The Divide (2014) s01e06 Episode Script

And the Little Ones Get Caught

1 Previously on The Divide… And that name you wrote down… It’s dangerous.
Not just to you, to Christine, too.
- Hey, Eric.
- Come here.
Everything that I have done for Stanley Zale is legal.
But is making it legal make it all right for you? Did he say why he came? He wants a job.
A job? I thought this was all taken care of.
I have work for you, Bobby.
Except only you and me can know about it.
We're the ones working on the Bankowski case.
Oh, well, that's all over now, isn't it? No, we believe the real killer is still out there.
Hey, hey.
Where you going? - Trey.
- We are not finished here.
- I didn't do anything wrong.
- Calling me a fool? Is that the only thing you heard? Is that what you think? I said you were fooled by the lie.
Where is all of this coming from? What lie? - Sounds like my father.
- Is that true? No.
Look, I wrote it, all right? He was the one who inspired it.
Trey, come in here.
Your grandfather is a great man, no doubt.
He has accomplished great things and I am so proud you look up to him.
But, son, he is of a different generation.
A lot of things have changed.
The Butlers were killed 'cause they were black.
What's changed? The Butlers were not killed because they were black.
- It was a robbery gone wrong.
- Do you really believe that? Yes, and this is not about the Butlers.
We didn't raise you to see people like that.
Like what? You guys stuck me in a school with a bunch of white kids.
And you think, what, I'm not supposed to see my color? Do you think that I just blend in? I have to work harder.
I have to be smarter.
I have to be special because they see me as different.
Because I am different.
Yes, you are different.
And, yes, you do.
You are still the son of a public figure, which makes you a public figure whether you like it or not.
And you have to have a sense of responsibility for the things that come out of your mouth.
You cannot just say whatever you think.
I can't just say what I think? Okay, so what about when I write stuff? What about when I write? Am I gonna have to run it past you guys first? You're telling me I can't think for myself? Are you thinking for yourself right now or are you thinking what your grandfather told you to think? Pops is the only one who even asked me how I felt about Jenny.
- You guys don't even care.
- That's not true.
How can we help you, son, if you don't talk to us? I'm telling you what I think right now and you're not listening to me! You watch your tone.
The moment I begin to speak my truth, you guys want me to keep it to myself.
Then I'll keep it to myself.
I'm gonna kill your father.
Mmm, yeah, you and me both.
(Phone rings) "I'll Be Near" playing (Shivers) Can I bum one? Sure.
Thanks.
Something wrong with Maxine? Why? She's been snapping at me all night.
I don't know.
When you were inside, did they ever put you in the hole? What, solitary? Yeah, three times.
You know, on death row, they don't put you in the hole.
Death row is the hole, right? Man, I'm not really a smoker, but this is like the best cigarette I've ever had.
(Chuckles) Isn't it great when that happens? (Laughs) (Sighs) Drove his car into a telephone pole on Market Street.
I'll pick him up after he's discharged tomorrow.
(Snoring) (Theme music playing) (Alarm beeping) (Turns off alarm) - Hey.
- Hey.
Did you sleep at all? Is it Trey? Not really.
- Bobby? - (Laughs) I mean, you were right.
I should have never trusted him.
I don't care about being right as much as you think I do.
You tried to help him with a job.
You gave him a chance.
It's not your fault.
Is it us? Hey.
A lot of things got said the other night that shouldn't have been said.
And I'm sorry.
It's okay.
We okay? Hmm? I was sitting in that hospital room while Jenny was asleep and I was thinking about what it's like to be her age.
We were so lucky, not just because we had each other, but because we knew what we wanted.
And when I left Tasker Homes, I thought that this life was gonna give me everything, and for the most part, it has.
And then I look at Trey and he's got he's got a voice.
He has something to say and he got up on that stage and he said it, right or wrong, fearlessly and unashamed.
I forgot what that feels like.
You you still got that.
No.
I sit in those partner meetings and I don't give a damn about any of it.
And you were right.
I do my job, I turn the other way because I keep telling myself this is just for now.
What do you want to do? I'm quitting the firm.
Okay.
Okay.
I'll go with whatever you want me to, but But? No, it's it's just that this Bankowski business, I don't know what's gonna happen.
You think this is the right time to make that big a change? Baby, I don't give a damn if it's the right time.
Hey, this is Emily Butler's friend Pauline.
