NCIS (2003–…): Season 5, Episode 4 - Identity Crisis - full transcript

While demonstrating an autopsy, Ducky announces murder; Gibbs and company investigate. The victim worked for the FBI, which tried to catch a person who erased old identities and created new ones. The NCIS and the FBI catch the bad guys.

DUCKY:
Every body has a story to tell.

Now, although this gentleman
died a natural death,

he gave his cadaver
to further your education.

80 pay careful attention
to what he has to tell us.

Now, the brain.

Inside you will see
the delicate structures and pathways

that determine memories, emotions,
basic motor functions.

In sum, who we are.

Mr. Palmer, would you cradle the brain
while I sever this?

Lieutenant Greer,
the four lobes of the cerebrum?

Um, there's the frontal,
the parietal, occipital, and temporal.

Uh.

The adult human brain
weighs approximately three pounds.

It feels like a soggy grapefruit.

Yes, we“, pass it around.

And don't let its small size fool you.

The cerebral cortex
contains 1 billion neurons,

and 1 million billion connections
orsynapse.

If you were to count
one synapse per second,

you wouldn't finish counting
for 32 million years.

Uh, doctor?

Is this natural?

DUCKY:
Certainly not.

What the hell is that?

This, my dear lieutenant, is murder.

Ha. Ha, ha, ha. Oh.

Not bad.

Look at this one.
You're gonna love this guy.

ZIVA: Yeah, he would not be safe
with me. I would eat him.

But he's so adorable.
How could you say no to that face?

[CHUCKLES]

Please tell me
you're looking for a man for Ziva.

- Not me.
TONY: Oh.

McGoo,
is there something you wanna tell me?

Looking at animal rescue sites.

ZIVA: McGee's thinking
about getting a puppy.

A puppy's a lot of work.

You gotta feed it, walk it, train it.

Yeah, I'm not 12, all right?
I work hard.

I deserve someone who will jump up
all excited when | get home.

You know,
lay on the couch, watch TV.

- Maybe lick my face a little bit.
- Ha, ha, ha.

- Might be easier getting a girlfriend.
- Oh.

Which might even be easier
with a puppy.

Even for you.

I'm not ready to start taking tips
from you on this yet, probie.

Tony, I think it's time you get back
on that horse.

- Are you getting a pony?
- It's an adage.

I'm not familiar with that breed.

Yeah, well, they are quite rare.

It's sort of a cross between a Pegasus
and a unicorn.

- So who's the favourite?
- The pit bull.

Oh. Yeah,
that makes sense for you, actually.

Not really for McGee. Ha, ha.

He's more of a spaniel kind of guy.

Cocker, maybe.

- How about an Australian Shepherd?
- Oh.

They're working dogs.

[PHONE RINGING]

GIBBS: Pick it up, DiNozzo.
TONY: On it, boss.

AFIP. Smooth things over.

Please hold.
What did we do to incur the wrath

of the Armed Forces Institute
of Pathology?

Ducky kept one of their cadavers.

Ducky stole a cadaver?

- I'm sure he had a good reason.
- I hope so.

Sit.

Stay.

Roll over. Ha.

[ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]

It's absolutely ridiculous, Jethro.

This man's body should never
have been donated to science.

Too late for a refund.

DUCKY:
He was murdered, Jethro,

with an injection of mercury
into his brain.

A liquid bullet.

Mr. Palmer is presently endeavouring
to reach the ME

who made
such a grievous oversight.

- Still no answer, doctor.
- Well, then redial, Mr. Palmer.

Yes,
"unidentified African-American male,

approximately 50 years old.

Blood alcohol level 0.12.

Official cause of death: Asphyxiation
from the deceased's own vomit."

However, here's the kicker.

They elected not to perform
an autopsy.

PALMER: But it'd be hard to find
a pin-prick hole in the base of a skull

and heavy metals
wouldn't show on a tox screen

unless
you're looking for them specifically.

Mr. Palmer, do not defend
the inefficiency of others.

I'm not sure you can just take control
of a body, Duck.

Well, someone has to.

I mean,
based on preliminary findings,

County Police determined
that he was a nameless drifter.

A John Doe.

Had too much to drink
and died in his sleep.

