Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent (2024) s03e07 Episode Script
Whole Lotta Love
1
[NARRATOR]: In Toronto's war on crime,
the worst offenders are
pursued by the detectives
of the Specialized Criminal
Investigations Unit.
- These are their stories.
- [ECHOING GAVEL]
[WOMEN SINGING] Stay, wanna go ♪
Wanna stay, wanna go ♪
I don't know what to say,
I wanna throw it all away ♪
I feel like a zombie ♪
I'll die at the party ♪
- Yeah, you'll find my body ♪
- [PHONE RINGING]
Fully covered in confetti ♪
- I tried calling ♪
- [CHEERING]
Come on, Ivy. Stay for one more song.
- [POP SONG PLAYING ON SPEAKERS]
- No, Amy.
Uh, seriously, I have to go.
I have class tomorrow at nine.
You're literally acing every course,
you can take a morning off.
What? Is something wrong?
- Is-is it Rob?
- No. I'm fine.
Go sing, I'll see you at home.
- Go!
- [CHUCKLING]
- Go.
- [SCOFFING]: Okay.
- Uh, can I close my tab?
- Sure.
No whole lotta love tonight?
What?
Nothing.
[PHONE RINGING]
Here.
Rob, stop calling. I'm not at Tempo.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Ivy, if you're still feeling this way,
maybe you should take a break.
Go see your parents.
So you think I should just
run away from my problems?
No. I think you need
to manage your stress.
But you don't think
this is real, do you?
Like, I'm not living in some
fantasy world, Dr. Nielson!
I didn't say that, Ivy.
Come. Sit.
Please.
[SIGHING]
I think you should consider
doing what's best for
you in this situation.
I know what's best for me.
And I'm not going anywhere.
Everyone's looking at this all wrong.
I've done the test.
These wounds were made by
something easily accessible.
Um, a steak knife. A pairing knife.
So, you think the killer
was in the house with her.
Followed her out?
Why? Is that what you think?
Come on.
Please, Ivy. Help me out.
Why would someone stab
this woman seven times?
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Passion makes people do
irrational things,
Morris. And you'd know that
if you didn't spend all your
time playing with knives.
Okay, so what is it
then? I wanna possess you,
be you, so I'm gonna kill you?
[PHONE RINGING]
Hello?
Uh, yes, yes. Thank
you for calling back.
Uh, yeah, I can be there.
Is that your, uh, mystery lead?
[CHUCKLING]
[DOOR OPENING]
Uh, you're sure that's what you heard?
Yes. I'm certain.
Who else have you told about this?
You're the first.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- [RESTAURANT DIN]
[TYPING ON KEYBOARD]
[EMAIL SENT FEEDBACK]
[GASPING]
Rob, what the hell are you doing?
[STAMMERING]: I just wanna talk.
Been avoiding me.
[INCREDULOUS CHUCKLING]
We've talked for
months. You don't listen.
We broke up.
Okay, but what if I didn't want to?
Hey, it's me.
Great work. I just think that maybe
our last chapter needs
a bit more muscle.
I mean, I know you're all about
the subtlety and that's awesome,
but I think that if
we're gonna make waves,
we need to hit it harder.
That's my thought.
Anyway, I'll see you soon.
[PHONE DINGING]
[INTRIGUING MUSIC SWELLING]
Amy? Are you home?
I need to talk to you.
Amy?
- [CRICKETS CHIRPING]
- [SIGHING]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Amy, I'm on my way
to campus to find you.
- Call me as soon as you
- [LINE DISCONNECTING]
[GROANING]
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
[KEYS JINGLING SOFTLY]
[GASPING]
[STATICKY VOICE OVER PHONE]:
Hello? Campus Services.
What's your emergency? Hello?
[THEME SONG]
Campus Security got a call
from this phone at 11:22,
but there was nobody on the line.
- [POLICE SIRENS CHIMING]
- They sent somebody at 11:30,
thinking it was a prank.
- No such luck.
- Yeah.
Ivy Abbott, 20 years old.
- [SOMBER MUSIC]
- Dean says she's a third-year
Criminology Major.
She's got a 4.0 GPA.
Smart kid.
You talked to the parents yet?
Yeah. They're both academics.
They're in Edinburg for a
year, they're flying back today.
Ivy was their only kid.
So [SIGHING]
what sent Ivy Abbott
to an emergency phone
in the middle of the night?
Well, her cell phone died.
Uh here.
See if it'll charge.
Oh, great. Thanks.
[POLICE SIRENS CHIMING]
I wonder if someone was following her.
Well, these indentations
between her fingers.
Could be she tried to arm herself?
Maybe with her keys for protection.
Okay, so, she runs to the
phone to call for help,
but the killer
stabs her in the neck and then drags her
and flips her over.
Keeps stabbing. [SIGHING]
The wound to her neck
would've been fatal.
The six stabs on her
back, that was anger.
This was personal.
[LOUDLY]: You found a weapon?
Uh, no. Nothing yet.
[INTRIGUING MUSIC]
Anything on her person
that could account for this?
Looks like rope burn.
No, we just found her
wallet, keys, and her phone.
[PHONE BEEPING] Oh, it's charged.
[SIGHING]: Thanks.
Hey.
"What do you mean you're too
scared to stay home. Call me."
[ECHOING GAVEL]
[SHAKILY]: Ivy said she was
coming back to our apartment.
I was studying on campus till midnight.
My phone was on Do Not Disturb.
And when I got Ivy's voicemail
I texted her and she didn't respond.
I ran home, then I found this.
I tried to blow them all
out, but there are so many.
Amy, is there anyone we can call?
- [DOOR OPENS]
- Can I text my mom?
Of course.
[SHAKY BREATHING]
[SNIFFLING]
Amy, has anything like
this happened before?
The first time there were
just a couple of candles.
Then a few more. It's the third time.
[SHAKILY]: I've never been so scared.
Do you have any idea
who might have done this?
Yeah, I figured it was Rob. Ivy's ex.
I-it started a couple months
ago when they broke up.
Did Ivy ever inform the police?
Yeah, she tried. The cop at the station
said that it's not a crime
to leave something
outside of someone's house.
Yeah Sweetheart, I'm
so sorry to hear that.
Do you think this was some grand
gesture to try to get Ivy back?
We tried every other way.
Constant calling,
texting. Guy's unhinged.
What, you think I did something to Ivy?
No, no. I would never hurt her.
Well, what do you know about this, huh?
It's got quite the distinctive scent.
[SNIFFS]
Cedar, cannabis, Canadian wildflowers.
And a hundred of these were left on
- Ivy's patio last night.
- That's crazy.
Where were you last night, Rob?
I was at the Madison.
Got there at, like, 10
PM with a few buddies.
We stayed until, I don't know, 1:30?
Get back here with Kailey.
- She just left.
- Kailey?
I'm trying to see new
people. Get over Ivy.
Best six months of
my life were with her.
So why did you break up?
I don't know, I [INHALING DEEPLY]
She just pulled away.
She broke up with me.
She wouldn't tell me why. She
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- [EXHALING DEEPLY]
She shut down her social
media, started to go to therapy,
which I thought was weird.
I mean, she never wanted to
talk about her feelings before.
Who's her therapist?
Someone on campus.
Sarah something.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Ivy and I met four times
in the last few months.
She was a great student.
Good kid.
Yeah, she needed someone to talk to.
Yes. She was stressed. Anxious.
Did this anxiety have
anything to do with, uh,
unwanted attention?
A lot of female students
seek out guidance
regarding harassment,
Detective, and unfortunately
Ivy was no different.
Look, I I wouldn't
normally do this, but, um.
You can have my notes.
- They might help.
- Thank you.
Ivy was convinced that
someone was following her.
She said that they left things
outside of her apartment,
lurked near her place.
To be honest, I couldn't
tell whether this was real
or whether it was some delusion
brought on by some underlying issue.
It says here, "Possible BPD"
I'm assuming that's Borderline
Personality Disorder?
Disordered sense of
self, intense emotions
Relationship instability. Yes.
All motivated by a fear of abandonment.
But I wasn't sure because
Ivy also exhibited traits
of Paranoid Personality Disorder.
Delusions, distrust.
And you never made
an official diagnosis?
No, no, and
Considering what happened
to her, I suppose I
I got that all wrong.
[SIGHING]
Regardless, it would take me more than
four sessions to be sure. You know,
some folks go after
this stuff with a hammer.
I paint in watercolour.
You know, it takes time.
Patience.
[SIGHING]: I wanted to
help Ivy, I really did,
but I couldn't report
the harassment for her.
Did Ivy ever describe this person?
The only thing that
I remember her saying
is that he wore an army jacket.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
It's so sad, isn't it?
Did you know her?
[EMOTIONALLY]: She was my girlfriend.
Oh, my God
I'm so sorry.
Apparently, she tried to report it,
but the description of the guy was vague
and you know what they
say about stalking.
- Yes, homicide in slow motion.
- [SIGHING]
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
- Finished Ivy Abbott's autopsy.