She testified at trial.
I found out where she works.
I doubt she'll have much to say different from her testimony.
Well, I thought at least we'd get some background.
It's worth a conversation.
Maybe.
Loretta Strauss was a bust.
Did you dig up anything we should talk about? Clark, line two.
Clark: Christine! - What? - It's the judge's office.
Terry Kucik just got himself a second job.
Terry, this is colossally stupid.
You're not even supposed to be around normal old friends grade school guys, teachers, rabbis.
Why would I be around a rabbi? So now you're gonna go work for a guy who might have murdered your girlfriend? You don't believe that, so what's the problem? You think that, that's the problem.
- How did this even happen? - Eric's father knows the judge.
He put in a call.
Maxine's cool with it, right? Look, I need another job.
I mean, I've got to get out of my parents' place.
This is bullshit.
I'm not gonna waste my time on a client who's on a suicide mission.
So what are you gonna do? You're gonna send me back to prison? No, I'm gonna wait for you to slit Eric Zale's throat and then I'm gonna go get some DNA off his body and prove you innocent.
This is gonna put a little dent in our donations, don't you think? We exonerate a guy wrongfully convicted of one murder and then he goes out and kills somebody.
- Hey, I never killed anybody.
- What's that? "Groovin' the Blues" playing Really? Aryan Brotherhood? Blood in, blood out.
Why don't you tell us about Diaz? Who's Diaz? - He was a lifer.
- Yeah, for triple homicide.
The guy was a friggin' scumbag.
He was a man who had a wife and a son who's in junior high school right now.
You killed someone? Okay, look, I promise I'm not gonna kill Eric.
Oh, okay.
Thanks.
I feel so much better right now.
Do you have any idea the position that you're putting us in? The hundreds of other convictions, innocent people that we're committed to helping that you're playing with.
Terry, I don't like you.
(Door opens, closes) Damn it, why didn't you tell me? You might have tried to stop me.
I absolutely would have tried.
Look, I got to know what happened.
And you think Eric's gonna tell you? I don't know.
I don't have a plan.
What are you doing, Terry? When you gave us Eric's name, you were so terrified about what might happen that you wrote it on a piece of paper.
Don't do this to us.
We put our asses on the line for you.
Look, now that I'm out, I just can't pretend that it doesn't matter, okay? I got to find out what happened.
I'm sorry.
(Groans) Thank you for the lift, my man.
Go on.
Go on, say it.
Billie was right.
Does she even know I was in an accident and you left me here? Wait, I left you in there? You put yourself in there.
- I can't count on you for shit.
- I know.
- I done heard that song my entire life.
- (Car alarm chirps) You keep proving it to everybody.
What, you want me to feel sorry for you? I don't want anything from you.
Get in the car.
Yeah, I'll get in the car.
Oh.
You mind rolling down that window? Do not throw up in my car.
I do not throw up.
(Engine starts) He told me who gave the order.
What? Rhubarb.
He told me who the top man was.
- Just like that? - No, not just like that.
He thought I was one of them.
He was scared.
I had him all set up.
I got him drinking.
Got what I wanted.
I had to have myself a little celebration afterwards.
Why didn't you call me? I didn't want to tell you right away.
I needed some encouragement.
Why? Turn the car off.
You ain't gonna like what you hear, son.
I feel like his girl Friday.
What is it you need to know? Tell me anything you can about Zale.
It's a work thing.
- Are you ever off duty? - Not very often.
Sorry to hear that.
I was hoping for a nice light luncheon.
Would you at least pretend that that's the reason you're here? Stanley Zale and I have a little chess game we play.
He tries to charm me and I pretend to be charmed.
He pretends not to know that I'm pretending and I pretend not to know that he knows I'm pretending.
He assumes I have contempt for him because he’s nouveau riche.
It would never occur to him it's because I think he's a rotter.
But we always make sure to invite each other to our cocktail parties.
Why do you think he's a prick? With whom are you spending time that you so easily resort to vulgarity? I've met two kinds of wealthy men who came from humble beginnings the ones who take pride in that backstory, who feel compassion for their parents and grandparents who toiled and struggled to raise them, and those who erase their history, who lie about it either because they're ashamed or because there are bodies buried beneath that road.
Do you know if he has connections to the Polish mob? What's a Polish mob? Is this a joke? You know, underworld people.
