but we still haven't
got a smoking gun.
But we do. We have the mask.
I was able to
compare the gas masks
sold at Vernon's employment
with the imprints
on Amanda's face.
They were a perfect match.
That can't be a coincidence.
Did we ever find a mask
at Vernon's apartment?
No.
Vernon could have
easily disposed of it
after killing her, which is
exactly what the killer did
on the case I
worked on years ago.
I'm telling you, Director,
all the facts point
to Vernon being our
guy. It's case closed.
Except it isn't.
I've been going
over the numbers,
and I hate to say it,
but Arthur Vernon is innocent.
What are you talking about?
Amanda's time of death...
The 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. window
that we've been working with...
Is based on the assumption
that her body temperature
was 98.6 at the time of death.
Now, what happens if that
body temperature is higher?
Say 102, 103?
And how could that happen?
Because Amanda was on Rymodrin,
and when you combine Rymodrin
with intense physical exertion,
like she certainly would have
experienced during her attack,
it can cause a person's
body temperature to spike.
So, if Amanda's actual body
temperature was higher,
then that pushes back
her time of death
by six hours, 11:00
a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
which would mean...
Vernon couldn't have done it.
He was at a doctor's
appointment,
had a rock-solid alibi.
With all due respect
to my colleague,
this is just conjecture.
Yes, elevated body temperature
could be a possible
side effect of Rymodrin,
but I have never come across
it in all my years of practice.
And I have. On a
case I worked on.
And just to be sure,
I spoke with Amanda's
doctor, who told me that
she was always complaining
of running hot.
Her complaints
could mean nothing.
Did her doctor verify it?
And this case of yours...
What is it?
What are the details? I
don't remember, exactly.
It was a long time ago
and I was an assistant.
But I do remember the
part about the Rymodrin.
So, let me get this straight.
Your theory is based on
some case you don't remember
and weren't even the M.E. on?
And you're gonna
believe him over me?
I know I'm right, Director.
Cut Vernon loose.
No, this is a mistake.
When the senator learns you
let a killer go... The senator
isn't in charge of
this investigation.
I am, and I'm going with my man.
If anything happens,
it's on you.
Hope we did the right thing.
Even if he didn't kill Amanda,
he's still a creep.
What's done is done.
No use crying over
spilled suspects.
Do you think he's innocent?
What I think is we
need to get to work
finding another suspect.
Any ideas? McGEE: Maybe.
I was going over
Amanda's phone records.
Day before she died,
she made several calls
to a classmate from
the Rosewood Center.
Rosewood. That's the
school for troubled teens?
Yeah. Classmate
may know something.
Kind of a long shot but...
Bring her in first
thing tomorrow.
Oh. Hey.
Hey.
What are you doing?
Oh, so this is how it works.
I've always heard that you guys
have heart-to-hearts in here.
Is that what we're doing?
We're doing a
heart-to-heart? Yep.
About Arthur Vernon.
Please, Jess, tell me you're
not taking Bauer's side on this.
No, no, I am on
your side. Always.
It's... I just want to make sure
that your feelings about Bauer
aren't clouding your judgment.
So you're not taking my side.
Kasie told me what Bauer
did to you in college.
And I told her, I am
completely over it.
Are you?
No, I lied. It
really pisses me off.
But I'm not letting that
cloud my work, all right?
Vernon is innocent, and
the facts are the facts.
Okay. I believe you.
You want to talk about it?
It just doesn't seem fair.
Guy like Bauer gets to
cheat his way to the top
while the rest of us
struggle just to keep
our heads above water.
He gets TV shows,
he gets book deals.
And what do I get?
I get a broken-down van
and braces I can't afford.
I'm sorry, Jess,
I'm just throwing myself
a pity party here.
No. No, no, no.
Party away.
I just sometimes wish
that things were easier.
Yeah, I understand.
It's tough right now.
But...
maybe try focusing
on what you do have.
Thanks for coming
in, Ms. Lygnos.
Yeah, of course.
Um, I heard about
Amanda on the news.
I-I still can't believe it.
I just saw her a week ago.
TORRES: Were the
two of you close?
Not really.
I mean, I hadn't seen
her since school,
and we weren't even
that close then.
Which is why it was so weird
when she just called
me out of the blue
and asked me to lunch.
What did y'all talk about?
Rosewood, mostly.
Before we met,
she asked me to bring
all of my school photos.
I was into photography
back then, and I used to
go around taking
photos of everything.
Any idea why Amanda wanted
to see these photos?
A trip down memory lane or...
No. I mean, to be honest,
I was surprised she wanted
to relive Rosewood at all,
given the rough
time she had there.
What do you mean?
Rosewood wasn't
exactly a summer camp.
If you were there it was
because you had issues.
Amanda seemed to
have more than most.
She was withdrawn,
anxious.
I always felt bad for her.
Okay, what happened
after this lunch?
She wanted to keep the photos,
and I gave them to her.
We said our goodbyes.
Then, a few days later,
she called me, uh, but by
the time I called her back,
she was already dead.
(phone chirps)
Excuse me.
It's Parker.
The police just
found another body.
It's at the same park as before.
(indistinct radio chatter)
Lori Nelson, age 21.
A jogger found her an
hour ago, called it in.
KNIGHT: I spoke
with the local LEOs.
They didn't know much.
I ran a quick search on her.
She posted videos on CurioCam.
Just like Amanda.
Anything on the body?
It's a fresh kill. Less
than three hours old,
and her head appears
crushed. Also like Amanda.
PARKER: Where's Arthur Vernon
now? Anyone got eyes on him?
We sent agents to his
apartment and his workplace,
and no one can find him.
Vernon is in the wind.
He didn't waste
any time, did he?
SELENA: How could
you let him go?
Senator, I understand...
Because of you,
another woman is dead.
This is unbelievable.
We were acting on the best
evidence we had at the time...
No, you were acting on
his evidence.
Now, you could have chosen
to listen to Dr. Bauer,
a highly-respected pathologist,
but instead,
you went with him,
and he was wrong.
I want him fired immediately.
Whoa, whoa. Hey...
No one's getting fired.
I made the call
to release Vernon,
not Dr. Palmer.
I don't care. I want him out!
(clears throat)
May I say something, please?
I feel awful that
another woman was killed.
But that doesn't necessarily
mean that Arthur Vernon did it.
Oh, come on. Jimmy. Really?
After all this, you're still
gonna stick with
your Rymodrin theory?
