Chicago P.D. (2014) s03e10 Episode Script

Now I'm God

Hey, you have a female attempted suicide? Yeah, she just came in.
She's alive, barely.
Gas inhalation.
We gotta get her to Med right now.
Come on, let's go.
What is it about? We need to be sure there's nothing more going on here.
That attempted suicide? Dr.
Charles, he's not buying it.
What's not to buy? You heard the report.
Today, three women, all cancer-free, overdosed on chemo.
- Clear.
- Clear.
Do you think a doctor's giving false diagnoses and overdosing? The police are on their way.
Jessica Pope, Carol Shepperd, Dani Frank.
Each brought independently to Med with no connection between 'em except an overdose of chemo for a cancer they don't have.
I wanna know who prescribed that stuff.
in Jessica's apartment caused a flashover.
So there is nothing left but char.
There's no phone, no laptop, no datebook.
- Nothing.
- No doctor's name.
We talked to Dani Frank's girlfriend.
They hadn't been dating that long.
She didn't know Dani's doctor.
But she did say that Dani was doing better until she took a turn, and when she confronted her doctor about it he put her on an experimental protocol that was supposed to beat it.
Sorry to interrupt.
A new patient just rolled into the ED.
Unconscious, pancytopenic just like the others.
Look, I don't know if this is legal, but, right now, I really don't care.
That's her stuff.
Have at it.
- Thank you.
- All right.
All right, Leah Kamen, She's a shift manager at a telemarketing firm.
Insurance card.
I'll call the company, see if they got the name of the doctor who submitted the claim.
Hey, is there any way to trace the chemicals in their system back to a specific manufacturer? A mass spectrometry test was performed on Jessica.
We can order the same for the others.
There're only a few manufacturers.
- Will you do it, please? - Yep.
Thanks.
Uh, Leah has Dani Frank, Carol Shepperd, and Jessica Pope as contacts on her phone.
All our victims knew each other.
Yeah, looks like that.
- Huh - Great.
Thanks.
I got a name.
Dr.
Dean Reybold.
- Hank.
- Hey Al.
What's going on? Oh, man Hank.
Hank.
Hey, you can't go.
The hell I can't.
If you show up, Reybold is gonna shut down.
He doesn't know me.
I will take Jay.
We will find out if he's the one overdosing these women.
- Al - We'll look into the victim and then talk to Goodwin.
Just you and me.
Right? It's six years since I've heard the name Dean Reybold.
Six years since I know.
He was the last cancer doctor Camille went to, and if he's the one doing this If he's the one doing this, we're gonna nail him.
I'm sorry to keep you waiting.
Uh, my receptionist said you were here about Leah.
Brave woman.
That's right, and Dani Frank, Jessica Pope, and Carol Shepperd as well.
Did something happen to them? In the last 24 hours, they've all shown up at Chicago Med flooded with chemo.
Dani's dead, and the other three are in comas.
Uh They teach you a lot about the body in medical school, but what they don't spend enough time on is teaching you how to deal with loss.
You get attached to your patients.
They're fighters, and you fight with them, but with oncology, you rarely win.
So, you treated all of them? I did I am.
When was the last time you met with these women? I would have to check their files.
Do you mind if we take a look at those files? Uh, I don't, but the state does.
I can't give 'em to you unless you have a warrant, but the moment you do, they're yours.
I will hand them over personally.
Why don't we drop the whole "I'm a fighter for my patients" act, all right? We know you mistreat your patients, and we know you did something to these four women.
Yes, I helped them.
By poisoning them? That's what chemotherapy is, Detective.
You poison cancer cells.
If you don't understand the most I understand exactly what you did.
You know what, we're gonna be back with a warrant.
Thank you.
You know I'm happy to help in any way I can.
Thanks for coming.
A little notice would have been nice.
We're moving like a bullet train on this one.
Well you pulled me out of a jerk-off awards banquet, so I can't complain.
Got a locker room I could use to change? Whatever you need, Counselor.
Uh, Sarge, is there anything more on the Burgess, you remember Detective Stark from Area Central, Violent Crimes, don't you? Lead detective on Roman's shooting? Right.
It's good to see you, Detective.
I just wanted to say again how useful I can be to your investigation Did something change since I took your statement, or did you actually see something? Okay, the victim's ex-wife said she saw a gun.