Some people live their whole lives
off the grid.

Well, not our man.

l'd wager
that he spent several years in prison.

Now, it's elementary,
my dear Jethro.

The proliferation
of scar tissue on his body.

Cigarette-sized burns.

Our John Doe lead a violent life.

Yes, well,
this long scar on his left leg is surgical.

However, it healed poorly.

Suggests prison-calibre
medical treatment,

especially post-operative.

And the tattooing.

Pen ink. Jailhouse-style.

DUCKY: Yes, perhaps we can get Abby
to shed some light on this pattern.

It's her area of expertise.

DUCKY:
A John Doe. I mean, it's ridiculous.

It can't be that difficult
to locate a prison record.

Somebody must actually care
that this man is dead.

Well?

Did you locate the ME?

No, I gave up.

Oh, therein lies the problem.

People are just not willing
to do the legwork.

He had a murder victim
right in front of him.

Classroom full of military students.

I think
he might be a bit embarrassed.

Excellent detective work.

I hope your opinion of me
doesn't waver

after I've given this fellow
a piece of my mind.

- Never.
- I warn you, this might get ugly.

I'm looking for Dr. Jordan Hampton.

Ha. You've found her.

Uh, is there something wrong
with your telephone?

Wouldn't know. I don't answer it.

Too many bodies
and not enough time.

Special Agent Gibbs.
Uh, Dr. Donald Mallard, NClS.

Pleasure.

I assume you're not here
to check on my phone.

Perhaps you'd have a moment
to discuss a John Doe

that crossed your table
nine days ago.

Remember the body?

HAMPTON:
Yeah, I remember every body.

Fifty-something, black male.

Found DOA on Highland Pier.

Aspirated on his own vomit.

I assume you kept him
the requisite 72 hours?

No one made any enquiries.

Day two of his stay,
I caught a priority triple homicide.

Day four,
Anatomy Board picked him up.

- You needed the space.
- Not a whole lot of elbow room.

Where he went after that,
I can't say.

AFlP, and then our autopsy suite.

GIBBS: We're investigating his death
as a homicide.

[SIGHS]

Damn it.

I missed something.

An injection of mercury
into his brain

between the first vertebrae
and the occipital bone.

[EXHALES SHARPLY]

Police tried and failed to ID him.

AFIS database
and dental record searches.

- They came up empty.
GIBBS: DNA?

I'm not sure how it goes at NClS.

Around here
that takes about six months.

They never canvassed the scene.

Sadly, most cops I know,
they prefer to hear "case closed"

than look for a reason to open one.

That's not the first time
someone slipped through the cracks.

Well,
I'm glad you caught him, Dr. Mallard.

As am I.

Yeah, I hope she recovers
from that tongue lashing.

GIBBS:
What did you find under the pier?

Uh, eighty-five cents,
two batteries and a bottle cap.

- No mercury, no needle.
GIBBS: Keep looking.

We've gotta find someone
who knew him.

Highland Beach in October.
Not much of a tourist draw.

Soft-shell crab season's
almost over.

People really like boats that much?

You work for the Navy, DiNozzo.

[CLASSIC ROCK PLAYING
OVER SPEAKERS]

[CHATTERING]

TONY: Maybe we should start
with this waitress.

Eating or asking questions?

If you were hoping for subtle,
you could have lost the guns.

Or at least the hats.

Excuse me.
I'd just like to show you a photo,

see if, uh, you recognise this man.

Okay.
Are you trying to build suspense?

No.

Um, it's just that the man
in the photo is dead,

and, uh, some people find
that shocking.

Oh. Thanks for being gentle.

I'm a gentle man.

GIBBS: Seen him?
- Never seen him.

Uh, so the waitress,

Miss Shannon O'Hara,
remembers our guy.

Never got a name.

Paid cash. Big tipper.

How about your biker gang there?

Oh, they're just passing through.

- That's it?
- Well, they don't like cops much.

Check out the brunette at the table.

TONY:
Good eye, boss.

I'll tell you, my radar is just totally shot.
She's smoking.

That's not what you meant.

You were suggesting that she seems
interested in our presence.

A little too interested.
And that I should question her.

