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The Hunting Party - Season 2 - Episode 10: Byron May

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00:26The Pit
00:42Crack screen. Ooh, that's the worst. Man, you gotta get yourself a better case for this thing.
00:47Yeah.
00:48When's the last time you updated your software? This thing's moving a little slow.
00:52I don't know. I just need the screen fixed.
00:54Could be the drop.
00:56Oh, snap. You play War Monger, too?
00:58I guess I tried that out at some point.
01:01Did you, uh, did you make it to Freya's Chariot? It's pretty epic.
01:05Uh, look, man, how long will it take to fix the screen?
01:07Uh, usually two business days. But for a fellow War Monger, I can get this done in one.
01:14For Odin.
01:18Right. Okay. Thanks.
01:20Hell yeah.
01:21Yeah.
01:27What a cool guy.
01:41Oh.
01:49I really wanted to go see the Pirates play this weekend, but all my boys are out of town. FMO.
02:10Yes!
02:15And here he comes, in the turn four, hugging the line, throttle wide open here, expanding...
02:30Hey, dude. I, uh, got your screen fixed.
02:35Oh. Uh, thanks.
02:38Oh, and I, uh, I went ahead and upgraded the OS for you. No more buffering when you play War
02:43Monger.
02:45Right. How did you know where I lived?
02:48Company database.
02:51Uh, you didn't have to...
02:53Oh, it's all hell. It's, it's fine. In fact, I didn't even charge you for it.
02:57And, uh, you were on my way home, so I thought I would just deliver it.
03:02Save you from having to come in again.
03:05Okay. Thanks, man.
03:08Mm-hmm.
03:09I was, you know, I, I was supposed to go to the, um, Pirates game tomorrow, but my friend just
03:14flaked on me.
03:16Is there any chance that you would want to go?
03:20They're great seats. I splurged.
03:23Yeah, uh, you know what, man? I don't really like baseball.
03:28So, um, but you have a good time, okay?
03:34You told your mom that you wanted to go to the game.
03:37What the hell? Did you go through my phone?
03:40Why are you lying to me? You love baseball.
03:42Get the hell out of here, you creep.
03:44I was trying to be nice.
03:45Hey, did you hear what I said? I said get out.
03:50Fuck!
04:03And it's who I said get in my house.
04:15You know what I used to do?
04:20Shane, it's all there.
04:23Seven years ago, you were recruited to work at the pit,
04:25but your file was flagged during the vetting process
04:28and denied.
04:30Until, of course, Lazarus pushed it through herself.
04:33I'm sorry, man.
04:34She didn't just figure out that you're her biological son.
04:38She's known for years.
04:41Doesn't say in here why I was rejected.
04:44You didn't pass the psyche, though.
04:47My source told me when they dug all this up.
04:50But they thought I was too crazy for the pit.
04:53No, no, no.
04:54Places like this, they want people they can control,
04:57that follow orders no matter how unethical.
04:59It is a good thing that you did not check those boxes.
05:02A good thing? You sure about that?
05:04And when I checked the right box for Dr. Fairfax,
05:07maybe he was onto something.
05:08Nah, don't do that. Don't do that.
05:11I know who you are.
05:13We both do.
05:15And she's an expert.
05:21Yeah, all right.
05:24Okay, so she lied to me.
05:26She pushed my paperwork through.
05:28She wanted me here.
05:31Why?
05:32If she wasn't going to tell me who she was,
05:35why go through the trouble?
05:36Best case scenario, you're her estranged son.
05:40Feelings are complicated.
05:41Worst case?
05:44Literally anything else.
05:51Speaking of,
05:53we need you out here.
06:01Shane, we're going to figure this out.
06:06All right, thanks, man.
06:08Yeah.
06:15All right, folks, this is a sensitive one.
06:18Inmate K-77, Byron May.
06:20His fingerprints were found all over a murder scene in Pittsburgh.
06:23Locals were in the prints already,
06:25but as usual, our system intercepted the request
06:27and bounced back into a match reference.
06:29Byron May, I don't know this one.
06:32Oh, that's a first.