Oh, heavens, I wouldn't know.
I mean, he started in construction.
I'm sure he had some help.
All those union sort of people.
Don't they all know each other? I'm trying to figure out if he's dangerous.
If, for example, he's capable of hiring people to threaten me.
Someone threatened you? I'm trying to clear a client who was falsely convicted of murder.
I think Zale is involved.
What? I don't want to start an argument.
You think this is all about my dad.
You look at me and see some broken little doll who used to be so pretty, something you could show off to people.
You think I should want all of this instead.
What I see is a little girl sitting on my bedroom floor surrounded by my hatboxes.
You weren't like other little girls.
You were never interested in playing dress-up.
You just loved taking out all the hats from the boxes, arranging them around you on the floor.
And then you'd try to remember which hat went where.
And I'd say, "Put them anywhere you like, 'cause then next time it would be a surprise.
" But you needed to believe there was a right way and a wrong way.
You were testing yourself.
So I'd try to be silly.
I'd put them on backwards.
I'd pile them up on top of my head so they'd tumble down all around me.
But I was just distracting you.
I'm sure you don't remember that.
One of the boxes smelled like violets.
Or at least that's what I decided violets smelled like.
One smelled like hair spray.
And there was one, my favorite, that was this pale pink with sketches of the Eiffel Tower.
And it smelled like vanilla.
The other ones, it was just memory, visual cues.
But when I matched up those three boxes I felt like I was cheating.
Blanc Violette.
That was the name of my perfume then.
Your nose was right.
If someone like Stanley Zale is threatening you, Christine, let this one go.
Stanley: I'm not quite sure I understand.
Are you leaving your partners or just leaving me? I'm leaving everything.
I've decided it's just time to move on.
- Seems a curious time to decide.
- Why is that? Well, it's no secret your husband's been looking for some excuse to come after me.
The only thing preventing him is a conflict of interest you being my lawyer.
Stanley, this has nothing to do with my husband.
And as far as I know, Adam is not coming after you.
A source I have in the Attorney General's office I'm doing this for me.
I told my partners this morning and I wanted to come over and tell you in person before you heard it from someone else.
Now, the transition may take a couple of weeks, but I can assure you that one of the partners will be well prepared to pick up where I left off.
I don't want one of the other partners; I want you.
Because I'm a good lawyer or because I'm the DA's wife? Why can't it be both? I certainly wouldn't let you handle my affairs if you were a crap lawyer.
Yes, I appreciate the large donation you made to his campaign.
And, you know, at the time I thought you were being supportive.
But now I'm curious.
I was being supportive.
But, yes, it was a perfect fit for me.
There's no need to lie about it.
But Adam became DA with my support, not because of it.
It's not as if I can control an election.
I'm surprised.
You were never this paranoid before.
What happened? I'm moving on, Stanley.
Well, I'm not so sure I want you to move on.
You don't have a choice in that, Stanley.
Billie, I always have choices.
(Indistinct chatter) Adam, Adam, wait, wait! Where you going? Adam! Come on! Adam! (Breathing heavily) This was about a month before the murders.
We'd all gone to Great Adventure.
It was Terry's idea.
He knew a guy that got us in for free.
Seems like a lifetime ago.
Emily was definitely into him? Yeah.
I mean, they came from different worlds, but on some level, they understood each other.
What about you? Did you like him? He was nice enough.
He had a temper.
Not an all-the-time thing.
It really came out when school started in the fall.
Yeah.
He was pissed he couldn't see her as much.
Emily started focusing on applying to colleges and she knew that her parents wouldn't approve of him.
Excuse me.
She was under a lot of pressure.
Terry was freaking.
Yeah, I don't know Terry very well, but I can imagine if he was freaking, he might be a little - Scary? - Yeah.
She was definitely afraid of him towards the end, if that's what you mean.
Emily told you that? No, she didn't use that word, but we were best friends.
All right.
All right.
Did you meet any of Terry's friends? - Heads up, coming through.
- Well, everybody knew about Eric.
- Eric Zale? - Total asshole.
Cute, but always wasted.
He came onto me a few times.
Flirted with Emily, too.
He was a rich kid.
He liked to rub Terry's nose in it, you know? It was always a competition.
Between Eric and Terry? No, it was more Eric.
Me and Emily, we had these fake IDs and we went to a bar with Terry on the Halloween before the murders.