It's not a theory, it's fact.
And I told you, it's nonsense.
It goes against
all my experience.
And, what, your experience
is more valid than mine?
Do I really need to answer that?
I am so sick of you throwing
your career in my face.
You wouldn't even have a
career if it wasn't for me.
This how you run your agency?
Dr. Palmer.
Go home.
What? Are you firing me?
No, I'm taking you out
of the line of fire.
Go home, take a breath.
PARKER: He's right, Jimmy.
We'll call you when
things cool off.
SELENA: Okay. Let's
talk about how you plan
to catch this lunatic Vernon.
I imagine you have some
proposals on the table.
Okay. Yeah.
Yeah, I'll just-I'll just
call you back later.
Bye.
How's Jimmy doing?
Uh, I don't know.
He says he's okay.
But this morning, when
I went to his apartment
to drop off his coffee,
there were dirty dishes in
the sink from last night.
Dirty dishes? Jimmy?
Yeah, cleaning is,
like, his sport.
I hope he's okay.
Look, I know everybody's upset
about Jimmy being benched,
but the best thing
we can do for him
is to catch Arthur Vernon
and put this case
behind us, okay?
So, where we at?
BOLO's still out on Vernon.
And we are monitoring
the borders and airports,
but so far, nothing.
All right, keep at it.
He'll pop up sooner or later.
What if we are wasting our time?
What do you mean?
What if Jimmy's right and
Vernon isn't our killer?
I mean, think about it.
If he did kill Amanda,
why would he go back to
the scene of the crime
so soon and kill another person?
It clearly implicates him.
TORRES: Yeah, that
always did bug me.
It's too obvious.
Okay, I'll bite.
But if it isn't
Vernon, then who is it?
Well, after we met up with, uh,
Amanda's classmate
from Rosewood,
I went and did a little
digging on the school.
Turns out they're currently
under investigation for
allegations of sexual abuse.
I haven't read
anything about that.
Cause a high-priced law firm
is trying to cover it up.
Amanda's classmate
said that Amanda
was withdrawn and anxious.
Could be signs she
was being abused.
Maybe that's why she
wanted her school photos.
She was looking for evidence
to incriminate her abuser.
Well, maybe she found it and
that's what got her killed.
Only way we'll know for sure
is to find out what
was in those photos.
All right. McGee, Torres,
search Amanda's
apartment for the photos.
Knight, dig deeper
into this law firm,
find out who they're protecting.
(phone ringing)
And go for Bauer.
Liz, hi, how are you?
The book contract?
I have a copy in my
car. Let me go look.
And while I have
you on the phone,
what do you think about
this for a new book title?
The Morgue the Merrier.
No, I know, I know.
I don't see him anywhere.
I think he's gone.
Okay, great. Now-now
get close to the body.
Arthur Vernon is innocent,
but in order to prove it,
I need to get a closer
look at Lori Nelson.
Okay. If anyone finds
out I'm doing this,
I'll be the one at
home eating Mallomars,
which wouldn't be so
bad, come to think of it.
Are you next to the body, Kasie?
Yeah. Let's get this over with.
All right, okay, so, so
move me closer, all right?
And, um, you can
reverse the camera.
Okay, just... Oh!
Oh... Kasie?
(groans)
Ugh. Oh, God.
Kasie? What happened?
I can't see anything.
Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on.
Oh... (gags) Wait, Kase?
Ka.. I-I can't see
anything. What happened?
(groaning)
Kasie?
Oh... Oh!
Kasie. K-K... W-What
happened? I...
Oh, gosh. Oh.
Is everything okay?
No. You're gonna buy me
a new phone after this.
All right, all right, all right.
I need to see a bruise
on her upper left arm.
Can you move the
camera in closer
and turn it around?
What is that?
I don't know. I
mean, the bruising
could be from where the
killer grabbed her arm,
but the white stuff...
It looks like it's some sort
of skin cream that's dried out.
Maybe she had
eczema or psoriasis?
That's what I was thinking,
but her medical report
says she didn't have
any skin conditions.
Then whose skin cream is this?
What are you doing in here?
PARKER: Okay.
Hit me. What do we got?
I dug into the Rosewood scandal
and, uh, finally found
who the law firm is protecting.
PARKER: Hello.
That's the guy we saw
at the senator's house.
His name is Raylan Marsh.
He is a Texas oil tycoon
and one of the original
investors in Rosewood.
Two former students
are accusing him
of sexual abuse.
Marsh is claiming that Rosewood
is just one of his
hundreds of charities
and that he's never even
stepped foot inside the school.
But we know he's
lying. Why's that?
Did you find the school
photos at Amanda's apartment?
No, someone else
got to them first.
But we found something better.
The webmaster at
CurioCam contacted me
about an outstanding
bill on Amanda's account.
Turns out she was
paying for a separate
cloud storage account
where she kept digital
copies of the photos.
She was gonna go
public with the photos.
She was gonna post them
on her CurioCam page.
The webmaster told you all this?
No, Amanda did.
My name is Amanda Grayson.
Six years ago,
when I was a student at
the Rosewood Center...
I was...
abused by Raylan Marsh.
Over a period of several months,
Raylan Marsh...
sexually assaulted me.
And he's gonna say
that it never happened, and
that he was never there.
But these photos show the truth.
If she had gone
public with this,
that would have destroyed Marsh.
He must have got wind of what
she was planning and killed her.
And then framed one of her
obsessed fans to take the fall.
Only Marsh isn't our killer.
We found something suspicious
when examining the body
of our latest victim.
To be fair, Jimmy was
the one who found it,
but he was right
to be suspicious.
Are you now agreeing with him?
What'd you find?
The killer wasn't
wearing gloves when
he killed Lori Nelson.
He grabbed her and
left behind a residue
of his psoriasis medication.
Luckily, it was a
rare prescription
that needed to be compounded.
I was able to trace
the prescription,
and guess who it belonged to?
(door closes)
Senator.
Oh, Agents Parker and Knight.
I hope you're here to tell me
that you've caught
Arthur Vernon.
No, but we didn't need to,
because he didn't
kill your daughter.
You did.
What?
We found your prescription
cream on Lori Nelson's body.
PARKER: You got
sloppy. You should have
used gloves like
you did with Amanda.
(scoffs)
I have no idea what...
Why would I kill Amanda?
Because of Raylan Marsh.
Amanda was going to expose
him for sexually abusing her.