Not a problem.

Mm. That's a problem.

[CELL PHONE BEEPING]

[CELL PHONE BEEPS]

- Oh, excuse me.
- No, excuse me.

McGEE: Mind if we ask
where you're going in such a hurry?

What business is it of NCIS?

TONY: We're looking for anyone
who might have known this man.

- He's dead?
- You know him?

His name's Marvin Hinton.
He was with me.

And you are? Careful.

I was just reaching for my ID.

"Special Agent Courtney Krieger."

Hinton was working for the FBI.

Hey, Gibbs, need a refill? I'm going.

GIBBS:
Well, yeah, Betro. Thanks.

- Make it a double.
- You got it.

McGEE: Still can't find any record
of Marvin Hinton.

And you won't.
Marvin Hinton doesn't exist anymore.

Anymore?

His cell mates swear Marvin Hinton
served six years at Cumberland,

although any record of it vanished
when he was released last month.

We had to reassemble his history
by hand.

It's not complete.

He once went
by the name Frederick LeClaire.

McGEE:
"Hinton a.k.a. LeClaire.

Boot legging, false IDs,
resisting arrest, theft."

The guy's a career felon.

Interstate trafficking, primarily.

How did he show up on your radar?

KRIEGER:
It was a routine tip.

Picked him up
offloading stolen cargo containers.

At which point, you discover
a nameless man

whose entire history's been erased.
No fingerprints, no criminal record.

- Not even a high-school transcript.
McGEE: Well, that's impossible.

You'd need first-person access
to a federal mainframe,

credit ratings,
countless private companies.

It would be like taking spit
out of the ocean.

How'd he do it?

Claimed he didn't.

Said he was contacted
by someone offering the service.

The Eraser.

What movie is that from?

I don't know. Flashdance?

Why was Hinton not back in prison?

He was a small fish.

But The Eraser, he's our real target.

We hoped he would contact Hinton,
get paid off, and finish the job.

- Provide Hinton with a new identity.
- Exactly.

I was left to babysit.

It was my first field assignment.

Never expected him to be killed.

That is what happens to bait.

Hey, it's not your fault.

So why didn't Hinton skip town
when he had the opportunity?

He was having too good a time
on the government expense account.

But we did have him
under 24-hour monitoring.

- Three team shifts.
- What changed?

The Eraser didn't make contact.

They pulled my surveillance team
to chase other leads.

You notify your boss.

We need to know
everything you know.

[ELEVATOR BELL DINGS]

The Bureau set Hinton up here?

To maintain the appearance
he was flush.

Anyone else have their own key?

No, we met here weekly,
so no one would see us together.

He agreed to play along
in exchange for leniency.

But he knew it could be dangerous.

Wow, forget the puppy, McGee.

A place like this is what you need
to score with the chicks.

GIBBS:
Here.

Boss,
this could be the murder weapon.

Mercury.

Positive for blood.

Ooh. Fluids. Lots of them.

No surprise there.

Six years in prison.

The Eraser made the initial contact
at the Crab Shack.

- Not face to face?
- No, slipped him a note.

GIBBS: So you sent Hinton back
hoping for another one?

Hinton was supposed to keep a record
of anyone he came in contact with.

I was running background checks,
chasing down his leads.

You got your wish.

Your first crime scene.

He was killed in that room.

This is why I love you guys.

You bring me hair, you bring me blood,
you bring me fluids.

And mercury.

- Predictable, yet constantly surprising.
- We try.

Of course, mercury is toxic,

so you shouldn't let kids break open
thermometers and play with it.

Speaking from personal experience,
Abs?

- Actually explains a lot.
- You want it, but it kills you.

It's like a metaphor.

It's a cigarette.

Or chocolate for dogs.

By the way,
I like the dachshund for you.

You can name him Mercury.

This mercury, Abby.

Industrial grade.
Commonly used in heavy machinery.

It's fallen out of favour
because of the fear factor.

A lot of it's being dropped
on nations like India.

Where exporting-slash-dumping
has become a major revenue stream.

Anyways,
this is what killed our painted man.

Speaking of which,

I've seen a lot of great skin art
done with a ballpoint pen and a needle.

Like this, and this.

