Person of Interest (2011–2016): Season 4, Episode 14 - Guilty - full transcript

While on a jury for a murder trial, Finch becomes suspicious of another juror; Reese starts to open up to a therapist.

FINCH:
We are being watched.

The government has a secret system.

A machine that spies on you
every hour of every day.

I designed the machine to detect
acts of terror, but it sees everything.

Violent crimes involving ordinary people.

The government
considers these people irrelevant.

We don't.

Hunted by the authorities,
we work in secret.

You'll never find us.

But victim or perpetrator,
if your number's up, we'll find you.

Any word from Root?



No new leads on Shaw?

Any progress on the backlog
of numbers we missed...

...when Samaritan went on the offensive...

...the ones I've looked into
are already dead...

...or locked up for the crimes
we failed to prevent.

Me too, but I found three
that are open missing-persons cases.

All three went missing
during the same 48-hour period.

- Trying to find out if they're connected.
- Or still alive.

I'll do what I can, but I'm afraid the
unfortunate facts of having a real life...

...have finally caught up to me.

Professor Whistler has jury duty.

And I can't ignore it...

...for fear of attracting attention
to my cover identity.

You just have to try to get out of it
like everybody else.



And if I'm stuck on a jury
when the next number comes up?

Fusco and I can handle it.

About that.
After everything that's happened...

...perhaps it would be best if we left him
out of our operations for now.

When we started,
you told me we'd both wind up dead.

This is worse.

You're right.

If we're shorthanded, we're shorthanded.

We're not bringing anyone else into this.

It's just you and me again, Mr. Reese.

I don't care if I have bad reception,
Terrence, we're rolling calls.

Now get me on with Anton.

We better be out of here by Friday night,
you know?

I got courtside Knicks tickets.

Grading exams.

- Where do you teach?
- Oh, local college.

I was high-school English teacher
for 41 years.

But budget cuts.
I was pushed into retirement.

I miss the students, well, some of them,
but I have a lot more free time now.

- I'm actually learning to knit.
- Indeed.

If you'll forgive me,
I really should focus on some work.

You're computerized, now, that's great.

In public school, we barely had money for
books and teachers, let alone fancy laptops.

FINCH:
What in the...?

MAN: Okay. Next group.
- Oh, dear. Oh, dear.

MAN:
"Paladino, Mel.

Everts, Riva.

McDermott, Doug.

- Whistler, Harold.
FINCH: Ah.

MAN:
Rollins, Timothy.

Blake, Emma."

Oh, that's me.

- I'm Emma, by the way.
- Harold.

Well, at least we'll both have
a friend in there, huh?

LANA: I need to be excused
due to financial hardship.

I am negotiating a
multi-million-dollar deal.

You'll be compensated for your time.
Forty dollars a day.

I hate cops. All cops.
I'd never believe anything a cop said.

Just like I don't believe
what you're saying now.

- Nice try, Mr. Rollins.
- I don't really follow the news.

So I guess I don't have an opinion
one way or the other.

- No challenge, Your Honor.
- No challenge.

No, I can't think of anything
that would prejudice me in this case.

I mean, except for the larger issues
with our government.

Issues?

One can't really call it "government of the
people, by the people" anymore, can one?

Because we're all being watched
by an intelligent supercomputer...

...that's slowly but surely
taking over the world.

You can return to your seat
in the gallery, Mr. Whistler.

That's Professor Whistler, actually.

JUDGE:
Okay, that's our jury.

The rest of you are free to go.

[PHONE RING-TONE PLAYING]

What did I say about cell phones?

Zero tolerance.

- You are held in contempt.
- What? No. I swear, it was off.

That's not even my ringtone.

It seems we have a seat to fill.

Professor Whistler, your number's up.

When I said I was looking forward
to our next session...

...I didn't expect you to make me
wait so long.

Is that your way of saying
you missed me, Iris?

Heh, heh. It's my way of saying you're not
supposed to cancel mandatory sessions.

Well, they didn't give me mandatory sessions
because I'm good at following rules.