06:33Well, in the 2010s,
06:35he worked as a tech specialist at an electronics store
06:38where he crossed all seven of his victims.
06:40And after only brief encounters...
06:41After a brief encounter,
06:42he would become fixated on his victims,
06:44but after they inevitably rejected his overtures,
06:47he would beat them to death
06:47with an improvised weapon, yeah?
06:49Uh, sorry, I thought you said you didn't know this guy.
06:52Nope, I don't know this guy.
06:53But that is the work of the Eastside Ripper,
06:55and his name is not Byron May.
06:57It's Victor Rosa,
06:58who is serving consecutive life sentences
07:00at the Pennsylvania State Penitentiary.
07:02So, either they have the wrong guy,
07:04or the pit does.
07:06What the hell are we talking about?
07:08Well, we're talking about here,
07:09Agent Henderson,
07:10is a very delicate situation.
07:12Is there an innocent man in prison?
07:17Are you serious?
07:19Yeah, I'm afraid it's more complicated than that.
07:21The Eastside Ripper was a serial case
07:24of particular interest.
07:25Scientists in the pit.
07:26In 2013, they used covert surveillance technology
07:29to positively identify him as Byron May,
07:32and our team took him into custody.
07:34He had no friends or family,
07:36so no one even noticed he disappeared.
07:38Okay, so you had the actual killer in custody,
07:40did not tell the police the case stayed open
07:43until 2015 when Victor Rosa was arrested.
07:46I was not involved.
07:48But that's correct.
07:50For obvious reasons,
07:51the pit does not share information
07:53with local authorities.
07:55You understand.
07:56You had the right guy,
07:59and you did nothing to help an innocent man?
08:02Be that as it may,
08:04your job,
08:05our job,
08:07is to catch Byron May
08:09before he kills again.
08:14Nothing more, understood?
08:36Not again.
08:37Come on.
08:40Come on.
09:18Come on.
09:20Come on.
09:45You were supposed to be at work.
09:47Who the hell are you?
10:03Who the hell are you?
10:47How are you feeling, Byron?
10:52Safe.
10:55Can you hear your mother?
10:59Yes.
11:01Can you hear her heartbeat?
11:09Your mother loves you very much.
11:18I know.
11:21Your tax dollars hard at work, ladies and gentlemen.
11:24I did one of them sensory deprivation chambers once. I just fell asleep. It was a waste of 50 bucks.
11:28This isn't quite a sensory deprivation chamber. This was something called birth therapy where a patient is put in a
11:34simulation of his mother's womb. Supposed to trigger early childhood memories.
11:39Does that even work?
11:40Sometimes.
11:41Either way, when Byron got to the pit, the therapist traced the genesis of his social dysfunction back to a
11:46traumatic birth. The umbilical cord was wrapped around his neck.
11:49Okay, but that doesn't exactly add up to serial killer though, right?
11:52My nephew was born the same way and he works for a non-profit.
11:57Okay.
11:57No, I'm just saying. How does sticking Byron in a futuristic fake womb supposed to fix all the murdering?
12:03I think the hope was that he'd be in a state where the social conditioning could be rewired. It actually
12:07paid off in dividends.
12:09You know, when people brought their devices into me, I think they forgot that they store their entire lives on
12:15those things.
12:16Pictures of their kids, friends, texts, emails, the lies they tell, secrets, things they love, hate.
12:27I could spend hours going through someone's phone and by the end, I would know everything about this person.
12:37I mean, things they wouldn't even share with their own mother.
12:40It was like a shortcut, a cheat code.
12:45I felt so close to them, but it didn't matter. It always went the same way.
12:54It's normal to want connection, but you can't force imaginary ones into existence.
13:02All I ever wanted is for people to like me.
13:07And I just don't understand how other people can make friends so easily.
13:13It's like the more I try, the more people seem put off by it.
13:18Genuine friendships take time and understanding. They're based on a reciprocal interest, and that just doesn't happen overnight.
13:27So Byron had trouble forming authentic relationships as a kid. He couldn't do anything about that rejection.
13:33But as an adult, he responded to that rejection with violence.