Very nice.

But this guy's tattoo, it's a mess.

The symbols are gibberish,
the pattern is haphazard.

It's a puzzle.

And it puzzles me, Gibbs.
I'm determined to solve it.

Hair samples?

Not nearly as interesting.

- Six different women.
- Hinton had a lot of girlfriends.

One's a bleach blond.
One's auburn from a bottle.

If you wanna know anything else,

you have to find me something
to match it against.

MAN:
Delivery for Tony.

- I got it. I got it.
- Thank you.

TONY: Hey, how are you?
MAN: Good, thanks.

Whoa.

Here you go.

MAN:
Thank you. Have a good night.

Keep the change.

Portabello mushroom, no tomato.

Philly cheesesteak,
extra steak, extra cheese.

These are all Hinton's contacts.

TONY: Ah. Can't help but notice
they're all women.

What made him think
The Eraser was a woman?

KRIEGER:
Well, I don't know that he did.

Well, because, you know,
you said he was enjoying himself.

- You--
- You have mushroom in your teeth.

KRIEGER:
Where's your bathroom?

Ah. I will show you where it is.

McGEE: Hey,
so I've been thinking about the murder.

Why kill him that way?

I mean, an injection into the brain,

definitely not
the most common method.

To find out why, you must ask who.

Someone tidy.
Someone who doesn't like messes.

McGEE:
Do you have a theory?

Someone who needs to be
in constant control of a situation.

Someone who does not like
to lose control of their emotions.

McGEE:
Ziva, what are you doing?

Uh, I'm not an expert here,

but I'm pretty sure what you're doing
right now is a violation of the code.

It is not against the law.

The woman's code.

McGee, I bet you,
if we take a strand of her hair,

it will match the sample
from Hinton's condo.

Well, of course, she's already said
she's been there every week.

ZIVA:
This woman is uptight.

Not even a single strand.

We will have to go to the source.

Ziva, no hair pulling.

She's the only one
that was in contact with Hinton.

It would have been easy for her
to just sweep him under the rug.

- Motive?
- She's ambitious.

He became too much
of a complication.

When someone's that uptight,

it's only a matter of time
before they...snap.

Okay.

- You don't like her.
- Do you?

I understand
what she's going through.

I remember what it was like
to be green.

- Afraid you're gonna mess up.
- Which she did.

So what? You want to rub it in?

Come on, Ziva.
I think she deserves a little sympathy.

Tony seems to like her.

I do not think Gibbs does.

Who do you work for, Tobias?

Homeland Security or the FBI?

The world's on my shoulders, Gibbs.

A world made of paper.

Just throw that anywhere.

Kind of defeats the purpose of e-mail

when you have to print it all out
for the file anyway.

Yeah. That's why I don't use it.

Really? Not because you can't
figure out how to work it?

I spend most of my time now
coordinating the flow of information.

What can I give you?

Your opinion
on Special Agent Courtney Krieger.

Promising.
Does everything by the book.

The book doesn't show
very much imagination.

Definitely a child
of the electronic age.

Currently running a low-level asset
in Highland Beach.

Asset named Hinton.

Okay. What am I missing?

The fact he was murdered.

Marvin Hinton is dead?

I told her to notify you.

You gotta be kidding me.

She sent an e-mail.

It went in my spam folder.

This is serious, Gibbs.

Alive, Hinton was just an ex-con
who made a deal with the devil.

Dead means
the devil came to collect.

Devil have a name?

Just about all he's got.

- You ever heard of Kamal Konkani?
- Mm-mm.

Built his reputation in the early '90s

manufacturing false IDs
for IRA bombers.

Moved around Europe
one step ahead of the authorities

for the next ten years.

Where he went, death followed.

Been invisible since the millennium.

Made a fortune
working for terrorists.

Hinton wasn't a terrorist.

The game has changed in a decade.

Documents are more sophisticated,
electronic tracking, facial recognition.

We think Kamal was using Hinton
as a test.

A test for what?

Homeland picked up chatter
from a training facility in Libya.

A terrorist cell

with assurances of clean entry
onto US. soil.

Assurances from Kamal Konkani.

And with Hinton dead--

The only eyes on Kamal
have been closed for a week.

