Castle s06e07 Episode Script

Like Father, Like Daughter

On the ground! Now! Frank? Frank? Take a seat, son.
Please rise.
Frank Henson, 15 years ago, you were convicted.
By the commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
For the 1998 murder of Kimberly Tolbert.
You were sentenced to death.
This court has found insufficient evidence.
To grant an emergency stay.
Thus, your execution will proceed as scheduled.
At midnight three days from today.
Court is adjourned.
John I am so sorry.
Thank you, Professor.
You folks did everything you could.
I know my brother appreciates it.
Frank This can't be it.
There's got to be something more.
We can do.
What about the lab work.
We were gonna test again, or what about Alexis, we've played every card.
Sometimes the good guys don't win.
I am not giving up.
And you know why? Because it's the best idea ever.
Castle, I am not getting married in space.
Why not? We could be the first.
Commercial space flight is only a couple years away, and you said you wanted it to be special.
Yes, because when I was a little girl, imagining my wedding day being stuck in a small tin can.
With a thousand tons of rocket fuel.
Strapped to my ass was exactly what I had in mind.
Then we agree.
If you don't wanna go and look at wedding venues this weekend, then just say so.
I don't wanna go look at wedding venues this weekend.
Too bad.
- What? - Nothing.
It's, um, text alert on the project Alexis has been working on.
- I thought you guys weren't talking.
- We're not.
Rather she isn't.
So I insulted her boyfriend.
What's the prison sentence on that? Castle, just give her some time.
She'll get over it.
That's what you think.
Once when she was 3, I refused to buy her a candy bar.
She held her breath until she passed out.
You have no idea how determined she can be.
Alexis, we went through the case files like you asked.
I gotta say, there's nothing in there that says.
This guy's innocent.
What about the swabs from Kim Tolbert's body.
That we submitted to the New York trace lab.
For re-testing? I mean, they've had them for weeks.
Well, we've been calling every day to move things along, but it's not in our jurisdiction.
You don't understand.
A man's going to die in three days.
Unless we do something.
We do understand.
There's just not much that we can do.
What about your dad? Have you talked to him about this case? Yeah, maybe he'll spot something that no one else did.
Hey.
Hey.
So You're here.
I need your help.
But just because I'm asking.
Doesn't mean things are okay between us.
I'm still mad at you, okay? Okay.
What's up? I've been working on this innocence review case.
With my criminal law Professor.
This guy is on death row for killing his neighbor A high school girl But he didn't do it, and they're about to execute him for it.
How do you know he didn't do it? Well, for one thing, he had rotator cuff surgery four months before.
He couldn't have swung the fireplace poker.
Used to kill the victim.
Well, under the rush of adrenaline, you'd be surprised what people are capable of.
You sound just like the prosecutor.
But there's more.
They found fresh tire tracks in the dirt.
Outside the victim's back door Bicycle treads.
And Frank didn't own a bike.
No, he was 24 then.
He worked on cars.
Wait.
How do you know his name? You just said it.
No.
I didn't.
You know about the case.
How? Yeah how? I must have seen the file on esposito's desk.
You've been checking up on me.
No! No.
Well, a little, yes.
- You're unbelievable.
- Couldn't help it.
You're my daughter.
I'm interested in your life, but you won't return my calls.
Okay, so did you find anything in the file? Anything that can help? Alexis, he did have priors.
What makes you think he's innocent? Because I know him, dad.
I've spent time with him.
He's not a killer.
I know what the evidence says, but he didn't do this.
I need you to come to Pennsylvania with me.
I need you to help me prove it.
No, come on.
I get it.
It would only be for a couple of days, 'cause that's pretty much all the time there is left, and it's a chance for Alexis and me to reconnect.
Castle, you don't have to explain.
We can look at venues another day.
- You sure you're all right with this? - Yes.
I mean, she's practically family.
I care about her, too.
You're pretty great, you know that? Yeah.
