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مسلسل Criminal Minds مترجم - Episode 15
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00:03At the end of his two-year killing spree, seven women were dead.
00:09He made a name for himself, literally.
00:13He sent out written communication identifying himself as the Keystone Killer.
00:19These letters, all of which were accompanied by a word search puzzle,
00:25were part of his game.
00:26Like the son of Sam, he taunted the police.
00:30He fueled the media's fascination with it.
00:32As you'll see in the book, he left specific crime scene details in the word puzzles.
00:39And then, 18 years ago, he just stopped killing.
00:44Now, one of the Philadelphia PD's theories was that he was in jail on an unrelated charge.
00:50But this is a man who craves attention.
00:53He could not remain a faceless prisoner for so long.
00:57Another theory was that he had simply moved away,
00:59and he continued killing in another city or another country.
01:02But the FBI's VICAP program tracks murderers and murderers all around the world.
01:07They turned up nothing.
01:10This intricate knot was part of his signature.
01:13It's a signature we have never seen repeated.
01:15Another theory was that he had died, which is the only explanation for why a compulsive psychopath would stop killing.
01:24But I never believed he was a psychopath who had to do this.
01:28I believe he is a narcissistic sociopath who chooses to.
01:33This is his last victim, Amy Jennings.
01:37She was 23.
01:39Her infant son was in the next room when she was killed.
01:45So, uh, so even if he thinks he's finished, he still has a debt to pay.
01:55Thank you, Mr. Ryan.
01:57Thank you, sir.
02:04You look comfortable up there.
02:06Why don't you come back to the BAU for a guest lecture?
02:09I'm retired, remember?
02:11Hell of a way to relax.
02:14323 pages on the one that got away.
02:16He hasn't gotten away.
02:18And you didn't count that eight-page prologue.
02:21What happened to Florida?
02:2236 holes a day.
02:23Florida's too humid.
02:26Anyway, I'd miss the seasons.
02:28So I'm in Philadelphia now.
02:30You're in Philadelphia for the seasons?
02:32You think I'm, what, dysfunctional?
02:36Obsessed?
02:37Want to eat where the killer eats?
02:39Sleep where he sleeps?
02:41Maybe I'm addicted to Pat's steaks.
02:43Maybe I'm holding out hope that the Eagles will turn it around next season.
02:47Remember weapons of mass destruction?
02:49What are you saying?
02:50You think I'm chasing a ghost?
02:51I'm saying sometimes we get it wrong.
02:54You ever consider that?
02:55I've considered everything.
03:01So, how are things at BAU?
03:03Anything changed since I left?
03:05Everything changes.
03:07Everything stays the same.
03:08You know how it is.
03:09Miss me?
03:10No.
03:11Just you to buy a book then, huh?
03:12What can I say?
03:14Profilers, they fascinate me.
03:16I'm sorry to interrupt, but this is for you.
03:22Thanks.
03:22Sure.
03:26Fan mail.
03:27Fan mail.
03:28How do you like that?
03:33Wait a minute.
03:34Hey.
03:35Who gave this to you?
03:36I don't know.
03:37Guy in a blue jacket?
03:39Hey, hey, wait.
03:40Hey, that's not the guy.
03:42Hey, it's not the guy.
03:44What's going on?
03:47Sorry, sir.
03:48Misunderstanding.
03:54Luna's mind does not probe the Blackwater.
03:57I'd like two volumes of the same book, Max.
04:00Why don't we add a few more checks?
04:03Is this from him, the Keystone killer?
04:05Son of a bitch was right here.
04:08You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:10Lock this place down.
04:12No one leaves until I talk to them.
04:17You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:25You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:26You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:28You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:30You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:32You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:32You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:32You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:32You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:33You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:33You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:34You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:35You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:35You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:36You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:37You still think I'm after a ghost?
04:49Norman MacLean wrote,
04:50It is those we live with and love and should know who elude us.
04:57So they've been here all night?
04:58Apparently.
04:59Where else would any of us be on a Saturday night?
05:01It's not like we have lives or anything.
05:03Speak for yourself.
05:04Guys, we are about to meet Max Ryan,
05:07the guy responsible for catching the Boise child killer.
05:09Have you ever talked to him before?
05:11He's pretty intense, brusque, not much of a bedside manner.
05:14Sound like anyone else we know?
05:15I heard he was forced into early retirement.