Captain Moreno said you took unpaid leave.

There was a death in the family.

I'm sorry to hear that.

Do you wanna talk about it?

Okay.

Then on to the good news.
This is your last session.

I'm signing off on you. Congratulations.

You're sane. Or close enough.

And you're free to go.

Okay.

Well...

- Thanks for everything.
- Mm-hm.

I'm sorry.

FUSCO:
"Missing persons"?

- You lost, Lionel?
- What's the deal with these three?

The deal is they're on my desk, not yours.

They're not homicides. So I was guessing
this is part of our little side project?

Actually, we're putting that on hold
for a while.

When I need your help, I'll let you know.

[PHONE RINGING]

[AUTOMATED VOICE ON PHONE]
Sierra...

Someday soon, your phone
will have a little 5K on its screen...

...a fifth-generation wireless technology
that will make it run faster and work better.

And that 5K will be there
because of Caroline Mills...

...the hard-working CEO
of a major telecommunications firm...

...who was gunned down in her own home
by her own husband, Chad Bryson.

You see, Caroline was about to earn
her company billions...

...and you're going to hear from witness
after witness who will tell you...

...that Chad, a failed entrepreneur,
couldn't handle his wife's success.

That their marriage was on the rocks.

And that, out of jealousy and greed...

...Chad Bryson chose
to kill his wife Caroline...

...rather than risk being
left with nothing.

REESE [OVER EARPIECE]:
Finch. We just got another number.

[WHISPERS]
I'm a touch busy at the moment.

Yeah, but I think the machine
wants you to handle this one personally.

How can you possibly know that?

Because I just tracked down our new number,
and she's sitting right next to you.

FINCH: Well, I spent last night
digging through Emma's digital footprint.

You find anything interesting?

Nothing she hadn't already told me
yesterday.

She taught high-school English for 41
years, and then was forced into retirement.

Although, prescriptions for anti-depressants
and appointments with a psychiatrist...

...suggest that she's not happily retired.

Nothing wrong
with getting a little help, Finch.

Certainly not, I just can't find any clues
as to why she needs our help.

Which means whatever is going on,
it's probably about this trial.

Might explain why she has enough clippings
about this case to wallpaper an asylum.

Yesterday, she denied
knowing anything about it.

Telling them what they want to hear
to get herself on that jury.

Looks like she's obsessed.

Perhaps she's trying to get close enough
to kill Chad.

Or maybe she's one of those nut-balls
who falls in love with a killer...

...and she's after the prosecutors
trying to put him away.

Either way, she may be our perpetrator.

Try to find out what she's planning,
Mr. Reese.

I'll keep an eye on her here.

Hi, neighbor.

Well...

Okay, Emma,
bought any good murder weapons lately?

[PHONE RINGING]

Kind of busy, Lionel.

I figured when you didn't show up for work.
Thought I'd lend a hand.

- I tried to track down your missing three.
- Leave that alone.

You're not the only one who can pull
a missing-persons file.

One of your three, his cell signal vanished
in the armpit of Queens.

I don't have a body, but there's a bar near
here, until recently, belonged to Elias.

Damn it, Lionel.

I'm thinking maybe your missing person
used to do business with Elias.

Lionel.

I said I could handle it.

Just stay out of this one, okay?

Yeah.

John. Please tell me
you didn't just shoot someone else.

Not yet. But I was...

I thought...

...maybe we could keep talking.

Of course.

- About what?
- About...

...things that have happened.

Regular sessions. I'd be happy to.

But you should know this will be more than a
chat to make sure you're not about to snap.

I'll be asking you
some pretty tough questions.

- Like what?
- Like who are you, really?

Because you're not a cop.

My dad, three brothers, an uncle
and two of my aunts, all police.

I've been around cops my whole life
and you, my friend, are not a cop.

So how did John Reilly
wind up working for the N.Y.P.D.?

Does 9 a.m. tomorrow work for you?

And you worked closely
with Caroline, Mr. Ward?

Senior vice president of operations.
I was her right hand.