The killer twisted the
knife inside her neck
almost 180 degrees.
He sliced her carotid and her jugular?
Yeah. She bled out quickly. [SIGHING]
I looked into those
abrasions on her left hand,
there's thin fibres embedded.
I sent them for testing.
Possibly clutching onto
an object as a weapon
- when the keys failed?
- Maybe.
I once tried to fend off a
subway perv using a debit card.
Yeah, I pretended
ChapStick was pepper-spray.
It actually worked.
Her killer wasn't a stranger.
He had a personal connection with her.
Yeah, he either hated
her or desired her.
Maybe he even felt a whole lotta love.
It's the name of the candle.
Forensics just came back,
pinpointed a proprietary blend
of cedar, cannabis, and
Canadian wildflowers.
Created by a Canadian company, Shy Wolf.
I called them and guess
who bought 150 candles
using their credit card online?
- [SOFT MUSIC PLAYING]
- Hope you have a reservation
'cause we're totally booked tonight.
Oh, I'm sure you can squeeze
us in for, I don't know,
five minutes and 33 seconds?
Well, that's just enough
time to do a hearty rendition
of Whole Lotta Love.
Carter Harold, right?
- That's you?
- Yeah.
Well, seems recently you bought
a whole lotta these candles.
[GLASS THUDDING]
It's very expensive
to just leave them all
in Ivy Abbott's backyard.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
[GLASS CLANKING]
[GRUNTING]
Come on, Carter. That's enough.
I didn't kill Ivy, I swear.
You sure?
'Cause you were stalking her.
Okay. I left the candles
on the night she died.
On all those nights.
- But I just wanted
- Wanted what?
Be her own personal boogeyman?
No. I wanted her to know
that I cared about her.
The candles. They were a message.
They were named after
a song we sang together.
You're telling me a 20-year-old
sang Led Zeppelin at karaoke?
Not exactly. Um
I was in a room on my own one night.
But then I heard a voice
in the hall joining in.
I logged out and saw
- her.
- Then you got hooked.
Pulled her address off
her ID, went to her house,
started taking photos, lighting candles.
She needed to know how I felt.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- What about how she felt?
'Cause I'm pretty
sure you terrified her.
Every. Single. Time.
See, I-I'm, uh, pretty
new to this, so forgive me,
but you want us to believe you
trespassed onto her property,
peaked through her windows
and took some pretty
intrusive photos of her,
but then you didn't follow
her to a deserted area,
stab her in the neck and in the back?
Carter, what did Ivy do
when she saw the candles?
Answer the question.
She ran away. Okay?
- She obviously didn't like them.
- Shocker.
So I left and I went to
work a late shift at the bar.
Check the cameras, I was there by 11:15.
We will.
Honestly, I wished I followed her.
I could've helped her.
Well, maybe it's not too late to help.
I mean, you followed her around, right?
Yeah.
What was she up to?
She was spending way too much time
at that Criminology building.
She had classes there.
No, it's not just class. It's
something else.
Every day, she goes to
some weird locked room
that only a few people had a key to.
What's inside?
I don't know, but I
think it's bad for her.
Very bad.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Let me know when you're done.
That looks like a bunch of
true crime nerds made a nest.
Or the Cold Case Club.
They do seminars supervised
by Professor Garrett Poole.
What's the case?
The victim was Kat
Berman, murdered in 2019.
Student at Queens University.
[SIGHING]: She was
stabbed once in the neck.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
And six times in the back.
Exactly like Ivy.
So Ivy Abbott was studying
Kat Berman's murder
and ends up getting killed
in exactly the same way?
Yeah, down to the twist of the knife.
- [OFFICE PHONES RINGING]
- Uh, take a look at Ivy's autopsy
and Kat's autopsy from six years ago.
Their fatal neck wounds were caused
by the exact same maneuver.
Followed by six stabs to the back.
The only difference was
the marks on the hand.
Ivy had them, Kat did not.
- You talk to Kingston PD?
- [DISTANT DOOR BUZZING]
Yeah, they gave us access to Kat's file,
but they haven't had
a new lead in forever.
So, now we have two dead students,
similar ages, same wound.
[SIGHING]: Yeah. We might be
looking at a serial murderer.
Or a copycat who knew
the wound pattern well.
Maybe because they studied
it at Cold Case Club.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Ivy was an excellent student.
I'm sorry for your
loss, Professor Poole.
Uh, profile told us she
was in your Cold Case Club?
Yeah, one of only 10 kids selected.
Yes, it was an invitation only
criminology seminar
for third-year students
and Ivy was, yeah, she
was doing incredibly well.
They all were.
So you thought your best and brightest
could solve Kat Berman's murder?
Uh, stump the Kingston PD?
No, it's more of a teaching exercise.
- Hmm.
- So you take an unsolvable case
- and give it to a bunch of smart kids.
- And see what they do with it.
Each bring their own expertise,
their own point of view.
- It's fascinating.
- Hmm.
And what was, uh, Ivy's angle?
Interpreting witness testimony.
Hmm.
And what if, uh, a student
- discovers a lead?
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
Well, then I would take
it to the cold case unit,
but I've been using this
one for a couple years now
and so far there are no new leads.
Hmm.
But, uh, Ivy wanted to find one. Yeah.
Uh, we heard she spent
quite a lot of time
in the seminar room after hours.
Yes, they all did.
I told them they'd get
top marks if they solved it
and they couldn't take the files home.
Did those files include, uh,
Kat Berman's autopsy?
Yes. Why?
Oh, we were wondering if
any of the students were, uh,
taking the pathology angle?
Cause of death. Injuries.
Yes, Morris Lemay.
He's an aspiring forensic pathologist.
He was trying to recreate
Kat Berman's wounds
using various unique methods.
Many body pathologists
practise replicating knife wounds.
It's not weird.
So, does everyone work on Miss Piggy?
Well, they should. The
consistency of pig flesh
is very close to human.
Well, funny. That's why we're here.
Morris, where were
you the night Ivy died?
I didn't kill Ivy. I
was with my parents. Here.
All night.
You can ask them.
[DISTANT CHILDREN CHATTERING]
What's on your mind?
If only I'd move faster.
[INTRIGUING MUSIC] Done better.
Could've found out who
really did this and
Ivy would still be alive.
Do you think Kat's killer murdered Ivy?
Isn't it obvious?
Ivy probably figured out who did it.
[LOWLY]: You call
yourself a detective
Professor Poole says that
there were no new leads.
Yeah, well, Professor Poole
doesn't know everything.
Ivy finished reviewing witness testimony
and moved on to something that
wasn't even assigned to her.
Something that no one was allowed to do.
Interviewing real witnesses.
How'd you know?
Oh, well, that's exactly
what he would've done.
So, what was Ivy's strategy?
Ivy was really into victimology.
In particular, victim facilitation.
You know, the theory of
what makes someone a target.
But nothing of the witness testimony
made it seem like Kat
was a high-risk victim.
Just went to work and to school.
So Ivy wanted to know how the
killer came into Kat's orbit.
Yeah. Ivy figured the perp was
either an unassuming random,
a stalker
Or someone Kat didn't want
anyone else to know about.
Did Ivy find any new leads?
She went to meet a
witness the day she died.
I saw the address she
wrote down before she left.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Yes. Ivy Abbott came by here at 6 PM.
We chatted, she left.
I was here till 12.
I didn't even know her.
But Ivy thought that you
might know Kat Berman.
And where was this?
Six years ago, I was living
in Kingston with my aunt and
on the weekend I delivered
pizzas for a place called Max Dough.
And Ivy knew you were
delivering pizzas to Kat?
She saw a photo of our
pizza box in Kat's recycling.
Part of the case files, I guess.
And Ivy wanted to know
if you ever saw anyone
with Kat on the weekends?
Yes. And there was a guy
there with her sometimes.
- Definitely a boyfriend.
- So Damien,
did you ever, uh, see
a face, get a name?
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- No, but I heard his voice.
He was annoying. Told the
same story over and over.
So our pizza box was red, right?
Every time Kat took it inside,
he would make a comment on how it was
the exact same colour of his
fancy cottage in Newfoundland.
So when I told Ivy about
it, she got really tense.
Said she needed to talk to
her professor right away.
Hmm. Funny.
He didn't tell us that.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER AFAR]
Morris. What are you doing here?
I, uh, came to grab some of my research.
Well, you won't need it.
Out of respect for Ivy,
I'm cancelling this seminar for good.
[SCOFFING]: But what about our grades?
Is that all you can
think about? Your grades?
[CHUCKLING]: What kind
of question is that, man?
What's wrong with you?
Uh
Uh, I'm sorry. You're right.
Hang on, hang on. I'm sorry. It's, um
Marks are gonna be determined
based on the work that's
already been submitted.
You're okay. Don't worry.
So you've never heard of Damien Aku.
No, Ivy never mentioned
meeting anyone named,
Damien Aku and
I would never condone
reaching out to a stranger
- about the cold case.
- Really?