05:18No, he chose to retire.
05:19He's written a new book on the Keystone Killer case.
05:21He moved to Philadelphia to be closer to the crime scenes.
05:23That's retirement?
05:25B.A.U. style.
05:28Who in his mind has not probed the black water?
05:32John Steinbeck, East of Eden.
05:35Story of good and evil, love and hate.
05:38There's been some new activity on the Keystone Killer case.
05:41New?
05:42He was at Max's lecture last night.
05:44What?
05:45He got away?
05:46Would we have woken you up if we caught him?
05:51He handed this letter to the security guard.
05:54And he included two driver's licenses with it.
05:58One is from his last victim.
06:00Last known victim.
06:01Amy Jennings.
06:03Strangled in 1987.
06:05Old socks.
06:09This is gray.
06:11You see something?
06:12Yeah.
06:13What is the significance of black bra and gray wool socks?
06:17That's what Amy Jennings was wearing when we found her.
06:19That's a lot of detail to remember for 20 years.
06:22Green River Killer.
06:23Couldn't remember where the bodies were buried, much less what they were wearing.
06:26Some unsubs take pictures.
06:27Print them themselves so they can manipulate the scene, bring it to life.
06:31That would explain the level of detail.
06:35Does no fight in the rear window have anything to do with the Jennings case?
06:38No.
06:39He entered in through the front door.
06:40There's ample evidence that Amy fought him very hard.
06:43Now he's referring to a new victim there.
06:45The second driver's license.
06:47Carla Bromwell.
06:48Yeah, there's a C Bromwell here in the puzzle.
06:51Philly PD went to the address on the license a little while ago.
06:54Found her suffocated with a plastic bag.
06:56Suffocated.
06:57His previous victims are strangled.
06:59His MO's different.
07:00He hasn't been killing all along, has he?
07:01It would have been difficult to tie these new murders to the Keystone Killer,
07:04but with the change in methodology and the time that's elapsed between kills.
07:07If he had been active, I would have known.
07:09It's not entirely impossible for an unsub to switch his MOA.
07:13The Zodiac Killer went from stabbing people to shooting them.
07:15Yes, but he wanted to take the credit.
07:17This bastard didn't do anything in secret.
07:19I'd say good morning, but it's still dark outside.
07:24Who's this?
07:25Carla Bromwell.
07:26Uh, Gideon, can you put it on the news?
07:29The Philadelphia police were notified late last night of a letter that was hand-delivered to this news station.
07:35Apparently, it was written by the infamous Keystone Killer,
07:39who's wanted in connection with the murders of seven women back in the late 1980s.
07:44He also included a photograph of a woman.
07:47She appears to be dead in the photo, suffocated with a plastic bag.
07:53Now, subsequently, police discovered a body in the Overbrook area,
07:57but they are not confirming that it's the woman in this picture.
08:01He works fast.
08:02That's an understatement, huh?
08:04Meet you on the plane in 30 minutes.
08:07I'm coming with you.
08:10I'm not asking, Jason.
08:19Billy P.D. confirmed that Carla Bromwell's been dead less than 12 hours.
08:23She was 47.
08:25Victims are getting older.
08:26That is unusual.
08:28Victimology rarely changes.
08:29Her hands and feet were bound with flex cuffs.
08:31Flex cuffs?
08:32No ropes?
08:33That's what they said.
08:34They're waiting at the crime scene for you.
08:37Thank you, sweetheart.
08:38Here if you need me.
08:40So older victims are in a different mode of binding and killing.
08:43Maybe the note just means we have a copycat on our hands.
08:46A copycat who just happens to have Amy Jennings' driver's license?
08:50No.
08:52No, it's the Keystone Killer.
09:03How are we supposed to work with him?
09:06Gideon.
09:07He's not even an active agent.
09:09He's here because he knows his case better than any of us.
09:13We're leading the investigation.
09:14He's only consulting.
09:16Anyone tell him that?
09:44Yes, sir.
09:45Agent Ryan.
09:47Detective.
09:48Should have guessed you'd show up sooner or later.
09:49He's consulting with us.
09:51CSI's done processing the body?
09:53Yeah.
09:53We'll get out of your way.
09:54Thanks.
09:57This is his eighth victim.
09:59There's no bruising on the wrists, ankles, or neck.
10:03Just a good-sized blunt force head wound.
10:05Yeah, probably a surprise attack.