Now go spend some time with your daughter.
- Thanks.
- Good luck.
It has been a long time since we have taken a road trip together.
Remember the time we went to amish country? Ended up getting chased by that cow? Dad, this isn't a road trip, and this isn't about fun.
This is about having less than 70 hours.
To save a man from execution.
Let's go.
Right.
Fasten your seatbelt.
Gonna be a bumpy ride.
So How is How is Pi? Everything still good? Why are you asking about Pi? I just thought.
- We should chat about - Dad, I know what you're doing.
What am I doing? You're trying to bond.
No, I'm not.
Yes, you are.
We haven't talked in weeks, so now you're trying to make this about us.
No, I wasn't.
I wasn't, so And what if I was? Would that be so bad? I just thought you were here for the case.
I am.
Then how come you haven't asked a single question about it.
Since we left? Okay.
Um so what do I need to know? Frank Henson the accused.
We're meeting him at the prison.
He's Pennsylvania blue collar, struggled through high school, but he's smart.
He earned his Automotive Mechanic degree in '95.
He's a little rough around the edges, but he's got a good heart.
- Okay.
- And And there's Maggie.
Who's Maggie? Maggie ingram, the love of his life.
She'll be at the prison, too.
Love of his life? Is it one of those prison pen pal romance things? Dad, no.
She's his high school sweetheart.
He proposed to her two weeks before his arrest.
And she stayed with him? She's been by his side the whole time.
Every hearing, every appeal.
She's the one who wrote to the innocence review.
Every week for three years to get us involved.
You know, Alexis, um Th-this is a long shot.
You know that, right? I mean, it may not work out the way you hope.
I-I just don't wanna Just don't wanna see you hurt.
Dad, I know these people.
I care about them.
It already hurts.
You're good.
Alexis.
Thank God.
Maggie, this is my dad.
Hi.
Mr.
Castle, thanks for coming.
I'd almost given up till Alexis called.
Hey, baby.
Hey, sunshine.
So what is this, a going away party? - No.
They came back to help.
- Help out? Lost the appeal.
It's over, isn't it? No.
It's not over.
Not yet.
This is Mr.
Castle, Alexis' father.
Hi.
Nice to meet you, Mr.
Castle.
Your girl's one in a million.
- You should be proud.
- I am.
So are you some kind of lawyer? No.
- You a cop? - No.
I'm a mystery writer.
He's more than that.
He's helped the NYPD crack their biggest cases.
Well, I don't I don't wanna oversell it.
You ever save a guy on death row? No.
But my dad's a genius at uncovering the real story.
Frank, I know you've been through this.
More times than you can stomach, but if you can Tell him what happened that night.
Frank.
I was working on my Camaro.
I spent every waking hour with it back then.
My house alarm went off.
I was doing some welding, and the smoke set off the garage alarm.
The code is Stingray 7.
It's off now.
Thank you.
That's when I heard the screams across the street.
I ran over to see what happened.
Hello? Is everyone all right? Back door was open, so I went inside.
She was lying there.
The blood was Whatever happened, i was too late.
I heard the sirens, and I panicked.
I mean, I knew how it would look, so I took a rag.
And tried to wipe down all my prints, but I ran out of time.
I had her blood on me, a police record.
It went the way you'd expect.
And what about your home security company? Did they have a record of your call? Yes.
But the prosecution argued it still left plenty of time.
How well did you know Kim Tolbert? Not that well.
I mean, her mom and her lived there a few years, and Kim'd flirt with me a little bit.
I was friendly, but that was it.
They entered her diary into record.
She wrote that she had a crush on Frank, so the prosecutor made Frank out to be some kind of predator.
And you didn't see anyone as you ran into the house? No.
They must have bolted out the back before I got there.
Well, what about back then? Anybody she was having a problem with? Lyle Gomez, Kim's high school ex-boyfriend.
They had a very stormy relationship.