'Cause Damien told us
that Ivy's first priority
was to report back to
you about a new suspect.
Well, she may have sent an email.
Maybe it ended up in my junk box.
I don't know, my inbox is a mess.
I haven't had time to go through
Sorry, this is the
first new clue in years
and you haven't had time?
I'm saying I didn't know
there was a new clue.
Oh, okay. Well, that's all right.
You know what, we can fill you in.
Uh, so Ivy found out that
Kat had a secret boyfriend.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Now, we don't know his name.
Oh, but we do know that he owns some
pretty stunning property.
Yeah, a red cottage in Newfoundland.
Kinda like this one.
- [SIGHING]
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
Were you dating Kat
Berman, Professor Poole?
And what did you do when Ivy found out?
We know he took a sabbatical
from Osler in 2019,
moved to Kingston to write
a book on the penitentiary.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Same year Kat was killed.
Yeah, Kat worked in a library
that housed some of the
penitentiary archives.
They might have met there.
We haven't confirmed it,
but after Kat was killed,
Garrett Poole went back home
and eventually started
the Cold Case Club.
It's possible he was simply
interested in the case.
They lived in the same city.
Maybe he read about
it in the newspaper
Yes, but now we're thinking
that he was sleeping with Kat.
So, he's either obsessed
with the woman he loved
Or he's a, uh, murdering
narcissist who's
spent the last three years
daring his students to catch him.
Who the hell are we dealing with?
We're about to find out.
Yes, I was sleeping
with Kat Berman in 2019.
Our relationship has nothing
to do with her murder.
I didn't kill her. I loved her.
You used her murder as
fodder for a university class.
- I wanna solve the case.
- So did Ivy.
And from the looks of it,
she got dangerously close to the truth.
Uh, we got a warrant to
search your communication
and, oh, you weren't lying
about your inbox being a mess.
But, uh, we found this in your trash.
What is this, uh, Ivy's email?
The one that, uh, you couldn't find.
- Hmm.
- It was sent the night she was killed,
but forgive me, I-I left
my glasses on my desk.
Perhaps you could read it out to us.
[SOFT ELECTRICAL BUZZING]
"I know you were dating Kat."
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
This isn't what this
looks like. Come on.
No? Because you deleted a
very clear message from Ivy
that would give you a very
clear motive for murder.
And let's face it, it might be
easier just to get rid of her
than to, uh, have to
track down and destroy
2,000 copies of a book with
a very damning detail on it.
[CHUCKLING]
I did not kill Ivy out of
some kind of self-preservation
because I did not kill Kat.
Do you understand?
Then why would you lie to us?
Do you have any idea how hard it is
to be a male professor these days?
[CHUCKLING]
I did not want the fact that
I slept with Kat to get out.
Okay? It's not because I killed her,
it's because I would be
ruined. I'd be cancelled.
I would lose everything.
[LOWLY]: Yeah, but Ivy still knew.
- Go after her?
- Yeah, your office is very,
very close to where she was killed.
Yeah, but I wasn't at my office.
Where were you?
I was with a colleague at her office.
- Who?
- Sarah Nielson.
I'm working with her on my new book.
I was with her from 9:30 to midnight.
Sarah Nielson the campus therapist?
Did you know that, um,
Sarah was treating Ivy?
- I mean
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
Yes.
How?
'Cause I introduced them.
[SCOFFING]
Do you hand pick all
your students' therapists?
[CHUCKLING]
Maybe you got your pal to talk to Ivy
for the same reason
you trashed that email.
Because you didn't
want the world to know
that you and Ivy were also
in a sexual relationship.
Yeah, that would make you two for two.
That's two relationships, two students.
Both dead.
Ivy never told me
that she and Garrett Poole
were sleeping together.
I'd have to report that.
Even though you're friends?
I think that outweighs
friendships, Detective.
So do morals.
And the night Ivy was killed?
Well, Garrett was with me in my office
till well after midnight.
We were working on his new book.
Whatever was happening with Ivy,
Garrett's telling the
truth about that night.
That's helpful, Sarah. Thank you.
Did forensics come back on
those fibres in Ivy's hand?
I was just about to call you.
They're from a cord used in
retractable key card fobs.
What, like the one Poole used
to let us into his office?
It looked long enough to
wrap around Ivy's hand,
cause rope burn.
I knew we shouldn't have let him go.
No, the man had an
alibi, it was verified.
But if you find the cord,
I can test it for Ivy's DNA.
Thanks, Lucy. Standby.
Okay, you two. We need
to be very strategic here
because whether or not
there's DNA on that cord
Poole's alibi still stands.
However, in my experience, even the most
bulletproof of alibis will weaken
when faced with a fear
of obstructing justice.
So if we tell ethical, moral Sarah
that we've got some
evidence against Poole,
she might bend.
And if you gild the lily
by showing her a little more
of the horror of the
crime she's covering up
Hmm, she might break.
Can you, uh, put a SPIN team on Poole?
Nothing I'd rather do.
Go break that alibi.
[WHISPERING]: Garrett.
Thank God they released you. You okay?
Yeah, I'm fine. I'm fine.
Thanks for talking to the
cops. You're a lifesaver.
Um
Garrett.
Yeah?
Is there anything
that you wanna tell me?
About what?
About Ivy?
Garrett.
[WHISPERING]: I just lied for you.
Hey.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
You know I didn't hurt her.
Right?
You know that.
[WHISPERING]: Of course you didn't!
- But I
- But nothing.
Why should we give some myopic cop
anyone who have opportunity
to pin this on me?
I left your office, I was
out walking around the campus.
Ju-just processing all these
great ideas that you had
for the last chapter, you know?
You're amazing, you know that, right?
Oh, stop.
God, I'm so lucky to have you.
What do you mean?
[CHUCKLING]: I mean
you're loyal and you're
You're faithful and you're
you're so smart.
It's just pure.
There's no silliness.
There's no messy feelings
getting in the way.
Why are you showing me these?
Because we believe your
friend Garrett Poole
did that to Ivy Abbott.
That's-that's impossible.
I told you that we were together.
It's amazing what people
will do to protect a friend.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- [GLASSES CLICKING]
What do you have in your pocket?
Come on, show me.
[OBJECTS CLINKING SOFTLY]
Okay, so you're by yourself.
It's nighttime.
Someone's following you.
Out of all of this, what do
you use to defend yourself?
So they have a knife.
You have a pen.
I mean, compared to you right now,
Ivy was lucky. She had her keys on her.
Intertwined them between her fingers
in the hope that she could
take a swing and then run.
But she didn't.
'Cause someone stabbed
her in the side of the neck
before she got the chance.
[SHAKILY]: Why would Garrett do this?
Well, Ivy learned that
there was another student
he was involved with
who also wound up dead.
Kat Berman, six years ago.
There were more?
I knew about Ivy.
Wait. You knew that Poole
was sleeping with Ivy?
Why are you wasting our time?
Okay.
Ivy told me.
I was horrified, but I couldn't
always trust what she said.
I told her it wasn't appropriate
and she told me that she was
too scared to break up with him.
Now I could never imagine
Garrett threatening a woman.
Well, this looks more
than a threat, doesn't it?
- Garrett wouldn't
- Hurt anyone?
Come on, Sarah.
Predators don't just
hide in the shadows.
They're in nice offices in nice homes,
in positions of power.
And you are enabling him.
Why?
I didn't want Garrett to be ruined.
What if Garrett was telling the
truth? What if Ivy was lying?
But she wasn't.
So don't lie for him.
[EXHALING DEEPLY]
[INHALING SHARPLY]
Garrett was in my office
with my until 11 PM.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
I'm sorry.
I never thought that he
could do something like this,
so when he asked me to say that
we were together until midnight,
- I said okay.
- [KNOCKING AT DOOR]
Detectives, a word.
[OFFICE PHONES RINGING]
SPIN team just called.
Poole is on the move,
he's got a suitcase with him.
I'll deal with Sarah, you go.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
There he is. We need his key fob.
Doctor Poole.
Garrett Poole. Police. Stop!
[GRUNTING]
What the hell is going on here?
- I didn't do anything.
- [HANDCUFFS CLINKING]
We'll see about that.
Garrett Poole, you're under arrest
for the murder of Ivy Abbott.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
I was headed to Union Station.
I'm catching a train to go to
Hudson Valley to see a friend.
I'm not guilty of anything.
Well, the jury's out on that,
but we'll have a clearer picture
once forensics comes
back with the key fob.
You see, we believe it
was the last thing that
Ivy Abbott grabbed for before she died.
You knew it was only a matter of time
before Ivy outed you as Kat's killer,
so you got rid of her to save yourself!
- I didn't kill Ivy!
- [KNOCKING AT DOOR]
I didn't kill Kat. I
told you. I love them.
Both of them!
You preyed on two young students
and both have ended up dead.
[DOOR SHUTTING]
Is that the results? The DNA test?
What does it say?
[INSISTENTLY]: What does it say?
[SIGHING]
Negative for Ivy's DNA.
