Criminal Minds s19e02 Episode Script

Cluster

1
Previously on Criminal
Minds: Evolution
Brian Garrity is a tinfoil
hat-wearing truther.
GARRITY: FBI fabricated
a manhunt to cover up
the assassination of Deputy
Director Douglas Bailey.
Do you have any idea
how many rabbit holes
Brian Garrity has been down in his life?
The moon landing, the
Kennedy assassination.
LEWIS: Guards say you're
talking to yourself.
Anything I should know about?
Go ahead. She'll believe you.
Your subconscious is
fighting urges to kill,
which is why I'm distracting you.
You talking to me is how you cope.
The families of some of
your victims have reached out
and they want to meet you.
Most are looking for an accountability
that doesn't always
come with a conviction.
VOIT: You think
if I walk you through everything,
you'll be able to stop someone else?
LEWIS: For the sake of others,
I can't just let you sit in
here and not tell your story.
VOIT: Problem is, while we sit in here
talking about it, someone new
is out there doing it.
You just don't know it yet.
Open up. Police.
- What's his name again?
- Al Smith.
Mr. Smith? Metro PD.
- You're sure he's home?
- Think so.
I saw him three days ago. He's off.
I-I need more than "he's off".
He's not picking up his mail.
He's not answering his phone.
Other day, he couldn't
even unlock his door.
He's off.
(KEYS JINGLE)
Mr. Smith?
- Anybody home?
- (SOFT HISSING)
We're entering to do a wellness check.
Sir? Are you all r (SNIFFS)
Hold up.
Is that a gas leak?
Our ranges are ancient.
- Oh, no, did he suffocate?
- Shh, shh, shh.
(SHARP SCRATCHING IN DISTANCE)
Whoa, whoa, whoa,
whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Hey, stop.
Whoa, stop. Stop.
What the fuck are you doing?
Hey, what the fuck are you doing? Stop.
- You don't need to do this.
- Al,
- no.
- Y-You don't need to do this.
- BILL: Stop.
- KILPATRICK: No!



I'm sorry.
(PHONE VIBRATES)
(PHONE CLICKS)
GARCIA: Harlan Ellison wrote
"I have no mouth,
and I must scream."
(ALARM RINGING)
Fuck!
Fuck!
(GRUNTS)
(RAGGED EXHALE)
Fuck.
Get it together.
(ALARM STOPS)
(ELEVATOR BELL DINGS)
- Where is he?
- He's right there.
All right. Hey.
- Thank you.
- Oh, but of course.
- What happened to your hand?
- It's nothing. I'm okay.
Holy shit!
They will let anybody up
on the sixth floor now, huh?
Well, they let your dumb ass
become a profiler, didn't they?
- How have you been, Tom?
- Good.
- Yeah?
- Good. You?
Well, you know
Uh, listen, I-I, uh, I heard about
- Yeah. Um
- I know, bud.
I'm sorry.
Seriously, what, uh, what
are you doing up here?
Well, I'm here to see you.
And, hopefully, your team.
- Is it bad?
- It's weird.
Come on.
Came to the right place. Let's go.
(CHUCKLES)
- Hey. SSA Prentiss.
- Hi.
- Agent Tyler Green.
- Good to see you again, sir.
Oh, you've worked with
Agent Green before?
Well, I helped Green get through
his Basic Field Training Course.
Well, he didn't help
so much as I survived.
Agent Milliken kicked my ass.
Me and all the new agent trainees.
PRENTISS: Is that how you met Luke?
Oh, no. Alvez and I
are retired army grunts.
We met in the ARC Program.
The Army Recovery Care Program.
- They do great work.
- MILLIKEN: We do.
I'm proud to get to volunteer there.
We help ill and injured service members
reintegrate into civilian life.
Matter of fact, that's why
I'm knocking at your door.
The BAU does equivocal death
investigations, correct?
Helping determine the manner of death,
whether it's suicide, homicide, or
just an accident?
That is correct. Do you
have a case like that?
Well
Luke, could you
This is Captain Al Smith,
another friend of mine from ARC.
He died yesterday morning.
Cause of death?
Gas stove blew up in his face.
All four ranges were
turned all the way up.
Based on the explosion,
they'd been that way
for quite some time.
Had the, uh, matchbook in his hand.
We can take the case.
We'd start with a psychological autopsy,
but I-I just don't
think there's much for us
- to investigate here.
- MILLIKEN: I know. I know.
And I know the numbers.