KNIGHT: Marsh happens
to be the single
biggest donor to the
senator's campaign.
He's practically bankrolling it.
PARKER: And if word got
out that the, uh, senator
was being financed by the man
who molested her own daughter,
then both of your careers
would be finished.
Marsh abused my daughter?
PARKER: I'm sorry, senator.
It happened to her a long
time ago at Rosewood,
years ago.
She hadn't seen him since,
until two weeks ago,
when Marsh showed up
at your fundraiser dinner.
That's why she got so upset.
KNIGHT: Your daughter
was a troubled woman.
But the last two
weeks of her life,
she was trying to do good.
She wanted to go
public about Marsh
and show the world
who he really is.
PARKER: Unfortunately,
she confronted Pritchard
about it first, and he panicked
and killed her. And
later, Lori Nelson.
And framed both of the
murders on Arthur Vernon.
PARKER: I got to say,
bringing in Dr. Bauer
to throw us off track?
Genius move. You played
Bauer like a fiddle.
Feeding him clues you knew
that he would eat up.
It was your idea to hire him
in the first place, wasn't it?
It was his idea.
Selena, please.
We were always having
to clean up her messes.
I was only trying to
protect you, to protect us.
(shouts)
REPORTER: where,
earlier today,
Douglas Pritchard was
arrested for the murders
of both Amanda Grayson
and Lori Nelson.
Sources tell us the arrest
was made with the help
of famed pathologist
Dr. Miles Bauer.
KASIE: What a load of bull.
He gets all the credit?
Jimmy's the one
who broke the case.
I am just happy to be back.
And happy that we got
some justice for Amanda.
Yeah, and thanks to her video,
Raylan Marsh will be going away
for a very long time.
What ever happened to, uh,
Arthur Vernon, by the way?
Oh, we finally found him.
He was at his grandma's cabin,
hiding out from the press.
Oh. Dr. Bauer could learn
something from that.
(elevator dings)
Speaking of which...
Oh, I'm sorry.
I just, uh,
came to get my stuff.
Uh, know what, I can come back.
No. We...
were just leaving.
You're packing it up, huh?
Yeah, Vegas PD called.
They need my help
with a double murder.
Ooh, sounds juicy. Yeah,
it's nothing like
this one, though.
This was one hell of a case.
It'd make a great book.
(chuckles) I'm sure it would.
Yeah, we could write it
together, if you're interested.
I could speak to my publisher.
I think that's more your
thing, you know? I'm good.
Listen, Jimmy.
I'm sorry if things
got weird between us.
Oh, Miles, please.
It's all in the past.
For what it's worth,
you should know I was
always jealous of you.
You were always the
better one. Still are.
Heck,
I know it couldn't
have been easy,
watching our careers take
different paths, but...
No, it wasn't, but...
I'm-I'm glad things turned
out the way that they did.
You know, if I'd taken
a different path,
I would have never met Breena,
I wouldn't have Victoria.
I certainly wouldn't have
my second family here.
So, I'm right where
I'm supposed to be.
Take care of yourself, Jimmy.
You too, Miles.
Captioning sponsored by CBS
and TOYOTA.
(indistinct chatter)
You get a spot right up
front, all right? Thanks.
Okay, everyone.
If I could have your attention.
All right.
Detective Grizz is just
wrapping up a case.
He should be here any minute
now, all right? KIDS: Aw.
Okay? All right, thanks so much.
Just give me one second,
please. Excuse me.
Joe, what the hell are you...
Aw, come on, man.
There are kids here.
What, man? I'm hydrating, okay?
It's like a frigging
sauna in this thing.
Put the head back on
and get out there.
Isn't there some other type of
community service I could do?
Sorry, pal, you drew
the short stick.
You're Detective Grizz
for a whole month.
I hate Detective Grizz.
The suit is really itchy
and it smells. Bad.
You should have thought of
that before you got a DUI.
Now come on, let's go.
All right, give me a minute.
(sighs)
(groans)
What are you looking at?
(sighs)
(muttering)
Okay, kids, gather around.
There you go. Okay,
without further ado,
please welcome Detective Grizz!
JOE: It's a... There's...
In the w... in the woods...
It was right there!
There's a... It's...
in the woods.
There's a dead
body in the woods!
(kids screaming) There's
a dead body in the woods!
♪ ♪
Wait, explain to me
again. He's a bear...
That solves crimes,
yeah. Detective Grizz.
Yeah, he shows up at
schools, teaches kids to...
(gruffly): stay away from crime.
Or else what... he mauls them?
Didn't you have Detective
Grizz when you were a kid?
Nah, not where I grew up.
Wait, so this dude puts
out forest fires too? No.
That's another bear. What?
How many bears they got working?
No ID on the victim.
First on the scene
saw her Navy tattoo,
which is why they called us.
Well, McGee, they don't need us.
They got Detective Grizz,
so he can solve it.
Detective Grizz is too
busy puking his guts out.
(coughing)
Yeah, looks like the contents
of her coat fell out.
PARKER: Anything interesting?
Uh, a torn valet stub.
Could be where she last parked.
Valet company's
number's on the back.
Run it down. JIMMY: Sorry.
Sorry, I'm late, I know.
You oversleep, Jimmy?
No, my car wouldn't
start. Again.
No, not the Man Van.
Yeah, the Man Van. In hindsight,
not the best purchase.
And to top it all off,
the handle to my
bag finally broke.
You know, my tools
spilled everywhere.
I love this bag.
Dr. Mallard gave it to me.
Jimmy, why didn't you fix
all that stuff already?
I'd love to, Nick, but
Victoria needs braces,
and money's a little
tight at the moment.
Tell me about it.
It's criminal.
Speaking of. Our victim?
Oh, right. Sorry.
Well, uh, based on decomp,
I would say that she's been
here for a couple days,
which is gonna make
establishing a time of death,
uh, challenging.
What about cause?
Also challenging.
Got so many wounds here
it's hard to tell
which ones were fatal.
All in all, I'd say it's
gonna take some time.
So we got nothing. Yeah.
Come on, guys,
you're making me look bad
in front of Detective Grizz.
KNIGHT: Well, this
might make you happy.
Valet company gave me an address
where the car was last parked.
Where is it?
Nice digs.
You sure this is
the right place?
Yeah.
Came up registered
under a trust.
Happy to help. Anytime.
It was great meeting
you. Thank you.