Yeah, I told you!
I told you I didn't kill anyone!
Then why did you ask a colleague
to fabricate an alibi for you?
I didn't ask her to do that.
It was her idea.
So, she just came up with
this whole plan all by herself.
Why?
Sarah is a friend.
Okay? She's a close friend.
She adores me. She'd do anything for me.
So when we found out
that Ivy was killed,
a student we both knew,
Sarah suggested that we
just say we were together.
You know? Just to keep things tidy.
[INHALING SHARPLY]: So one more time.
Where were you?
At 11 o'clock, I went out for a walk.
And Sarah stayed behind
and worked on my edits.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Leaving you both alone
and unaccounted for at the
time of Ivy Abbott's murder.
Let's get Sarah's interview up.
Yeah, I'm on it.
[TYPING ON KEYBOARD]
[STATICKY]: What do you
have in your pockets?
Come on, show me.
Hmm, okay, so.
You're alone. It's nighttime.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
The white key card.
It's not the official blue
one the rest of the staff have.
- It's temporary.
- And she tried to hide it.
Which mean she got rid
of her official card
and the fob that went with it.
And as Poole said,
"She adores him. She'd
do anything to help him."
Sarah Nielson was inside Ivy's head.
Yeah, she knew she could kill Ivy
and point the finger at any
number of people in Ivy's life.
Even pointed you two toward a stalker.
And all the while, she
was covering for Poole,
which also gave herself an alibi.
That's some fancy footwork.
- Hmm.
- But then for some reason,
she decided to throw
Poole under the bus. Why?
Oh, 'cause we offered him up as a patsy.
And if Sarah's smart, uh, the
only piece of hard evidence
that we hoped to test is long gone.
Finding that fob wouldn't help.
[SIGHING]
I'm Sarah's defence lawyer.
First thing I'd say,
everyone at Osler has that fob.
30,000 people could be your killer.
your client has no alibi.
She was in her office. Working.
The therapists' offices
don't have cameras. I checked.
Thank you, Counselor,
but I have the floor.
- Oh.
- Hmm.
You don't have my client's
prints on the murder weapon
because you don't have a murder weapon.
No sign of her on CCTV.
At least not a recognizable Sarah.
Okay, but what is a recognizable Sarah?
The woman is a cypher.
I-I don't think I've seen
the real Sarah this entire time.
This This could be the real Sarah.
Uh, this is Poole's one big
book, right? Got him tenure,
but it doesn't read
like his earlier papers.
Listen to this language:
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- "As Anna Freud posited in 1936,
defence mechanisms operate unconsciously
to protect the ego.
Repression, rejection,
sublimation, displacement.
Sigmund Freud swung at these
conditions with a hammer.
But Anna Freud believed in
time, layers, and patience.
She unpacked these emotions with care
and painted them with
a watercolour brush."
That's exactly what Sarah
said to us when we first met.
You think that's her research?
And she gave it all to Poole?
- Romantic isn't it?
- Yeah, certainly is.
And that's how we break her.
Thanks for meeting me here, Sarah.
How you feeling?
I-I'm a little stunned.
I can't believe Garrett
said it was my idea
to lie about his alibi.
[SIGHING]: Yeah, well,
we saw right through that.
Well, I'm just glad that you caught him.
Yeah. [CHUCKLING]
But it's not over yet.
We still have to put
him behind bars and
And there are aspects of
both Ivy and Kat's cases
that we just still don't understand, so
hoping you can help.
Well, I don't know Kat.
Oh, that's okay.
Kat's murder was almost
exactly like Ivy's
and you know Ivy, you know Garrett.
You're the expert here,
not me. [CHUCKLING]
I'm-I'm so curious
about your perspective.
Hmm, I've already told
you everything I know.
Facts, yeah. But I'm
looking for feelings.
And you were practically
inside their heads.
I mean, you were Ivy's
therapist and Garrett's muse.
What do you mean Garrett's muse?
Oh, Sarah. I I read his book.
Those chapters on defence
mechanisms, impulsivity,
- emotional dysregulation.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
That was all you.
No, no, no, no, no. That wasn't all me.
- We worked-we worked together.
- On your ideas?
Well, I wanted to help him.
Yeah, like you helped
him with his alibi?
It's okay. I know it's not your fault.
I think that Garrett was able
to get away with these murders
because he manipulated
his victims. You included.
This guy was very careful.
No, no. There's careful and
then there's controlling.
Oh, what do you mean?
Well, Ivy mentioned that
Garrett asked to track her phone.
- That's why she was so scared.
- Wow.
He liked to lead in relationships.
To have the upper hand.
Well, was he like that with you too?
In your relationship?
Well, Garrett and I
we're just friends.
Really? [CHUCKLING]
Sarah, come on.
I can tell when a woman is in love.
And Garrett knew how you felt
and he took advantage of that?
What are you suggesting?
- That I'm weak?
- [CHUCKLING]: No. God, no.
No, I've, uh
I've been there myself.
Huh.
My rookie year, I fell
absolutely head over heels
with a guy that I worked with.
[EMOTIONALLY]: I became obsessed.
I memorized his schedule,
I followed him around,
I would make excuses to work together
Did he like you back?
He liked my work.
He liked it so much that
sometimes he would claim it.
[SIGHING]: As his own.
Hmm.
Yeah, eventually he did. He
did want more than just my work.
So he did like you back.
[WEAKLY]: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
But, uh, he didn't like
me enough to get serious
'cause, uh, turns out he
was married the entire time.
Oh.
And I wanted a kid.
I wanted a family.
That's terrible.
At least Garrett isn't married.
Well, no.
He is otherwise engaged.
He spends his time on frivolous things,
but gives you just enough to hang on.
Kind words, empty
promises, and all the while,
your time marches on,
your window is closing.
I have always had feelings for Garrett.
Hmm.
But he He said that we
shouldn't cross the line
that we were colleagues.
But he crosses the
line with his students.
But that's none of my business.
And I have-I have accepted
that we're just friends.
No, friends don't steal
their friend's work.
Friends don't use their friends
to try to cover up their
affairs with students.
And friends don't blame their
friends for their crimes.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Or maybe they do.
See, I think you might be
doing exactly that to Garrett.
What are you talking about?
Sarah, how would you define projection?
It's when someone attributes
their own undesirable feelings,
thoughts, and behaviours
to somebody else.
Okay, so when you suggested
that Ivy was Borderline
with a touch of Paranoid
Personality Disorder
and intense emotions,
and fear of abandonment,
impulsivity, delusions
I am not delusional, Detective.
And I-I actually I've done
nothing but try to help you.
Yeah. Well, you've been very helpful.
Yeah, when you wanted me
to trust you and like you,
you told me everything I wanted to hear.
But I've read your notes
and I've made some of my own
and I think all those things
you were saying about Ivy
you were really
talking about yourself.
Huh.
Sarah, stop.
No, no, no, no, no, no. I'm done here.
From the moment that I
walked into that office,
you've been trying to manipulate me.
And now you are trying
to turn the tables
with anger and contempt
and it's not gonna work.
Was that your attempt
at empathizing in there?
At relating?
God, you are so out of your depth.
You should be embarrassed.
See, you're projecting again.
You've been carrying a torch
for that man for 10 years.
10 years of him stealing your work,
tossing you scraps while
he screws his students.
And you know it's shameful
and you still can't stop.
I don't need Garrett.
No, you don't, but you want him.
You want him fully and forever
and you know he wants you too.
He just needed a little nudge.
You know that one day he's gonna wake up
and look at you and see what
is right in front of him.
What's been here all along.
You just needed those
girls to get out of the way.
They're baubles.
They're trinkets.
But you You are the real thing.
So you stabbed Kat outside her house,
you tracked Ivy's phone
and you killed her.
No, no. You have no proof.
I know that you threw
away your key card.
And Ivy was smart. She
grabbed it, didn't she?
As she was dying? 'Cause
in her last moments,
she wanted to leave a
trace. Someone, stop her,
please stop this monster
Ivy-Ivy was a child,
okay? An idiotic fool.
And she thought that
Garrett was gonna, what?
Leave his job and marry her?
- I tried to play nice.
- How?
I told her to leave. I said leave town,
but she-she stuck
around. She didn't listen.
- Garrett didn't listen either?
- No! He never does.
I-I-I don't know what I have to do!
And that's why you
threw him under the bus.
To make him listen, to make him yours.
- [DRAMATIC MUSIC]
- Yes!
Yes because then, then it
would finally be me and him
and I would stand by
him and I would visit him
and-and when he got out of
prison he would know who
He would know who really loved him.
[SHAKY BREATHING]
I wonder if he's gonna visit you.
[HANDCUFFS CLINKING]
[SOMBER MUSIC]
You okay?
Yeah.
Think I used more hammer
than I did watercolour.
[CHUCKLING]: Well, whatever the tool,
we still painted our
killer into a corner.
It's never easy to corner another woman.