I mean, there's evidence of her being beaten with it.
The hospital report's inconclusive, and Officer Roman underwent a painful medical procedure to help this woman's child.
So their relationship is suspect.
Okay, what is your agenda here? Because from where I'm standing, you look like you want to do anything but help a jammed-up cop who wears the same badge as you, Detective.
I have statements from officers who canvassed neighbors, yards, and alleys, and no gun has been found.
Stay out of my investigation.
- Hey.
- Thanks.
The guy's a prick.
What's the word? I'm on ice till they figure this out.
I shouldn't even be talking to you.
- What can I do? - You heard him.
Nothing.
I'll see you later.
Burgess.
Burgess.
Burgess! Get over here.
- What? - You're on your own today.
- What? - No partner.
No assignment.
I want you out there patrolling wherever you want, and if that happens to be in a neighborhood where a gun went missing, well I don't know anything about that.
Thank you, Sergeant.
We'll need documents, invoices.
If the doctor ordered medicine overseas, the source country.
Every piece of evidence counts.
I need proof that Reybold acted with criminal intent.
I need evidence he knew his actions could result in harm, but he acted anyway.
Until you have that no arrests.
Is that clear? Let's do it.
Antonio, Atwater.
Chicago PD! Ma'am, step away from the shredder.
I need you to step away from the Come on, come on, come on.
Set it down.
Set it down.
Sergeant, we're holding one here shredding documents.
It's just preemptive.
They're just looking for Sergeant.
Where's the warrant? So you came here with a hastily written and narrowly defined search warrant to what? Upset my clients' patients? Your client has been diagnosing patients with cancer they don't have to fleece them with treatments they don't need.
I'd say he's the one upsetting them.
This is absurd.
I have the highest cure rate in the Midwest.
My patients are every Dr.
Reybold.
Shredding client files.
I have nothing to hide, Hank.
You two know each other? I treated Sergeant Voight's late wife.
Don't say another word.
You know who doesn't shred files? Innocent people.
Hank, you know me.
I held your wife's hand when she Dr.
Reybold.
Camille's death was hard on me too.
Don't you say her name.
You hear me? Back up, Sergeant.
She was such a fighter.
She would not want you to do this.
- You're under arrest.
- Hank - On what grounds? - Obstruction of justice.
We can pick him up at the 21st.
- Cuff him.
- Get up.
Don't say anything until I get there, Dean.
- Hands behind your back.
- Shut it down.
Copy that.
I told the detective there was a gun.
I don't know what more I could do.
So that night Ritchie took off on foot after Roman shot him, but no car registered to him was found here the next day.
So I checked with Uber.
He doesn't have an account.
No cabs came here, and his monthly el pass doesn't have him on it all day.
So I'm wondering, did, maybe, somebody drive him here? Denny.
Ritchie's brother.
Ritchie had a couple DUIs and had his license yanked.
So, Denny, he drove him around.
Okay, do you think that Denny could have stayed when he came here? Waited for Ritchie to come out? Maybe.
Denny's he's a good guy.
What's that supposed to mean? Just just that Is there anything else I should know, Callie? No.
You know, I don't know if you remember, but when Camille used to see you in your office and this is when she was at her lowest from the pain of chemo Well, you'd take her hand and tell her she should just treasure every moment because life is so fragile.
You better start enjoying every moment.
Two years ago, Dr.
Reybold told me I had bone cancer.
He said it would be tough, but we'd get through it together.
The kind of chemo he gave me, it rots your bones.
I couldn't stay at my job.
I can't play with my children, be with my husband.
Dr.
Reybold kept reassuring that this chemo was gonna work.
I was alive.
It was a miracle.
A year ago, my teeth started falling out.
Six months ago, it took my leg.
And now you're telling me it was all for money? - What have you got? - I made you copies of the patient files we could salvage.
All poisoned with chemo they did not need.
All willing to testify.
- Is this enough? - For fraud? For homicide.
You want him to stop practicing today? I go in front of a special grand jury with fraud charges, and the Department of Professional Regulations will pull his license the minute I do.
And when his lawyer sees what we have, he'll roll.
Look, you turn up new information after that, we can go back for another bite at the apple and use the fraud case as evidence.