Plus she dumped him a week before she was killed.
Police talk to him? Well, they didn't have to.
They had me.
Mr.
Castle, I've got three days left on God's earth.
I don't need you to find the real killer.
I just need somebody to prove it wasn't me.
Castle, take it easy.
Calm down.
Calm down? You should have seen the way these people looked at me.
Like I'm some kind of savior.
I-I don't even know if he's innocent.
Okay, how can I help? I don't even know if i can help.
I mean what if I can't? Alexis would never forgive me.
Just do your best, Castle.
I mean, she loves you.
And I'm here For both of you.
She's coming.
I gotta go.
Hey.
Ready to get started? Let's go.
This is everything spanning the life of the case.
Well, the least your Professor could've done.
Is throw in some cliffsnotes.
So what do we know about this ex-boyfriend of Kim's? Lyle Gomez.
Was a varsity football player.
Hot and cold relationship with Kim.
Everyone that knew him said he had a temper.
Do you guys talk to him? Professor McDonald and the defense lawyer tried, but Lyle told them he didn't want to relive it.
Said it was too painful.
And there's no evidence that indicates.
- He might have done it? Nothing at all? - Mnh-mnh.
What are all these little things on the floor around the body? Charms.
They broke off her bracelet during the struggle.
So before the attack, there might have been some pushing and shoving.
Lovers' quarrels can start like that.
Before they turn to something else.
But aside from Maggie's theory, there's nothing tying Lyle to any of this.
But maybe you'll see something we missed.
Hey, so that evidence the innocence review.
Submitted to the trace lab How close are they.
To looking at it? Well, from what we heard, it's gonna take weeks, which means they'll never get to it in time.
- What? - Well, by all accounts, Kim was a bright and beautiful girl.
Who everyone loved.
She had no enemies to speak of, and nothing points to anyone other than Frank.
Because they didn't look at anyone other than Frank.
Or maybe because It was Frank.
Look, I'm sorry, Alexis.
It's just sometimes Okay, fine.
But if it was Frank, what was his motive? Right.
Wow.
You innocence review folks just won't give up, will you? Can I help you, officer "Lane"? Kim's murder tore this town apart.
I guess, we're just wondering what you all are fighting for.
- Justice.
- Justice? He had her blood on his hands when they caught him.
He was holding the shop rag.
That he used to wipe down the crime scene.
You want justice? Let him meet his maker.
Has it been like that the whole time? Pretty much.
Okay, let's go over this again.
Frank hears a scream.
He runs across the way.
He bangs on the door.
It's locked.
- He runs around the back.
- He finds the back door open and goes inside.
Back door was open.
Wait.
What time of year was the murder November? Yeah, the 13th.
Why? So? So that's far too cold for Kim to have left the door open.
Yet according to Frank, it was open, presumably because someone else committed the crime.
Yeah, but everyone thinks he's lying.
Yes, but what they don't see, what no one sees.
Is that we can prove whether or not he was lying.
Come on.
I'll get the car.
You pay the check.
Wait.
Dad? Come on, dad.
Will you please tell me what you're doing? If Frank is guilty, then he would have opened the back door, which means He would have wiped down the doorknob.
To get rid of his fingerprints.
But if he's telling the truth and the back door.
Was already open, he wouldn't have needed to wipe it.
Because he never touched it.
And that would mean someone else was there that night.
Question is, did CSU dust that doorknob for fingerprints? Here it is.
- They did.
- And? And it was wiped clean.
Sorry, sweetie.
He lied.
- But it doesn't make any sense.
- I know.
I wanted to believe it as much as you.
No, I mean this report.
It says the back doorknob was totally clean No prints, no nothing.
So Frank couldn't have wiped it down.
The shop rag Frank used was covered in grease.
From working on his car.
They found traces of grease.
In other places where he wiped down his prints, but there's no mention of it on the doorknob.
It isn't in the report.