[SOMBER MUSIC CONTINUES]
[THEME MUSIC]
[NARRATOR]: In Toronto's war on crime,
the worst offenders are
pursued by the detectives
of the Specialized Criminal
Investigations Unit.
- These are their stories.
- [ECHOING GAVEL]
[WOMEN SINGING] Stay, wanna go ♪
Wanna stay, wanna go ♪
I don't know what to say,
I wanna throw it all away ♪
I feel like a zombie ♪
I'll die at the party ♪
- Yeah, you'll find my body ♪
- [PHONE RINGING]
Fully covered in confetti ♪
- I tried calling ♪
- [CHEERING]
Come on, Ivy. Stay for one more song.
- [POP SONG PLAYING ON SPEAKERS]
- No, Amy.
Uh, seriously, I have to go.
I have class tomorrow at nine.
You're literally acing every course,
you can take a morning off.
What? Is something wrong?
- Is-is it Rob?
- No. I'm fine.
Go sing, I'll see you at home.
- Go!
- [CHUCKLING]
- Go.
- [SCOFFING]: Okay.
- Uh, can I close my tab?
- Sure.
No whole lotta love tonight?
What?
Nothing.
[PHONE RINGING]
Here.
Rob, stop calling. I'm not at Tempo.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Ivy, if you're still feeling this way,
maybe you should take a break.
Go see your parents.
So you think I should just
run away from my problems?
No. I think you need
to manage your stress.
But you don't think
this is real, do you?
Like, I'm not living in some
fantasy world, Dr. Nielson!
I didn't say that, Ivy.
Come. Sit.
Please.
[SIGHING]
I think you should consider
doing what's best for
you in this situation.
I know what's best for me.
And I'm not going anywhere.
Everyone's looking at this all wrong.
I've done the test.
These wounds were made by
something easily accessible.
Um, a steak knife. A pairing knife.
So, you think the killer
was in the house with her.
Followed her out?
Why? Is that what you think?
Come on.
Please, Ivy. Help me out.
Why would someone stab
this woman seven times?
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Passion makes people do
irrational things,
Morris. And you'd know that
if you didn't spend all your
time playing with knives.
Okay, so what is it
then? I wanna possess you,
be you, so I'm gonna kill you?
[PHONE RINGING]
Hello?
Uh, yes, yes. Thank
you for calling back.
Uh, yeah, I can be there.
Is that your, uh, mystery lead?
[CHUCKLING]
[DOOR OPENING]
Uh, you're sure that's what you heard?
Yes. I'm certain.
Who else have you told about this?
You're the first.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- [RESTAURANT DIN]
[TYPING ON KEYBOARD]
[EMAIL SENT FEEDBACK]
[GASPING]
Rob, what the hell are you doing?
[STAMMERING]: I just wanna talk.
Been avoiding me.
[INCREDULOUS CHUCKLING]
We've talked for
months. You don't listen.
We broke up.
Okay, but what if I didn't want to?
Hey, it's me.
Great work. I just think that maybe
our last chapter needs
a bit more muscle.
I mean, I know you're all about
the subtlety and that's awesome,
but I think that if
we're gonna make waves,
we need to hit it harder.
That's my thought.
Anyway, I'll see you soon.
[PHONE DINGING]
[INTRIGUING MUSIC SWELLING]
Amy? Are you home?
I need to talk to you.
Amy?
- [CRICKETS CHIRPING]
- [SIGHING]
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Amy, I'm on my way
to campus to find you.
- Call me as soon as you
- [LINE DISCONNECTING]
[GROANING]
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
[KEYS JINGLING SOFTLY]
[GASPING]
[STATICKY VOICE OVER PHONE]:
Hello? Campus Services.
What's your emergency? Hello?
[THEME SONG]
Campus Security got a call
from this phone at 11:22,
but there was nobody on the line.
- [POLICE SIRENS CHIMING]
- They sent somebody at 11:30,
thinking it was a prank.
- No such luck.
- Yeah.
Ivy Abbott, 20 years old.
- [SOMBER MUSIC]
- Dean says she's a third-year
Criminology Major.
She's got a 4.0 GPA.
Smart kid.
You talked to the parents yet?
Yeah. They're both academics.
They're in Edinburg for a
year, they're flying back today.
Ivy was their only kid.
So [SIGHING]
what sent Ivy Abbott
to an emergency phone
in the middle of the night?
Well, her cell phone died.
Uh here.
See if it'll charge.
Oh, great. Thanks.
[POLICE SIRENS CHIMING]
I wonder if someone was following her.
Well, these indentations
between her fingers.
Could be she tried to arm herself?
Maybe with her keys for protection.
Okay, so, she runs to the
phone to call for help,
but the killer
stabs her in the neck and then drags her
and flips her over.
Keeps stabbing. [SIGHING]
The wound to her neck
would've been fatal.
The six stabs on her
back, that was anger.
This was personal.
[LOUDLY]: You found a weapon?
Uh, no. Nothing yet.
[INTRIGUING MUSIC]
Anything on her person
that could account for this?
Looks like rope burn.
No, we just found her
wallet, keys, and her phone.
[PHONE BEEPING] Oh, it's charged.
[SIGHING]: Thanks.
Hey.
"What do you mean you're too
scared to stay home. Call me."
[ECHOING GAVEL]
[SHAKILY]: Ivy said she was
coming back to our apartment.
I was studying on campus till midnight.
My phone was on Do Not Disturb.
And when I got Ivy's voicemail
I texted her and she didn't respond.
I ran home, then I found this.
I tried to blow them all
out, but there are so many.
Amy, is there anyone we can call?
- [DOOR OPENS]
- Can I text my mom?
Of course.
[SHAKY BREATHING]
[SNIFFLING]
Amy, has anything like
this happened before?
The first time there were
just a couple of candles.
Then a few more. It's the third time.
[SHAKILY]: I've never been so scared.
Do you have any idea
who might have done this?
Yeah, I figured it was Rob. Ivy's ex.
I-it started a couple months
ago when they broke up.
Did Ivy ever inform the police?
Yeah, she tried. The cop at the station
said that it's not a crime
to leave something
outside of someone's house.
Yeah Sweetheart, I'm
so sorry to hear that.
Do you think this was some grand
gesture to try to get Ivy back?
We tried every other way.
Constant calling,
texting. Guy's unhinged.
What, you think I did something to Ivy?
No, no. I would never hurt her.
Well, what do you know about this, huh?
It's got quite the distinctive scent.
[SNIFFS]
Cedar, cannabis, Canadian wildflowers.
And a hundred of these were left on
- Ivy's patio last night.
- That's crazy.
Where were you last night, Rob?
I was at the Madison.
Got there at, like, 10
PM with a few buddies.
We stayed until, I don't know, 1:30?
Get back here with Kailey.
- She just left.
- Kailey?
I'm trying to see new
people. Get over Ivy.
Best six months of
my life were with her.
So why did you break up?
I don't know, I [INHALING DEEPLY]
She just pulled away.
She broke up with me.
She wouldn't tell me why. She
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- [EXHALING DEEPLY]
She shut down her social
media, started to go to therapy,
which I thought was weird.
I mean, she never wanted to
talk about her feelings before.
Who's her therapist?
Someone on campus.
Sarah something.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Ivy and I met four times
in the last few months.
She was a great student.
Good kid.
Yeah, she needed someone to talk to.
Yes. She was stressed. Anxious.
Did this anxiety have
anything to do with, uh,
unwanted attention?
A lot of female students
seek out guidance
regarding harassment,
Detective, and unfortunately
Ivy was no different.
Look, I I wouldn't
normally do this, but, um.
You can have my notes.
- They might help.
- Thank you.
Ivy was convinced that
someone was following her.
She said that they left things
outside of her apartment,
lurked near her place.
To be honest, I couldn't
tell whether this was real
or whether it was some delusion
brought on by some underlying issue.
It says here, "Possible BPD"
I'm assuming that's Borderline
Personality Disorder?
Disordered sense of
self, intense emotions
Relationship instability. Yes.
All motivated by a fear of abandonment.
But I wasn't sure because
Ivy also exhibited traits
of Paranoid Personality Disorder.
Delusions, distrust.
And you never made
an official diagnosis?
No, no, and
Considering what happened
to her, I suppose I
I got that all wrong.
[SIGHING]
Regardless, it would take me more than
four sessions to be sure. You know,
some folks go after
this stuff with a hammer.
I paint in watercolour.
You know, it takes time.
Patience.
[SIGHING]: I wanted to
help Ivy, I really did,
but I couldn't report
the harassment for her.
Did Ivy ever describe this person?
The only thing that
I remember her saying
is that he wore an army jacket.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
It's so sad, isn't it?
Did you know her?
[EMOTIONALLY]: She was my girlfriend.
Oh, my God
I'm so sorry.
Apparently, she tried to report it,
but the description of the guy was vague
and you know what they
say about stalking.
- Yes, homicide in slow motion.
- [SIGHING]
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
- Finished Ivy Abbott's autopsy.
The killer twisted the
knife inside her neck
almost 180 degrees.