13:37Okay, here's what I'm wondering. Byron killed seven people, right?
13:43How did investigators pin that guy's crazy on an innocent man?
13:46So he and Victor worked at the same electronics store.
13:50Circumstantial evidence, a DA that was under pressure to find the killer.
13:53Yeah, it wouldn't be the first time an innocent person is railroaded by the system.
13:56Right, so Victor Rosa gets a life sentence, this guy gets spa treatments.
13:59Yeah.
14:01No.
14:02No, screw Lazarus.
14:03We're not gonna let an innocent man spend the rest of his life in prison, right?
14:07No, we're not.
14:08All right.
14:09Well, if we're gonna put this right, better find Byron first.
14:14Yeah.
14:23James Wilson, time of death was about a week ago.
14:27They just uncovered the body this morning when a maintenance worker called about a weird smell.
14:32He was stabbed 63 times with a fork.
14:36Huh.
14:37Spur of the moment kill.
14:39That tracks, right?
14:41If he's following his old M.O., he would have crossed with James before all this.
14:44I've been reviewing James' socials and I just found something super creepy in one of his photos.
14:49Check it out.
14:53Looks pretty wholesome.
14:58Oh, that is creepy.
15:00He took a photo with the guy who would kill him and he had no idea.
15:04Morales, when was this taken?
15:06Two months ago.
15:08He was stalking James for a while.
15:11Morales.
15:12Hey, guys.
15:13Ben just got an angle on James' house.
15:16Rain camera from across the street has a clear view.
15:18I've got Byron leaving the house in a hurry eight days ago, presumably right after the kill.
15:22The strange thing is, is there's no footage of Byron entering that day and there are cameras angled all over
15:27this house.
15:28How could he have exited without entering?
15:31Maybe he tunneled in.
15:33Hey, keep going back a little further.
15:36Scrubbing.
15:39Nothing.
15:40Keep going.
15:42Okay.
15:42Going back even further.
15:45What are you thinking?
15:46All of Byron's previous kills, they happened at the entrance of the home.
15:50Maybe James invited him in.
15:52Except there's no footage of him coming in through the front door.
15:55Maybe he didn't use the front door.
15:57Whoa.
15:57Zoom in on that vent.
16:00We got him.
16:01Sending it over now.
16:07When was that?
16:08Four weeks ago.
16:09And then we don't have Byron on camera again until the day he killed James and fled.
16:13Well, that doesn't make sense.
16:15Unless he was already in the home.
16:17He didn't need to enter to kill James because he was already inside.
16:23Well, how do you stay in someone's house for a month without anyone noticing?
16:47Hey, don't step on the insulation. Underneath is just drywall. You go right through.
16:53You think that's where Byron was sleeping?
16:58Looks like a rat's nest.
17:00It's not a nest.
17:02It's a womb.
17:04Guys?
17:06We found something.
17:24Hey.
17:25Hey.
17:39Check this out.
17:41What is that?
17:42He's spying on them through the holes in the air vents.
17:49Look.
17:50There's another one.
17:52Hey, these angles, they match those photos over there.
17:57Gee, why can't you just follow James around like a normal stalker?
18:04You guys ever heard of, uh, frogging?
18:08What? Like the, uh, retro video game?
18:11No, like, like frogging. Like, P-H-R-O... No?
18:17Okay.
18:19Frogging.
18:19Basically, someone sneaks into another person's home while they're away or at work and they just...
18:24don't leave.
18:25That person comes home and has no idea that there's a stranger in their walls or their basement or...
18:31in this case, the attic.
18:34Now that he's killed James, I wouldn't be surprised if Byron is creeping around his next victim's attic right now.
18:41Froggers were often deprived of human connection and use their voyeuristic position to connect with their victims.
18:48There's this vicarious thrill they get from staying in someone's home or their life.
18:53Most of the time, it traces back to early childhood because they were forced to hide due to trauma, shame,
19:00deep insecurity.
19:03Hey, Bo. You want a treat?
19:06Here you go, Bo.
19:08Now, by spying on someone's most naked and vulnerable moments, they get to actually connect.
