Chicago P.D. (2014) s03e19 Episode Script

If We Were Normal

1 - Hey.
- Hey.
- Got you a coffee.
- Thank you.
And I don't know if you take it black or with milk or soy or anyway I brought everything.
Thank you.
Look at that.
Here you go.
- Thanks.
- Thanks.
So what's up? So I wanted to get your advice on something.
But I like, I probably know what you're gonna say, which is what I need to hear about something that Sorry, I need to hear you say "Don't do it.
" - Okay, I'm with you.
- Okay.
Last night, I went out with Roman, just as friends, but by the end it kind of felt like more than that.
Hmm.
- You don't seem surprised.
- Oh, I'm sorry, you You wanted me sure.
Oh, my God! I mean, nothing has happened at all at all, but last night there was this moment Do you know what I'm talking about? Yeah, I do.
But having been engaged to Ruzek, what you are saying is that I should not be opening the door, right? You want me to be the one to tell you that you should not date your partner? - I - Oh, yeah, no.
You know why I forget? I forget sometimes that you and Jay are dating, 'cause you guys make it look so easy.
Really? Units in 21 and units on the Citywide, battery in progress involving a male and a female reported at Kinzie and Dearborn.
First responding officers please advise.
- Let's roll.
- 2113 squad, I'm responding.
Some guy just got stabbed.
Okay, slow down.
Get out of the street.
- Where did it happen? - Over there.
- What did you see? - This couple was arguing.
- She was in her underwear.
- She was high on something, and she stabbed the guy and she ran.
- Where did he go? - He drove off.
I don't know, north.
And then some other guy ran after to see if she was okay.
- Wait, what guy? - Him.
I lost her.
She tried to stab me.
- I was just trying to help.
- Okay.
Did you catch a plate, a type of car? It was silver, I'm not sure what kind.
It was an Audi, A4 or A6.
We need to send out a flash message.
Yes.
Where did she go? Right that way down the alley.
Okay, I need the three of you to stay here.
You're all witnesses.
Please stay here.
- [car horn honking.]
- Hey! [tense music.]
Wait.
[alarm ringing.]
- Down here! - Go, go.
Go.
Stop.
- Call it in.
- 2113 Squad, requesting additional units.
Forced entry at 3233 South Princeton.
We are entering the premises.
There is a plainclothes officer on the scene.
- Let's go.
- Yeah.
- Chicago PD, anyone in here? - Burgess.
I got it.
Go.
Drop it! Let me see your hands! Let me see your hands! Help me.
Victim's name is Ruby Baker.
She says she was kidnapped.
She stabbed her abductor with a screwdriver she found in the trunk of his car.
She got away.
He drove off.
This was a kidnapping in progress? No, Ruby thinks she was snatched about two months ago, maybe? She says she lost track.
Kidnapper drugged her.
Next thing she knows, she's chained up in some room.
We ran her through NCIC and LEADS.
Nobody's reported her missing.
She's still traumatized.
You can talk to her.
- But go easy.
- All right, thanks.
Can you get the evidence over to the lab? See if they can put a rush on it.
Yeah, got it.
Done a rape kit yet? She's refusing medical treatment.
She won't let us touch her.
She's 19, so technically, we can't force her.
- Thanks, Natalie.
- Yeah.
Ruby, this is Sergeant Voight, and that's Detective Olinsky.
- Did you get him? - Not yet.
We're hoping that you can help us with that.
Ruby, the man you stabbed, was that your kidnapper? Mister.
Just Mister.
That's what he made me call him.
What else can you tell us about this man? He was tall.
He had sandy brown hair.
That's great.
Is there anything else? His nose.
It looked like it'd been broken.
Like, a long time ago.
And he always parts his hair, like a politician.
Did he force himself on you? I'm sorry.
Where were you held? - Was it a house, a building? - A room, with no windows.
He didn't want me to know what time it was.
And he wouldn't let me leave, not even to use the bathroom.
I used a bucket.
He got off on that.
Ruby, do you remember any other details of that room? - Sounds? - I heard kids playing.
Almost every day.
And yesterday I heard sirens, lots of them.
I thought I was being rescued.
So how'd you end up outside? Mister or whatever the hell his name is he said we had to move.
He threw me in the trunk.
I kept banging till he pulled over.