Take care. Thanks for
your help. Yep. Thanks.
Ma'am.
Can I help you?
NCIS. Is, uh...
is this your house, sir?
No, this is Senator
Grayson's residence.
I'm her chief of staff,
Douglas Pritchard.
Uh, can I ask what
this is regarding?
We'd like to have a
word with the senator.
Well, she's just
finishing up a meeting,
but if you care to wait inside.
I'll tell the
senator you're here.
This room is nicer than
my entire apartment.
You know what I'm
thinking, don't you?
That I have a crappy apartment?
Senator. Dead body.
We could be looking
at another, uh,
Chappaquiddick-type dealio.
Parker.
That looks just like...
Our victim, yeah.
SELENA: I take it you're here
about Amanda?
All right, what, uh
what did my daughter
do this time?
I'm sorry. Um...
I'm afraid your daughter's dead.
I can't believe she's gone.
We're sorry for
your loss, senator.
I always feared
this would happen.
Amanda was a troubled person.
How so?
Well, she was self-destructive.
Always acting out.
Do either of you have children?
No.
You think running a government
is hard, try parenting.
I guess it was my fault that
she was the way she was.
Amanda probably needed
more attention
than I could give.
If I'd only been
there for her...
Hey, hey. Don't do that
to yourself, Selena.
You did everything
that you could.
When did you see her last?
Two weeks ago.
I hosted a dinner.
She just showed up.
Did this dinner have a valet
service? PRITCHARD: Yes.
It-it was a fundraiser
for the senator's
reelection campaign.
And how did Amanda seem?
Surprisingly upbeat.
And then she just
slipped back to
her old ways and...
started drinking and
became loud and belligerent.
I tried to order her a
car to take her home,
but she just ran off.
That was the last
time we spoke. (sobs)
Well, thank you, Senator.
That's, uh, that's
enough for now.
If we have any more
questions, we'll be in touch.
You'll be in touch
sooner than that.
I want to be updated
on this investigation
every step of the way.
That's normally
not how we handle...
My daughter was
murdered, Agent Parker.
And I'm gonna use
everything in my power to
catch the person responsible.
Do you understand?
Yes, ma'am.
KNIGHT: When the senator
said that Amanda was
troubled, she was not kidding.
I checked her record.
Multiple DUIs, vandalism,
disturbing the peace,
and all before her sweet 16.
Teen delinquent. I can relate.
Though I doubt she
did time in juvie.
Well, she was shipped to
Rosewood Center in Utah,
which is like, uh, a boarding
school for troubled teens.
And when that didn't work
her mom signed for her
to join the military
as a last-ditch effort.
I take it that
didn't work either?
I talked to Amanda's CO.
She recently got
disciplined for misconduct.
Not her first time.
It sounds like the Navy
was planning on discharging her.
So what was she mixed up in?
I might have an answer.
Looked into Amanda's finances.
Turns out she was
running a side hustle.
She was posting
videos to CurioCam.
You say that like
I'm supposed to know
what you're talking about.
It's an online
subscription service
where people record
private videos
for their subscribers.
You know, sex
videos, kinky stuff.
So I've heard.
Uh-huh. KNIGHT:
There are a lot of
shady characters on CurioCam,
so she could have met
the wrong person online.
JIMMY: I'm sorry, uh,
braces are how much?
And that's for the
whole mouth, right?
Okay, all right.
Uh, let me see what
I can scrounge up
and I-I'll talk
to you later. Bye.
Sorry, Director.
Problems, Dr. Palmer? No, no,
I just... Victoria
needs braces.
I'm learning they
are a tad expensive.
Oh, yeah, I remember.
When my kids needed braces,
I practically had to
refinance the house.
I am this close to telling
her just not to smile
for the rest of her life.
It'd be so much cheaper.
(chuckles) So, how's
the autopsy coming?
I've just about calculated
Amanda's time of death.
I would have had it sooner, but
given the state of the body,
it's taken longer than
I would have liked.
Actually, that's why I'm here.
Senator Grayson
has been pushing
to get some answers
as soon as possible,
and she has now
demanded that we take on
a forensic pathologist to
assist with the autopsy.
Wow, I haven't worked with
anyone down here since, uh,
well, since Dr. Mallard.
Yeah, and I understand
it's an imposition,
but the senator's
got SECNAV involved
now, so it's a...
Uh, no, no, no,
it's fine, Director.
Who's the pathologist?
From what I hear,
he's actually
quite accomplished.
He's worked a lot of
high-profile cases,
he's written several
bestselling books.
He even has his own docuseries.
(elevator dings) It's
not Miles Bauer, is it?
(laughs)
Jimmy. Can you believe this?
How long's it been? Come
here, give me some love, man.
Oh. Miles. Yeah,
nice to see you.
VANCE: So, wait,
how do you... how do
you two know each other?
Uh, we were pre-med
together back in college.
Oh, more than that.
We were roommates.
This guy... the
smartest guy on campus.
And the horniest.
(chuckles nervously)
Nah, seriously, you look good.
(laughs) You look good, too.
Uh, congratulations
on all your success,
you know? The...
You've made a name for yourself.
What, all the TV stuff? Nah.
That's just Hollywood
phony-baloney.
It's not like what you do here.
Oh... Getting justice
for fallen sailors?
That's truly God's work,
man. So charitable.
Well, it's... I mean,
it's not charity,
it's actually my job.
So, Dr. Bauer, I take it
you're ready to start?
Yes, looking forward to it.
And just so you know, Jimmy,
as I told your director earlier,
I'm here simply to
offer support. This is
your house. I'm just a guest.
I appreciate that.
So where are we?
Time of death? I was...
Going off these numbers,
I'd say our victim
died two days ago
between the hours of
5:00 and 7:00 p.m.
Just about to say
that. Excellent.
This partnership is
working out already.
Good.
Good, let's get to work.
NARRATOR: With the gruesome
discovery of yet another victim...
Hey, Kasie? Shh.
San Antonio police
turned to Dr. Bauer for help.
In order to catch the
San Antonio Butcher,
I knew I had to examine
his original victims.
Every dead body has
a story to tell.
You just need to listen.
Man, he's good. (video stops)
So you've heard.
Oh, I am so excited.
I've read all of Bauer's books.
Have you gone down
to meet him yet?
No, but I did work with him
back in my FBI
days. Not a fan.
What?
Eh, I always thought Bauer
was a blowhard and
a publicity chaser.