Her death was a huge loss.

Caroline was Infinince.

Will the company fail without her?

Oh, no. We're in good hands now
with Dean Reston, our new CEO.

And the 5K standard that Caroline developed
is about to put us back on top.

It's just a shame she won't be alive
to see it happen.

Did Caroline's success
make her husband jealous?

She did mention once
they'd been fighting a lot.

She was thinking about a divorce.

COBB: And when was this?
- Two weeks before she died.

COBB:
Thank you, Mr. Ward.

Would you say Caroline
was an easy person to work for?

Sure. Absolutely.

Exhibit A7, Your Honor.

A personnel report signed by Phillip Ward.

Could you read to me from Page 6, please?

"Attrition due to
stress-related illnesses...

...including migraines, ulcers
and mental health problems...

...have increased by 15 percent."

Stress-related illnesses.

Caroline's employees were so miserable,
they were getting sick...

...leaving the company in droves.
Isn't it possible one of them killed her?

- Objection.
JUDGE: Sustained.

YATES: Nothing further.
JUDGE: We will now recess for lunch.

No. Karen.

Karen, you do not have that meeting
without me. I said we push so we push.

If Emma's there to kill anybody...

...she must be planning on using
her bare hands.

I couldn't find any evidence
she was trying to buy a weapon.

Perhaps her plan involves a method
of attack you haven't considered.

I know a lot of ways to
kill people, Harold.

FINCH:
She just pulled out a second phone.

[BLEEPING]

FINCH:
Are you seeing this, Mr. Reese?

Maybe I couldn't find out Emma's plan
because she's working with a partner.

- Here's lunch.
- Oh, good.

Oh, my God, finally.

Oh, thank you.

Or maybe she's not a partner after all,
but an unwilling participant.

- Here you go.
- Thank you.

[FIONA GASPING AND GRUNTING]

- Fiona?
WOMAN: She'll be okay?

- Fiona, What's wrong?
- It's an allergic reaction.

She's in anaphylactic shock.

She must have one of those EpiPen things
on her, right?

- She told the bailiff she couldn't have
eggs. LANA: There's eggs in mayo, right?

BAILIFF:
Call 911. We need an ambulance.

MAN 2: She's allergic to something. - Emma's
not the perpetrator here, Mr. Reese.

Someone's trying to fix this trial, and
they're willing to kill to make it happen.

FINCH: Our poisoned juror should recover, but
she won't be back in court any time soon.

An alternate will take her place.

Whoever is using Emma to fix the trial
isn't playing around.

- Any idea who sent her those texts?
- Not yet.

But in the meantime,
I think I know who's behind this.

Looks like Chad Bryson hired some sort of
a fixer to make sure he's found not guilty.

Since we got Emma's number,
they're probably planning to kill her...

...and any other jurors who get in their way.
They're trying to tip the scales of justice.

We gotta tip them back.

Hello, John. Been a while.

Zoe.

- What are you doing here?
- I do a lot of business here.

Especially when high-ranking officials
get arrested in a hot tub...

...with hookers and blow,
and they need me to clean up the mess.

So detective...

...what are you doing here?

Undercover work.

It's a long story.

Did you really think you could fix
the Chad Bryson trial...

...without calling me for help?

Saw you snapping pictures of the jurors.

And Harold's one of them.

Thanks, we can handle this.

Yeah, so one question:

If business lady votes "not guilty,"
what's grandpa gonna vote?

REESE: He's a cranky old man,
she seems like a pain in the ass.

She votes one way, he votes the opposite.

- Guilty.
- Good guess.

Totally wrong.

Do you see what he's doing?
He's taking a drink after she does.

That's called mirroring.

It means that, whether he knows it or not,
he has accepted her as the alpha.

If she votes "not guilty," he will too.

You got someplace we can go work?

All anyone at our company wants
is what Caroline deserves: Justice.

- Thank you very much. Excuse me.
ZOE: Here's what I've got so far:

Alpha-bitch Lana,
well, she would be fired in a heartbeat...