That's when I stabbed him.
Listen, none of us can imagine what you've been through, and I'm sure you just want to try to forget, but we really need you to do something for us.
We need you to let the doctors give you a rape kit.
I I can't stay here.
He said he'll find me.
I'm not going back to that place.
Well, we'll have an officer posted outside your door.
Can you stay? Sure, yeah.
I can stay.
[sighs.]
Sarge, think I narrowed down the location.
All right.
So Ruby said that she jumped out the car at Kinzie and Dearborn.
Told Olinsky that they drove around for about ten minutes.
That would put her approximate location in this six-mile radius.
Ruby heard kids and sirens, which means we're looking for someplace near a school or playground.
There's a bunch of them in that area.
Has anyone read Ruby's rap sheet? In the last year alone she's been picked up for credit card fraud, retail theft, possession of heroin.
Where'd she say she was grabbed from? Pin Pan Alley.
Pool hall on Ashland? That's a hangout for runaways.
Lots of teen prostitution.
So she's got a history, like everybody else.
All right, where we at with the composite? It just came in.
All right, so circulate it to all hospitals, urgent care centers.
See if anyone matching this description came in with a stab wound.
Antonio, you and Jay hit that pool hall.
Hey, where's the thing, requisition forms? - Grab those too.
- Copy that.
Hey.
Looking very official.
Drowning up here.
Platt's riding my ass.
And my hangover doesn't help, which I have you to blame for that.
I'm sorry, who ordered the last round? Hey, heard you caught a weird one.
Uh, yeah, it was bizarre.
There's a girl Cherish the anecdote, Burgess.
As of 11 minutes ago.
I am on furlough for one week, preparing for the wedding my father always dreamed he drop the ball on.
And you, Haircut.
Ivory tower's issued a district audit, due by end of shift.
Sarge, this came out a month ago.
This is desks, computers, pencils, everything in the building.
That is accurate.
And the serial numbers on each item have to match up with the numbers on the list.
- By the end of the shift? - It's okay.
We'll get it done.
I'll help you.
Yes, help.
Don't help.
I don't care.
- Burgess? - Yeah? As you are well aware, my wedding is 12 days hence.
I need someone to help keep me on my feet with respect to alcohol and such what.
You want me to help? Oh, are you inviting me? I guess I am.
But no plus one.
Yours is the last salmon filet we have left.
- Take another look.
- Yeah.
I've seen her and 20 more girls just like her.
Don't be a jagoff, all right? We think she was abducted from here.
I'm saying a lot of girls her age come and go.
I don't keep track.
You have surveillance cameras here? Think the guy who owns this place cares about his employees? Does he? I haven't met the guy.
He doesn't.
Only thing he cares about is his money, so he has a camera right over the safe in back.
- And nowhere else.
- That's him.
- No? - Nah, sorry, man.
I haven't seen her.
- What about you? - No.
You looking for Ruby? - Who are you? - We used to be tight.
That so? Then what, Ruby was kidnapped.
You know by who? No.
Damn.
Kidnapped? Tell me about the last time you saw her.
We, uh, got in a fight.
About money.
So she went to work.
- And by work you mean? - Ruby went on dates, with guys.
- This guy? - I didn't get a look at him.
Just his car.
It was expensive.
- Like an Audi? - Yeah.
Yeah, like one of those.
My brother.
This your normal route? You lose your mail or something? We're actually looking for a guy who lives around here.
Yeah, this guy look familiar? He drives a silver Audi.
Yeah, you know, yeah, yeah, yeah.
5381 Bristol.
Next block over.
You wouldn't happen to know his name? No, there's been a mail hold on that address.
I never delivered a letter to the house, but I seen him come and go.
All right, thank you, brother.
[children playing.]
[knocking on door.]
Chicago PD! All right, watch out, bro.
Whoa, whoa, hold on, hold on.
My aunt's a realtor.
They all do it.
Stairs.
[tense music.]
Police! Anybody in here? - Hey, we're clear upstairs! - Copy.
Hey, Kev, hey.
Looks like there used to be locks here.
That's a lot of security for an interior door.
Ah, we're clear.
- You ready? - Yeah.
One, two, three.
[panting.]
- You smell that? - I hate bleach.
Yeah, he wiped the place clean.
Ruby said he had her chained up to a wall.