He never met a camera
he didn't like.
And good thing, too, because
his docuseries is amazing.
Maybe he'll do one
about this case.
How about we focus on
someone else's videos?
Namely the ones
Amanda made, okay?
I reviewed all the footage
in her CurioCam account.
There was a lot of stuff.
Over four hours worth.
Was it all explicit?
Uh, not exactly.
(soft rustling)
What the hell am I looking at?
(laughs)
Amanda made ASMR videos,
which stands for autonomous
sensory meridian response.
People record themselves
making soft noises
like chewing or whispering.
It's designed to relax you.
People pay for this
crap? Oh, yeah.
It's big on the web.
Amanda had thousands of
dedicated subscribers.
Oh, yeah? Any one stand
out? (video stops)
One guy named
Arthur Vernon.
He watched every
video Amanda made
and always left a
ton of comments.
What kind of comments?
The creepy kind.
"I think about your
smell, your flesh.
My soul burns for you."
Hmm. I know, right?
All this from bubble wrap.
You got an address?
(knocking)
It's open. Entrez vous.
(coughs) Oh.
Arthur Vernon?
No, man. Arthur's,
like, not here.
You his roommate? Mm-hmm.
I'm Agent Knight,
this is Agent Torres.
Do you know when
Mr. Vernon will be home?
Nope.
(laughs)
Hey, you all right if we
look around while we, uh,
while we wait for him?
Knock yourself out, man.
Su casa es mi casa.
Uh, which one is Vernon's room?
Down the hall,
to the left. Left.
(laughs)
We should arrest him
for just being a moron.
Oh, wow.
We have a stalker 101 over here.
Our boy was obsessed
with Amanda.
Obsessed enough to kill her?
Is that...
Amanda's scarf.
Looks like he kept a
souvenir of her murder.
Mr. Vernon.
I understand how this looks.
Yeah?
How does it look?
I know about Amanda.
I didn't kill her.
I was a fan of hers.
We saw what was
inside your closet,
Arthur,
along with the comments
that you left on
her video posts.
This one is one of my favorites.
"You and I are meant
to be together,
in this world or the next."
Poetic.
ARTHUR: I was
interested in Amanda.
That's not a crime.
Care to tell us
how you got ahold of her scarf?
She gave it to me.
When? Few weeks ago.
I messaged her through the site
and asked for a piece
of her clothing,
so she sold it to me.
You have any record
of this transaction?
A receipt or...
No, it's not really
tax deductible.
I sent her cash.
I'd like some more water.
When we're done.
McGEE: Where you
were two days ago
between 5:00 and 7:00 p.m.?
I was at work.
I'm a cashier at the
army surplus store.
Anyone see you there? My boss.
He was there doing
inventory. You can ask him.
Oh, we will.
McGEE: Army surplus store
is only about a mile from where
they found Amanda's body.
That's convenient,
don't you think?
Are we almost finished here?
It's getting pretty late.
Have you ever been married?
Arthur?
Yes.
We divorced.
What happened?
She get tired of your
sparkling personality?
She, uh...
she was unfaithful.
Well, that must
have made you angry.
Probably why she
filed a restraining
order against you, huh?
KNIGHT: According
to the reports,
she said that you were abusive,
and that you
threatened to kill her
on multiple occasions.
She's a liar.
If I'd ever lost my temper,
believe me, she had it coming.
Like Amanda had it coming?
(door opens)
So, what do you
think... Is he our guy?
Not sure yet.
I mean, everything about
him screams guilty.
He even gives me the creeps.
But the evidence?
Circumstantial.
We got nothing solid yet.
Damn it.
Senator Grayson caught
wind about Vernon.
She won't stop calling me.
She's out for blood,
huh? Oh, yeah.
She's pressing me
to make an arrest.
Well, look, I know she's
a senator, but, uh,
can't you tell her to back off?
It's delicate. Well, look,
Leon, I'd love to help you out,
but, uh, without any proof,
we can hold Vernon for 24 hours,
but after that, we got to
cut him loose. All right.
Let's just hope
we find something.
Oh, uh, sorry. I was just
gonna check her liver.
Oh, please. Go ahead.
Are you sure? 'Cause
I can wait if...
I insist. There's plenty
of organs to go around.
Yeah, liver looks healthy.
No signs of steatosis.
No steatosis. Check.
How long is he gonna
just stand there?
Who? Kenji?
Nah, don't mind
him. He's just here
in case I ever want to
turn this into a book.
He makes a mean cappuccino,
by the way. You want one?
No, I don't. Hey, Kenji,
Could you whip up two
cappuccinos for us?
Extra foam. Mm-hmm.
No, I don't need the... Kenji?
Kenji? Kenji, I... (groans)
(sighs)
Wish we had that
toxicology report.
Kasie should have
it done by now.
Sorry, she dropped it off
while you were in the bathroom.
Don't bother reading it.
Other than some vitamin B
and Rymodrin in her system,
Amanda was clean.
Rymodrin?
She was taking
medication for ADHD?
Not surprising. Seems
like everyone I know
has been diagnosed
with it these days.
Why didn't you
tell me about this?
I've been waiting
for the report.
I don't know. Just
slipped my mind.
Wouldn't be the first time.
Hey, Jimmy. McGee.
Hi. Have you met Dr. Bauer?
No. No, nice to meet you.
Yeah, same. Listen, I
hate to rush you guys.
We're kind of under
the gun on this one.
Have you found anything?
We determined Amanda's
cause of death
was blunt force
trauma to the head,
most likely from a rock
swung by somebody
who's left-handed.
Huh.
Arthur Vernon is
left-handed, I think.
Have you found any DNA?
Not yet, but we're
still looking.
Every dead body has
a story to tell.
You just need to listen.
All right! You know it. Nice.
(chuckling)
What are these marks here?
Uh, we don't know
what that is yet.
Uh, it could be markings
from where the body
hit the ground.
Or maybe something
was placed over her mouth?
Of course. How could
I have been so stupid?
I knew those marks
looked familiar.
You've seen this before?
I was working this case
years ago in Chicago.
We caught this serial killer,
real scumbag.
He liked to put a mask
over his victim's face
and asphyxiate them
prior to stabbing them.
Yeah, those are mask
impressions. I'm sure of it.
So, her killer placed a mask
over Amanda's face
before killing her, huh?
You find the mask,
you find the killer.
I was wondering when you
guys were gonna show.