Hell, I preach 'em.
87% of all vets report exposure
to at least one traumatic event,
and less than half get the
treatment that they need.
But that is not Al, okay?
If you met him through ARC,
what-what was he being treated for?
Anxiety. Depression. Intrusive thoughts.
Which are indicators of PTSD.
His pistol was in his gun safe.
I mean, he didn't blow his
brains out, he blew himself up.
And he took a cop
and a building superintendent with him.
That's odd, even for PTSD.
Did you know him, Luke?
I know the type.
And I know what scares me is
Let's say this is what it looks like.
Sometimes, it happens in clusters.
One of our guys punches his own ticket
and another one says,
"Hey, that's a good idea".
"Maybe I'll go out the same way."
That's why I want to
take it. Find out why.
- Tyler, would you mind?
- Not at all.
Agent Prentiss, thank you.
- Good morning.
- Ugh.
Ah, you got my email.
What the hell is Voit up to?
Tara is with him now, so
is Rebecca to expedite.
All he has to do is pick a family member
and say, "Boo-hoo, I did it".
Just one family member.
And he is down to his final four.
He's treating this like he's
picking out a goddamn ring.
He is trying to find
the victim he killed
with the least amount of violence
because that will be the least upsetting
to whomever he talks to.
Yeah, well, someone should tell him
it's always upsetting.
PRENTISS: Hey. Morning.
- Woof.
- Oh. You too?
How many podcasts do you listen to?
Um, I don't know. It's mostly news. Why?
Well, Henry devours them.
Specifically, the ones on Voit,
and it turns out that there's one
that mentions me, you and the BAU.
It's our case.
- It goes with the territory we'd be mentioned.
- No.
Emily.
This one is made by someone you know.
Personally.
Fu
(ELEVATOR BELL DINGS)
Emily. Bella!
- Come on.
- Oh. Oh, dear. I get it.
I've made your job harder, haven't I?
But, Emily, come on, the
brass ring is right there.
All this time, I've been
barking up the wrong tree.
I thought conspiracies
were where it's at.
Serial killers. Serial killers!
My downloads are through the roof,
and it's not just about the money.
The money is very nice.
It's about the social capital.
Emily, I'm trending.
I've never trended before.
I've never had a hashtag catch on
with more than three people
and now I'm trending.
And yes, of course, I may have taken
one or two little liberties
in the service of a greater story
Are you going to kill me?
No, because that's illegal.
And you have every right
to produce a podcast
that is nothing but lies.
Excuse me, not nothing.
Did or did not Elias Voit call you dad?
Because I paid an orderly
a hefty sum for that intel.
Which, when he said it, was more like,
uh, "Is that you, Dad?"
And less like I had it on the pod,
which was more, um,
"Ooh, spank me, Daddy".
PRENTISS: Even that
is not why you're here.
You're here because you're claiming
Voit is a serial killer
that was trained by the BAU to be
a Manchurian candidate, which is-is
- uh uh
- ROSSI: It's horseshit.
And you're gonna clean
up the mess you've made.
I can do that. I can
do that, no problem.
I-I'm wrapping up season one.
I-I can put a cap on the season finale,
uh, and do a 180-degree pivot.
That's what we do on podcasts.
You start out with one
thesis, and then, eventually,
you pivot to another one, right?
To sell it, though, I just need one
little thing.
What?
What no other Elias Voit podcast has.
I want an on-the-record interview
with the white whale himself.
- You can't possibly
- GARRITY: Oh, come on.
I mean "white whale" metaphorically.
I'm not fat-shaming the guy.
Although, I did hear he's
putting on LBs in prison.
- Confirm? Deny?
- No.
Okay, good for him.
Keeping the weight off.
No to your request.
That's not happening.
Oh That's really a shame.
I feel bad for you guys.
'Cause I guess I'll just
have to keep telling my story
my way.
Get out.
GARRITY: Oh.
Tell Tara I said hi.
(SIGHS)
OFFICER: Transfer van
is here. Please have
all transfer prisoners
to the garage and ready.
I think this one.
Oh, wait, no, sorry.
No
This one. Yeah.
- Deena Ryan.
- VOIT: Mm-hmm.
You're sure?
Yeah.
- Yeah, I'm sure.
- LEWIS: Okay.
Why her?
(SIGHS)
What does it matter?
It matters because it matters.
Before her mom comes in here,
we need to confirm that
you're telling the whole truth
- about her daughter.
- Look, I strangled Deena.
She died. That's the whole truth.