You're telling me
there are terrorists on the way here

and they could be anyone?

How did this start?

With a dead man
named Marvin Hinton,

a.k.a. Frederick LeClaire.

GIBBS:
An ex-con looking for a new identity.

A wish your Eraser was
more than happy to accommodate.

My boss looks mad.

He's going to chew you up.

Out. Chew you out.

Maybe not. Maybe he's one
of those silent-killer types.

JENNY: What do you know
about this Eraser?

McGee.

Believed to be a Pakistani national
raised in India and England.

Made his name
working with terrorists.

Clean IDs. Easy transit.

Facilitated Basque terror attacks
in Spain, IRA bombings in England.

The GIA bombing in France
in 1995.

"Killed eight, wounded hundreds.
Led by Khaled Kelkal."

French authorities identified
the man who made it possible

as Kamal Konkani.

TONY:
That's a lot of Ks.

Ks are funny, Agent Krieger.

- Did you ever see The Sunshine Boys?
- Shh!

But they weren't able to put a face
to the name

before he disappeared off the radar.

JENNY: Apparently,
he's relocated to Maryland.

Upgraded his system
for taking people off the grid.

FORNELL:
We were tipped off to Hinton.

So it's possible that Kamal dropped
the dime himself to test his work.

- His work seems impeccable.
- Now he's covering his tracks.

And shopping the service
to terrorists overseas.

I'll monitor the situation
in the training camps,

watch closely for any movement.

I suggest
you pick up Kamal's trail on this end.

No trace. No face.

This ought to be easy.

Special Agent Krieger.

A word.

ZIVA:
According to his Interpol bio,

Kamal rarely ventures out
of his safehouse once it is established.

Style's cloak-and-dagger. Low-tech.

No cell phone,
no electronic messages.

- Smart.
- He prefers to pass notes.

The Bureau provided several
intercepted

by the French 12 years ago.
Coded. Abby has them now.

FORNELL: I don't give a flying crap
what it states in the handbook.

You don't know enough
to make a decision on your own.

- That was long overdue.
- What have you got against her?

I do not like cleaning up
after other people.

It is very clear what
you would like to have against her.

Excuse me?

You want to sleep with her.

Well, so what if I do?

[ZIVA LAUGHS]

Same old Tony.

I thought the new Tony
wanted something more.

A real relationship.

I was pretending
to be someone else.

Well, you could have fooled me.

I thought you had grown.

I'm not interested in outgrowing sex.

Sure it would be nice, Tony,
but it would be meaningless.

Empty. It would be wrong for you.

She is a pretty girl,
but she's just a girl.

The man you were becoming
needs a woman.

At least I thought he did.

You believe that? An e-mail.

Perhaps we 're looking at this tattoo
from the wrong angle.

I've manipulated the image
every way I can.

I've inverted it. I've shrunk it.

I've stretched it. I can't figure it out.

Oh, gonna have to mute you, Duck.

- No wait.
- Nothing personal.

It's very pecu—-

- Got something on the tattoo?
- It's a work in progress.

But I did find out something about
the notes that the FBI got from Kamal.

The FBI code-breakers couldn't make
anything of the language.

No, neither could I.

But the paper that the notes
are written on, it has a curve,

so it came off of some sort of spool.

GIBBS:
Cash register receipt.

And Major Mass Spec had a field day
with these smudges.

Decided that it's makki ki roti
and sarson ka saag.

It means flour bread
and mustard leaf sauce.

Which goes nice
with a glass of Iassi.

GIBBS:
Indian food.

Punjab, to be specific.

Kamal likes his home-cooking.

Might add to his profile.

- That's good work.
- Gonna have to mute you, Gibbs.

Don't say good work.

Not until I figure out the riddle
of the tattoo.

Ziva, can I ask you a question?

Isn't it hard
being the only woman on the team?

- No.
- God, I wish I had your confidence.

Well, it comes from experience.

Well, the way I'm going
that's something I'll never get.

Look, Courtney,

they obviously saw something valuable
in you.

OthenNise,
you would not have made it this far.

Thank you.

But stop trying to be perfect.

You will mess up,

and, occasionally,
you will take a beating.