[text alert chimes.]
Yeah.
Lindsay was right.
All right, Mouse says that the house belongs to Bill and Ruth Gainsbridge.
They moved to Florida three months ago.
No sign of forced entry, so somebody must've had the key.
We'll get Mouse to get ahold of the real estate company, get us a picture of the listing agent.
What's that? She was trying to get out.
My daughter loves these.
And I'm addicted to them too.
You have a daughter? Two, actually.
One's your age, Lexi.
And Michelle.
You close? Well, as close as they want me to be.
What about you? What about your parents? My dad died when I was eight.
I haven't talked to my mom in years.
What happened to your arm? Nothing.
Can I see it? Oh, man.
He did this? I did it to myself.
So I wouldn't forget who I was in that place.
He kept repeating how I was nothing, that he was going to turn me into someone else.
I had to "submit" until I was "purified.
" That's what he called it.
- [knocking on door.]
- Detective? - Can I talk to you? - Yeah.
I'll be right outside.
Yeah? We got the results back from the rape kit.
Okay.
Ruby's pregnant.
No.
This can't be happening.
I can't have his baby.
We'll do an ultrasound to see how far along you are.
You still have options.
Can you do a paternity test? Prove what he did to me? We can do an amniocentesis, but there are risks.
It could harm the baby.
I know you got a million things going through your mind right now, but I'm gonna need you to look at some photos, see if you recognize any of these men.
Can you do that? Okay.
Oh, God.
Ruby, Ruby You need to say it.
Which one abducted you? You need to say it.
That's him.
Drew Stommer, real estate agent at Cermak Reality.
Business degree at Northwestern, minor is psychology.
Never married, no kids, no priors.
This guy looks like the world's most eligible bachelor.
That's what they said about Ted Bundy.
We got the results of Ruby's ultrasound back.
She is seven weeks pregnant, which means it's Stommer's.
I called the owners of the house on Bristol.
They told Stommer to put it on the market six months ago He didn't list it on MLS till last week, which means he's been sitting on the house.
Yeah, to hide Ruby.
And he had to move her because the house was about to sell.
Perfect, all right, thank you.
Ah, uh, guys.
Stommer, I just ran him through the DMV.
He's the registered owner of a silver 2004 Audi A4.
His office says that he's hosting an open house at a property in Hyde Park.
All right, Antonio, you and Lindsay go pick this guy up.
No, I'll pick him up.
Okay, you and Atwater.
Jay, get a warrant for his house.
I want you to search it top to bottom.
- Ruzek, you got a sec? - Yeah.
Platt has me doing inventory.
I notice you signed in a laptop last week, but it's not in the evidence locker.
Any chance you know where it is? It says I signed it back in.
Yeah, it was on Wednesday.
Well, then it's got to be there somewhere.
No, I checked twice already.
No laptop.
You really gonna bust my balls about this? I have to have the inventory done by the end of the shift, so.
Well, I got a case to work, so.
You ask about the laptop? Look, I'm not saying he stole it, but Adam once lost a pair of boots while he was wearing them.
So it'll turn up.
Don't stress.
All new flooring, and did I mention we are in an A-plus school district? Great place to raise children.
Drew Stommer? Excuse me.
I'll be right with you.
You're under arrest for kidnapping and sexual assault.
Chicago cops.
You believe this? In front of clients? Oh, I'm gonna have your jobs.
I'm gonna recommend you use your right to be silent.
Chicago PD.
Oh, is something wrong with the doorbell? Chicago police.
Do you live here? Of course.
What is this about? Ma'am, are you related to Drew Stommer? I'm his wife, Madison.
We have a warrant to search the premises.
We're gonna come inside.
Excuse me.
Where is Drew? And what is this all about? Among other things, your husband's been arrested for kidnapping.
Kidnapping? Kidnapping who? You know, I really should call my husband.
Sit down.
He's not taking calls right now.
Hey.
You're gonna want to see this.
Come on.
Mrs.
Stommer, do you have a child? Drew says we're going to have one soon.
So you're expecting? We're trying.
Drew says that setting up the nursery will help to manifest the baby.
He says if you can visualize it, you can make it true.
Okay.
We're gonna need you to come down to the station and answer a few questions.
Recognize her? We know you were holding her at the Bristol Street house.