That is not good enough, Elias.
Her mother's gonna want to know why.
Why you took her daughter,
where you took her,
- how you strangled her.
- Wait.
Wait, you both wearing wedding rings.
Oh, my God, you got married.
That-That's amazing. Congrats.
Focus, please.
Yeah, sorry. Um
Look, I-I just hope it works out.
- (SCOFFS)
- VOIT: I mean, not "I hope".
I It's gonna work
out. It's gonna be great.
I just, I-I think, you
know, especially everything
we're going through
right now, getting married
is kind of the ultimate act
- of optimism, so
- Hey. Hey. Hey, hey, hey.
- VOIT: What?
- We know you're getting divorced,
but we've got a job to do.
Right. Uh Sure. All right.
(SIGHS) Tell you what,
I'll coordinate with
the Bureau of Prisons.
We'll get Deena's mom
put on your visitor list.
Great.
And I will review Deena's file.
Just
be honest with the mom, okay?
- (BUZZER SOUNDS)
- (DOOR OPENS)
ROSSI: Nice job.
Dodging that question,
not telling them what you
really did to that girl.
I really don't want
to tell them anything.
Then why are you doing this?
You told me to.
What good is having an angel
on my shoulder if I don't listen to him?
(GASPS) Oh, that's adorable.
What is?
You think I'm the angel.
Do you want me to, uh
Get started without me. I'll catch up.
(DOOR OPENS)
(DOOR CLOSES)
How are you doing?
Tired.
I heard that.
I'm SSA Luke Alvez with the Bureau.
I'm looking into Captain Smith's death.
Oh. Nice to meet you.
If, uh, if you're here,
I guess that means, uh
Yeah.
He didn't have a family.
I've got to get him dressed
and take him up to Arlington.
- Can I have a look?
- Yeah.
Don't take it out of the bag.
Smith was EOD?
Pardon?
Captain Smith was Explosives
Ordinance Disposal.
Um, I guess. Is that important?
It might be.
- Can I ask you something?
- Sure.
The way he died,
is there gonna be enough
for his dress blues?
I don't know.
(SIGHS)
Okay, so cause of death was
trauma from the explosion.
If that didn't do it, the
fourth degree burns would have.
- Was it instantaneous?
- Yeah.
The cop and the super weren't so lucky.
I know it might sound weird,
but was his brain still intact?
You thinking PTSD?
I'm thinking it, yeah.
Well, there's definitely evidence
of a traumatic brain injury
as a result of, you know,
a small rocket exploding
in Captain Smith's face,
but when you're talking PTSD,
the biggest giveaway, post-mortem,
is reduced hippocampal volume,
and his was perfectly-sized.
So his brain was normal?
Mm, I didn't say that.
I saw something weird
on the CT scan at first.
It was so nuts, I
performed an MRI to be sure.
That is highly abnormal.
GREEN: And it's not from the explosion?
Mm-mmm. Too symmetrical.
So, what would cause that?
Not what. Who.
MILLIKEN: I'm sorry, I don't
understand what I'm looking at here.
GREEN: Those gashes between the lobes
are evidence of an ice pick,
shoved up each nostril into his brain.
Captain Smith was lobotomized.
Wait, what?
Why?
We don't know.
He he-he would never
We thought the same thing
until we did some more digging,
and it turns out that
this isn't the first time it's happened.
GREEN: This is Major Howard Newton.
Last week, he disappeared.
When police found him,
he'd also been lobotomized.
You recognize him?
No. Should I?
He was an advocate for
Arlington Army Recovery Care.
Look, Tom,
you thought this was
about more than suicide,
and you were right.
This doesn't make any sense.
All the ARC Program does
is help injured soldiers.
Why would somebody do this to us?
ALVEZ: (SIGHS) Because he's hurt,
and he wants them to feel his pain.
You don't have to do this.
I-I can help you.
I can make you feel better, I swear.
No, no, no, no.
What are you gonna do?
This is better if you don't move.
Just-just give me one more chance.
I promise, it-it'll work this time.
Please.
No.
Y-Your daughter was very, um
I'm sorry. I know that's
That's-that's what I
want to say, is I'm sorry.
A-Are you-are you comfortable?
Do you need anything?
Maybe like water or, I don't
No.
Want to take a swing at me?
I'm not gonna fight back.
You could probably get
a few in before anyone
runs in here and
That's not gonna happen.
I don't want that either.
Okay. W-W-What do you want?
It I'm Sorry. I mean
W-What do you want from me?