Dad, if there wasn't any grease Then someone else was there, wiped down the doorknob before Frank got there, getting rid of their own prints.
Someone else was there that night.
Sweetie, you were right.
Someone else killed Kim Tolbert.
Yes, Professor, I understand.
Okay.
Bye.
- What'd he say? - It's not enough.
But we know someone else wiped down the doorknob.
Yeah.
But he says you can't build a case.
Based on evidence that isn't there.
It's Beckett.
Hey.
Hey, how's it going? I Not not so good.
We'd be grasping at straws if we had any.
Well, I might have one for you.
I went to the trace lab last night.
Their people wouldn't run your case evidence, but I found someone else that would.
Who? It's Lanie.
Put me on speaker.
Yeah.
Um you're on.
Alexis, why on earth.
Wouldn't you come to me directly? - Lanie, I didn't know you could do - She convinced a contact at the lab to run evidence after hours.
Now we re-tested every swab taken.
From Kim's body 15 years ago.
Everything listed in Pennsylvania's report.
Came out in our report, with the exception of one thing.
We found trace amounts of ammonium nitrate.
That their lab never picked up.
Ammonium nitrate? It's an oxidizing agent, commonly found.
In cold packs, explosives, - fertilizer.
- Fertilizer.
Wait.
Lyle Gomez.
Kim's ex-boyfriend.
He used to work at a gardening store.
Dad, it's him.
That's why he wouldn't speak with us.
- We have to go talk to him.
- Wait a minute.
If you guys think someone out there is involved, then you need to get ahold of the police.
Yeah, I don't think the police are gonna be of much help around here.
Castle, if he's your killer, he's dangerous.
I can't help you if something happens.
Look, Beckett, Frank Henson has two days to live.
This is our only lead.
What else are we supposed to do? Okay.
Now odds are, Lyle Gomez will not.
Want to speak with us, but I've got experience with guys like this, so you just leave it to me.
There he is.
All right, that does not bode well.
Where you think you're going? - To talk to him.
- Alexis, no.
Absolutely not.
He just gave us a none-too-subtle hint.
He was looking at you, dad.
He won't talk to you, but I can reach him.
The man is a possible murder suspect.
He won't do anything with you here.
But what makes you even think.
He's gonna open the door to you? I'm a teenage girl.
I'll remind him of Kim.
- No, I'm not - I'm not asking for permission.
I'll be watching you like a hawk.
You people need to stay off my property.
I guess Kim was wrong about you.
What do you mean? I read her diary.
She said you were kind, caring, made her feel safe.
What else did she say? How about you let me in? Not a day goes by I don't think about her.
You ever been in love so bad, it hurt? Is that why you don't talk about it? Where were you when it happened? Kim called me that night.
She wanted me to pick her up from Jasper Grove.
Jasper Grove? What's that? Farmland and woods, east of town.
Kids party there.
She must have gone to one, which surprised me.
Because she barely ever drank.
But Kim broke up with you, right? So why'd she call you? She said I was the only one that she could trust.
She was upset.
About what? She didn't say.
I figured somebody hit on her.
Anyway, she asked me to drive her home, so I did.
What happened then? I was hoping that her calling meant.
That she'd give me another chance.
So I asked.
- If I could come in.
- And did you? She wanted to be alone.
She said she had some decisions she needed to make.
So I decided I needed to get drunk.
So I went and I shoplifted a pint of Jack, but the shop owner caught me.
He made me pick up every single piece of litter.
In his parking lot as punishment.
When I heard the sirens, I thought he was arresting me, too.
Those sirens were for Kim.
When I got to her house, I saw Frank.
I saw her body on the stretcher.
If I had just found a way to stay there, she'd be alive.
Did you tell this to the police? They didn't ask.
Why would they? They had the guy.
Why do you think Frank killed her? Maybe he got jealous.
He didn't like seeing her with other guys.
What other guys? I didn't ask.
But I know they dropped by her house.