19:14A lot of the time, it goes back months or even years and it's usually non-violent, but occasionally, things
19:20take a turn.
19:22Byron used to use his victims' phones to gain access to their personal life. It's how he got to know
19:27them.
19:28But now, without his job or that access, he's infiltrating their lives, studying them 24-7.
19:35So, Byron got to know James by spying on him.
19:38But moving into a victim's house, that is a high-risk move.
19:42Accidental contact is bound to happen. So, he gets caught, there's a confrontation, and he kills James with a fork.
19:49So, all his encounters have gone wrong. You're saying he's gonna keep doing this.
19:54What happens when it goes right?
19:56It never will. Byron's still trying to shortcut normal social development.
20:01He's using the information that he gathered during frogging to create a chance meeting with his victims.
20:06Just like his previous MO, he's gonna craft himself into what he thinks is the perfect match for the object
20:11of his obsession.
20:12But it's gonna be just as manufactured and empty as before. So, when he inevitably gets rejected...
20:19He's gonna kill again.
20:23He's gonna kill again.
20:30Hey, buddy. It's walk time.
20:34Bo, where are you going? Bo, come on, boy. Let's go.
20:51Hey. I'm sorry, I didn't know Eric had company. I'm Lee, the dog walker.
20:55Uh, just here to take him for a walk.
21:00But, uh, what are you doing?
21:03You know, I-I can come back another time.
21:32Yeah!
21:53Guys.
21:55You gotta see this.
21:57This is all true crime.
21:59There's an entire section on serial killers.
22:01No way.
22:02Yeah, there's at least half a dozen books on the East Side Ripper.
22:04Oh, you gotta be kidding me.
22:06The Pit.
22:07It taught Byron that friendship should be reciprocal.
22:10He fixated on James because he thought James was fixated on him.
22:14But how did Byron know about James' interest in the East Side Ripper to begin with?
22:19Bookstore?
22:20True crime convention?
22:22Probably got a fan club.
22:24Feels more specific.
22:27Morales, can you see if there's a connection between James and Victor Rosa?
22:32Get this. James made two requests to visit Victor Rosa in prison.
22:36Visiting a serial killer in prison, that's a whole other level of fandom.
22:40But it wasn't reciprocated. Looks like Victor rejected both requests.
22:43There's gotta be some kind of interaction. Phone calls, letters, something.
22:47Prison keeps a record of all correspondence.
22:50Yeah, there's a letter from James to Victor from two years ago.
22:54Read that to us, please.
22:55Dear East Side Ripper, I know how hard it is for you to make friends.
22:59You've done terrible things, but then again, who hasn't?
23:03I believe that you didn't mean to do them.
23:05I know there's goodness inside of you, and it's a goodness that I understand.
23:09It's a goodness I would like to correspond with.
23:12Please write me back. I want to know your story.
23:14I'm gonna need a list of anyone who wrote letters to Victor Rosa.
23:25Guys, Victor Rosa received a lot of mail over the last ten years.
23:29But if I ignore everything from his family and lawyers...
23:36James was one of four people who sent fan mail to the East Side Ripper in prison.
23:40Can you imagine being innocent and getting fan mail?
23:43Can you imagine writing fan mail to a serial killer?
23:45It's actually very common. It's a form of fibristophilia.
23:47That's right. We saw that with Carol in her love affair with Mark Marsden.
23:51Exactly, but instead of falling in love, James formed an asexual obsession with the East Side Ripper.
23:55Morales, let's do a wellness check on the rest of the superfans.
23:57Tell the officers to make sure they're safe and lock down their homes. We're on our way now.
24:00Two steps ahead of you.
24:02Pulling the addresses now. I'll send them to you and Pittsburgh PD.
24:05Copy. Let's go.
24:07Rex?
24:08What are we doing?
24:12I gotta talk to Victor Rosa.
24:15You mean the guy Lazarus gave us express orders to stay away from? That's the guy you want to talk
24:20to?
24:20Yeah.
24:21I'm not complaining. I just want to make sure we're all on the same page.