I want to tell you what I've learned.
Because when your child dies,
you learn.
Everything.
You seek out every detail
you can find to make it make sense.
So, I've learned how
much pressure it takes
to crush a larynx.
14.3 kilograms. Did you know that?
I did.
Of course you did.
'Cause you learned it, too.
It was part of your training.
- What?
- RYAN: Your training
by this government agency.
The very same agency,
coincidentally, that caught you.
Because you went off the
reservation, didn't you?
LEWIS: Ms. Ryan, that's
completely unfounded.
VOIT: Wait, what is she talking
I'm sor I don't know. What
di Where did you hear that?
- Don't tell me you don't know.
- I
You know. The whole world knows.
- It's in the podcast.
- What podcast?
What podcast?
Look, calm down.
There are a lot of podcasts out there
telling bigger lies about you.
This is how the algorithm works.
I'm sure Brian Garrity's bad,
but he's not even the
worst one out there.
Yeah, but he is the most popular, right?
Given your prior experience with him,
the most believable,
thus the more dangerous.
Dangerous? Jesus, stop already.
Just tell me how I'm wrong.
Look, give a dipshit a megaphone,
he's still too stupid
to use it properly.
Just let the guy have his
15 minutes and he'll go away.
What if my daughters hear it?
LEWIS: Elias, your daughters
already know everything.
A podcast is not gonna
change their minds.
Okay, well, what if it
changes someone else's?
You know, someone could find
this, they could-they could
interpret it wrong,
they might identify with
me, they might idolize me.
You didn't control a network of people
who would do anything
that you told them to do.
No. But we arrested
all of them, remember?
The guy we're talking about is a troll.
What is the first thing that we learned
about the Internet? You
don't feed the trolls.
No, that was the first
lesson of the Internet
before the troglodytes took over.
I want-I want I want
to set the record straight.
- How?
- By going on his podcast.
No.
How am I supposed to give anyone closure
when everyone who comes in here
is believing these lies
that this Garrity clown is telling them?
Look, I'll keep doing this,
but how am I supposed to keep doing this
and subjugating myself to people if
if-if if they don't even
believe what I'm saying?
I want to at least apologize
for what I actually did.
All right. Let's-let's
think this thing through.
You go on the record with
Garrity, what happens?
You get more attention.
You give him more attention.
You're only gonna make
the guy more popular.
Yes, and that is why you are going to
give him a list of conditions.
Of course you have conditions.
So I'm supposed to make a
podcast happen from prison?
It's-it's not a
livestream, it's a pre-tape.
FBI and DOJ have complete
control over the recording.
Anything goes sideways,
we seize the audio.
A-And what are these
conditions Voit's demanding?
A backup recording,
provided by us, nothing high-tech.
It can literally be, like,
a voice memo on your phone.
- Why?
- Insurance.
Voit wants to make sure
Brian doesn't edit him
out of context or misrepresent him.
And if he does, Voit
has the right to release
the unedited audio to a rival podcast.
(LAUGHS) And we're
just fine with all this?
W Am I happy to let
a psychopath match wits
with a deranged narcissist?
No, I'm not, but if
it gets rid of Garrity,
I'm willing to roll the
dice on a psychopath.
Wait, I thought you profiled that Voit
- was no longer a psychopath.
- No, you're right.
He's not. It's (SIGHS)
When Brian Garrity
is in my life, it
Have you ever had heartburn?
Where-where the
acid reflux is so, so hot,
it's like you can taste the hatred?
Okay, the guards are
gonna have to inspect
- all the audio equipment.
- Oh, absolutely.
REBECCA: Okay, and no touching. None.
Of course.
Will Garrity say yes?
He already did.
He had his own counter-conditions.
Ok Okay, now I'm feeling it.
(SIGHS) Come on.
The prescription
antacids are in my office.
Oof.
What do we got?
Two victims. Part of a program
to help veterans recover
physically and mentally.
Unsub's targeting them,
but not killing them.
Well, then what is he
Oh, shit. Lobotomy.
Never mind.
Victimology's connected through
the Army Recovery Care Program.
So, he could have been a part of it
or rejected from it, and
now he's taking revenge.
Uh, lucky for us, the U.S. Army
does keep meticulous records.
(GASPS) Tyler, could you do me a solid?
Vouch for me with Agent Milliken,
'cause then maybe I can
get into ARC's files?
Men in uniform either
throw themselves at me
or throw me out of their office.
- Is everything okay with Luke?