He dressed up like Spider-Man.
And in walks Eric also dressed as Spider-Man.
It was one of the last times I saw her.
(Chatter) Okay, good.
Terry! Wait up.
Let me give you a ride.
Yeah, thanks.
Listen, I'm getting dinner with my dad.
He wants you to come along.
Look, man, I can't get off the grid without telling my parole officer.
Don't worry.
My dad will call somebody.
- I don't know, Eric.
- Trust me.
Trust me.
Take Dad two seconds to call your PO, make it happen.
- All right, sure.
- Done.
Done.
You're lucky that monitor's not like one of those shopping carts.
What? They got these shopping carts now, you take them too far away from the grocery store and the wheels lock up.
My kids, they love it.
They can't wait for the damn wheel to lock up.
They scream every time.
Yeah.
"Remember You" playing Yeah, your dad used to call her the mad scientist.
'Cause she always had a plan.
Mm-hmm.
You had no idea what that plan was.
Weird stuff on the counter like rosemary.
What's rosemary doing next to the cornmeal? (Laughs) Yeah, then suddenly the kitchen was clean.
The house smelled like heaven.
There it was, like it had been there all along.
(Chuckles) Yeah, there was method to your grandma's madness.
- What play is that from? - "Hamlet.
" Mostly method and a bit of madness.
Mmm! Man, that's good.
- Yeah, I know it is.
- Whatever it is.
(Laughs) Stir in the rice.
Let it boil a bit.
Turn the flame down.
Cover it up.
- All right? - Cool.
- (Car idling) - (Dog barking) (Phone chimes) Isaiah: You want to get that cornbread? - Trey: Got it.
- Billie: Smells good.
(laughs) - Sorry, guys.
- Hey.
Sorry, stuff just appeared on my desk as soon as I put my coat on.
Well, it looks good.
Well, if you don't like it, you can blame him.
(laughs) What's going on? I need to speak to him alone.
So if you can find a way to speed this up, I'll tell you about it later.
Hey, son? You know, I was telling Trey about Grandma's cooking.
The mad scientist.
- What'd I tell you? - (Laughs) Billie, you want to pass me your bowl there? - Thank you.
- Mm-hmm.
Trey's got that same gift as his grandma.
It's the way he takes his feelings and thoughts about the world and puts them into a poem.
You want to pass me yours there, son? Your grandmama would have loved to have heard that.
Don't you think? Yeah, I do.
She would have been really proud.
Okay, can we say grace? Dear Lord, we thank You for the food we're about to receive So how did this release come about? - Well, it's not permanent yet.
- Oh, it will be, I'm sure.
But you said that you're getting a new trial, right? - Yeah.
- So there must be new evidence? Yeah, but it's you know, I'm not supposed to talk about it.
No, no, no.
Of course not.
You do whatever your lawyers tell you.
But what firm is representing you? It's more like an organization.
The Innocence Initiative.
Oh, yes.
Yes, of course.
They've done remarkable things.
Something to drink? Nonalcoholic beer if you have one.
- Dad? - All set.
Very good, sir.
Your folks must be over the moon, huh? Yeah, Mom's been great, but Dad's pretty tough.
I don't know if he told you, but I tried to help him out when he lost the business.
Got him foreman jobs wherever I could, but we had a little falling out.
- That was the Jersey jobs, right? - Yeah.
Yeah, I worked those, too.
They were whew.
So what did you guys fight about? Well, I don't know how to say this delicately, but there are certain kinds of men who even when they win, they lose.
They just have a losing mentality.
You know what I mean? - Eric: Mmm.
- Yeah.
It must be very, very painful going through everything you've been through and then when you finally get back home, it's not completely welcoming.
In your father's defense, I have to say you don't know until you have a child what pain you can feel when something happens to them.
Sometimes it's so unbearable, you try to make yourself not feel anything for them.
Maybe your father just needs a little time.
He's a good man at heart.
For you, sir.
- Thanks.
- My prediction your mom's the key.
She's devoted to your father.
She's the real backbone.
He'll try harder for her sake.
Now, if there's anything I can do, any way I can help No, no.
I mean, you've done enough, really.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
It can't be easy starting over.
Listen, if your boss here gives you any trouble, - you come to me, I'll take care of it.
- (Laughs) (Laughs) Cheers.
- Cheers.
- (Glasses clinking) (Laughs) Isaiah: Bye, son.