Other boys.
Thanks.
Dad, what are you doing?! I was overreacting, maybe.
You were in there a long time.
And I came away with some leads.
Turns out Kim was seeing other boys.
What other boys? We were hoping you could tell us.
You lived across the street from her.
Do you remember seeing any other guys.
Go to Kim's house? That was 15 years ago.
This is important, Frank.
One of them may be involved in her death.
That's the only lead you have? We're also looking.
Into the party Kim went to that night.
We have NYPD checking, seeing if.
Anything was reported in Jasper Grove.
That could connect to her murder.
Try to focus on kids you saw at Kim's house.
Anything you can remember Hair color, cars they drove, bikes they rode.
Not just that day.
Any day.
Try to think.
I'm tired of thinking.
I'm tired all around, to tell you the truth.
Frank.
It's over, Alexis.
Don't say that.
All these years Maggie has been leading this charge.
She's been my rock, and now I've gotta be hers.
I've got less than two days.
To help her make peace with what's about to come.
The last thing that she needs is more false hope.
- This isn't false hope.
- It is false hope.
- It's done.
- This could be what turns everything around! It's done.
Alexis Guard.
Listen, I appreciate everything you've done, everything you've tried to do.
But it's time to let it go.
Dad, we might be on to something.
How can Frank just give up? After what he's been through, I can't blame him.
So you're giving up, too.
Hey, we are gonna follow every possible lead, but We can't go back to Frank, not until we have solid evidence that he's innocent.
Hey, Castle.
Hey, Ryan, did you come up with anything on Jasper Grove? No police or incident reports.
From the night that Kim Tolbert died.
However, I did find definite signs.
Of trouble in Jasper Grove.
What kind of trouble? A farmhouse there was foreclosed on.
In '97, stood empty till '99.
That's when a young family bought it, but as soon as they moved in, they all got sick.
Turns out the place was contaminated.
With toxic chemicals.
From what? High levels of residue.
From methamphetamine production, which might explain.
Your ammonium nitrate.
Someone was using the farmhouse to cook meth? Yeah, and it looks like.
It might have been kids.
What makes you say that? Photos from the county assessor's office.
Show bicycle tracks in the dirt all over the property.
Thank you very much, Ryan.
Bike tracks.
There were bike tracks outside Kim's house.
Dad, do you realize what this means? That maybe the party Kim went to was at that farmhouse.
And she saw kids doing meth.
- Well, not just doing meth.
Cooking meth.
- That's why she had to get out of there.
- That's why she told Lyle she had some decisions to make.
- She was thinking about turning them in.
So maybe when she left the party One of our teenage meth cookers.
Got worried she'd go to the cops.
- So he went after her.
- On his bike.
The tire tracks at her house He knew where she lived because he'd been there before.
He was one of the other guys Kim was seeing.
We need to talk to Kim's mother.
Now that was weird.
Usually I do that with Beckett.
Ew.
Hey, what are you doing here? Hey.
I, um Just wanted to thank you for all of your help.
With Castle and Alexis.
Seemed like you could have done that over the phone.
All right.
Talk to me, girlfriend.
Tell me what's on your mind.
Do you find it odd that Alexis has gone.
To everyone but me on this case? She hasn't gone to perlmutter yet.
Yeah, well, no one does if they can help it.
Well, you can't take it personally.
No, I know.
It's just Castle and I are about to become a family, which is weird enough as it is, and He and Alexis have this whole history.
That has nothing to do with me, and it kind of feels like when it comes to the two of them, I'm always gonna be on the outside.
Perfect families don't exist.
It's gonna be up to you.
To find a way to make your baggage.
Match their baggage.
It's up to you to make your own history.
Mrs.
Tolbert, we're very sorry to intrude.
You have some nerve.
I know who you are, what you're trying to do.
Look, whatever you may have heard about us, we are not here to tell you that Frank Henson is innocent.