10:07Well, the puzzle said no fight.
10:09I know what the puzzle said.
10:14Edwin is extensive.
10:16Level of violence is escalating.
10:18Yeah.
10:18This bedroom is in the front of the house.
10:21And the puzzle mentioned a rear window.
10:24Maybe he left a print.
10:25No way.
10:28Well, I think I'm going to check it out anyway.
10:30You do what you want to do, but believe me, you're wasting your time.
10:37Elle's good at this, Max.
10:38Did I say she wasn't?
10:42I haven't had a feeling like this around a dead body in 18 years.
10:45I remember what you said to me on my first day.
10:48Don't lose your objectivity.
10:50This isn't personal.
10:52Yeah.
10:52Well, maybe not for you.
11:02We are aware of the media reports.
11:05However, we cannot confirm at this time.
11:06Heads don't kill her.
11:08The FBI will be making a formal statement later on today.
11:11We've received more information from the murderer than the police.
11:14What's going on?
11:15We have a right to the truth.
11:16The Philadelphia police have to finish investigating this crime scene before we can make a statement.
11:21All of your questions will be answered at that time, so please be patient.
11:24That's all I can say.
11:26Ma'am, when can we expect that statement today?
11:28We don't know anymore now that we didn't know.
11:28Do you know anything about murder?
11:31What do you think of Ryan?
11:32He hasn't changed much.
11:34I think we could learn a lot from him.
11:36What could you possibly learn that you don't already know?
11:38Hot, repetitive thinking is a death knell for the brain.
11:41And for complete brain usage, diverse stimulation is the key.
11:46Look at this.
11:52Let's go show this to everyone.
12:00In order for the light to shine so brightly, the darkness must be present.
12:08He's quoting Sir Francis Bacon now.
12:11I used this specific quote in my...
12:12In your book on page 184.
12:15I read it on the plane.
12:17And you remember the page number of the quote?
12:20Don't ask.
12:21He says to expect another gift in two days.
12:23A gift.
12:24Calls his victims gifts.
12:26Gifts for whom?
12:28For me.
13:17A lot of things have changed in 20 years, including the age of the Keystone killer's victims.
13:20He's older, his victims are older.
13:23Makes sense to me.
13:24Most unsubs have specific fantasies.
13:26This is that they're killing the same person over and over again.
13:29This man clearly had a preference for young brunettes, and now he's switched to older women.
13:33What does that mean?
13:33Ted Bundy only killed women that looked like his fiancee, but then he devolved and he brutally attacked a house
13:39full of sorority sisters that looked nothing like his previous victims.
13:42He went off script.
13:44His final victim was a 12-year-old girl.
13:48When police found the van that he used to kill her, the amount of blood revealed that he had lost
13:53complete control.
13:54It was that de-evolution that eventually led to his capture.
13:58He could be de-evolving into a frenzy.
14:01So you mean he's about to mess up?
14:02Keystone killer's de-evolution is only a theory.
14:04We need to be prepared for anything.
14:06And if he is in a frenzy, there's no telling how quickly he'll fall apart.
14:09Or how many more victims he'll take with him?
14:11So we're going to go over everything we know, old and new, and hopefully find him before we find another
14:16body.
14:18We'll start with Agent Ryan's original profile.
14:21Max, you want to present it?
14:23No.
14:28We're looking for a white male in his late 40s.
14:31The controlled crime scenes, the meticulousness, and his collection of trophies suggests a possible military background.
14:37We believe he's been living in the same geographic area as his entire adult life.
14:41He would establish a job.
14:46I thought you were going to present the profile.
14:49The team can handle it.
14:52The team.
14:54We used to work solo when this all started.
14:58Well, we were wrong.
15:00You don't worry about too many cooks?
15:03Nope.
15:10He used a quote, Jason.
15:12He used a quote from my book.
15:15So?
15:17Maybe it's a coincidence.
15:21We've both been doing this too long to believe that.
15:30Let's focus on the differences in the crimes.
15:33What's he doing that's new?
15:34Well, his latest victim was hit in the head.
15:36That's new.
15:37In the word puzzle, he said she didn't fight.
15:40So I hit her.
15:41Scare her?
15:42Show her he's in charge.
15:44Well, he never did that before.
15:45And a blow that hard wouldn't scare her.
15:47It'd probably just...
15:48Probably just knock her unconscious.
15:49In order to control her?