Ever since the news
broke about Arthur,
shop's been flooded
with reporters.
Not that I mind.
Good publicity.
Uh, how long did
Mr. Vernon work here?
Couple years.
What impressions
do you have of him?
You mean do I think
he could have killed that girl?
Heh, I can answer
that real easy.
Hell yeah.
He did it. What
makes you say that?
Arthur was always an odd bird.
You know, kept to himself,
got real sensitive
if you ever touched
any of his stuff.
But underneath, there was this
anger simmering.
Like a guy who was
ready to explode.
And what about his alibi?
Can you confirm that
he was working here
three days ago between the
hours of 5:00 and 7:00 p.m.?
I can confirm that I saw him
for the 30 minutes
I was in the shop,
but what he did
before and after,
who knows?
Okay, well, thank you.
We will be in touch.
Hey, while you guys are here,
you want to buy
some military stuff?
We work with the military.
Want to sell something then?
(chuckles)
Oh, yeah, that's
pretty bitching, right?
Genuine World War II gas mask.
A lot of guys are
into this vintage stuff.
Was Vernon into it?
Well, now that you mention it,
yeah, he was.
You better not be going for
the last jalape o chips.
What's that? Oh, no.
They are all yours. Oh, okay.
Well, what's up?
Shouldn't you be downstairs
with Dr. Bauer, melding minds?
Oh, no, I just needed a
break. What's going on?
You two not playing nice?
I heard you were, like,
friends in college. Uh,
not... not exactly.
I know this face.
There's something going
on between you two.
(laughs) Jimmy.
I'm gonna get it out of
you one way or another.
Okay, all right, okay.
It's not that big of a deal.
Back in college, when
we were roommates,
I was kind of, like, the
star student, you know?
And Miles was a screwup.
He was always turning
in his assignments late,
he was flunking tests.
Miles Bauer was a screwup?
Oh, yeah. Yeah. No,
without my help,
he would have failed
out of school for sure.
Okay, so what happened?
Was he ungrateful or...
No, right before he graduated,
the Mayo Clinic offered
this pre-med internship,
and everybody wanted it.
So, of course Miles
applied for it,
but I was seen as, like,
the shoo-in for it.
And the day before
my interview, the
Mayo Clinic called
to reschedule the
interview time.
Miles took the message
'cause I wasn't home.
I never got it.
Oh, no... You missed
the interview?
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, Miles said he left a note
right there, by the phone.
I don't know.
I always wondered if maybe
he intentionally withheld it.
But, either way,
I didn't get the
internship. Miles did.
The rest is history.
That little weasel.
I'm gonna go down
there and kick his ass.
Whoa, whoa, Kasie.
No, no. Hey, hey, hey.
It's water under the
bridge. No, he s...
he sabotaged you, Jimmy.
I could never prove it, all
right? It's in the past.
Honestly, I'm over
it, all right?
So just...
enjoy your potato chips.
If you say so.
Gosh.
I don't know why I buy these.
Mm. They always burn my mouth.
They're jalape o.
They're supposed to.
Oh.
I swear, these give me fevers.
I got to go.
VANCE: Time's up.
It's been 24 hours.
Do we have enough
to arrest Vernon
for the murder of
Amanda Grayson?
Possibly. I was hoping
for something a little
more definitive.
Well, Vernon's got motive
and his alibi is shaky,
but we still haven't
got a smoking gun.
But we do. We have the mask.
I was able to
compare the gas masks
sold at Vernon's employment
with the imprints
on Amanda's face.
They were a perfect match.
That can't be a coincidence.
Did we ever find a mask
at Vernon's apartment?
No.
Vernon could have
easily disposed of it
after killing her, which is
exactly what the killer did
on the case I
worked on years ago.
I'm telling you, Director,
all the facts point
to Vernon being our
guy. It's case closed.
Except it isn't.
I've been going
over the numbers,
and I hate to say it,
but Arthur Vernon is innocent.
What are you talking about?
Amanda's time of death...
The 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. window
that we've been working with...
Is based on the assumption
that her body temperature
was 98.6 at the time of death.
Now, what happens if that
body temperature is higher?
Say 102, 103?
And how could that happen?
Because Amanda was on Rymodrin,
and when you combine Rymodrin
with intense physical exertion,
like she certainly would have
experienced during her attack,
it can cause a person's
body temperature to spike.
So, if Amanda's actual body
temperature was higher,
then that pushes back
her time of death
by six hours, 11:00
a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
which would mean...
Vernon couldn't have done it.
He was at a doctor's
appointment,
had a rock-solid alibi.
With all due respect
to my colleague,
this is just conjecture.
Yes, elevated body temperature
could be a possible
side effect of Rymodrin,
but I have never come across
it in all my years of practice.
And I have. On a
case I worked on.
And just to be sure,
I spoke with Amanda's
doctor, who told me that
she was always complaining
of running hot.
Her complaints
could mean nothing.
Did her doctor verify it?
And this case of yours...
What is it?
What are the details? I
don't remember, exactly.
It was a long time ago
and I was an assistant.
But I do remember the
part about the Rymodrin.
So, let me get this straight.
Your theory is based on
some case you don't remember
and weren't even the M.E. on?
And you're gonna
believe him over me?
I know I'm right, Director.
Cut Vernon loose.
No, this is a mistake.
When the senator learns you
let a killer go... The senator
isn't in charge of
this investigation.
I am, and I'm going with my man.
If anything happens,
it's on you.
Hope we did the right thing.
Even if he didn't kill Amanda,
he's still a creep.
What's done is done.
No use crying over
spilled suspects.
Do you think he's innocent?
What I think is we
need to get to work
finding another suspect.
Any ideas? McGEE: Maybe.
I was going over
Amanda's phone records.
Day before she died,
she made several calls
to a classmate from
the Rosewood Center.
Rosewood. That's the
school for troubled teens?
Yeah. Classmate
may know something.
Kind of a long shot but...
Bring her in first
thing tomorrow.
Oh. Hey.
Hey.
What are you doing?
Oh, so this is how it works.
I've always heard that you guys
have heart-to-hearts in here.
Is that what we're doing?
We're doing a
heart-to-heart? Yep.
About Arthur Vernon.
Please, Jess, tell me you're
not taking Bauer's side on this.
No, no, I am on
your side. Always.
It's... I just want to make sure
that your feelings about Bauer
aren't clouding your judgment.
So you're not taking my side.