Erin he stops practicing the minute I walk in.
How's your sergeant? He'll be a lot better with a homicide conviction.
Voight.
What? Hey.
You made a deal? What kind of deal? It's a year's license suspension - Are you kidding me? - Five years probation, - $14 million in resti - No jail time? You think these women want to get dragged through a trial? I think those women want justice.
I do! If he loses, he could appeal for years.
How many of them have that kind of time? He didn't just defraud people, Dana.
- He murdered them.
- But we can't prove it.
The judge advised us to take this based on the evidence.
State's attorney agreed.
Until you get me new evidence my hands are tied.
Hey.
I need your help.
Well, at first blush, clinically, classic psychopath.
Prey on the weak.
All these women are marginalized by age or race and physically or emotionally removed from any support.
Well, we know from phone records four of these women knew each other, and from there, we discovered they met in a chat room, confront him about his methods.
So my question is: how could he have managed to pull them in for more rounds if they were already skeptical? Cancer diagnosis has so much uncertainty.
People are looking for a guide through the process, someone they can trust.
A savior.
Hmm.
And if they walked away, what would they have? Psychopaths control their victims to get that charge they crave.
Telling a healthy woman she has cancer, oh, there's a thrill.
Probably where he started.
Right? He does that, doesn't get caught, so he escalates to the next stimulus treating her, becoming her champion.
I wager heavily we look into this guy's past, there's mistreatment by women.
Now he flipped it.
"I used to be subject.
Now I'm God.
" Would you be willing to testify to that? In order to take the stand, you know, I gotta I get fully formed diagnosis, right? Speak to him directly.
Well he ain't pleading insanity and I promise you his lawyer's not gonna let you anywhere near him.
Dr.
Charles sorry.
I just wanted to let you know that Jessica Pope she didn't make it.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
The thing about psychopaths Love to hear themselves talk.
- Yeah? - We picked up footage of your car outside Callie's house the night of the incident.
You mean the night your partner killed my brother.
Yeah, and I know you drove him there.
- So? - So I don't think you left.
I think you followed him, and when he bled out you took his gun so he'd look innocent.
And because of that, a good police officer is gonna go down - for something he didn't do.
- You guys are incredible.
If you have that gun, Denny, you need to turn it over right now.
- Otherwise, you're looking at - Are you arresting me? Mm-mm, not yet.
I don't have a gun.
I got nothing more to say to you.
Thank you.
Whoa.
You're that doctor from the news.
I'm sorry.
Dr.
Daniel Charles, Chicago Med.
Man, they sure are going after us these days, aren't they? You out on bail? I mean, why are they even charging you in the first place? Can you explain that to me? Must be so hard to distance yourself from cancer patients.
When you got into medicine, did you expect to save everyone's life? Hmm but to lose patients over and over, watch them get diminished by illness The U.
S.
is so far behind.
I have a series of cocktails that are revolutionary.
Other doctors don't approach my methods or my numbers.
That's what should be on the news.
That should be on the news And, of course, I mean, they never questioned your therapies, right? I mean, wh - Did they have a medical degree? - Exactly.
Did they cure cancer? That shuts 'em up.
they're afraid for their lives, I'm the only one who can save them.
- What a lovely watch.
- It's beautiful, right? Yeah, I got a guy, uh, Howard, on South Wabash.
This retails 75,000 easy.
He gave it to me for 45,000.
Whew.
If you're interested I can, uh, give you his info.
He can hook you up.
I mean, look at this thing.
Wow, gorgeous.
- Really gorgeous.
- Yeah.
Hey.
Hey.
What do you know about the brother? - Whose? Ritchie's? - Yeah.
- I didn't deal with him.
- I did some digging.
He has two parking tickets written on Callie's block.
Yeah, he'd drive Ritchie.
When Ritchie was in jail.
Did Denny and Callie have a thing? How would I know? There's something going on there.
She seemed very protective of him.
So I'm just trying to figure out who to go at next.
- So Denny took the gun.
- Yeah.
If he did, he'd have thrown it in the river.
Here we are.
Same place we started.
That's defeatist.
No, that's realist.
This is defeatist.
Thanks.
Hank, I miss Camille.
Hmm.
I mean, my whole life till I was 14 was Bunny.
You know? When she was sober.
When she wasn't.