15:50Well, he switched from using rope to flex cuffs.
15:53The intricate knot was part of his signature.
15:56Flex cuffs are easier.
15:57Probably saved him time.
15:59No, no, no, no.
15:59It's more than that.
16:00The rope was meticulously tied.
16:02It was intimate.
16:03Completely unnecessary.
16:04And he abandoned the rope and the use of his bare hands,
16:07which makes his kills less personal and less controlling.
16:13Okay, seriously, guys.
16:14Let's just abandon all this.
16:16Let's just treat him like he's a new offender.
16:17He isn't.
16:19Guys, I have a name.
16:24New Bras.
16:25That's a name from what country?
16:27It's backwards.
16:28S. Harbin.
16:29There was a Scott Harbin on Ryan's original suspect list.
16:31It's not Scott Harbin.
16:34Harbin went to jail in 1988 for stabbing a guy while he was trying to escape during a home invasion.
16:40The guy later died.
16:41Harbin didn't even know there was anyone at home at the time he broke in.
16:44How long did he get?
16:4530 years.
16:46So it makes him a little more than halfway done.
16:48Unless he's been paroled.
16:50No.
16:50No, it's too easy.
16:52I interviewed Harbin.
16:53Twice.
16:54He's a pervert.
16:55He's a small-time burglar with a fetish for lingerie.
16:58I mean, he's a creep.
16:59But he is not the Keystone Killer.
17:02Believe me, our guy has not been in jail all these years.
17:07All right, I'm going to call Garcia.
17:08See what she can dig up on this guy.
17:10He's not the guy!
17:22Jason, what are we doing here?
17:24What do you mean?
17:24Well, is Ryan interested in catching the Keystone Killer or just proving he's right?
17:36Scott Harbin was paroled three months ago.
17:40Oh, yeah?
17:40To Philly?
17:41Yeah, looks like it.
17:43And hey, guess what?
17:44Bad boy missed his last appointment with his parole officer.
17:47Well, that right there makes him a wanted man, doesn't it?
17:50Uh-huh, uh-huh.
17:51And I have an address on him.
17:52Uh-huh.
17:54You are amazing.
17:55You have no idea.
17:57Uh-huh.
18:03Help me out, Sean!
18:05Stop!
18:06I said stop!
18:09Okay, okay, all right, all right, all right.
18:12Are you Scott Harbin?
18:13What?
18:13Scott Harbin!
18:15Yeah, that's Scott Harbin.
18:17Hey!
18:17Come on.
18:18Ryan!
18:20You got old.
18:22Haven't we all?
18:24Missed an appointment, Scott.
18:26Oh!
18:27They send the FBI now for parole violations?
18:29Yeah, we were in the neighborhood.
18:31Excuse me, fellas.
18:39Thanks.
18:43Arch.
18:44Yeah.
18:45Look at that.
18:46Socks three inches, underwear six inches.
18:48Could teach you that at basic training.
18:50Ryan thought he might have a military background.
18:53Hey, Morgan.
18:55What's the chance he labels his secrets?
19:04What do you think?
19:06I don't know.
19:09He doesn't seem to be a guy who needs to be in control.
19:13He's definitely obsessive.
19:16Everything has its place.
19:19Probably comes from years of solitude, huh?
19:22A strict upbringing.
19:23Maybe this is a guy who likes to be alone.
19:26Sharing a jail cell must have been a nightmare.
19:29I don't know.
19:30Are you finished?
19:33Did I make you angry?
19:34Did I upset you?
19:36What?
19:37You're going to hurt me?
19:38I'm not stupid.
19:40No, you.
19:41You wouldn't hurt me here.
19:43You'd wait.
19:44Sneak up behind me and hit me over the head.
19:47Just when I'm not looking.
19:49What's the matter, Scotty?
19:52Can't deal with a woman who's not afraid of you?
20:07Hey, Morgan.
20:09Yo.
20:12Think he makes his own movies?
20:15Well, if he's a control freak, Ryan thinks he is.
20:17Why wouldn't he?
20:18Where are the tapes?
20:27You okay?
20:29What do you mean?
20:32Got a little hot.
20:34Did I say anything that wasn't true?
20:35No.
20:41Well, then I guess I'm fine.
20:52You hear that?
20:53Yeah.
20:58I got it.
20:58I got it.
21:01Oh, man.
21:01Give me a hand.