Kasie told me what Bauer
did to you in college.
And I told her, I am
completely over it.
Are you?
No, I lied. It
really pisses me off.
But I'm not letting that
cloud my work, all right?
Vernon is innocent, and
the facts are the facts.
Okay. I believe you.
You want to talk about it?
It just doesn't seem fair.
Guy like Bauer gets to
cheat his way to the top
while the rest of us
struggle just to keep
our heads above water.
He gets TV shows,
he gets book deals.
And what do I get?
I get a broken-down van
and braces I can't afford.
I'm sorry, Jess,
I'm just throwing myself
a pity party here.
No. No, no, no.
Party away.
I just sometimes wish
that things were easier.
Yeah, I understand.
It's tough right now.
But...
maybe try focusing
on what you do have.
Thanks for coming
in, Ms. Lygnos.
Yeah, of course.
Um, I heard about
Amanda on the news.
I-I still can't believe it.
I just saw her a week ago.
TORRES: Were the
two of you close?
Not really.
I mean, I hadn't seen
her since school,
and we weren't even
that close then.
Which is why it was so weird
when she just called
me out of the blue
and asked me to lunch.
What did y'all talk about?
Rosewood, mostly.
Before we met,
she asked me to bring
all of my school photos.
I was into photography
back then, and I used to
go around taking
photos of everything.
Any idea why Amanda wanted
to see these photos?
A trip down memory lane or...
No. I mean, to be honest,
I was surprised she wanted
to relive Rosewood at all,
given the rough
time she had there.
What do you mean?
Rosewood wasn't
exactly a summer camp.
If you were there it was
because you had issues.
Amanda seemed to
have more than most.
She was withdrawn,
anxious.
I always felt bad for her.
Okay, what happened
after this lunch?
She wanted to keep the photos,
and I gave them to her.
We said our goodbyes.
Then, a few days later,
she called me, uh, but by
the time I called her back,
she was already dead.
(phone chirps)
Excuse me.
It's Parker.
The police just
found another body.
It's at the same park as before.
(indistinct radio chatter)
Lori Nelson, age 21.
A jogger found her an
hour ago, called it in.
KNIGHT: I spoke
with the local LEOs.
They didn't know much.
I ran a quick search on her.
She posted videos on CurioCam.
Just like Amanda.
Anything on the body?
It's a fresh kill. Less
than three hours old,
and her head appears
crushed. Also like Amanda.
PARKER: Where's Arthur Vernon
now? Anyone got eyes on him?
We sent agents to his
apartment and his workplace,
and no one can find him.
Vernon is in the wind.
He didn't waste
any time, did he?
SELENA: How could
you let him go?
Senator, I understand...
Because of you,
another woman is dead.
This is unbelievable.
We were acting on the best
evidence we had at the time...
No, you were acting on
his evidence.
Now, you could have chosen
to listen to Dr. Bauer,
a highly-respected pathologist,
but instead,
you went with him,
and he was wrong.
I want him fired immediately.
Whoa, whoa. Hey...
No one's getting fired.
I made the call
to release Vernon,
not Dr. Palmer.
I don't care. I want him out!
(clears throat)
May I say something, please?
I feel awful that
another woman was killed.
But that doesn't necessarily
mean that Arthur Vernon did it.
Oh, come on. Jimmy. Really?
After all this, you're still
gonna stick with
your Rymodrin theory?
It's not a theory, it's fact.
And I told you, it's nonsense.
It goes against
all my experience.
And, what, your experience
is more valid than mine?
Do I really need to answer that?
I am so sick of you throwing
your career in my face.
You wouldn't even have a
career if it wasn't for me.
This how you run your agency?
Dr. Palmer.
Go home.
What? Are you firing me?
No, I'm taking you out
of the line of fire.
Go home, take a breath.
PARKER: He's right, Jimmy.
We'll call you when
things cool off.
SELENA: Okay. Let's
talk about how you plan
to catch this lunatic Vernon.
I imagine you have some
proposals on the table.
Okay. Yeah.
Yeah, I'll just-I'll just
call you back later.
Bye.
How's Jimmy doing?
Uh, I don't know.
He says he's okay.
But this morning, when
I went to his apartment
to drop off his coffee,
there were dirty dishes in
the sink from last night.
Dirty dishes? Jimmy?
Yeah, cleaning is,
like, his sport.
I hope he's okay.
Look, I know everybody's upset
about Jimmy being benched,
but the best thing
we can do for him
is to catch Arthur Vernon
and put this case
behind us, okay?
So, where we at?
BOLO's still out on Vernon.
And we are monitoring
the borders and airports,
but so far, nothing.
All right, keep at it.
He'll pop up sooner or later.
What if we are wasting our time?
What do you mean?
What if Jimmy's right and
Vernon isn't our killer?
I mean, think about it.
If he did kill Amanda,
why would he go back to
the scene of the crime
so soon and kill another person?
It clearly implicates him.
TORRES: Yeah, that
always did bug me.
It's too obvious.
Okay, I'll bite.
But if it isn't
Vernon, then who is it?
Well, after we met up with, uh,
Amanda's classmate
from Rosewood,
I went and did a little
digging on the school.
Turns out they're currently
under investigation for
allegations of sexual abuse.
I haven't read
anything about that.
Cause a high-priced law firm
is trying to cover it up.
Amanda's classmate
said that Amanda
was withdrawn and anxious.
Could be signs she
was being abused.
Maybe that's why she
wanted her school photos.
She was looking for evidence
to incriminate her abuser.
Well, maybe she found it and
that's what got her killed.
Only way we'll know for sure
is to find out what
was in those photos.
All right. McGee, Torres,
search Amanda's
apartment for the photos.
Knight, dig deeper
into this law firm,
find out who they're protecting.
(phone ringing)
And go for Bauer.
Liz, hi, how are you?
The book contract?
I have a copy in my
car. Let me go look.
And while I have
you on the phone,
what do you think about
this for a new book title?
The Morgue the Merrier.
No, I know, I know.
I don't see him anywhere.
I think he's gone.
Okay, great. Now-now
get close to the body.
Arthur Vernon is innocent,
but in order to prove it,
I need to get a closer
look at Lori Nelson.
Okay. If anyone finds
out I'm doing this,
I'll be the one at
home eating Mallomars,
which wouldn't be so
bad, come to think of it.
Are you next to the body, Kasie?
Yeah. Let's get this over with.