Y'all get home safely now.
- Billie: Okay.
- Trey: Later, Dad.
- Yeah, get home safe, son.
- (Scraping plate) What's wrong, son? Rhubari.
What did he say? You gonna make me repeat it? Or you just gonna look me in the eye and lie like you've been doing for 11 years? Adam, it's complicated.
That I believe.
On my way over here, I thought it would be worse if I found out you had been cheating on Mama for 11 years.
You know, one of those guys with kids, a whole other family, but that would just be personal.
This hell, I can't even think of the right word.
I need to sit.
Do you understand what it means to have climbed as high as I've done? The possibility of helping our people? Taking our place in history? No, you don't get to give the color speech.
You don't get to be the black man who had a reason for obstruction of justice.
- My obstruction of justice? - Yes.
What about yours? You think race had nothing to do with you burying those photos? Huh? And you better ask yourself why it took you more than a decade to notice that something wasn't quite right.
If you were misled, it's because you wanted to be.
You wanted the same thing that I did.
There's no comparison.
When are you gonna stop lying to yourself? Huh? Hmm? I don't care what you tell people on television to get your vote, but here, right now, to me, to yourself, say it.
Say it.
A black family that got too big for white folks was murdered.
That's what you thought then, and that's what you think now.
You wanted a conviction.
You wanted somebody to pay.
- I wanted the guilty.
- Bankowski was guilty.
He was there.
He did nothing.
He stood by while that girl was raped and murdered and did nothing.
He trashed his life before we even put him in death row.
And what about Terry Kucik? What's he guilty of? He was a small price to pay.
I gave the community what they wanted.
I gave them you.
I know what you're capable of.
I know where you can go better than you know yourself.
This world rarely gives us opportunities like this.
And this one came to me on a silver platter from God above and I took it.
Opportunity for what? To have a powerful white man in my back pocket for whatever I needed.
Who killed the Butlers, Pop? (Sighs) He called me crying.
Scared out of his mind.
A grown man with more power than I could imagine in two lifetimes.
He called me, begging for my help.
Can you imagine Trey committing this kind of atrocity? The child that you love, that you nurtured, turning into this kind of monster? - Eric Zale? - Eric Zale.
Why did his father call you? I overlooked a couple of offenses that Eric had committed.
I knew what I was doing.
It was like offering his father a calling card.
Whenever you need my help, sir.
So his father called.
Eric was high on something.
Jared had sold him on the idea of robbing the Butlers by knifepoint.
They didn’t know that the husband was home from work and they didn't know that the girl was off sick from school.
The dumb-ass idiots.
Once inside, the Zale kid snapped.
Zale told us that Kucik had been sleeping with Emily Butler.
So when the semen came on back belonging to Kucik, well, that was a no-brainer.
The little girl had seen two men and we now had two men.
And you had Rhubari falsify the DNA and then you sent Terry Kucik to prison for 11 years for nothing? Are you gonna cry over one little white boy? Hmm? How many of our innocent have we lost? How many over the years? Yes, I bought Stanley Zale for one white boy.
- So what? - You think you bought him? You think you got Stanley Zale in your back pocket? Really? You keeping Zale from pouring dark money into the hands of people who want to take away our voting rights? People who want to keep us from moving forward? That dark money works both ways.
Because of me, he put money into black schools all over Philadelphia.
Magnet schools, after-school programs, African-American businesses.
Now, this other stuff, this is the first time I'm hearing about it.
I didn't know anything about this.
What else did you get him to pour his money into? In you.
How much did he put in my campaign? You would not have won without it.
(Clock chiming) (Sighs) So a man who butchered a black family didn't even just execute them quickly, stabbed them to death and let them suffer to the very end has been a free man since.
Stanley Zale and his son don't have one speck of Butler DNA on their hands, but we're moving our people forward.
We have more after-school programs.
Did Mama know what you did? Oh, come on, son.
Of course not.
You don't see it, Pops, do you? You didn't buy anybody.
You didn't put Zale in your back pocket.
You just became him! You became everything we suffered ignorance and brutality to change, that people died to overcome.
You're the one who bought the lie.
You believed that they had all the power.
You still do.
You didn't give me a future.
You just destroyed it.
But, you know, that doesn't even bother me now.
You know what hurts the most? My father died.
And I'm standing here looking at you with my own eyes and I don't know who the hell you are.