21:02What?
21:03Give me a hand.
21:10Hey, little help.
21:12It's okay.
21:12It's okay.
21:13No.
21:14No.
21:15No.
21:16No.
21:16No.
21:16Get an ambulance right now.
21:18Move.
21:19I'm on it.
21:20I'm on EMT.
21:27Roger that.
21:30Yeah, here he comes.
21:31They're bringing him out now.
21:32We'll call you back.
21:39Scott Harbin.
21:40Single obsessive military background.
21:42Fits your profile.
21:43But he keeps his victim in his house?
21:45He's that far off script?
21:46Right.
21:50Got your name on him.
21:55Isn't Scott Harbin an inelegant creature?
21:58A monster.
21:59There is no light with him.
22:00No balance.
22:01He is pure evil.
22:03Balance is what gives one mercy.
22:05You'll be reminded of my brand of mercy tomorrow, Max.
22:09What does that mean?
22:10Scott Harbin's a predator, just not the one we're looking for.
22:13According to the area, at least a six block radius.
22:15Someone must have seen this guy.
22:22Well, that's got to be a first.
22:23A killer actually leading us to another killer.
22:25Oh, come on.
22:25We all know they make the best profilers.
22:27They admire each other's work.
22:29Yeah, but usually from afar.
22:30Well, at least we got Harbin off the street.
22:32All right, let's review.
22:33What do we know about the Keystone Killer?
22:35And we know that he's not dead or in jail.
22:38Enjoys the taunting, the game.
22:40He's in complete control.
22:41He strangled seven women in the 1980s, stopped for 18 years, and then began again suffocating them.
22:47Ten percent of all violent crimes are caused by strangulation.
22:50It only takes 11 pounds of pressure to fully incapacitate your victim.
22:53And if you hang on for at least 50 seconds, they'll never recover.
22:56When you suffocate someone, you actually have less control over their death.
22:59And it's actually more passive because the killer doesn't feel the life leaving the body.
23:04Hey, he's changed almost everything that he does.
23:07Why?
23:07Why?
23:08Why?
23:08Why?
23:09I mean, what's he getting out of this new M.O.?
23:11Where's his payoff?
23:12You got Carla Bromwell.
23:13She sustains a significant head injury.
23:16Blitz attacks suggest disorganization.
23:18No self-confidence.
23:19This is a guy who walks into seven victims' homes prior to this.
23:22There was no forced entry at any of the scenes.
23:25Where's the loss of confidence?
23:26He would never change the way he kills by choice.
23:29What?
23:30Well, we've been operating under the assumption that he purposely changed his M.O.
23:35You say he changed because he had to change.
23:37He knocked her unconscious.
23:38And he wasn't to scare her.
23:40Because he couldn't control her physically while she's awake.
23:43He could be incapacitated.
23:45At least partially.
23:46Maybe an injury.
23:47Or a stroke.
23:48Either way, you're going to have to have medical records.
23:50Agreed?
23:51Yeah, so what are we talking about?
23:52Well, this had to have happened after the middle of 1988 in Philadelphia.
23:56Somebody who fits the rest of the profile.
23:58It's a lot of hospital records.
24:01Call our girl Friday.
24:06We're releasing a profile of the man we're looking for.
24:09We're hoping that someone out there seeing this will recognize some of the elements.
24:13He is most likely a white male in his late 40s with a military background and well-educated.
24:20He has a need for power and control.
24:22So he probably has a job with some type of authority.
24:26You've just described half of the men living in Philadelphia.
24:30How does that help us?
24:31If you'd let me finish.
24:32The killer wrote in his last letter that he'd strike again within two days.
24:35How close are you to an arrest?
24:37I'm not at liberty to discuss the progress of this ongoing investigation.
24:41My name is Philip Romwell.
24:45My sister Carla was murdered yesterday by a man you people should have stopped 18 years ago.
24:52Are you at liberty to explain how I'm supposed to tell our mother about this?
25:01I am very sorry for your loss, Mr. Romwell.
25:04Please know that we do have the very best team assembled to handle this.
25:08Isn't Special Agent Ryan working with the FBI again?
25:12He was unable to solve the murder before.
25:14What makes you think he's capable now?
25:16Agent Ryan was one of a number of men working on this case.
25:20There is no blame to be put on any one man or division.
25:26I hate to be standing out there in front of those jackals.