And then what?

Then, you know the expression,
you get back on the horse.

I competed in equestrian.

- Showjumping, mostly.
- Oh.

My uncle bred Arabians.

Do we hug now?

McG EE: Assuming he likes
home-cooking,

there are 15 Indian restaurants within
a ten-mile radius of Highland Beach.

Kamal doesn't travel.

Confine the search
to walking distance.

McGEE:
There's only one in the vicinity.

"Punjab Tandoori."

Man's gotta eat.
We know he's been in the area.

If he's using the same MO, passing
notes, who's he handing them to?

Any chance
he's got people from the old country

working on this side?

McGEE: That makes that restaurant the
perfect place to hang out if he does.

Chance he could be
at the restaurant.

Let's keep this one low key
when we go to scope it out.

Have to go in undercover.

TONY:
Hi, table for two, please.

Right this way.

Looks like a nice place,
doesn't it, honey?

Sure does, sweet cheeks.

Hold steady.
I'm gonna zoom in here.

On the waiter, DiNozzo.

WAITER: Our specials this evening
are the Masala Chops

and the Lobia Curry.

- The Lobia is my personal favourite.
McGEE: And freeze.

WAITER: Here are the menus
and I'll be right back.

McGEE: Facial ID
should only take a second here.

Unless he has been erased.

"Ashwin Ramji.

Married father of three.
Resident since 1987.

- Legal citizen since 1999."
ZIVA: Seems clean.

Courtney, can you get an angle
on the kitchen staff?

McGEE:
She looks tense.

Think maybe
it should be you in there?

I think she'll do fine.

Act natural. Just a normal date.

Can I tell you a secret?

It's been a while.

TONY:
Yeah, me too.

Well, work comes first.

Just pretend you like me.

That's not too hard to do.

TONY:
You have really soft hands.

[TONY & KRIEGER CHUCKLE]

- How is it going, Tony?
TONY: Whoa!

Let me-- I'm so sorry.

You know-- It's okay.

Good thing we didn't put the mic
in his pants.

I'm just gonna go clean this up.

That's not quite
how I remember dating.

McGEE:
Fee/s about par for the course.

[GRUNTING]

MAN:
Sorry. Sorry, man.

Excuse me.

Didn't get a good look
at the delivery boy.

TONY:
Well, looks like they keep him busy.

Maybe Kamal gets take-out.

McGEE:
Cross-checking the addresses.

Can /he/p you, sir?

[TONY CHUCKLES]

Yeah.

Can we get our food to go?

- Because my girlfriend and I...
WAITER: Ah...

I understand.

That's very naughty, yes?

Stop. Third on the list.

It's a rented apartment.

Look at the name on the lease,
McGee.

[PHONE RINGS]

- Yeah.
ZIVA: Should be passing you now.

GIBBS:
I see him.

Regular dinner delivery
to a Frederick LeClaire.

That's a name our dead guy's used
before. Dead guys don't eat.

Yeah. So who's using it now?

We can't be this lucky.

Let him make the drop first, Ziva.

ZIVA:
Yes, Gibbs. Standing by.

- Okay, take him.
- Moving in.

Hi, I was wondering
if you could help us.

I'm a bit lost.

Where are you trying--?

[GRUNTING]

What the--?

Just dinner.

The door.

Allow me.

Clear.

ZIVA:
Clear.

Nobody here.

This is Kamal's place.

Yeah, or it was.

Can't have gone far.

GIBBS:
Where '3 the guy who lives here?

How would I know?
I just deliver the food.

How's he gonna eat
if he's not home?

MAN:
It's a standing dinner order.

I drop off his meal every afternoon
and he pays two weeks in advance.

- So you've seen him?
- Yeah.

Once.

Gave me a big wad of cash.
And a good tip.

Can you describe him?

Okay, I guess.

Older black guy about my height.
Maybe a little taller.

How about this guy?
You seen him before?

Is this a trick question?

That is the guy who lives here.

Frederick LeClaire.

- Marvin Hinton.
- Kamal Konkani.

Our dead guy's our bad guy.

Then who killed him?

McGEE:
Robert Graves.

Twenty-five years old.

No aliases, no priors, no passport.