We'd just like to ask you some questions.
Questions no one else can answer.
Otherwise, we would not bother you.
What questions? Did Kim have problems with any of the other guys she was seeing? There was no one else.
Just Lyle.
And she'd just broken off with him.
Well, it's just that.
We had heard that some other boys had stopped by the house.
Some boys? Yeah, she was a tutor.
Some of her students were embarrassed.
That they needed help, so she kept things quiet.
That's who she was.
Do you remember these students' names? I'm not about to let you hang this on one of them.
- Now you need to leave.
- Thank you for your time.
Ma'am, just one more question.
What subject did Kim tutor? Chemistry.
- Dad - I know.
Kim tutored chemistry.
So what if one of her students tricked her.
Into helping him learn how to cook meth? And when she figured out what he was doing, he killed her.
No, there's something else.
As soon as Mrs.
Tolbert said "Chemistry," I remembered.
Look at this.
Two identical chemistry books.
Were found at the scene of the crime.
So maybe the other one belonged to one of her students.
Right, but a textbook like this is expensive.
If you lost one, you'd have to pay a fine.
You'd want it back.
Unless it would implicate you in a murder.
Dad, if we figure out whose book this is, we might find our killer.
I don't know if that's possible.
I mean, these books are over 15 years old.
It's worth a shot.
Actually, some of them are over 20 years old.
But because of budget cuts, we still use them.
Can you pull up records all the way back to 1998? Well, even if I can, I probably shouldn't.
Perhaps.
A generous donation for new textbooks is in order.
I suppose I could bend the rules.
These are the barcodes from each book.
Make it out to "Cash.
" Where are ya? Let's see Both of them are actually still in our system.
Loaned out September 8th, 1998.
- Neither was ever returned.
- Any way you can figure out who they belonged to? One was Kim Tolbert's The poor girl who died.
And the other one? Looks like it belonged to one John Henson.
My God.
That's Frank's younger brother.
The chemistry book puts John in Kim's house, but we're gonna need a lot more than that.
To prove he's our killer.
These files are all on Frank.
There's not a lot here on John.
How long until Ryan finishes his background check? He should be calling any minute.
Have you managed to find anything.
That might link John to the murder.
No, but I did find something that links John to Kim.
According to this accident report, Frank was speeding and got in a car crash in '97.
John was with him.
He was hurt pretty badly.
He had to miss a lot of school.
He was taking chemistry that semester, which is probably why he needed tutoring from Kim.
That'll be Ryan.
"John Henson.
Clean record.
No convictions, no arrests.
" Wait.
One arrest in '98, 3 months before Kim was killed, for possession of a controlled substance.
Meth? Doesn't say, and the charges were dropped, but this establishes John was involved in drugs.
And if Kim had gone to the police.
Saying he was a meth cooker, he wouldn't have gotten off with a slap on the wrist.
That's motive for murder.
We need to talk to John.
According to this, he lives in Manhattan.
Thank you for coming in, Mr.
Henson.
Anything for Frank.
Of course, at this point, he needs a miracle.
I've always supported my brother.
I never wanted to think he could have hurt Kim, but if someone else did this, why haven't they been found by now? Well, maybe no one was looking in the right place.
Now how well did you know Kim? Well, I saw her every day at school.
Anywhere else? Outside of class? Her house, sometimes.
She tutored me.
And were you at her house the day that she died? No.
Why? We were just wondering what your chemistry book.
Was doing at her house.
Well, I must have left it there or forgot it.
And you never asked for it back? I mean, Kim was killed.
Somewhere in the middle of your school term.
Wouldn't you have needed it? Well, I might have bought a new one.
It was a long time ago.
I don't really remember.
Why does that matter? You know, it probably doesn't.
Um Now in your statement, you said you were in your room at the time of Kim's murder, but you didn't hear her scream.
That's right.
Did you hear any other unusual sounds that night? Not that I can think of.