So you got two options: We can get your DNA and prove as much, or you can come clean.
I mean, I can save you the trouble.
- The DNA will be a match.
- Mm-hmm.
So you admit to sexually assaulting Ruby Baker.
No.
She gave me permission.
To rape her? Ruby and I entered a dominant-submissive relationship.
I paid for sex and provided her a place to live.
In return, Ruby submitted herself to me.
It was consensual.
Man Forgive me, but she stabbed you and ran for her life.
That doesn't sound consensual.
Last week, Ruby started behaving erratically.
She threatened to blackmail me.
I had no choice, I had to terminate our agreement.
So I drove her back into the city.
Did you know Ruby was pregnant? Seven weeks.
Well, she's a prostitute.
I imagine that's an occupational hazard.
[knocking on door.]
Will you give us a second? I don't know where to put her, Sarge.
She says her name is Madison, and not only is her marriage to Stommer not official, she doesn't exist as a person.
Secretary of State's got no record of a Madison Stommer so I ran the maiden name she provided, "Madison Dodd.
" The social matches a woman in Mt.
Vernon, but the DOBs don't match.
You check Cook County? I ran all cross checks.
She doesn't have so much as a library card to her name.
I ran Madison's prints.
Her real name is Jamie Lynn Stevens.
Says she went missing seven years ago.
Dr.
Charles.
Appreciate you coming down.
Isn't it about time we put my prints on the palm scanner? [chuckles.]
Yeah, right after we finish your personalized parking space.
I got to tell you, Hank.
I've never quite received this call before.
Hey, Jay, it's inventory day.
I have you down for the receipt of two lipstick cameras? Oh, yeah, yeah, the lipstick cameras.
I got 'em here somewhere.
We drilled these into a vice lord's baby mama's house.
Here you go.
What we know he doesn't? Mamacita's cheating on him With his sister.
- His sister? - Yeah.
Nice.
Thanks for these.
Yeah, man.
Hey, Ruzek.
Any luck with the laptop? No.
This is Sergeant Voight, and this is my friend Dr.
Charles.
He's a psychiatrist at Chicago Med.
We asked him to sit in with us.
A psychiatrist.
I need to consent to that.
It's just a conversation.
Do you recognize this girl? Her name's Jamie Lynn Stevens.
This is you.
That's not me.
We know that it's you from your fingerprints.
[tense music.]
You have a younger sister named Caitlin, and she misses you very much.
I'm sorry.
I think you must have me confused with someone else.
If it's not you, than who is it? Because Jamie Lynn is missing.
You know what I think? I think maybe seven years ago or so, Jamie Lynn, a confused young woman, went looking for help.
Jamie Lynn is dead.
And what she found terrified her, and nobody could blame her for that.
In fact, it terrified her so much that she convinced herself that Jamie Lynn needed to disappear so that Madison could survive.
I I chose to be with Drew.
Well, Drew, your husband, he just admitted to hiring prostitutes to be his S&M partners.
Drew said never to trust the police.
Let me tell you what I think.
I think you and your husband used Ruby Baker as a concubine just so you could have a baby.
I don't know anyone by that name.
You know what I think? I think that you're a good person, and that you want to do the right thing.
And we just want to help you do that.
If my husband hasn't already asked, we would like a lawyer.
- Here you go.
- Thank you.
Yeah, you owe me a dollar.
Shut up.
Okay.
So look at this.
I know we're down a laptop which will turn up, I promise.
But, uh, check this out.
Somebody owes the district a 2013 Jeep Grand Cherokee.
- Wait, what? - Yeah.
We are missing a $30,000 SUV.
Think Platt'll notice that.
And whose handwriting is that? - Voight's? - Yeah, Voight.
Voight stole a car, nine months ago.
You said that.
All right, I'll go talk to him.
What, you think I'm scared to talk to Sergeant Voight? Shouldn't you be? I'm saying he's got all kinds of reasons for doing what he does.
But if he's got that car assigned to some off-the-books whatever the hell it is? You know what I'm saying.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah You left your scrunchie in my car last night.
Yes, I did.
Okay, what do we got? Madison Turner is actually Jamie Lynn Stevens.
She was arrested in 2008 on solicitation charges, and then she went missing in 2009.
Who filed the missing persons report? Her mom.