All right, okay, so, so
move me closer, all right?
And, um, you can
reverse the camera.
Okay, just... Oh!
Oh... Kasie?
(groans)
Ugh. Oh, God.
Kasie? What happened?
I can't see anything.
Okay, hold on, hold on, hold on.
Oh... (gags) Wait, Kase?
Ka.. I-I can't see
anything. What happened?
(groaning)
Kasie?
Oh... Oh!
Kasie. K-K... W-What
happened? I...
Oh, gosh. Oh.
Is everything okay?
No. You're gonna buy me
a new phone after this.
All right, all right, all right.
I need to see a bruise
on her upper left arm.
Can you move the
camera in closer
and turn it around?
What is that?
I don't know. I
mean, the bruising
could be from where the
killer grabbed her arm,
but the white stuff...
It looks like it's some sort
of skin cream that's dried out.
Maybe she had
eczema or psoriasis?
That's what I was thinking,
but her medical report
says she didn't have
any skin conditions.
Then whose skin cream is this?
What are you doing in here?
PARKER: Okay.
Hit me. What do we got?
I dug into the Rosewood scandal
and, uh, finally found
who the law firm is protecting.
PARKER: Hello.
That's the guy we saw
at the senator's house.
His name is Raylan Marsh.
He is a Texas oil tycoon
and one of the original
investors in Rosewood.
Two former students
are accusing him
of sexual abuse.
Marsh is claiming that Rosewood
is just one of his
hundreds of charities
and that he's never even
stepped foot inside the school.
But we know he's
lying. Why's that?
Did you find the school
photos at Amanda's apartment?
No, someone else
got to them first.
But we found something better.
The webmaster at
CurioCam contacted me
about an outstanding
bill on Amanda's account.
Turns out she was
paying for a separate
cloud storage account
where she kept digital
copies of the photos.
She was gonna go
public with the photos.
She was gonna post them
on her CurioCam page.
The webmaster told you all this?
No, Amanda did.
My name is Amanda Grayson.
Six years ago,
when I was a student at
the Rosewood Center...
I was...
abused by Raylan Marsh.
Over a period of several months,
Raylan Marsh...
sexually assaulted me.
And he's gonna say
that it never happened, and
that he was never there.
But these photos show the truth.
If she had gone
public with this,
that would have destroyed Marsh.
He must have got wind of what
she was planning and killed her.
And then framed one of her
obsessed fans to take the fall.
Only Marsh isn't our killer.
We found something suspicious
when examining the body
of our latest victim.
To be fair, Jimmy was
the one who found it,
but he was right
to be suspicious.
Are you now agreeing with him?
What'd you find?
The killer wasn't
wearing gloves when
he killed Lori Nelson.
He grabbed her and
left behind a residue
of his psoriasis medication.
Luckily, it was a
rare prescription
that needed to be compounded.
I was able to trace
the prescription,
and guess who it belonged to?
(door closes)
Senator.
Oh, Agents Parker and Knight.
I hope you're here to tell me
that you've caught
Arthur Vernon.
No, but we didn't need to,
because he didn't
kill your daughter.
You did.
What?
We found your prescription
cream on Lori Nelson's body.
PARKER: You got
sloppy. You should have
used gloves like
you did with Amanda.
(scoffs)
I have no idea what...
Why would I kill Amanda?
Because of Raylan Marsh.
Amanda was going to expose
him for sexually abusing her.
KNIGHT: Marsh happens
to be the single
biggest donor to the
senator's campaign.
He's practically bankrolling it.
PARKER: And if word got
out that the, uh, senator
was being financed by the man
who molested her own daughter,
then both of your careers
would be finished.
Marsh abused my daughter?
PARKER: I'm sorry, senator.
It happened to her a long
time ago at Rosewood,
years ago.
She hadn't seen him since,
until two weeks ago,
when Marsh showed up
at your fundraiser dinner.
That's why she got so upset.
KNIGHT: Your daughter
was a troubled woman.
But the last two
weeks of her life,
she was trying to do good.
She wanted to go
public about Marsh
and show the world
who he really is.
PARKER: Unfortunately,
she confronted Pritchard
about it first, and he panicked
and killed her. And
later, Lori Nelson.
And framed both of the
murders on Arthur Vernon.
PARKER: I got to say,
bringing in Dr. Bauer
to throw us off track?
Genius move. You played
Bauer like a fiddle.
Feeding him clues you knew
that he would eat up.
It was your idea to hire him
in the first place, wasn't it?
It was his idea.
Selena, please.
We were always having
to clean up her messes.
I was only trying to
protect you, to protect us.
(shouts)
REPORTER: where,
earlier today,
Douglas Pritchard was
arrested for the murders
of both Amanda Grayson
and Lori Nelson.
Sources tell us the arrest
was made with the help
of famed pathologist
Dr. Miles Bauer.
KASIE: What a load of bull.
He gets all the credit?
Jimmy's the one
who broke the case.
I am just happy to be back.
And happy that we got
some justice for Amanda.
Yeah, and thanks to her video,
Raylan Marsh will be going away
for a very long time.
What ever happened to, uh,
Arthur Vernon, by the way?
Oh, we finally found him.
He was at his grandma's cabin,
hiding out from the press.
Oh. Dr. Bauer could learn
something from that.
(elevator dings)
Speaking of which...
Oh, I'm sorry.
I just, uh,
came to get my stuff.
Uh, know what, I can come back.
No. We...
were just leaving.
You're packing it up, huh?
Yeah, Vegas PD called.
They need my help
with a double murder.
Ooh, sounds juicy. Yeah,
it's nothing like
this one, though.
This was one hell of a case.
It'd make a great book.
(chuckles) I'm sure it would.
Yeah, we could write it
together, if you're interested.
I could speak to my publisher.
I think that's more your
thing, you know? I'm good.
Listen, Jimmy.
I'm sorry if things
got weird between us.
Oh, Miles, please.
It's all in the past.
For what it's worth,
you should know I was
always jealous of you.
You were always the
better one. Still are.
Heck,
I know it couldn't
have been easy,
watching our careers take
different paths, but...
No, it wasn't, but...
I'm-I'm glad things turned
out the way that they did.
You know, if I'd taken
a different path,
I would have never met Breena,
I wouldn't have Victoria.
I certainly wouldn't have
my second family here.
So, I'm right where
I'm supposed to be.
Take care of yourself, Jimmy.
You too, Miles.
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