What about the smoke alarm? Yeah, no, I did hear that.
In Frank's trial testimony, he never mentioned you coming down to the garage, so you were in your room the whole time.
- The alarm was going off? - Yes, I was.
Now I find that odd, Mr.
Henson, because the security company logs show the alarm sounded.
For a full two minutes.
And 47 seconds, but you stayed in your room that whole time.
Never got up to check and make sure.
That the house wasn't burning down? You never heard the alarm going off, did you? Because you weren't in your house.
What are you saying? That I killed Kim, that I did it? Where were you that night? I'm not answering any more of your questions.
What is this, guys? I thought we were done.
Mr.
Henson, we've, uncovered some new evidence Evidence that suggests someone else killed Kim Tolbert.
Who? Frank, I know this is going to be hard to hear, but we think it could be John.
No.
John? Based on what? His chemistry book was found at the crime scene.
His alibi for where he was when Kim died is falling apart.
What the hell is wrong with you? I told you to drop it.
What do you mean? Frank, we're really on to something.
And I'm saying get off it.
You leave John out of this.
Honey, what's wrong with you? If John did this He knows.
He knows it was John.
Frank? Is this true? I You knew this whole time? Why would you do this? Why would you throw your life away? Because I threw his away.
Okay? I'm the reason why he killed her.
No.
Frank, whatever John did, it can't be your fault.
You remember that Camaro I was telling you about? I rolled that car With Johnny in it.
I walked away But he didn't.
After the head injury, he wasn't right for a while.
He started taking drugs.
He got violent.
He'd have these memory lapses.
He wouldn't remember what he did.
Frank.
What really happened that night? My worst nightmare came true.
It's off now.
Thank you.
My God.
What'd you do, John? What'd you do?! You gotta get out of here.
You hear me? Go back to the house.
Get cleaned up.
Go! Now! The next thing I knew, the cops were there.
I mean what was I supposed to do? - People need to know, Frank.
- No, they don't.
And if they ask me, I'm gonna deny it.
- They're about to kill you.
- I know.
And you're gonna let them, when it was John who did this.
Maggie, he doesn't remember.
I-it took three, four times of him coming here.
For me to realize that he he doesn't remember anything from that night.
Look, I always hoped I'd get off.
On some kind of technicality, you know? Not this.
Never this.
He's built a life.
He's got a wife.
He's got two kids, and I-I'm not gonna take that away from him.
Frank, please I'm sorry.
This is the way it's gotta be.
There must be something we can do.
It's not what Frank wants.
But he's innocent, dad, and he's going to die.
Tomorrow.
I know.
I actually started believing we could save the guy.
And we almost did.
I know how much he loves Maggie.
If he just had more time to think about this, maybe he'd change his mind.
But the clock just ran out.
The clock.
What time was that 911 call again? Neighbor reported hearing the scream at 8:04 P.
M.
Why? We missed something.
Come take a look at this photo.
This wall decoration could have fallen down during the struggle.
You mean the solar system thingy? Not just a solar system thingy.
Our orbiting planets don't line up like that.
This is a binary clock.
- That's a clock? - Yeah.
For science geeks like Kim.
You count the amount of planets in each quadrant, it tells you the time.
In this case, 7:32.
half-hour before our 911 call.
That's because the scream that Frank heard.
Came from John we he discovered Kim's body at 8:04.
She'd already been dead for 30 minutes.
Both brothers are innocent.
Hey.
I just got off the phone with Kim's mom.
You called Kim's mom? Desperate times.
- And she didn't hang up on you? - No.
She mostly yelled.
She wouldn't tell me who Kim tutored, but she did say that all the checks Kim got from tutoring went into her college fund.
So she was paid by check.
That means somewhere there's a record of who paid her.
Ryan and esposito are checking banks now.
This is it, dad.
Jasper Grove, meth, the bike tracks If it wasn't Frank or John, it has to be one of those other kids.
You still going through that video? Yeah.