I didn't know that moms could be kind.
Or brave.
Or Unselfish.
She didn't even like me when you first brought me home.
- You remember that? - Yeah.
She already had her hands full with Justin, and I showed up and I just doubled her trouble.
We were hellions.
I remember this one day I came home Iron Maiden T-shirt, skirt up to here, you know, and she's just waiting for me in the living room.
She has a dress from Marshall Field's.
She told me that you saw something in me that was worth sacrificing for, and so she would too, and she used her Christmas money to buy me that dress.
I have an idea.
Reybold met with our victims three weeks before they showed up dead or in comas.
You have the accounts receivable for his office? Here and here.
The victims met with Reybold on December 10th, and there.
December 11th an order came into the office for chemo for each victim.
- How much? - Twice as much as they got every other time before.
On the 11th? Wait, 'cause in Reybold's schedule, he has our victims getting treated on December 14th, the 16th, And then he had another order for chemo placed December 22nd for three times the usual amount.
And he's got them all listed for appointments right after that.
Wait, what was the last order? January 2nd.
That's right before they came into Med, and it's seven times the usual amount.
How did he get that past the insurance companies? They'd never approve seven times the normal amount of chemo.
Did he even bill it to insurance? No.
So his office ate the payments? Or he paid for it himself.
If you're gonna order enough chemo to kill someone, that would be murder.
Is this enough? His signature on the invoices proves intent with physical evidence.
Keeping it off the books is a cover-up.
If I can get the women from the fraud case to testify he dosed them personally I think we can convince a jury.
That's all I need to know.
Thank you thank you.
You know, I've devoted my whole life to healing, but healing is more than finding the right medication, more than establishing the right treatment program.
No, it's connecting with our patients wholly and never giving up, making them believe that a full recovery is possible too.
Yeah, is that how it went with Jessica Pope? What about Dani Frank? Carol Shepperd? - Back off.
- Leah Kamen? What about their healing? I guess they had a different treatment program, huh, Doc? - Uh, this this isn't - Turn around.
You're under arrest for the murder and attempted murder of four patients.
That's not too tight, is it? Come on.
Party's over, folks.
These 42 patients already had their day in court, Your Honor.
Dr.
Reybold took a plea and was sentenced.
- Case closed.
- Except it's a straight line from the fraud to these murders, and drawing that line Will unnecessarily prejudice the jury.
What happened to the patients in that case is irrelevant in the current proceeding.
Irrelevant? Because the fraud victims didn't die and my victims did? - Your Honor - Pull it back, Ms.
Shelby.
Dr.
Reybold murdered four women to cover up his fraud.
The jury needs to hear this so that they can understand the whole story.
But they'll be unduly prejudiced if they do.
The bottom line is: the fraud victims can't testify.
Too prejudicial? Not relevant? It was an uphill battle.
So not one of the victims can testify that Reybold dosed our four women personally? Three the Medical Examiner just ruled Jessica Pope's death a suicide.
- Put me on the stand.
- Why? Do you have cancer? I can walk a jury through all of this.
Sure, then Green will rip you a new one when she brings up Camille and your motive for going after him.
I'm the lead investigator on this case.
If you don't put me on the stand, she will, and you won't have set the table for it.
Dana.
If you go off script one time, you will lose this case for us.
It is too big a risk.
I'm putting Erin on to talk about the investigation.
There is no way you are testifying.
If Denny's anything like his brother, he would have thrown that gun into the river like Roman said.
Denny's not like Ritchie though.
He's had the same job for ten years.
I mean, those parking tickets by Callie's house only brush with the law he's ever had.
I bet my life he took that gun to protect Ritchie and Callie.
- So go talk to him.
- I can't.
I have been in this guy's face before.
He won't roll for just me.
I mean, I I need something to hold over him or I know what you need.
- Wait, what? - Me.
Bobby, watch the desk.
I'm doing some field work.
- Okay.
- Are you coming or what? Yeah.
Hey.
'Sup, Denny? This is harassment.
I'm gonna paint you a picture here, Denny.
You lie to an officer, that's impeding an investigation.
You make a false statement on the record, that's obstruction of justice.
You keep a gun, that's withholding evidence in a murder.