(Sniffles) Don't know how to describe it.
It's not just like someone you loved died.
It's like everything you ever thought was dying.
And you have to teach yourself to do everything differently.
How to think, how to breathe, how to take a step.
And even with that, I still feel sorry for him.
In one split second, I'm looking at him and he's a whole different man.
But at the same time, he's the man I've known my whole life.
It's like seeing double.
You didn't know, did you? What? About Zale.
Adam, what would make you think that? Did you know that he financed my campaign? Well, yeah, but that was attorney-client privilege.
And not a conflict of interest? No, because I wanted you to win and you needed campaign funds.
And this was the perfect opportunity for me to help you get what you needed.
There goes that word again.
And you never questioned why a conservative was backing me? Rich people pour money into both sides, Adam.
We both know that.
But you were right.
You were right, I was being played, too.
And I realized that today when I told Stanley that I was quitting the firm.
What are you gonna do, Adam? Well, you know who I'm thinking about is Jenny.
How will she survive when this comes out? It can't come out.
What other choice do I have? She cannot survive that and neither can we.
A man murdered a family and he's walking free.
Another man was convicted and he's innocent.
So work with Clark and find a way to get Terry Kucik retried.
You don't have to provide the killer.
If I keep quiet and someday Trey finds out the truth, and he will, he'll be in the same place I'm in now.
- And that will destroy him.
- And I know Zale.
If you go after him, if you go after his son, he is going to expose everything you, your father.
You cannot let something ruin our lives that you had no control over, that you didn't even know was going on.
Adam, listen to me.
We have worked too hard to get what we have.
And we've done amazing things for this community.
You cannot throw away our future.
Think about Trey.
How was work today, honey? Can I make you a martini? Maxine is pissed.
The kitchen's a mess.
I called her and I told her I'd clean it up when I got back.
You can go, by the way.
So is Eric Zale paying you well? Medical? Dental? Vacation days? Look, I'm sorry.
I know I put you guys in a bad position.
But it was just something I had to do, okay? Let me ask you this what if he does tell you about what happened with Emily? Do you even know what you'd do? I thought you wanted a new trial.
- Wanted your life back.
- I'll never get my life back.
My life was over the day I got arrested.
It's gone.
And, yeah, maybe I got something ahead of me, maybe.
But really all I have is today, right now, here in this friggin' bar with you looking at me like I'm completely insane.
And, okay, maybe I don't know what I'm doing.
But I haven't had a future in so long that maybe I'm a little out of practice.
So, yeah, I'm gonna hang out with Eric Zale and I'm gonna see what happens.
So, what? We’re just… we’re done here? You want us to drop the case? (Scoffs) You don't need to rescue me.
- Okay? - Oh! Oh! I don't.
Wow.
Thank you.
Thank you.
That is such a relief.
I guess I must have misread all those 10 years of letters, because obviously you could have gotten yourself out of prison.
Look, I'm grateful to you I don't need you to be grateful! I need you to be alive.
You got to get away from Eric Zale and you got to let us do our job.
I wish I could believe you.
I really do.
But, Christine, this isn't about you and Clark, okay? This is bigger than that.
And I know you understand this because if you had any faith in the legal system, you would have studied for your bar exam.
"Darkest Light" playing (Phone ringing) Yup.
Eric Zale was never called to testify because according to pretrial documents, he was admitted into Willow Hills on October 15 for a 90-day rehab.
- Yeah? So I went to go see Emily's friend, that Pauline MacDonald.
- When? By yourself? - Yeah.
Like a big boy all by myself.
- And she tells me - Man: Hey, man.
(Groans) - (Clark grunting) - Clark? (Grunting) (Groaning) (Grunts) Keeps me From trying Who am I to say? My love Is dying To be on your way Why am I always Drawn to the darkest light? It seems That I Believe I can help it shine So let me see (Phone vibrating) The lines upon your face Invite me In To dance in your darkest place (Knocks) Thank you for meeting me.
What happened to Clark? A couple of guys attacked him tonight outside the Initiative.
Jesus.
How is he? He's in bad shape.
Can I see him? He's still unconscious.
We think it's because he looked into Eric Zale's alibi.
Alibi? Eric Zale was on the crew that worked the Butler house.
Clark found out the reason he was never called to testify.
They said he was in rehab.
It's bullshit.
We need you to help prove it.

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