...if her bosses knew
that she was embezzling.

Superfan Tim
has a good-sized gambling problem...

...and good old Mel
has a 40-year-old illegitimate son...

...that he hasn't told his wife about.

We were trying to swing a verdict, Zoe,
not ruin their lives.

Well, a little leverage never hurts.

Court is adjourned, Mr. Reese.
What have you been...?

- Ms. Morgan.
- Harold.

- It's lovely to see you.
- And so unexpected.

John? A word?

I thought we agreed not to involve
any more innocent people in our work.

Well, Zoe's not exactly what I call
innocent. Besides, she insisted.

Saying no to Ms. Morgan
was never your strong suit, was it?

Boys, are we gonna work or what?

[REESE CLEARS THROAT]

ZOE: So unless there's some
prosecutorial misconduct going on...

...nine times out of 10,
the person who wants to fix the trial...

...is the person on trial.
- Chad Bryson.

I hacked Chad's accounts
to see if any payments...

...would help identify this fixer.
Nothing unusual I could find.

So whoever the fixer is, they're good.

Well, they certainly picked
the right person to sway the jury.

Emma's smart, she's patient, she's likable.

If Emma says that Chad's not guilty,
people are gonna believe her.

When you walk in that jury room,
all Emma needs is reasonable doubt.

You carry the burden of proof.

And we need to get you ready.

Okay, you've seen the evidence,
you've heard the closing arguments...

...you're all in the jury room and Emma
says she doesn't think Chad did it.

What do you say?

Oh, well, based on all the evidence
we've seen...

...I think it's hard to imagine
that he's not guilty.

What about the trainer who saw him
leaving the gym at the time of the murder?

That's reasonable doubt there.

I suppose technically every situation
has some measure of uncertainty.

Harold, this isn't science, it's law.

Rational thought doesn't apply.

Cell records clearly place Chad
near the house when it happened.

So? I hear they can be faked.
I got a friend who can do it.

Now, that's just cheating. I mean,
look at what he says in these e-mails.

Chad can't stand Caroline's success.
That's one solid motive.

Lots of people resent a successful woman.
Doesn't mean he killed her.

But lots of people don't have
this much evidence saying they did it.

Better, but it's still too polite. What
are you, from the Midwest or something?

- Yeah, I just don't think he did it.
- Are you kidding me?

Look at all of this.

The divorce papers, the angry voicemails,
the bloody footprint.

Look at all that and tell me
that Chad Bryson is not guilty as sin.

At this point,
my biggest challenge tomorrow...

...will be staying awake.

You got plans?

The night's still young.
Thought I might hit up some contacts...

...see if I can find out
who Chad hired to fix his trial.

Unless you have something else in mind?

I still got other work to do.

Well, I'll be damned.

You're interested in someone, aren't you?

You don't know me
as well as you think you do.

I think I know you
better than you know yourself.

And whoever she is...

...it won't last.

People like you and me, we're great
for a night, we're great for a weekend.

But we really suck at letting people in.

We're just not built that way.

Sleep tight, John.

When you said you wanted to talk...

...I thought there would be more
actual talking.

Hm. So your whole family's police?

Going back five generations.

You ever think about doing the job?

I went through the academy, actually.
Graduated and everything.

But I guess I was more interested in what
was going on inside other cops' heads.

Your dad disappointed?

I think he was mostly just glad I was safe.

When I was a kid...

...he taught me so much self-defense...

...that when my high-school prom date
got a little handsy...

...I wound up knocking him out
and making a citizens' arrest.

- Ha, ha, ha.
- Poor kid's parents threatened to sue.

- I actually did get sued when I was a kid.
- No.

I did. My dad was trying to teach me
how to drive...

...so I put our family's Oldsmobile through
the side of our neighbor's house. Ha, ha, ha.

I'm guessing you didn't get your license
for a while.

- I was only 8 years old at the time.
- Ha, ha, ha.

Are you and your dad still in touch?

We lost him when I was pretty young,
but l...

I never talk about him.