- JJ: Uh
- Yeah, I think-think so. Why?
- GREEN: I don't know.
Maybe it's nothing. He just
seems a bit You know?
See, that is why I always
consult the Oracle of Alvez.
Penelope, is Luke okay?
I don't know.
I don't know. And if
I did know, I wouldn't tell any of you
because I'm not a gossip.
So, let's get back to work. Skedaddle.
DOCTOR: It's not the
outcome any of us wanted, but
the tumor's spread.
There's nothing else we can do.
What are my, uh
What can I do?
Well, we have a choice.
If you want, I can discharge her,
or we can keep her here,
keep her comfortable.
How much time does she have?
Luke, she's in a lot of pain.
GARCIA: Hey.
Hey.
Where's your head?
This case
They're starting to notice.
Okay, uh
I'll get it together.
Oh, and one more thing?
Uh, Howard Newton the
first lobotomy victim
his wife brought him in.
All right.
Are you up for this?
I have to be.
KIM: This was let me think
about nine days ago now.
I can't even make sense of it, really.
He called me to tell me he
was coming home, but then
he never came home.
And when did you call the police?
Midnight, that night.
And when did they find your husband?
They didn't. I did.
When the sun came up
and he was still gone,
I started to just go crazy,
so I got in my car and I drove around.
I found him two blocks from our house.
So whoever did this
knew where you lived.
I suppose.
Or maybe they let Howard
go, and he recognized
- a few streets.
- (GRUNTING, STAMMERING)
- Hey. Hey, hey, hey. Shh.
- K-K-K
- Hey, hey, I'm here. I'm here, honey.
- K
Shh. Hey. Shh.
Shh. Shh. I'm here.
That's all he can say of my first name.
Kimberly.
Uh, Ms. Newton, we're (CLEARS THROAT)
we're trying to make a map
of where this man's
finding his victims and where
he might be leaving them.
Do you think you could help us out?
I can try. I-I don't know how much
I'm gonna be able to give you, though.
Okay, no, we-we appreciate that.
- Uh, Luke, can you
- Yeah. Sure.
I'll keep Major Newton company.
(DOOR OPENS)
- (DOOR CLOSES)
- HOWARD: K
No, y-your wife,
she'll-she'll be right back.
She's just in the other, the other room.
- K
- Do you-you need something?
K
No, no, no, no.
- No. No.
- (CRYING)
Kill me.
No, man. Hey.
- Kill me.
- No, man, just hang on.
- Okay?
- Kill me, kill me.
Just hang on.
It's all right.
GREEN: This victim's name
is Theodore Nguyen.
Lobotomized, catatonic, like the others.
He was found outside his
own office. No cameras.
- Where was this?
- GREEN: Baltimore.
There's no ARC Program in Baltimore.
That would track because Mr. Nguyen
isn't associated with
the military at all.
He's an acupuncturist.
Acupuncturist?
JJ: Yeah. Surprised us, too.
This guy is way outside
of this unsub's victimology.
Is there any overlap
between acupuncture and ARC?
No, none.
We don't offer that as
part of our services.
ALVEZ: Acupuncturists treat pain, right?
What did Nguyen specialize in?
He advertised clinical
therapies for headaches.
What kind of headaches migraines?
Yeah. In fact,
he promoted his unique therapy for it.
If the unsub is suffering from that,
it could be motivating him.
You don't lobotomize
somebody for headaches.
You might if the pain was bad enough.
(TIRES SCREECH)
What are-what are they called
the ones that your friend
- suffered from?
- Cluster headaches.
They're so intense that they can cause
temporary vision changes, auras.
ALVEZ: They can lead to
anxiety and aggression.
The pain is so bad that some patients
call them "suicide headaches".
Let's just say this unsub
suffered an injury in-country,
uh, developed PTSD.
First, he would try
to manage it himself,
- push it down.
- JJ: He'd push himself
to the limit. He's a soldier. A warrior.
Yeah. When that didn't work,
he would self-flagellate.
As in cut himself or whip himself?
No. Tattoos.
This guy has full sleeves, both arms.
Probably his whole body.
They would be a marker
of the pain that he's trying to outrun.
And once he can't take it
anymore, he comes to ARC
for some sort of relief,
he doesn't get it,
so he attacks the other vets
he comes in contact
with for not helping.
Yeah, except Ms. Garcia
and I checked with ARC.
Volunteer activity is
regularly documented.
And there's no overlap
between our two victims and
any one particular patient.