You brought your mom? What, 'cause you couldn't prove I did any of that on your own? We have proof that you drove your inebriated brother to a residence where he committed aggravated battery, and then he threatened a police officer, which led to his death.
You know what you can be charged with? Accessory to murder.
Whatever.
You're just saying things to try and trap me.
No, you will be charged as an accessory in your own brother's death.
Felony murder.
That's two to five years.
And not in county.
Stateville.
Come on, the way I see it, you've been trying to help everybody else.
Your brother.
Callie.
If I were you, I'd start thinking about helping myself.
Where's the gun, Denny? That gun turns up, the city does nothing for Callie.
She quit her job to take care of Andrew.
Ritchie left her flat broke.
She deserves better.
There's a reward for information leading to the whereabouts of the gun.
That reward could take the turn of a check made out to anonymous.
If you tell the detective in charge everything you saw all of it and that gun turns back up, well, that check could end up in the hands of a nice woman.
And I wouldn't be charged with anything? You're the grieving brother.
Why would we charge you with anything? In your review of Dr.
Reybold's books, you found no evidence he billed any insurance companies - for these treatments.
- No.
Well, who did pay for these treatments? Dr.
Reybold himself.
From his personal account.
Personal.
Which allowed him to overdose patients - Objection.
- Overruled.
To overdose patients without raising a red flag - with the insurance companies.
- Yes.
No further questions.
Could Dr.
Reybold have been helping patients get the care they needed? For instance, if three patients came to him and said they were having financial difficulties but wanted to stay alive what kind of doctor might pay for those treatments himself? A really remarkable one.
That's for sure.
Thank you.
That's all.
My conversation with Dr.
Reybold coupled with a look at his history led me to a clear diagnosis of psychopathy.
The psychopathic mind lacks fear, remorse, empathy.
In essence, it can't connect to or care about others.
That's Dr.
Reybold.
But he's a doctor.
Doesn't that suggest empathy or caring? Well, you'd be shocked how many functional psychopaths are in the world, you know, attracted to power, control.
Flaunting his success rates, the therapies only he can administer, belittling his patients to keep them under his control.
"I'm the one with the medical degree," he would say to his patients.
You know this how? Because he told me.
I renew my objection.
This entire conversation Was a spontaneous admission that has already been ruled on.
Agreed.
Overruled.
Continue, Ms.
Shelby.
So Dr.
Reybold would ask his patients if they had a medical degree? And made sure they knew he was the only one who could save them.
Those are actual words from our conversation.
Thank you, Dr.
Charles.
Well, let's talk about that conversation.
- Was it at your office? - No.
At the court? Ordered by a judge? - Nope.
- Did Dr.
Reybold know he was being interviewed? As I said before, it was not an interview.
It was two doctors striking up a conversation.
Where did this conversation take place? - In a coffee shop.
- Near your house? - No.
- Your office? - No.
- In fact, it was 8 miles from either of those places.
Didn't measure.
Do you know how many coffee shops are between your house or office and there? I don't.
and you rolled into this particular one, two blocks from the defendant's house? - To stalk him? - Objection.
Sustained.
Were you paid by the prosecution for your services, Dr.
Charles? I was not.
You're an unpaid agent of the police.
No one told me to speak with Dr.
Reybold.
I walked into that coffee shop and I saw this doctor And my curiosity got the best of me.
That works out well for State, doesn't it? Withdrawn.
Ever socialize with members of the Intelligence Unit, Dr.
Charles? Perhaps at a bar called Molly's? - I have.
- So they're friends of yours? My report on Dr.
Reybold is an unbiased analy That wasn't the question.
I know them through work and would be very proud to call them my friends.
No further questions.
Look, get a continuance.
My team and I I already used up my goodwill with this judge.
Then put Antonio on the stand.
He'll testify to the paper trail of the money.
The damage has been done.
They'll make those payments look like something else.
Again.
So tell me what you need to win.
I need the patients from the fraud case back in.
I need 42 people on a witness stand to say he dosed them personally or any eyewitness that can put that needle in Reybold's hand.
Can you do that? Maybe.
If you put me on the stand.
All three victims were in contact with each other, comparing notes.
We know this from their phone records.
After their December 10th meeting with Dr.
Reybold, they agreed to an experimental treatment which, in actuality, was simply twice the usual dose of chemo.