24:23Okay, look. Regardless of whether we're right or wrong about the superfan angle, we still have one unanswered question.
24:28How did Byron get his hands on letters that were meant for Victor Rosa in prison?
24:33Uh, why do I get the feeling you're about to suggest that we split up?
24:37Work the angle.
24:38No, it's fine. I'll get one of the officers to drop me off.
24:41Okay, Bex, please be careful.
24:44You be careful. I'm the one talking to an innocent man.
24:47Well, tell him we're getting him out.
24:52You know what this means? I got a shotgun.
25:02What's up, Snowflake?
25:06Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
25:10Here's the thing about Victor Rosa. He ain't once taken responsibility for what he's done.
25:16This is a place of rehabilitation.
25:19You can't start that journey unless you almost got you here in the first.
25:23Yeah, I bet a lot of inmates claim they're innocent.
25:27You ever get one that actually was, though?
25:30You hear them tell it? They all are.
25:33Come to think of it, we must be the most saintly square block in America.
25:37Victor get many visitors?
25:39Only his wife. She comes every week, has done for years.
25:43You know, it's hard for family members.
25:45They can't accept the truth.
25:47Especially when the incarcerated can't face it themselves.
25:52Thanks.
25:57It'll take as long as you need.
26:08Mr. Rosa, my name is Special Agent Rebecca Henderson. I'm with the FBI.
26:13Is this about my appeal?
26:17Um...
26:18Actually, this is about...
26:20This is about the murder of James Wilson.
26:24Never heard of him.
26:26You sure? Because it says that he sent you letters twice while you've been in prison.
26:32These were written to the East Side Ripper.
26:35That's not me.
26:37Okay, they weren't written to you.
26:40But what did you do with them? I mean, I know that the prison screens them, but once you actually
26:44got them, did you keep them?
26:45Look, my lawyer said it was alright. They're my property. I can share them with whoever I want.
26:49What do you mean, share them?
26:52Sorry, who did you share these with?
26:59Hey, listen to this.
27:00It's from Kenneth Wiley.
27:02Dear Mr. Ripper, I am writing to you today as someone who has the utmost respect and understanding for what
27:07you have gone through.
27:09Mr. Ripper?
27:10Yeah.
27:11We need a watch list for anyone sending fan mail to serial killers.
27:14Especially the ones using honorific titles.
27:16Fanboy or not, Mr. Wiley is a potential victim.
27:20I just got confirmation from local officers.
27:23They're en route to all three locations.
27:25I tell them we're five minutes out from Wiley's and we're gonna cross them off the list one by one.
27:29Copy.
27:31I'd like to report a missing dog.
27:32And when did you last see your missing dogs?
27:35Um, at home this morning before I left for work.
27:39Okay.
27:40Any more details you can give me?
27:41He went out with my dog walker, but I can't reach him and he hasn't come home yet.
27:46He's a multicolored Pomeranian. He's mostly black.
27:50Um, two years old. His name is Bo.
27:53And you have my girlfriend?
27:55Yes, he is. He's my girlfriend.
27:57Oh, thank you.
28:00It's okay.
28:01You're a good boy. You're a good boy.
28:06Victor, I wanna help you.
28:08Okay?
28:10Look, I get it.
28:11You don't trust law enforcement. I wouldn't either if I were in your shoes, but...
28:17I'm gonna level with you, okay?
28:19The DA that convicted you, he ignored evidence due to political pressure to get a conviction.
28:23He also suppressed critical testimony.
28:25Believe me when I say I want to help you.
28:32My wife visits me every week.
28:38Ten years.
28:40I'm not the only one in prison. Do you understand?
28:45My son thinks I'm a killer.
28:51He doesn't visit. He doesn't write anymore.
28:53I'm sorry.
28:56Said that he still loves me.
28:59That he understands what horrible mistakes I've made.
29:07But he's not gonna visit me until I confess that I'm the East Side Ripper.
29:14So...
29:16Admit that I'm a monster.
29:18That I'm not.
29:19What?
29:22Or never see my son again.
29:25What kind of choice is that?
29:33The choice you don't have to make.
29:36I know you're innocent.