According to his W-4,

he's been working at the restaurant
six months.

If you believe everything on paper.

How much longer
are we gonna do this?

Anxious to get out?

Wasn't planning on spending the night
in custody.

I have a term paper due tomorrow.

Grad student
in electrical engineering.

Solid B-minus average.

You grew up in Hagerstown.

It's a nice neighbourhood?

My parents were working class.

I've had jobs since I was 13

and I've had to work twice as hard
as the silver spoons to get where I am.

The delivery boy.

What did I do wrong?

Was there something
in the package?

Drugs?

He could still be a courier
and not know it.

He delivers information
in to-go boxes.

Returns with cash
that contains the reply.

And someone else at the restaurant

sends on instructions
to prospective clients.

Tucked in a meal.

It doesn't matter how he did it.

Hinton played you.

He was The Eraser all along.

Well, Hinton was Kamal.

That explains
his so-called retirement.

He was in prison.

Spending his time
improving the technique

for eliminating a person's history.

- Which means--
- He was testing it on himself.

So why--?

Let himself be caught
on the trafficking charge?

TONY: And Who--?
- Killed him?

That was clearly not part of the plan.

KRIEGER: We were working
under the assumption

The Eraser killed his client
to cover his tracks.

What if it was
the other way around?

The Eraser was killed
by one of his clients?

Terrorists?

We don't even know
if they've arrived yet.

Another client, then.

Someone with a past
they needed to forget.

KRIEGER: And once the client's past
had been erased,

he kills Kamal.

To eliminate the only person
who knows his true identity.

Almost. Not a him, a her.

- One of his girlfriends--
- Was actually a client.

Cute.

She was erased,
so we don't know anything about her.

ZIVA:
Wrong.

We do know how she kills.

Where is Dr. Mallard?

PALMER:
With our forensic scientist.

I don't think he's ready
to release the body though.

He really gets into his work.

PALMER:
Yeah, he's turned himself inside out

trying to unscramble the meaning
behind this tattoo.

Dr. Mallard hates to leave anything
unfinished.

HAMPTON:
Yeah.

Me too.

Dr. Hampton, what are you doing?

I would never cut into your body
without your permission,

but I would appreciate the opportunity,
to perhaps, level the scales.

Of course.

Hey, you could have come into my lab
flapping and quacking

about miracles I failed to weave--

I assure you,
that's not in my character.

Um...

Shall we do this together?

I can only hope
that this makes us even.

I might even owe you one.

Doctor.

The girls have a theory.

The murder does not have anything
to do with terrorism.

It's one
of The Eraser's other clients.

So the killer could be anyone,
from anywhere?

We have been sifting
through instances involving mercury.

Did not find a similar murder, but...

Idaho, three years ago.

George Barney dies in his sleep
after having a few too many drinks.

ZIVA:
Choked to death on his own vomit.

KRIEGER:
He's buried on his family farm.

ZIVA: Last month,
the Barneys start digging a new well.

It turns out the ground water
had been contaminated.

KRIEGER:
EPA was called in.

Traced the source
of the contamination

back to a leak
in George Barney's casket.

Mercury.

ZIVA: His young widow had been
the high school science teacher.

She moved on
after his untimely death.

Local cops couldn't track her down.

She killed her husband.

KRIEGER:
Here's a picture of the grieving wife.

Look familiar?

Do you need me
to identify another photo?

TONY:
Recognise this person?

Her hair matches one of the samples
from Hinton's condo.

And the murder has her signature.

All right. All right. Look, it was
a tragedy when my husband died.

The entire town thought so.

Doesn't sound like you shared
their sentiments.

They didn't know what he was like
when he was drunk.

Which was all the time.

So when the opportunity
presented itself to start a new life,

you took it.

Wouldn't you?

How did Marvin Hinton know
you were on the run?

He knew everything about me
in one look.

Everything that matters.

He knew
how I'd gotten my new name.

He said
he'd been contacted the same way.

So you went home with him.

Did it occur to you

that he was the one
who set up your new identity?

That he was toying with you?

Because he was the only one
who knew about your past, right?

I didn't kill him.

I suppose it wouldn't be any fun
if she just admitted it.