25:30Well, J.J., she can hold her on.
25:32You're all better at the press thing than we ever were.
25:35Well, we have a lot more of it to deal with now.
25:37Hmm.
25:40They need someone to blame.
25:43I guess it's me.
25:45Are you okay with that?
25:47Well, the fact is I haven't been able to solve the case.
25:51So I'm an easy target.
25:52But if I, if we do close it, that'll all go away.
26:00And you think you'll be able to, you know, just walk away?
26:05Well, I won't have any choice.
26:07But don't you want to?
26:09I mean, don't you get to a certain point where you want to relax?
26:12Maybe spend some time with your family?
26:15Family?
26:17I lost that a long time ago.
26:19I haven't even seen them in years.
26:24As far as relaxing,
26:26the BAU doesn't employ too many agents
26:29with a relaxing kind of mentality.
26:31Do they?
26:36Well, we've got some records to go through.
26:44I lost it.
26:46Bye now.
26:48Bye now.
26:51Bye now.
26:53Bye now.
26:53Bye now.
26:56Bye now.
27:10Something debilitating enough to lose strength permanently.
27:13I'm still thinking stroke.
27:15You know, Ryan's profile puts the unsub in his late 20s.
27:18Isn't that too young for a massive stroke?
27:20Technically, you're never too young for a stroke.
27:2380% of strokes are ischemic.
27:24The other 20% are hemorrhagic, which usually result in death.
27:27Ischemic strokes occur when plaque builds up in the arteries,
27:29causing restricted vessels to be blocked by a blood clot.
27:32Okay, but doesn't it take years for that type of plaque to build up?
27:35Uh, typically.
27:36Well, then, like I said, he was too young.
27:38Did you know that stroke victims that play virtual reality games
27:40show significant advances in recovery than those who don't?
27:43Here's somebody.
27:44In 1987, he was 30 single dishonorable discharge.
27:47That's a good start.
27:48What was the injury?
27:49Broken neck.
27:50Intense physical therapy for nine years.
27:52What's he been doing since?
27:54Oh, never mind.
27:55Guy moved to the Florida Keys.
27:56He's a scuba instructor.
27:57He's got the right idea.
28:00Come on.
28:01There's got to be something in here.
28:08Taking a break?
28:10Is there anything worse than cop shop coffee?
28:14The old cop shop donuts?
28:17You know, at home, I actually have to make the coffee bad now to enjoy it.
28:20Yeah, I've had what you make.
28:22You're saying you did that to me on purpose?
28:24Well, what her friends swore.
28:26Remember that, uh, Boise child murderer?
28:30How could I forget it?
28:32Lead city detective.
28:34Griffin, what's his name?
28:35Right?
28:35Yeah.
28:36I remember we got there.
28:37That man was nearly suicidal.
28:39Well, he had kids dropping around him like flies.
28:41You told him feeling guilty when a series of crimes is occurring that you can't stop.
28:45Natural response.
28:46Important thing?
28:47Not to let yourself become another victim.
28:50Hey, this is different.
28:51Really?
28:53Really.
28:55You see, Jason, somewhere, I think in my subconscious, I hoped that writing this book would draw him out.
29:01That he missed the attention.
29:03And maybe, maybe I wanted to play his game.
29:08You had no idea he'd kill again?
29:10No, but he did.
29:12And now there's another woman out there in danger.
29:15You know this man better than he knows himself.
29:19You always have.
29:20Now you got an advantage.
29:21You got a team of the most incredible agents in the world out there.
29:24And you're standing here alone.
29:26If you let us, we'll help you find him.
29:44You got a team of the most incredible agents in the world out there.
29:46The guy's well-read.
29:47He may have been a professor.
29:48There are just too many hospitals, clinics, long-term care facilities.
29:52We'd be sifting through records for weeks.
29:54Come on, there's got to be some way to narrow down the search.
29:56Well, we've ruled out a stroke, and half the hospitals don't even say how the accident occurred.
30:00Accidents?
30:02In America, someone's involved in a car accident once every ten seconds.
30:05Car accidents with injuries would all be reported by the police.
30:08We profiled him driving the late model American-made sedan.
30:11All right, so how about I get Garcia to check Philly PD records for accidents involving American-made sedans and
30:15serious injury?
30:16That's a long shot.
30:17It's a shot.
30:19Start with 1988.
30:20If it was an accident, it stopped him in his tracks.