Have you lost a lot of people, John?

But you don't talk about any of them,
do you?

Why do you think that is?

It's an occupational hazard.

With the work I've done...

...privacy becomes...

...a habit.

Maybe it's time for some new habits.

Sometimes habits are there to protect you.

- From what?
- From life.

From the way things go.

From the fact that every time
you get close to someone, you...

And you have seen clear evidence
that only Chad Bryson had the means...

...motive and opportunity
to enter the home he and Caroline shared...

...and to shoot her, not once, not twice,
but three times...

...in her chest.

Now, Caroline needs you to speak out
because her voice was silenced.

REESE:
How's Emma doing?

She looks a bit worried, but given
the circumstances, who wouldn't?

Any luck locating the fixer
so we can put a stop to all this?

No. You'll just have to piss him off enough
to bring him out in the open.

JUDGE:
We are in recess for deliberations.

ZOE:
Showtime, Harold.

In the interest of getting us home quickly,
I can serve as foreperson.

Actually, I'd like the job.

With all due respect, ma'am, I handle
rooms just like this one every day.

And I was a teacher for many years.

I know quite a lot about
resolving disputes.

Should we put it to a vote?

Fine.

Everyone for me.

All yours.

Okay, Emma made her first move.
You need to come out swinging.

Give them hell, Harry.

Please don't call me that.

EMMA:
Okay, should we get started?

Well, this Chad person is clearly guilty.

The voice-mail he left Caroline
shows he had motive.

And the cell phone places him at the house.

Why would there be a print of his shoe
in her blood...

...if he wasn't the one who killed her?

Yes. Exactly.

What Harold said. This man is guilty.

Wait. Wasn't Emma supposed to be
pushing for a not-guilty?

Only one person would wanna make
sure that Chad Bryson is found guilty...

...of murdering Caroline Mills. And that's
the person who actually killed her.

Finch, we've got a big problem here.

Okay, I think Harold has made
some very good points here.

I mean, is there anyone in this room
who isn't positive that Chad is guilty?

REESE:
We read this one all wrong.

There's no way Chad's paying
a fixer to have himself found guilty.

So someone else is trying
to fix this trial.

That someone probably killed Caroline.

We need to find that fixer
and hunt the real killer.

What am I supposed to do?

- Stall.
- Stall.

Okay, let's put it to a vote.
Who thinks the defendant is guilty?

What the hell, professor?

Weren't you all "give him the chair"
a second ago?

I may have been a bit hasty
when we first walked in.

But I got to thinking about
what's at stake here.

Chad Bryson's freedom,
justice for Caroline's death.

And I think maybe we owe it to Caroline...

...to take just a little more time
and really think this through.

How much time, exactly?

As long as it takes, I suppose.

Now, let's just go through the evidence
again, piece by piece.

TIM:
Unbelievable.

FINCH:
I'm sorry, but I'm still not convinced.

- And I don't think I'm the only one.
- Harold.

Ms. Vara and Mr. Paladino
have come around to my point of view.

- I said was I wasn't sure anymore.
- That's reasonable doubt.

Please, Harold.

Now, if we could take one more look
at that partial fingerprint...

EMMA: No. There's nothing more to look at,
nothing more to talk about.

You have to change your mind.

Come on, man. This is ridiculous.
You're holding us hostage.

Okay, okay, okay. This isn't getting us
anywhere, so let's just take a break.

WOMAN:
So where should we get dinner from?

Please tell me that you're making progress.

You tell us. I'm sending you a
technical report on Caroline's 5K system.

Need you to translate into normal English.

- Where did you get this?
- Looking over the evidence...

...we started to think that there might be
a cover-up going on at Infinince.

So I used some of your hacking tools
to break into their servers.

We found this in one of Caroline's
deleted e-mail threads.

Well, I can see why she deleted it.

It's a consumer safety evaluation
for their 5K system.

The cell towers were operating
at more than 200 watts...

...producing ground-level
absorption figures...

...far in excess of the SAR limit
of 1.6 watts per kilogram.