Yeah, but if he wasn't
evaluated correctly,
there would be no record, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah, that's right.
Then we need to talk to
whoever the acupuncturist saw.
He's the outlier in
terms of victimology.
We'll build a suspect list
out of any veterans he treated.
Okay, well, we need to move quick.
It's only a matter of time
before he gets another headache.
Hey, explain something to me.
If they're called "suicide headaches",
why is this soldier
going on the offense?
Because when you're a psychopath,
right before you kill someone,
your brain gets flooded with dopamine.
That would be the only chemical
that would give him some relief.
But he's not killing them.
No, because then their
pain would be over.
He wants them to feel like he does.
Locked in.
GUARD (OVER P.A.): Transport gate open.
GARRITY: Test one,
test one, shibboleth, shibboleth.
Sure you're good with this?
Test two, test two,
red leather, yellow
leather, red leather.
(SIGHS) For the record,
this is a secondary recording
of the Elias Voit and
Brian Garrity interview.
Mr. Garrity, do you
consent to this recording?
I do.
All right. Let's bring him in.
Oh, wait.
Okay. Now I'm ready.
(LAUGHS) I'm gonna make
BetterHelp my bitch after this.
- (BUZZER SOUNDS)
- (DOOR OPENS)
(INDISTINCT CHATTER IN DISTANCE)
(CLEARS THROAT)
(DOOR CLOSES)
(LAUGHS): Wow. I mean
You are so short.
I'm sorry, I-I just mean
I, you know, I was expecting
Save it for the episode.
Okay.
(SIGHS)
Welcome to The Sicarius Files,
colon, Elias Voit, colon,
Man or Mystery.
I am your host, Brian Garrity.
Today's episode, truly amazing.
My guest,
the Sicarius killer himself,
Elias Voit.
Hello.
- (CLEARS THROAT)
- To set the scene
for our listeners, we are currently
No, you can't say where he is.
Sorry. Right. Okay.
We are currently in prison.
So, Elias.
May I call you Elias?
VOIT: What is this?
Hmm? What is this?
Hmm?
- (SHARP RINGING)
- Wh Hey, please don't do that.
It-it-it puts the levels in the red.
Oh, your le Your
levels are in the red?
I'm sorry, you're
spreading lies about me
and you're worried about
your fucking levels?
Whoa!
(GASPS) Oh, whoa.
Ok-Okay, I'm-I'm turning
this off right now.
VOIT: No.
No.
You got yourself into this, little man.
There's no escaping now.
What's Are you gonna
This was the deal.
We didn't approve the sign.
Wh
(CLEARS THROAT)
Look at me, Brian.
Just look at me.
Why are you telling your listeners
that I was trained by the government?
- Uh
- I'll tell you why.
It's because it gives you
an explanation for me.
It makes me seem smaller.
Do I seem small to you right now?
No.
- I'm sorry, what?
- No.
No.
Good. And your podcast
how-how much of it
is actually true?
- None of it.
- None of it?
Good.
Good, very good. Now it's-it's my turn
to explain myself to you.
And you're not-you're not far off.
Takes a little man to
be scared of someone
banging on a table, but it
takes a littler one to resort to it.
There's
nothing romantic about me.
I'm not brilliant, I'm not special.
I'm an antisocial psychopath
who can only get his heart
rate up by killing people.
It's sad how pathetic I am,
but you know who's even more pathetic?
Someone who makes a show about it.
And anyone who listens to it.
Now we're done.
(DOOR OPENS)
(DOOR CLOSES)
(EXHALES)
You knew that was gonna happen.
You knew Voit was gonna do that.
No, we told him no physical contact,
but yeah, I-I had a feeling
he would have something
- up his sleeve.
- Mm-hmm.
- (EXHALES)
- Hey, take it easy.
I have to salvage the
remains of my flaming career.
You betrayed me. I
thought we were friends.
Oh, Brian, there's something
I've been wanting to say
for the better part of six years.
We are not friends.
All you have ever done
is make my life miserable,
so my job is not to
make your job easier.
Well, how dare you?
You are a public servant.
To the public! Not to you, personally.
Oh, you have me siding
with a convicted serial killer over you.
I don't know what I'm gonna do.
When my audience hears this episode,
they're gonna be furious
at Voit's disdain for them.
You don't
have to post it.
I already presold the advertising
to a vegan-only meal
kit delivery service.
And if there's one group
you don't want to cross,
it's Big Vegan.
Okay, so, so,
what if you reframed it?