29:41Victor, I need your help to prove that.
29:45Okay.
29:58I think I found a friend of yours.
30:01Oh, my God. I can't believe it. Thank you.
30:06Where did you find them?
30:07Just wandering over by the park.
30:10Yeah. I saw the address on the collar and figured I'd just walk over here.
30:13I don't know how I'm gonna be able to thank you.
30:17Oh.
30:24Do you want to come in? Can I get you a drink or something?
30:28Uh...
30:29Yeah.
30:29A drink would be nice.
30:31Thanks.
30:33Uh...
30:33Yeah.
30:36This is...
30:45Morales, new wrinkle.
30:47There's evidence that Byron has been to each of the houses that we've been to,
30:49but by the looks of it, he didn't stay long.
30:51Wait, he cased the others before settling on James?
30:54Yeah, that's what it looks like. We've only got one person left on the list.
30:56Hey, how come we can't get a hold of Bex?
30:58She's still at the prison. She had to give up her comms and her phone.
31:00All right. Let them know we're on our way to the last house and to meet us there.
31:03On it.
31:07Who did you send James Wilson's letters to?
31:11Victor, look.
31:13I can't tell you why, but this information, it could get you out of here.
31:19Her name is Kendra Wilcox. She's a famous crime writer.
31:22She's gotten people exonerated before. It's the only reason I wrote her back.
31:26And she specifically asked for the letters?
31:29She asked for everything. I gave her case files, letters from my family, the fan mail, all of it.
31:35Okay.
31:36Ma'am, phone call.
31:37Thanks. Sorry Victor, one second.
31:41Henderson.
31:41Bex.
31:42We've been trying to get a hold of you. The guys have searched all the houses on the list,
31:45and there was evidence that Byron was there, but now we've run out of fan mail.
31:48Okay. Byron focused on the fan mail because it gave him acceptance and understanding.
31:52So, who else, who else would write Victor letters expressing acceptance and understanding for the Eastside Ripper's crimes?
32:03Hey, you said your son, he used to write you letters?
32:06Eric hasn't written me in a long time.
32:10Morales.
32:13My name's Eric, by the way. Eric Rosa.
32:17Byron.
32:18It's nice to meet you.
32:21Cheers.
32:27Byron posed as a famous crime writer who promised to help Victor with the case, and that's why Victor sent
32:30him everything.
32:31So, Victor thinks he's been emailing someone who can help prove his innocence, but really he's been talking to the
32:35actual killer all along.
32:36Morales, did you find Eric Rosa's letters that he sent his father?
32:38Yeah, listen to this. People talk about the Eastside Ripper like he's a monster, and I understand why.
32:44You and I both know life isn't that simple.
32:47Nothing is black and white.
32:49I know you have a lot of love in your heart, but I can't be in your life unless you
32:52admit to being a murderer and ask for forgiveness for your crimes.
32:56That's exactly what Byron would want to read.
32:58I need Eric's phone number right now.
33:01And I was just running by the park when I saw him alone.
33:05I'm training for a marathon.
33:07Oh.
33:09No way. The Chatsville?
33:11Uh, yeah.
33:12Me too.
33:13We got a train together.
33:15I got a group of buddies. We all go running in the mornings.
33:17Oh, yeah. Definitely.
33:20Oh, man. I'm sorry, but I gotta probably call it a night. Gotta get up early for work.
33:27The old grindstone, huh?
33:29All good.
33:35Um, listen, thank you for bringing him home. I don't know what I would have done if I lost him.
33:43Of course.
33:44And no worries. I have to go visit my dad tomorrow anyway.
33:48Oh, uh, where does he live?
33:50He's, uh, in prison.
33:54He's a good guy, but he got into a fight with someone.
33:58It's been a really hard few years, but it's a long story.
34:04I'm so sorry, man. That really sucks.
34:07Yeah.
34:09Anyway, I don't know why I just said all that.
34:13Oversharing.
34:16I'll see you around.
34:18Uh, uh, hey, w-wait, um...
34:23Believe it or not, I know what that's like.
34:27Uh, my dad's in prison, too.