He sliced her carotid and her jugular?
Yeah. She bled out quickly. [SIGHING]
I looked into those
abrasions on her left hand,
there's thin fibres embedded.
I sent them for testing.
Possibly clutching onto
an object as a weapon
- when the keys failed?
- Maybe.
I once tried to fend off a
subway perv using a debit card.
Yeah, I pretended
ChapStick was pepper-spray.
It actually worked.
Her killer wasn't a stranger.
He had a personal connection with her.
Yeah, he either hated
her or desired her.
Maybe he even felt a whole lotta love.
It's the name of the candle.
Forensics just came back,
pinpointed a proprietary blend
of cedar, cannabis, and
Canadian wildflowers.
Created by a Canadian company, Shy Wolf.
I called them and guess
who bought 150 candles
using their credit card online?
- [SOFT MUSIC PLAYING]
- Hope you have a reservation
'cause we're totally booked tonight.
Oh, I'm sure you can squeeze
us in for, I don't know,
five minutes and 33 seconds?
Well, that's just enough
time to do a hearty rendition
of Whole Lotta Love.
Carter Harold, right?
- That's you?
- Yeah.
Well, seems recently you bought
a whole lotta these candles.
[GLASS THUDDING]
It's very expensive
to just leave them all
in Ivy Abbott's backyard.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
[GLASS CLANKING]
[GRUNTING]
Come on, Carter. That's enough.
I didn't kill Ivy, I swear.
You sure?
'Cause you were stalking her.
Okay. I left the candles
on the night she died.
On all those nights.
- But I just wanted
- Wanted what?
Be her own personal boogeyman?
No. I wanted her to know
that I cared about her.
The candles. They were a message.
They were named after
a song we sang together.
You're telling me a 20-year-old
sang Led Zeppelin at karaoke?
Not exactly. Um
I was in a room on my own one night.
But then I heard a voice
in the hall joining in.
I logged out and saw
- her.
- Then you got hooked.
Pulled her address off
her ID, went to her house,
started taking photos, lighting candles.
She needed to know how I felt.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- What about how she felt?
'Cause I'm pretty
sure you terrified her.
Every. Single. Time.
See, I-I'm, uh, pretty
new to this, so forgive me,
but you want us to believe you
trespassed onto her property,
peaked through her windows
and took some pretty
intrusive photos of her,
but then you didn't follow
her to a deserted area,
stab her in the neck and in the back?
Carter, what did Ivy do
when she saw the candles?
Answer the question.
She ran away. Okay?
- She obviously didn't like them.
- Shocker.
So I left and I went to
work a late shift at the bar.
Check the cameras, I was there by 11:15.
We will.
Honestly, I wished I followed her.
I could've helped her.
Well, maybe it's not too late to help.
I mean, you followed her around, right?
Yeah.
What was she up to?
She was spending way too much time
at that Criminology building.
She had classes there.
No, it's not just class. It's
something else.
Every day, she goes to
some weird locked room
that only a few people had a key to.
What's inside?
I don't know, but I
think it's bad for her.
Very bad.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Let me know when you're done.
That looks like a bunch of
true crime nerds made a nest.
Or the Cold Case Club.
They do seminars supervised
by Professor Garrett Poole.
What's the case?
The victim was Kat
Berman, murdered in 2019.
Student at Queens University.
[SIGHING]: She was
stabbed once in the neck.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
And six times in the back.
Exactly like Ivy.
So Ivy Abbott was studying
Kat Berman's murder
and ends up getting killed
in exactly the same way?
Yeah, down to the twist of the knife.
- [OFFICE PHONES RINGING]
- Uh, take a look at Ivy's autopsy
and Kat's autopsy from six years ago.
Their fatal neck wounds were caused
by the exact same maneuver.
Followed by six stabs to the back.
The only difference was
the marks on the hand.
Ivy had them, Kat did not.
- You talk to Kingston PD?
- [DISTANT DOOR BUZZING]
Yeah, they gave us access to Kat's file,
but they haven't had
a new lead in forever.
So, now we have two dead students,
similar ages, same wound.
[SIGHING]: Yeah. We might be
looking at a serial murderer.
Or a copycat who knew
the wound pattern well.
Maybe because they studied
it at Cold Case Club.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Ivy was an excellent student.
I'm sorry for your
loss, Professor Poole.
Uh, profile told us she
was in your Cold Case Club?
Yeah, one of only 10 kids selected.
Yes, it was an invitation only
criminology seminar
for third-year students
and Ivy was, yeah, she
was doing incredibly well.
They all were.
So you thought your best and brightest
could solve Kat Berman's murder?
Uh, stump the Kingston PD?
No, it's more of a teaching exercise.
- Hmm.
- So you take an unsolvable case
- and give it to a bunch of smart kids.
- And see what they do with it.
Each bring their own expertise,
their own point of view.
- It's fascinating.
- Hmm.
And what was, uh, Ivy's angle?
Interpreting witness testimony.
Hmm.
And what if, uh, a student
- discovers a lead?
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
Well, then I would take
it to the cold case unit,
but I've been using this
one for a couple years now
and so far there are no new leads.
Hmm.
But, uh, Ivy wanted to find one. Yeah.
Uh, we heard she spent
quite a lot of time
in the seminar room after hours.
Yes, they all did.
I told them they'd get
top marks if they solved it
and they couldn't take the files home.
Did those files include, uh,
Kat Berman's autopsy?
Yes. Why?
Oh, we were wondering if
any of the students were, uh,
taking the pathology angle?
Cause of death. Injuries.
Yes, Morris Lemay.
He's an aspiring forensic pathologist.
He was trying to recreate
Kat Berman's wounds
using various unique methods.
Many body pathologists
practise replicating knife wounds.
It's not weird.
So, does everyone work on Miss Piggy?
Well, they should. The
consistency of pig flesh
is very close to human.
Well, funny. That's why we're here.
Morris, where were
you the night Ivy died?
I didn't kill Ivy. I
was with my parents. Here.
All night.
You can ask them.
[DISTANT CHILDREN CHATTERING]
What's on your mind?
If only I'd move faster.
[INTRIGUING MUSIC] Done better.
Could've found out who
really did this and
Ivy would still be alive.
Do you think Kat's killer murdered Ivy?
Isn't it obvious?
Ivy probably figured out who did it.
[LOWLY]: You call
yourself a detective
Professor Poole says that
there were no new leads.
Yeah, well, Professor Poole
doesn't know everything.
Ivy finished reviewing witness testimony
and moved on to something that
wasn't even assigned to her.
Something that no one was allowed to do.
Interviewing real witnesses.
How'd you know?
Oh, well, that's exactly
what he would've done.
So, what was Ivy's strategy?
Ivy was really into victimology.
In particular, victim facilitation.
You know, the theory of
what makes someone a target.
But nothing of the witness testimony
made it seem like Kat
was a high-risk victim.
Just went to work and to school.
So Ivy wanted to know how the
killer came into Kat's orbit.
Yeah. Ivy figured the perp was
either an unassuming random,
a stalker
Or someone Kat didn't want
anyone else to know about.
Did Ivy find any new leads?
She went to meet a
witness the day she died.
I saw the address she
wrote down before she left.
[ECHOING GAVEL]
Yes. Ivy Abbott came by here at 6 PM.
We chatted, she left.
I was here till 12.
I didn't even know her.
But Ivy thought that you
might know Kat Berman.
And where was this?
Six years ago, I was living
in Kingston with my aunt and
on the weekend I delivered
pizzas for a place called Max Dough.
And Ivy knew you were
delivering pizzas to Kat?
She saw a photo of our
pizza box in Kat's recycling.
Part of the case files, I guess.
And Ivy wanted to know
if you ever saw anyone
with Kat on the weekends?
Yes. And there was a guy
there with her sometimes.
- Definitely a boyfriend.
- So Damien,
did you ever, uh, see
a face, get a name?
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
- No, but I heard his voice.
He was annoying. Told the
same story over and over.
So our pizza box was red, right?
Every time Kat took it inside,
he would make a comment on how it was
the exact same colour of his
fancy cottage in Newfoundland.
So when I told Ivy about
it, she got really tense.
Said she needed to talk to
her professor right away.
Hmm. Funny.
He didn't tell us that.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER AFAR]
Morris. What are you doing here?
I, uh, came to grab some of my research.
Well, you won't need it.
Out of respect for Ivy,
I'm cancelling this seminar for good.
[SCOFFING]: But what about our grades?
Is that all you can
think about? Your grades?
[CHUCKLING]: What kind
of question is that, man?
What's wrong with you?
Uh
Uh, I'm sorry. You're right.
Hang on, hang on. I'm sorry. It's, um
Marks are gonna be determined
based on the work that's
already been submitted.
You're okay. Don't worry.
So you've never heard of Damien Aku.
No, Ivy never mentioned
meeting anyone named,
Damien Aku and
I would never condone
reaching out to a stranger
- about the cold case.
- Really?
'Cause Damien told us
that Ivy's first priority
was to report back to
you about a new suspect.