I mean, maybe this is
actually an opportunity.
- What do you mean?
- The podcast pivot.
A-And didn't Voit just hand you one
on a silver platter?
Yeah. Yeah.
Uh, an episode where
I find out the serial killer
is just a serial killer.
Oh, that's good.
You are brilliant.
(SCOFFS): Okay. Thank you.
I guess.
Hearing that from you
means something.
(KNOCKING)
So What, um,
you decided to kill him after all?
I did not.
But our Elias Voit podcast problem
has come to an end.
(SNORING)
Nobody on Nguyen's patient
list comes close to the profile.
But he did take a lot of
walk-ins who paid with cash
because they didn't have insurance.
That's just like the ARC program, right?
I mean, this unsub is
flying just under the radar
when it comes to victimology.
MILLIKEN: Is there something
about his headaches that we missed?
Some other condition that he might have?
Luke?
Hmm?
You got that "thinking
but not saying it" look.
No. Uh
All right, what about
this? What about
chronic traumatic encephalopathy?
CTE.
Yeah, we are treating
that more and more.
Especially as we
understand what concussions
are doing to the brain.
CTE has been known to lead to violence.
I mean, not always,
- but yeah, sometimes.
- GREEN: And worst of all,
it's like having a
time bomb in your head.
Don't know you have it, you can't even
diagnose it until an autopsy.
Do you think about that a lot?
I mean, when you serve,
you're always thinking about
where the next hit's coming from.
- Yeah.
- Our guy probably thought about it.
And no matter where
he goes, he can't seem
to get anybody to give
him a straight answer
on why he's so angry all the time.
And each time he gets angry,
he loses more and more control.
(VOICE FADING): I mean, take
Nguyen. He shoved the ice pick
so far up into the brain tissue,
it made contact with the tip
of his skull. He's not trying
DOCTOR: I'm sorry, but I need
to know how you want to proceed.
(EXHALES)
Okay
Okay
I need to see her.
Uh, b-before we do anything.
I need to see her. Where Is she
- is she awake?
- She's sleeping.
But I can wake her up for you.
Is this my fault?
- Is what your fault?
- If I would've brought her in
sooner, maybe we'd have
found the tumor earlier.
No.
That's not how this works.
No. No.
That's not how this works.
- What?
- ALVEZ: CTE.
That's not how it works.
It's not how this unsub works.
How do you know that?
The violence associated with CTE,
you know, or cluster
headaches for that matter,
it happens in bursts.
It's disorganized, impulsive.
Yeah, but this unsub
is stalking his victims.
He's kidnapping them.
Right, and then subjecting
them to sadistic torture.
That's highly organized.
So, you're saying that
he's not in pain at all?
No, he is. The
victimology tells us that.
Then what has the same symptoms?
Matches cluster headaches
or CTE but is neither?
A tumor.
Like the Texas tower shooter, um
- Charles Whitman.
- Yes.
He had a tumor pressing
down on his amygdala.
That's right. That's right.
Before he started shooting,
he stabbed his wife and mother to death.
And in his suicide note, he wrote
that he knew there was
something wrong inside his head.
MILLIKEN: So, this soldier came to us
for treatment, thinking
he had a headache, but
But he had something worse.
Much worse.
What the fuck?
Hello, Doc.
Hey. Our unsub is Sergeant David Graham.
Traffic cameras pinged him
along with a passenger we've ID'd
as neurologist Dr. Mark Trank.
All right, we have to assume
that's our next victim.
- Anything else?
- MILLIKEN: Yeah. Graham bounced
from ARC to the VA.
A CAT scan revealed
a glioblastoma cluster
- in his prefrontal cortex.
- Operable?
Yeah, but risky, as in,
"it might get lobotomized" risky.
VA doc that I talked to said that Graham
refused to accept the diagnosis.
- All right. Thanks.
- (ELEVATOR BELL CHIMES)
Alvez.
We've lost too many men already.
Copy?
Copy.
(GRUNTS SOFTLY)
Where the fuck am I?
David.
You remember me.
I didn't think you would.
But I remember you.
You know what I remember?
"I can fix you."
That's what you said.
"I can fix you, David."
But you can't, can you?
I said that I can try to fix you.
No, you said, "I can fix you".
You lied.
David.
Your tumor is located
inside the folds of your brain.
I-I would never lie to you.
Not if I have integrity
as a doctor.
Integrity?
You want to talk about integrity?
Let's go. Breach silently.
Follow our lead once
we're inside. Let's go.