Did you not hear the part about English?

The 5K cell towers could microwave people.

Exposure like that could cause
any number of health problems:

Nausea, migraine headaches, even cancer.

Didn't Chad's attorney say people
at the company were getting sick?

And I think I know why.

The prototype 5K tower was built
at their corporate headquarters.

You think one of the employees killed
Caroline for making them sick?

Caroline wasn't making them sick.
She was trying to stop it from happening.

After seeing this, she said she wouldn't
sell anything that's gonna hurt people.

She tried to call off the 5K deal.

She would have cost the company billions.

So someone at Infinince
killed her to shut her up.

And they framed Chad for her murder.

Well, this might be our someone.
Dean Reston.

Was tapped to CEO just a few days
after Caroline's death.

John.

MAN [ON VIDEO]:
Cell-phone video shows Chad Bryson

in a heated dispute with his wife...

...Caroline Mills two days before
she was killed.

Well, I think our fixer's fighting back.

He suspects a mole on the jury...

...he leaks this, and it cuts off
our contact with Harold.

The judge is having us sequestered
until we reach a verdict.

TIM:
So forever.

We're stuck here forever.

BAILIFF:
No electronics, judge's orders.

You'll get all your toys back
when this is over.

REESE: Don't worry, Finch. We'll
keep an eye on you and Emma...

...and find a way to get to the bottom...

What in the world?

Harold.

Now...

Where is your Internet connection?

[GASPS]

Morse code.

"Relax, Finch. It's me."

Please, stop...

...pointing...

...that thing...

...at me.

Don't worry.

Pretty sure...

...it's not loaded.

Finch. Get out on your...

"Balcony...

...now."

FINCH:
Don't.

Please, you don't have to do this.

Yes, I do, or someone else will get hurt.

Someone whose life still matters.

No, your life matters.

No. No, it doesn't.

Not for a while now.

I know someone's using
you to fix the trial.

And I know that you've only gone along
with it to protect others.

But we can't put an innocent man in prison.

Chad Bryson didn't kill Caroline.

Someone at her company did...

...because she was about to put people
ahead of a billion-dollar deal.

Caroline had the courage
to stand up for what's right.

We'll help you do the same.

Hey, Zoe. You'd be proud of Harold.

He just got Emma to change her mind.

Any luck proving Reston killed Caroline?

ZOE: Not yet. But I have a lead
on the fixer's location.

Three days before trial, someone at Infinince
used money from a corporate slush-fund...

...to rent an empty floor
across from the courthouse.

You got all that from their computer?

Hell, no. But a magician
never reveals her secrets.

Now, you want the fixer's location or not?

My friend is on his way to stop the person
that's been threatening you.

This will all be over soon.

Do you know who's behind this?

No. I got the jury summons.

First time in my life...

...it wasn't a problem.
It sounded like fun.

How pathetic is that?

The night before I was
supposed to report...

...there was a knock at my door.
I opened it.

No one was there.

There was a brown envelope.

- Full of newspaper clippings about the trial.
- Yes.

And a cheap cell phone.

There was a text.
It said I had to get on that jury.

And if I didn't follow orders...

...people would die.
- Why didn't you call the police?

I started to call 911,
but there was a gunshot.

Paula, my neighbor, said that someone
shot a bullet through their window.

It barely missed her little girl.

I got another text,
"The next one won't miss."

So from that moment on,
I just did what I was told.

Anyone in your position
would've done exactly the same thing.

He didn't pick you?

He didn't pick Lana or Mel.

Of all the people that were
in that jury room that day...

...he picked me. Why?

Did he know something about me?

Was it because I let them take my job?

I loved teaching so much,
and I let them take it away from me.

I'm just a pushover. For them.

For him.

What else could you have done?

He said he was going to hurt people.
And he wasn't lying about that.

But can you imagine how that would feel?

To know that something bad
was gonna happen...

...and it was your fault
if it doesn't get stopped?

I know I'm supposed to say "allegedly" when
I talk about this stuff, so here you go.