30:27Speak.
30:28I need a list, sweetness.
30:30Aw, sugar.
30:31You're in luck.
30:32Lists are my specialty.
30:33Go.
30:34All right.
30:35Philadelphia, 1988.
30:37I need all car accidents resulting in injuries.
30:41Wow.
30:42There's a lot of them.
30:43His friends let friends drive drunk back then.
30:45Okay, got injuries, 36 in a 12-month period.
30:50How many were American-made cars?
30:51Almost all of them, except only five were serious enough to send the drivers to the hospital.
30:56Let's hear it for American-made safety.
30:59Tell me who the drivers were.
31:00Okay, one happened on I-95 by the airport.
31:04Ambulance picked up the other driver outside of 3245 Ander Street.
31:10Ow.
31:11Broken back.
31:12That's not good.
31:14All right.
31:14Ander Street.
31:153200 block of Ander.
31:19That's where Carla Bromwell lived.
31:21Well, that driver's name is Walter Kern, currently 48 years old and still residing in the city
31:28of brother and sisterly love.
31:29If he's 48, that would have put him in his late 20s at the time of the killing.
31:34Just like Ryan predicted.
31:37Walter Kern had a military background.
31:40ROTC in high school, four years in the Air Force.
31:43Hospital records show that he lost mobility in his right side due to severed nerve damage
31:48to his spinal cord.
31:49He never got the strength back.
31:51Kern's been a county worker, claims adjuster, and get this, he installed home alarms with
31:56Scott Harvin.
31:57Takes one to no one.
31:58All those jobs allowed him access to people's homes.
32:01Explains why there was no sign of forced entry.
32:03He had a legitimate reason to knock on the door.
32:06Women felt comfortable letting him inside.
32:09He got a degree in criminology from Villanova in 1988.
32:12I wonder if he murdered anyone on campus.
32:15This certainly explains his knowledge of law enforcement.
32:17This looks like our guy.
32:19Anybody got a current address?
32:20575 White Street, Southeast Philadelphia.
32:23I got you, you son of a bitch.
32:26We got him.
32:27Let's go bring him in.
32:28Let's go bring him in.
32:32Let's go.
32:45Let's go.
32:58Hey, Walter, come on.
33:15How can I help you, General?
33:16I'm Special Agent Jason Gideon. This is Special Agent Max Rand with the FBI.
33:20Can we speak with Walter Kern?
33:22He's not here right now.
33:23You know where he is?
33:24Is something wrong?
33:26Can we come inside?
33:30What are you gonna do? Why are you doing this? Why?
33:37Put on these cuffs. Do it.
33:43What are you gonna do?
33:45No!
33:50Walter's at the Pinewood Community Center working with the Boy Scouts.
33:53He volunteers as one of the leaders.
33:55Would it be possible for us to search the house, ma'am?
33:57Oh, she's at the Pinewood Community Center.
33:59Uh, what for?
34:00We've been called in to investigate the murders of several women here in Philadelphia.
34:04That's why we need to talk to them.
34:07That is the craziest thing I've ever heard.
34:16And I'm gonna have to ask you to leave.
34:19Now.
34:19Could you answer one question for us, ma'am?
34:21Does your husband have an area here in the house that you're never supposed to go into?
34:25A place that you're not supposed to see?
34:29Walter has a dark room.
34:31Mm-hmm.
34:31If he knew you were in there, would he become so angry that you fear he could hurt you?
34:42He just doesn't want me to ruin his pictures, that's all.
34:45Mrs. Kern, has your husband ever suffered from long periods of depression?
34:51Yes.
34:53After his car accident.
34:55And did he suddenly just snap out of it for no apparent reason?
35:03What does all this mean?
35:05Could you show us the room, Mrs. Kern?
35:17It's clear.
35:34Looks like he collected every article written about.
35:39He's got your book.
35:42Damn it.
35:43I signed it.
35:44Watch was entirely correct about the photography.
35:46The seller's where he develops his photographs.
35:50What's that, a scrapbook?
35:52There's a chapter on every woman he's killed.
35:58These entries are detailed enough to let him relive the kills for years.
36:02He has candid photographs of the victims at the park, grocery store, outside a church.
36:06Driver's license, clothing, jewelry.
36:08Those chapters in the pack, they're not finished.
36:10These photographs are at least 20 years old. Look at the hairstyles, the clothing.