Well, she may have sent an email.
Maybe it ended up in my junk box.
I don't know, my inbox is a mess.
I haven't had time to go through
Sorry, this is the
first new clue in years
and you haven't had time?
I'm saying I didn't know
there was a new clue.
Oh, okay. Well, that's all right.
You know what, we can fill you in.
Uh, so Ivy found out that
Kat had a secret boyfriend.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Now, we don't know his name.
Oh, but we do know that he owns some
pretty stunning property.
Yeah, a red cottage in Newfoundland.
Kinda like this one.
- [SIGHING]
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
Were you dating Kat
Berman, Professor Poole?
And what did you do when Ivy found out?
We know he took a sabbatical
from Osler in 2019,
moved to Kingston to write
a book on the penitentiary.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Same year Kat was killed.
Yeah, Kat worked in a library
that housed some of the
penitentiary archives.
They might have met there.
We haven't confirmed it,
but after Kat was killed,
Garrett Poole went back home
and eventually started
the Cold Case Club.
It's possible he was simply
interested in the case.
They lived in the same city.
Maybe he read about
it in the newspaper
Yes, but now we're thinking
that he was sleeping with Kat.
So, he's either obsessed
with the woman he loved
Or he's a, uh, murdering
narcissist who's
spent the last three years
daring his students to catch him.
Who the hell are we dealing with?
We're about to find out.
Yes, I was sleeping
with Kat Berman in 2019.
Our relationship has nothing
to do with her murder.
I didn't kill her. I loved her.
You used her murder as
fodder for a university class.
- I wanna solve the case.
- So did Ivy.
And from the looks of it,
she got dangerously close to the truth.
Uh, we got a warrant to
search your communication
and, oh, you weren't lying
about your inbox being a mess.
But, uh, we found this in your trash.
What is this, uh, Ivy's email?
The one that, uh, you couldn't find.
- Hmm.
- It was sent the night she was killed,
but forgive me, I-I left
my glasses on my desk.
Perhaps you could read it out to us.
[SOFT ELECTRICAL BUZZING]
"I know you were dating Kat."
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
This isn't what this
looks like. Come on.
No? Because you deleted a
very clear message from Ivy
that would give you a very
clear motive for murder.
And let's face it, it might be
easier just to get rid of her
than to, uh, have to
track down and destroy
2,000 copies of a book with
a very damning detail on it.
[CHUCKLING]
I did not kill Ivy out of
some kind of self-preservation
because I did not kill Kat.
Do you understand?
Then why would you lie to us?
Do you have any idea how hard it is
to be a male professor these days?
[CHUCKLING]
I did not want the fact that
I slept with Kat to get out.
Okay? It's not because I killed her,
it's because I would be
ruined. I'd be cancelled.
I would lose everything.
[LOWLY]: Yeah, but Ivy still knew.
- Go after her?
- Yeah, your office is very,
very close to where she was killed.
Yeah, but I wasn't at my office.
Where were you?
I was with a colleague at her office.
- Who?
- Sarah Nielson.
I'm working with her on my new book.
I was with her from 9:30 to midnight.
Sarah Nielson the campus therapist?
Did you know that, um,
Sarah was treating Ivy?
- I mean
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
Yes.
How?
'Cause I introduced them.
[SCOFFING]
Do you hand pick all
your students' therapists?
[CHUCKLING]
Maybe you got your pal to talk to Ivy
for the same reason
you trashed that email.
Because you didn't
want the world to know
that you and Ivy were also
in a sexual relationship.
Yeah, that would make you two for two.
That's two relationships, two students.
Both dead.
Ivy never told me
that she and Garrett Poole
were sleeping together.
I'd have to report that.
Even though you're friends?
I think that outweighs
friendships, Detective.
So do morals.
And the night Ivy was killed?
Well, Garrett was with me in my office
till well after midnight.
We were working on his new book.
Whatever was happening with Ivy,
Garrett's telling the
truth about that night.
That's helpful, Sarah. Thank you.
Did forensics come back on
those fibres in Ivy's hand?
I was just about to call you.
They're from a cord used in
retractable key card fobs.
What, like the one Poole used
to let us into his office?
It looked long enough to
wrap around Ivy's hand,
cause rope burn.
I knew we shouldn't have let him go.
No, the man had an
alibi, it was verified.
But if you find the cord,
I can test it for Ivy's DNA.
Thanks, Lucy. Standby.
Okay, you two. We need
to be very strategic here
because whether or not
there's DNA on that cord
Poole's alibi still stands.
However, in my experience, even the most
bulletproof of alibis will weaken
when faced with a fear
of obstructing justice.
So if we tell ethical, moral Sarah
that we've got some
evidence against Poole,
she might bend.
And if you gild the lily
by showing her a little more
of the horror of the
crime she's covering up
Hmm, she might break.
Can you, uh, put a SPIN team on Poole?
Nothing I'd rather do.
Go break that alibi.
[WHISPERING]: Garrett.
Thank God they released you. You okay?
Yeah, I'm fine. I'm fine.
Thanks for talking to the
cops. You're a lifesaver.
Um
Garrett.
Yeah?
Is there anything
that you wanna tell me?
About what?
About Ivy?
Garrett.
[WHISPERING]: I just lied for you.
Hey.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
You know I didn't hurt her.
Right?
You know that.
[WHISPERING]: Of course you didn't!
- But I
- But nothing.
Why should we give some myopic cop
anyone who have opportunity
to pin this on me?
I left your office, I was
out walking around the campus.
Ju-just processing all these
great ideas that you had
for the last chapter, you know?
You're amazing, you know that, right?
Oh, stop.
God, I'm so lucky to have you.
What do you mean?
[CHUCKLING]: I mean
you're loyal and you're
You're faithful and you're
you're so smart.
It's just pure.
There's no silliness.
There's no messy feelings
getting in the way.
Why are you showing me these?
Because we believe your
friend Garrett Poole
did that to Ivy Abbott.
That's-that's impossible.
I told you that we were together.
It's amazing what people
will do to protect a friend.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- [GLASSES CLICKING]
What do you have in your pocket?
Come on, show me.
[OBJECTS CLINKING SOFTLY]
Okay, so you're by yourself.
It's nighttime.
Someone's following you.
Out of all of this, what do
you use to defend yourself?
So they have a knife.
You have a pen.
I mean, compared to you right now,
Ivy was lucky. She had her keys on her.
Intertwined them between her fingers
in the hope that she could
take a swing and then run.
But she didn't.
'Cause someone stabbed
her in the side of the neck
before she got the chance.
[SHAKILY]: Why would Garrett do this?
Well, Ivy learned that
there was another student
he was involved with
who also wound up dead.
Kat Berman, six years ago.
There were more?
I knew about Ivy.
Wait. You knew that Poole
was sleeping with Ivy?
Why are you wasting our time?
Okay.
Ivy told me.
I was horrified, but I couldn't
always trust what she said.
I told her it wasn't appropriate
and she told me that she was
too scared to break up with him.
Now I could never imagine
Garrett threatening a woman.
Well, this looks more
than a threat, doesn't it?
- Garrett wouldn't
- Hurt anyone?
Come on, Sarah.
Predators don't just
hide in the shadows.
They're in nice offices in nice homes,
in positions of power.
And you are enabling him.
Why?
I didn't want Garrett to be ruined.
What if Garrett was telling the
truth? What if Ivy was lying?
But she wasn't.
So don't lie for him.
[EXHALING DEEPLY]
[INHALING SHARPLY]
Garrett was in my office
with my until 11 PM.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
I'm sorry.
I never thought that he
could do something like this,
so when he asked me to say that
we were together until midnight,
- I said okay.
- [KNOCKING AT DOOR]
Detectives, a word.
[OFFICE PHONES RINGING]
SPIN team just called.
Poole is on the move,
he's got a suitcase with him.
I'll deal with Sarah, you go.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
There he is. We need his key fob.
Doctor Poole.
Garrett Poole. Police. Stop!
[GRUNTING]
What the hell is going on here?
- I didn't do anything.
- [HANDCUFFS CLINKING]
We'll see about that.
Garrett Poole, you're under arrest
for the murder of Ivy Abbott.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]
I was headed to Union Station.
I'm catching a train to go to
Hudson Valley to see a friend.
I'm not guilty of anything.
Well, the jury's out on that,
but we'll have a clearer picture
once forensics comes
back with the key fob.
You see, we believe it
was the last thing that
Ivy Abbott grabbed for before she died.
You knew it was only a matter of time
before Ivy outed you as Kat's killer,
so you got rid of her to save yourself!
- I didn't kill Ivy!
- [KNOCKING AT DOOR]
I didn't kill Kat. I
told you. I love them.
Both of them!
You preyed on two young students
and both have ended up dead.
[DOOR SHUTTING]
Is that the results? The DNA test?
What does it say?
[INSISTENTLY]: What does it say?
[SIGHING]
Negative for Ivy's DNA.
Yeah, I told you!
I told you I didn't kill anyone!