Now that we know neither Frank or John killed her, this video plays very differently.
Watch this.
See that? No.
What? Frank said he found her body on the floor.
Did he ever mention moving her? No.
According to Frank, he just pulled John away.
Exactly.
Breaking the charm bracelet, spilling the charms on the floor.
But watch as a medical examiner's team.
Moves her body for the first time.
See it now? It looks like another charm from her bracelet.
But if the charm bracelet broke after she died, how did the charm end up under her body? Okay, Castle, we got the evidence box from the lab.
- What are we looking for? - Okay, the evidence log says.
There should be a bag containing charms.
- From Kim's broken charm bracelet.
- Got it.
One of those charms should be shaped like a dolphin.
It's here.
You should have the rope bracelet there, too.
Thread that dolphin charm onto the bracelet.
Okay I'm threading.
Nope.
Can't do it.
The hole's too small.
It doesn't fit.
That's because it didn't come from Kim's bracelet.
It was left behind by our killer.
Lanie, can you get DNA off that charm? Maybe, but it won't help unless you have.
Someone to match it to.
We need to know who she was tutoring.
You should call them again.
I just called them 20 minutes ago.
I don't understand.
Why is it taking so long? Ryan found the bank where Kim had her account hours ago.
The account was closed in '98.
The bank has moved three times since then.
- They may not have even kept the files.
- And what if they didn't? - We're running out of time.
We need to go to the judge.
- With what? Frank will never admit to covering for John.
That would put John at the crime scene.
So what do we do? Dad, tell me what to do! Hey, I don't know, but whatever happens, we're gonna deal with it.
All right? Together.
I'm sorry I was mad at you.
No.
I deserved it.
I'm sorry.
Yes? What are the names? - Chief Lane.
- Can I help you? No, chief.
But we can help you.
This little dolphin pendant.
Was found in Kim Tolbert's living room the night she died, underneath her body.
So? So it's not hers.
You people are unbelievable.
Officer Lane, how old were you when Kim died? - Excuse me? - You were in her class.
In fact, she tutored you, didn't she? What's this all about? Checks you wrote to Kim Tolbert, chief, to pay for your son's tutoring.
Needed some help keeping his grades up.
Yeah, I bet because of swim team.
You guys took state that year.
It was big news.
Teddy, what's going on here? The night Kim Tolbert was murdered, she was in Jasper Grove, near a farmhouse you had foreclosed on a year earlier.
That house was later found to be contaminated.
With methamphetamine residue.
We believe your son was one of the people who contaminated it.
We also believe he wanted to be tutored in chemistry.
So he could learn how to cook meth.
This is ridiculous.
But Kim caught on to you, and that was bad for business.
So when she left that party, you followed her.
We found ammonium nitrate on her body.
I'd be willing to bet that the tire treads.
Outside the farmhouse are going to be a match.
To the bike treads behind Kim's house.
The night of her murder.
And then, of course, there's that.
Now that's enough circumstantial evidence.
For a judge But it's 2013.
I mean, now we can even take degraded DNA, have it amplified, tested.
And I'm sure that your evidence storage.
Has kept your dolphin well preserved.
Teddy? Say something.
Look at me.
Teddy! Based on the overwhelming circumstantial evidence.
And the exculpatory results.
Obtained from post-conviction DNA testing, the commonwealth of Pennsylvania hereby vacates Franklin Thomas Henson's murder conviction.
And sanctions his exoneration.
I'm sure you've spent far too many years.
Having judges look down on you, so I'll come down from the bench and deliver.
The signed order of dismissal myself.
Thank you.
I thought it was you.
All this time, you were protecting me.
How can you ever forgive me? Forgive you? I love you.
I'm just ready to live, brother.
What you did here was amazing.
Thank you For everything.
Anytime.
You ready? Don't you want to stay and celebrate? No.
This is enough.
Besides, there's someone else I need to thank.

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