The following week, he upped it to three times the amount.
By the time they wound up in the hospital, it was at seven times.
Because they confronted him about what he did, and he was afraid of being exposed.
Objection.
Counsel is testifying.
Sustained.
In your investigation, did you find it suspicious three patients met with the doctor one day Objection.
No one knows what transpired in this meeting.
That's because everyone in that meeting besides Dr.
Reybold is dead or in a coma.
- You Honor.
- One more time, and you're in contempt.
Could the amounts the patients received have been lab mistakes? No, Dr.
Reybold's signature was on every order.
Well, what about a dosing error? His staffer testified that Dr.
Reybold personally administered those doses.
But the staffer cut a deal.
That doesn't mean it wasn't the truth.
Objection.
Improper opinion.
Sustained.
What about any other witnesses who Asked and answered.
Yes, Ms.
Shelby, move on.
Your Honor, someone has to speak for these victims.
You don't speak.
You ask questions.
And if nobody else saw the doctor dosing Someone else did.
Me.
I saw Dr.
Reybold dose a patient.
My wife.
I saw Dr.
Reybold dose my wife Camille who died of cancer under Dr.
Reybold's care six years ago.
- Sergeant Voight - I'm a witness.
I saw him dose a patient.
The State has no further questions for this witness.
Well, I have a few.
Losing your wife to cancer must have been very painful, Sergeant.
Can you talk about your wife's illness? Camille was referred to Dr.
Reybold when her ovarian cancer returned.
He recommended an aggressive course and then a second round when that didn't get it all.
She was cold all the time couldn't keep food down.
Memory went in and out.
She She was depressed.
She fought as hard as she could, but She sounds brave.
She was.
You're still in mourning over your wife's death.
Isn't that what this is about? No.
How gratifying would it be to help convict Dr.
Reybold? It would be very gratifying.
- No further questions.
- For all his victims.
I said no further questions.
You answered exactly as I expected you to.
Redirect? What other victims are you referring to, Sergeant Voight? Objection.
Ms.
Green questioned my witness about one prior patient, Camille Voight.
Now she opened the door to the other 42 patients he treated.
She's right.
Overruled.
What other victims? Helen Graham Nia Felten Priya Parvati Anne Gamerman and 38 other people this doctor diagnosed with cancer they didn't have and treated with chemo they didn't need.
And how do you know this to be true? Because he said so himself in court under oath.
- Objection.
- Overruled.
Continue.
Dr.
Reybold confessed to personally poisoning 42 patients, ruining their lives, terrifying them and their families, and he did it all for a payout, and he admitted to all of this as part of a deal he made with the State of Illinois, copping to fraud.
This deal, Sergeant Voight? That's the one.
The State would like to enter into evidence case number 111 496 and amend its witness list by 42 people.
They have a verdict.
Hour of deliberation.
That's that's probably good, right? Camille would be proud of you.
You too, kiddo.
On the count of Narcotic Induced Homicide of Danielle Frank We find the defendant guilty.
On the count of Narcotic Induced Attempted Homicide of Carol Shepperd We find the defendant guilty.
On the count of Narcotic Induced Attempted Homicide of Leah Kamen We find the defendant guilty.
Defendant is remanded into custody until such time as a sentencing hearing is scheduled.
Bailiff.
Hank, your wife did not suffer needlessly.
You have to believe me.
The cancer did come back.
I never harmed Camille.
These patients, I was their only hope.
They got years because of me.
You can't put someone away for saving lives.
You can't! I wasn't harming them.
I was helping them.
Helping! Look, you're swimming! You're swimming! That was so good.
Did you see that? Yeah.
- I'm swimming! - You sure are.
Whoo! He's gonna get you.
- How did that feel? - Swimming! You sure was.
He was holding on to my suit.
That's awesome.
S! T! What's the T s? Tuh, tuh, tuh, tuh.
Go.
What's this letter? - U.
- U.
You want Dad to open a present? Let Dad open a present.
Give it to Dad.
Give it to Dad.
- This is for Dad.
- Here, Mommy, you can fil.
Okay, you gonna help me? - Yeah, I can help you.
- Help me.
- Hi, honey.
- There's Mama.
- Merry Christmas.
- Merry Christmas.
- I love you.
- I love you.

Previous EpisodeNext Episode