Then why did you ask a colleague
to fabricate an alibi for you?
I didn't ask her to do that.
It was her idea.
So, she just came up with
this whole plan all by herself.
Why?
Sarah is a friend.
Okay? She's a close friend.
She adores me. She'd do anything for me.
So when we found out
that Ivy was killed,
a student we both knew,
Sarah suggested that we
just say we were together.
You know? Just to keep things tidy.
[INHALING SHARPLY]: So one more time.
Where were you?
At 11 o'clock, I went out for a walk.
And Sarah stayed behind
and worked on my edits.
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- Leaving you both alone
and unaccounted for at the
time of Ivy Abbott's murder.
Let's get Sarah's interview up.
Yeah, I'm on it.
[TYPING ON KEYBOARD]
[STATICKY]: What do you
have in your pockets?
Come on, show me.
Hmm, okay, so.
You're alone. It's nighttime.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC CONTINUES]
The white key card.
It's not the official blue
one the rest of the staff have.
- It's temporary.
- And she tried to hide it.
Which mean she got rid
of her official card
and the fob that went with it.
And as Poole said,
"She adores him. She'd
do anything to help him."
Sarah Nielson was inside Ivy's head.
Yeah, she knew she could kill Ivy
and point the finger at any
number of people in Ivy's life.
Even pointed you two toward a stalker.
And all the while, she
was covering for Poole,
which also gave herself an alibi.
That's some fancy footwork.
- Hmm.
- But then for some reason,
she decided to throw
Poole under the bus. Why?
Oh, 'cause we offered him up as a patsy.
And if Sarah's smart, uh, the
only piece of hard evidence
that we hoped to test is long gone.
Finding that fob wouldn't help.
[SIGHING]
I'm Sarah's defence lawyer.
First thing I'd say,
everyone at Osler has that fob.
30,000 people could be your killer.
your client has no alibi.
She was in her office. Working.
The therapists' offices
don't have cameras. I checked.
Thank you, Counselor,
but I have the floor.
- Oh.
- Hmm.
You don't have my client's
prints on the murder weapon
because you don't have a murder weapon.
No sign of her on CCTV.
At least not a recognizable Sarah.
Okay, but what is a recognizable Sarah?
The woman is a cypher.
I-I don't think I've seen
the real Sarah this entire time.
This This could be the real Sarah.
Uh, this is Poole's one big
book, right? Got him tenure,
but it doesn't read
like his earlier papers.
Listen to this language:
- [SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
- "As Anna Freud posited in 1936,
defence mechanisms operate unconsciously
to protect the ego.
Repression, rejection,
sublimation, displacement.
Sigmund Freud swung at these
conditions with a hammer.
But Anna Freud believed in
time, layers, and patience.
She unpacked these emotions with care
and painted them with
a watercolour brush."
That's exactly what Sarah
said to us when we first met.
You think that's her research?
And she gave it all to Poole?
- Romantic isn't it?
- Yeah, certainly is.
And that's how we break her.
Thanks for meeting me here, Sarah.
How you feeling?
I-I'm a little stunned.
I can't believe Garrett
said it was my idea
to lie about his alibi.
[SIGHING]: Yeah, well,
we saw right through that.
Well, I'm just glad that you caught him.
Yeah. [CHUCKLING]
But it's not over yet.
We still have to put
him behind bars and
And there are aspects of
both Ivy and Kat's cases
that we just still don't understand, so
hoping you can help.
Well, I don't know Kat.
Oh, that's okay.
Kat's murder was almost
exactly like Ivy's
and you know Ivy, you know Garrett.
You're the expert here,
not me. [CHUCKLING]
I'm-I'm so curious
about your perspective.
Hmm, I've already told
you everything I know.
Facts, yeah. But I'm
looking for feelings.
And you were practically
inside their heads.
I mean, you were Ivy's
therapist and Garrett's muse.
What do you mean Garrett's muse?
Oh, Sarah. I I read his book.
Those chapters on defence
mechanisms, impulsivity,
- emotional dysregulation.
- [INTRIGUING MUSIC]
That was all you.
No, no, no, no, no. That wasn't all me.
- We worked-we worked together.
- On your ideas?
Well, I wanted to help him.
Yeah, like you helped
him with his alibi?
It's okay. I know it's not your fault.
I think that Garrett was able
to get away with these murders
because he manipulated
his victims. You included.
This guy was very careful.
No, no. There's careful and
then there's controlling.
Oh, what do you mean?
Well, Ivy mentioned that
Garrett asked to track her phone.
- That's why she was so scared.
- Wow.
He liked to lead in relationships.
To have the upper hand.
Well, was he like that with you too?
In your relationship?
Well, Garrett and I
we're just friends.
Really? [CHUCKLING]
Sarah, come on.
I can tell when a woman is in love.
And Garrett knew how you felt
and he took advantage of that?
What are you suggesting?
- That I'm weak?
- [CHUCKLING]: No. God, no.
No, I've, uh
I've been there myself.
Huh.
My rookie year, I fell
absolutely head over heels
with a guy that I worked with.
[EMOTIONALLY]: I became obsessed.
I memorized his schedule,
I followed him around,
I would make excuses to work together
Did he like you back?
He liked my work.
He liked it so much that
sometimes he would claim it.
[SIGHING]: As his own.
Hmm.
Yeah, eventually he did. He
did want more than just my work.
So he did like you back.
[WEAKLY]: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
But, uh, he didn't like
me enough to get serious
'cause, uh, turns out he
was married the entire time.
Oh.
And I wanted a kid.
I wanted a family.
That's terrible.
At least Garrett isn't married.
Well, no.
He is otherwise engaged.
He spends his time on frivolous things,
but gives you just enough to hang on.
Kind words, empty
promises, and all the while,
your time marches on,
your window is closing.
I have always had feelings for Garrett.
Hmm.
But he He said that we
shouldn't cross the line
that we were colleagues.
But he crosses the
line with his students.
But that's none of my business.
And I have-I have accepted
that we're just friends.
No, friends don't steal
their friend's work.
Friends don't use their friends
to try to cover up their
affairs with students.
And friends don't blame their
friends for their crimes.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]
Or maybe they do.
See, I think you might be
doing exactly that to Garrett.
What are you talking about?
Sarah, how would you define projection?
It's when someone attributes
their own undesirable feelings,
thoughts, and behaviours
to somebody else.
Okay, so when you suggested
that Ivy was Borderline
with a touch of Paranoid
Personality Disorder
and intense emotions,
and fear of abandonment,
impulsivity, delusions
I am not delusional, Detective.
And I-I actually I've done
nothing but try to help you.
Yeah. Well, you've been very helpful.
Yeah, when you wanted me
to trust you and like you,
you told me everything I wanted to hear.
But I've read your notes
and I've made some of my own
and I think all those things
you were saying about Ivy
you were really
talking about yourself.
Huh.
Sarah, stop.
No, no, no, no, no, no. I'm done here.
From the moment that I
walked into that office,
you've been trying to manipulate me.
And now you are trying
to turn the tables
with anger and contempt
and it's not gonna work.
Was that your attempt
at empathizing in there?
At relating?
God, you are so out of your depth.
You should be embarrassed.
See, you're projecting again.
You've been carrying a torch
for that man for 10 years.
10 years of him stealing your work,
tossing you scraps while
he screws his students.
And you know it's shameful
and you still can't stop.
I don't need Garrett.
No, you don't, but you want him.
You want him fully and forever
and you know he wants you too.
He just needed a little nudge.
You know that one day he's gonna wake up
and look at you and see what
is right in front of him.
What's been here all along.
You just needed those
girls to get out of the way.
They're baubles.
They're trinkets.
But you You are the real thing.
So you stabbed Kat outside her house,
you tracked Ivy's phone
and you killed her.
No, no. You have no proof.
I know that you threw
away your key card.
And Ivy was smart. She
grabbed it, didn't she?
As she was dying? 'Cause
in her last moments,
she wanted to leave a
trace. Someone, stop her,
please stop this monster
Ivy-Ivy was a child,
okay? An idiotic fool.
And she thought that
Garrett was gonna, what?
Leave his job and marry her?
- I tried to play nice.
- How?
I told her to leave. I said leave town,
but she-she stuck
around. She didn't listen.
- Garrett didn't listen either?
- No! He never does.
I-I-I don't know what I have to do!
And that's why you
threw him under the bus.
To make him listen, to make him yours.
- [DRAMATIC MUSIC]
- Yes!
Yes because then, then it
would finally be me and him
and I would stand by
him and I would visit him
and-and when he got out of
prison he would know who
He would know who really loved him.
[SHAKY BREATHING]
I wonder if he's gonna visit you.
[HANDCUFFS CLINKING]
[SOMBER MUSIC]
You okay?
Yeah.
Think I used more hammer
than I did watercolour.
[CHUCKLING]: Well, whatever the tool,
we still painted our
killer into a corner.
It's never easy to corner another woman.
[SOMBER MUSIC CONTINUES]
[THEME MUSIC]