I'm no expert on legal matters,
but it's pretty clear...

...something ridiculous is going on...
ZOE: Any luck, John?

We can't nail Reston
without catching his fixer.

Nobody's home.
But I think he knows I'm here.

Chad Bryson absolutely, positively...

...undeniably...
- And I think I know why he's not.

He only has information on 11 jurors.

Zoe, that fixer we've been looking for,
he's on the jury.

ZOE: He had Emma do the dirty work,
and he was watching her the whole time.

And he's in the hotel with her
and Finch right now.

[MAN GRUNTS AND BODY THUMPS]

FINCH:
What was that?

[EMMA GASPS]

[DOOR RATTLING]

FINCH:
Tim. Stay away from us.

TIM:
Oh, I'll try to keep my distance.

That's the whole point of using
Honest Emma, the schoolmarm...

...to persuade people
instead of doing it myself.

Just like the rest of your life,
you screwed this up royally...

...and now Harold has to pay the price.
EMMA: No.

FINCH:
Emma.

See, poor Harold couldn't stand
being the odd man out...

...so tragically,
he's about to take his own life.

I warned you what would happen
if you disobeyed, Emma.

So this one's on you.

[GRUNTING]

[TIM GRUNTING]

TIM:
Unh!

[GRUNTING]

Why the hell would you save me?

Because I wanna see you stand trial.

Your Honor, in light of new evidence...

...the People are dropping
all charges against Chad Bryson.

JUDGE: Mr. Bryson, you're free to go.
And the jury is dismissed.

Thank you all for your service.

[GAVEL BANGS]

Mr. Reston, how do you respond
to allegations your company's 5K towers...

...pose significant health risks?
- No comment.

Get me on the next flight to Beijing.

ZOE:
Business in China?

Or are you just trying to find some place
that doesn't have extradition?

Reston's a bean counter.

He didn't know that there were
problems with 5K, but you did.

As Caroline's right hand,
you had access to her home.

And Chad Bryson,
he may not have had a .45, but you do.

I know who you are, Ms. Morgan.

You here to make some kind of deal?

FUSCO: Phillip Ward, you're under arrest
for the murder of Caroline Mills.

Actually, I came by to tell you if you
needed somebody to clean all this up...

...don't call me.

You, on the other hand...

...don't be a stranger.

FUSCO: Hey, loverboy, your perp's ready
to go downtown.

But let me guess, you'll handle this.

We're in public, Lionel.

Look, I get it.
After what happened to Shaw...

...you and Glasses are worried
the same thing's gonna happen to me.

And you know what? It might.
And I'm fine with that.

You don't get to decide what
or who I'm willing to die for.

I made my choice a long time ago.

So stop shutting me out.

Yo, Richie Rich, let's go.

EMMA: Well, this is the most excitement
I've had in quite a while. Heh, heh.

I'm sure you'll be glad for things
to get back to normal.

Oh, actually, my normal sucks.

I hate knitting.

I think I might go back to teaching.

And if this school district
doesn't wanna pay me, then I'll...

I'll find one that does.

I think there are lots of students out
there who could use a teacher like you.

Thank you, Harold.

- For everything.
- Mm.

I've been thinking a lot
about our last talk.

And?

For a long time, I've been afraid.

To let anyone in.

Trying to avoid getting close.

To avoid loss.

No matter what I do...

...it happens anyway-

Loss is inevitable.

So is love.

It's a basic human need, John.

None of us can go very long without it.

Well, maybe it's time for some new habits.

- Still no word from Root?
- No.

But I shouldn't receive another
jury summons for quite some time...

...so that's something, I suppose.

Made some progress on our missing three.

They were all tight with Elias.

So Fusco and I are thinking maybe Dominic's
the reason they went missing.

I thought we agreed to leave Detective
Fusco out of our business for now.

I tried.

But he's like a fungus.

We can't bring anyone new into this.

We also can't do this alone.

A conundrum I know all too well.

After all, Mr. Reese...

...that's why I hired you.

[English - US - SDH]