Yes, sir.

FORNELL:
The delivery boy still here?

Waiting in the conference room.

Make sure he gets home.

Special Agent Krieger.

Nice work today.

She killed once for a new life.

Why not twice?

Did us a favour. Kamal is dead.

Doesn't seem to bother
his international clients.

The terrorist training camp?

Marine task force just went in.

- And?
JENNY: One terrorist killed.

They found an American passport
on his body.

- It went through squeaky clean.
- Kamal had completed the job.

What about the rest of the cell?

- Too late, already gone.
- They're on their way here.

And the only man
who knows who they are

is past telling us.

That's not certain, Tony.

Our dead man
may have one thing left to say.

We cracked it, Gibbs.
Me and Ducky.

We solved the puzzle.
We were looking at it wrong.

Yeah, it was Jordan, uh,
Dr. Hampton,

who had the idea
of excising the section of inked flesh.

That is so gross.

But what we found is so cool.

The blotchy, thick, blue, jailhouse dye,
that's just a camouflage.

Yes, the real clue is underneath.

Hidden
like a painted-over Monet canvas.

All I had to do
was eliminate the blue to clarify it.

This is the original tattoo.

It's beautiful, with deeper needling.

Professional work.

Oh, it's a masterpiece.
It's a Blaine Parker.

He's something of a legend.
Boston artist.

A man like Hinton
trying to shed his past.

So I talked to Parker's assistant,

and she was able to determine
the exact dates

when Hinton got the original tattoo.

Over a period of several days,
ten years ago.

Interpol's timeline
puts Kamal in London ten years ago.

Hinton's not Kamal.

Delivery boy lied to us.

More than that, he set us up.
He wanted us to believe it was Hinton.

What, you think the kid's Kamal?

He would have had to start
when he was 8.

Not if he's
the new Dread Pirate Roberts.

I love The Princess Bride.

No one would ever surrender
to the Dread Pirate Westley.

The Dread Pirate Roberts
picks a successor, then trains him.

Starts calling him Roberts,

and then settles
into a cushy retirement.

It's the name Kamal
that sells the business.

You can let me off up here.

KRIEGER:
Sorry for the inconvenience.

Just a case of mistaken identity.

- Good luck on your term paper.
- Thanks.

[PHONE RINGS]

GIBBS:
Ziva, where are you?

- Dropping off Graves, Gibbs.
- Don't.

Can we hug now?

flAUGHS]

From your closet.

Special delivery.

How did you find Kamal?

You don't find Kamal.

Kamal finds you.

He tempt you with the money
or the power?

Orjust the chance
to become somebody else?

Kamal could tell you needed him.

He needed me.

Can't even work his own computer.
The man's a dinosaur.

But he knows how to read people.

FORNELL:
Cover his tracks.

But you don't have the discipline.

Hinton figured you out.

He would have led the FBI
right to you.

FORNELL: So you killed him
before he got the chance.

Made us think he was Kamal.

Then you framed another client
for his murder.

GIBBS: Shannon O'Hara,
a.k.a. Karen Barney.

FORNELL: You knew how she killed
in the past. She was your first client.

Good for you.

You've got the whole story.

The worst mistake you made...

You tried to shoot our agents.

GIBBS: Hey, let me
hang that up for you, Tobias.

FORNELL:
Sit down!

GRAVES: What do you want?
- The rest of your client list.

Tell us where to find the real Kamal.

Now!

I was at an embassy party once.

Gated, razor wire, surveillance system.
The whole deal.

And this guyjust walks
in the front door

wearing a t-shirt that says,
"liquor store."

Holds up a brown paper bag
and he goes,

"Did anybody order, um,
a bottle of vodka?"

The places you can access
when you look the part.

TONY:
This thing starts kind of slow.

I'm sure it gets better.

McGEE:
The picture's up, boss.

TONY:
An NCIS production.

Brought to you
by Leroy Jethro Gibbs.

Starring, as usual, the FBI.

And the elusive Kamal Konkani.

GIBBS:
Freeze it.

Hm. The Dread Pirate Roberts,
I presume.

Did you get her number?

TONY:
Who, Courtney? No.

I did.
She wants to learn how to fight.