How well do you know your Bible?
- (GRUNTING)
- GRAHAM: Let me tell you
what I've learned about integrity.
(SOFTLY): Go, go, go.
The men who trained me
you know what they drilled into me, huh?
"Sergeant Graham, what is
the NCO Creed, soldier?"
"Sir, to never compromise my integrity
or my moral courage, sir."
"Soldier, what is integrity?"
"Sir, integrity means you
will do and say nothing
that deceives others, sir."
You have no integrity.
"I can fix you." That's
what you fucking said.
Now it's my turn to fix you.
"You need not fear the
terror of the night.
Or the arrow that flies by day.
Though thousands fall about you,
near you it shall not touch."
Know that one, David?
My squads used to pray that
when we'd go out on patrol.
Psalm 91.
That's right.
Soldier's Prayer.
You serve?
Yeah, I did.
And so did my partner here.
You know, I've been
praying Psalm 91 a lot.
Hasn't done much good.
I know.
I know how you feel.
When I got back from my last tour
I was losing my shit all the time.
At one point, I even
had my gun in my mouth.
I know what that metal feels
like against your teeth.
I'm guessing you do, too.
Yeah, I do.
But I realized it wouldn't
make me feel any better.
But this?
- This does.
- I know.
I know.
So how come you're where you are
and I'm where I am?
I went to a ARC.
I asked for help.
I tried that.
I know.
So what makes you so lucky, huh?
What'd they do for you?
They paired me up.
Yeah? With who?
Someone I just lost.
Hey.
Hey.
(WHIMPERS SOFTLY)
Let me ask you something.
Does that even make a difference?
You having a buddy?
Yeah.
Yeah, she made a
difference. She made a
made a big difference.
What the fuck now, huh?
You gonna be my buddy?
You gonna come visit me
in prison after all this?
After all this?
What are we gonna do, buddy?
Trade war stories in the yard?
Hey, if that's what you want, I will.
- (WHIMPERS)
- I will.
I just don't want to hurt anymore.
I know.
But I can't let you hurt
anyone else, either, okay?
Okay
Just put down the ice pick.
I don't want to see
anyone else die this week.
Okay?
Please.
Put it down.
Okay?
(ICE PICK CLATTERS)
Hey. It's clear.
Hey.
I'm not bullshitting you.
You want to talk to another
soldier, I'll be there for you.
I mean that.
What was her name?
The one they paired you up with.
Roxy.
Her name was Roxy.
Just hang on, all right?
- Let me get you out right now.
- TRANK: Okay.
- (WHINES)
There's my girl.
You remember the first day we met?
Hmm?
They told me, they said
they said, "Be careful,
She's a handful."
And I said, "Good.
'Cause I am, too."
(WHIMPERS SOFTLY)
You saved my life.
(CRYING SOFTLY)
(DOOR OPENS)
(ROXY WHIMPERING SOFTLY)

GARCIA: "Because he
holds fast to me in love,
I will deliver him.
I will protect him
because he knows my name."
Psalm 91.
ROSSI: I liked your little show.
For the podcast.
Performative violence. Nice touch.
Yeah, sometimes you got to
give the people what they want.
Scare 'em and just pull the
carpet out from under them.
Sure. You're not a monster.
You're pathetic.
Which means you don't
have to tell anyone
what you really did to Deena Ryan.
(CHOKING)
VOIT: Stop.
Oh, look at that.
You can shut me up.
Maybe you're not as
pathetic as you let on.
- Yeah, maybe.
- Maybe.
But then, what was the
point of defanging yourself?
Was that for the, um, listening audience
or the BAU?
(CLANGING IN DISTANCE)
Wait a minute.
Wait a minute.
Is that what this is all about?
I don't know what you're talking about.
You're analyzing this cell.
Every guard, every door,
every vulnerability.
That's not true.
I pled guilty. I'm
gonna pay for what I did.
Hey.
You can lie to your conscious self,
but you can't lie to me.
You're planning on your chance
to escape.
GARRITY: So, we give Elias Voit
the last word.
He wanted us to know how he feels.
We owe him our attention,
if not our approval.
For the last time,
this is Brian Garrity.
Thank you for listening
to The Sicarius Files.
VOIT: There's
nothing romantic about me.
I'm not brilliant, I'm not special.
I'm an antisocial psychopath
who can only get his heart
rate up by killing people.
It's sad how pathetic I am,
but you know who's even more pathetic?
Someone who makes a show about it.
And anyone who listens to it.
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