34:31I-I don't talk about it a lot, but, um, my dad is Victor Rosa.
34:39Uh...
34:39He's the East Side Ripper.
34:44Wow.
34:45Yeah. Uh, most people are pretty freaked out when I tell them.
34:50That's not very fair to you.
34:55Uh, sorry. Just one second.
35:04Oh, God.
35:07What is it? What's wrong?
35:08Um, my dog walker's body was just found, um, someone killed him.
35:18I guess that's why Beau was wandering around lost.
35:26How'd you know his name is Beau?
35:28His car.
35:30It's just an address on the car.
35:44He isn't picking up.
35:49Oh, well, if his name's not on his collar, you must have said it, then.
35:54Yeah. Yeah.
35:56Yeah, you're-you're probably right.
35:57Um, uh, um, listen, I-I should probably deal with this, so...
36:03Okay. Okay.
36:05Well, this was really nice.
36:09I hope to see you around.
36:13Yeah. Yeah.
36:17Yeah.
36:21Let's go.
36:52Stace?
36:53Eric Rosa, this is the FBI. Are you home right now?
36:55The FBI?
36:56I need you to be quiet and listen to me.
36:58We have reason to believe that there's a dangerous intruder in your house.
37:00You need to get out and go somewhere safe now.
37:02We'll be there in two minutes.
37:03Wait, are you talking about the weirdo guy, Byron?
37:08Did he kill my dog walker?
37:09Eric, get out of your house now.
37:12No, no, no, no, no. It's fine.
37:14He just left.
37:15No, he didn't.
37:16He is in your house right now.
37:19Eric!
37:33Eric!
37:39Eric!
37:40Eric! Stop! Please! Stop!
37:43What do you want from me?
37:44I just want to be your friend.
37:47Eric, I know you can forgive me.
37:50I know because you said so yourself.
37:52What are you talking about?
37:55In your letters.
37:57You said that you could forgive the East Side Ripper.
37:59No, I wrote those letters to my dad.
38:06Oh, my God.
38:11Help me!
38:12Somebody help me, please!
38:14Hey, hey!
38:15Byron, drop the knife!
38:16Byron, drop it!
38:21Okay.
38:22You're okay.
38:24All right?
38:27We just need his fingerprints, right?
38:35You're right.
38:36You're okay.
38:37Come on.
38:42Call the cleaners.
38:42Wait, stop, stop, stop.
38:45Shane's right.
38:46We're not cleaning this one up.
38:51Victor Rosa will never be free
38:52if they don't find the real killer.
38:57Masani.
39:08More or less than about 30 minutes.
39:10Pittsburgh PD is about to send over some prints.
39:13Make sure they're a match this time.
39:14Will do.
39:19Victor!
39:19Thanks.
39:20You are welcome.
39:21Hey.
39:21I'm sorry.
39:22What are you doing?
39:23What?
39:25The lawyer says you're getting out.
39:28This new evidence that fingerprints change everything.
39:31You'll have the appeal filed tonight.
39:38Oh.
39:42I mean, what?
39:43What are you talking about?
39:45I mean, what are you talking about?
39:47I mean, what are you talking about?
39:49Eric.
39:50Eric.
39:51Come here.
39:51Come here.
39:53Oh, my God.
40:05Hey.
40:17Okay, thanks for letting me know.
40:21Hey, I just got off the phone with Eric Rosa.
40:23His father is going to be a free man.
40:25Hey, we did the right thing.
40:28There will be consequences.
40:30Lazarus wants to talk to us.
40:32Let her.
40:33There's help.
40:33This ain't justice.
40:35Mm-hmm.
40:36I don't know.
40:38You know, there's always been this part of me that daydreamed when I finally met my mom.
40:45She'd be a good person.
40:47You know?
40:47Just misunderstood or wrongly convicted.
40:50Like Victor Rosa.
40:52Yeah.
40:54Hey.
40:55You really think she attacked Cyrus' convoy?
40:59I do.
41:04Okay.
41:08Hey.
41:12We still don't have proof.
41:16Well, we need to find some.
41:34We're going to find here.
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