36:32His recent themes of communication have been about old friends, unfinished business.
36:35His car accident was in the Fairmount district of Philadelphia.
36:38That's exactly where Carla Bromwell lived.
36:40He was on the way to kill her when he had his accident.
36:42It's not about finding a new type of victim.
36:43It's about a specific target.
36:45Because he was such a perfectionist and is a perfectionist,
36:47he had to finish what he started years ago.
36:49These aren't new victims, Max.
36:50They were already targeted right from day one.
36:53Who's in that last chapter?
36:59What's wrong with you, Walter?
37:01I've known you in hand for years.
37:04You're good people.
37:05You're down on your back.
37:08Speak again and I will kill you.
37:21I believe Walter Kern is in Sylvie Gooden's home now.
37:24Hodge confirmed he left the community center hours ago
37:27and Kern's car is parked on the next block.
37:28I want Walter Kern alive.
37:30I'll stand by for the word.
37:31Good, let's move on.
37:33Call you one, we've secured Kern.
37:34Yeah.
37:54Please.
37:56Please.
37:57Don't.
37:58I need to do this.
37:59I can't stop it.
38:24No!
38:24No!
38:25No!
38:30No!
38:32No!
38:33Be over soon.
38:37Look out!
38:38Domo! Domo! Domo!
38:42Domo! Domo!
38:43Down! Domo!
38:43What's my arm?
38:46Domo!
38:47It's all right. FBI.
38:48FBI. You're gonna be all right.
38:50Just breathe here. Make it easy.
38:51We got her. Sylvia Gooden's alive.
38:54Get in. I need your cuffs, man.
38:57You're gonna be fine. It's over.
38:59You're gonna be fine.
38:59Why don't you do this?
39:02I'll take care of her.
39:03That's enough. Now get up.
39:05You're gonna be okay.
39:07You're all right.
39:10Just breathe. Just breathe.
39:12Just breathe.
39:14Just breathe.
39:26You got him? Yeah, I got him.
39:28You know you've enjoyed this ride as much as I have, Max.
39:32I sure am enjoying this part of it.
39:36We are inseparable, you and me.
39:39Let's just test that theory, huh?
39:42Get him out of here.
39:51Abraham Lincoln once said,
39:53in the end, it's not the years in your life that count.
39:56It's the life in your years.
39:59Did Jason ever tell you about the time
40:00that he found the director's itinerary in a bomber's car?
40:03What, what?
40:04Come on, come on.
40:06No, no, he never said anything.
40:07Well, let me fill you in then.
40:08We had this bomber case.
40:10It was one of Jason's first,
40:11so we had him go over and search the bomber's car,
40:14which was in the Quantico garage.
40:16Except for me and the guys had planted this piece of paper
40:19that had all these times and locations
40:21of where the FBI director was going to be over the next 48 hours.
40:24Anyway, Jason takes one look at this piece of paper,
40:27and before we could stop him,
40:28he takes off, runs up 25 flights of stairs to the director's office,
40:33barges in, interrupting a meeting with the attorney general himself.
40:37Yeah!
40:39The director didn't find it very funny.
40:41And he was the only one who didn't.
40:45You know he has no one, no family.
40:48Who's that?
40:51Ryan.
40:52I mean, technically he's retired,
40:53but he hasn't seen his kids in years.
40:55Divorce is not uncommon in the BAU.
40:59You know the other night when you called Saturday night?
41:02Did you think it was weird that we all just were able to drop everything
41:06and go to the office?
41:07That we're all available to you anytime you call, day or night?
41:12No, not really.
41:14How do you do it?
41:16How do you do this job and still have a wife and a baby?
41:23Well, when I'm with them, I try to focus 100% of my attention there.
41:29And when I'm with you guys, I try to do the same thing.
41:32It's about priorities, Elle. It's about setting them and keeping them.
41:39I'm just so scared I'm gonna turn into that guy over there.
41:42Look up and see that my life has passed me by while I was chasing monsters.
41:48It's hard.
41:50This job will eat you up if you let it.
41:52So what do I do?
41:54Find a way not to let it.
42:23Add a taste of the levar that my brain he shed for of me at a while,
42:30Well, I know cause I'm with you.
42:37I think that we have a jealousy and my life.
42:37Then it choke away from you and I make like you.
42:37Um...
42:44Or something you're doing as you say...
42:44You're doing weird.
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