Then a year later she overdosed and the case ran cold.
Hey, boss, we've been going through Stommer's call logs.
His clients, wife, all check out except for one short phone call made three weeks ago at 2:32 a.
m.
on March 7 to a residence in Naperville owned by a woman named Marcia Harris.
Yeah, call outgoing from his cell phone.
Call lasted two minutes.
Marcia has no connection with Stommer.
What she does have is an 18-year-old daughter who was popped for solicitation in the exact same place where Ruby was kidnapped.
I'll drive.
- Hank? - Yeah.
We need to talk.
Actually, Sergeant, we do too.
Counselor.
You want to know the toughest part of my job? Knowing somebody's guilty, and not being able to do a damn thing about it.
Steve, we're still building a case.
So far, you've brought me a witness who won't identify herself as a victim.
Without a victim, I don't have a crime.
Actually, we brought you two, one who's pregnant with this psycho's baby.
Look, we're on the same side.
Reality is, proving rape against prostitutes is just shy of impossible.
Throw in her criminal history and her drug abuse, she doesn't stand a chance.
Just put her in front of a grand jury, let them decide.
It's her word against his.
There's no physical evidence, and everyone involved is over 18.
You have to kick Drew Stommer.
That girl in the hospital, she carved her name in her own forearm so she wouldn't forget who she was.
That's what this guy's capable of.
[sighs.]
All the more reason not to press charges on specious evidence.
Bring me something I can prosecute.
That picture's from a different time.
Like I said, I haven't seen Jennifer for a while.
Can you be more specific? It's been a year.
Jennifer is an addict.
Started stealing for dope.
Finally kicked her out when she pawned her own grandmother's jewelry.
When's the last time you talked to her? I honestly don't remember.
Was it March 7th at 2:33 a.
m.
? Maybe.
She called a few weeks ago.
I was sleeping.
I didn't recognize the number.
What did she say exactly? She, um, said she was with some guy, just had a bad feeling about him, that was it.
Did something happen to Jennifer? Thanks for your time.
So Jennifer realized what was going on, grabbed Stommer's phone, called for help.
Stommer's got another girl out there.
Jennifer Harris.
19 years old.
History of drug problems.
Fits Stommer's MO.
Mother couldn't give us much.
Jennifer's been out of the house a year, no fixed address.
She got herself together enough to get on public assistance, has a Link card that's active and purchased $13 worth of groceries on March 6.
Damn, March 6th? Day before she called her mom.
Yeah, nothing after that.
All right, get a warrant for this real estate office.
We're gonna hit every property Stommer represents.
This girl could be out there locked up, starving, we don't know what.
I want to try something else.
[dramatic music.]
Half day? You know I called a lawyer, right? He's not here now.
Hands behind your back.
[handcuffs clinking.]
Take a little ride.
You're out of your mind if you think you're getting away with this.
Get up.
They can't just drag us out here like this.
We didn't do anything.
Madison, look at me.
Do not listen to them.
We're gonna get through this.
I'll kill you! I'll kill you! - No! - Ruby, no! That is Ruby Baker.
Your husband kidnapped her eight weeks ago and held her in a basement and raped her to get her pregnant.
No, honey, remember what we talked about.
Everything they say is a lie.
We're gonna tie you to all three abductions.
This is the last free air you're gonna breathe.
Hey, we need your help.
He's holding another girl.
We don't know where she is.
It's the truth.
Another girl like Ruby.
He took her and he hid her for one reason: to give you the family that you always wanted.
Your husband raped me! Every night until I forgot how long I was down there! They are trying to tear us apart.
We did nothing wrong.
We're just trying to start a family! Like you always wanted! Madison, I think you knew what was going on the whole time.
You might have had your eyes closed.
This is what it looks like.
- No, I didn't know! - Madison, listen to me - Shut up! - Madison! - Look at me! - Madison! Your name is Jamie Lynn Stevens.
You grew up outside of Rockford, Illinois.
[crying.]
No.
Your little sister's name is Caitlin.
Caitlin is 25 years old now.
She's married.
- She had a baby girl.
- Madison, look at me! She named her baby Jamie Lynn.
Look at me, Madison! It's okay.
I know that you know what the right thing to do is.
I can tell that you're a good person.
I know that you want to help us.
I can see it.
Please, you are our only chance at finding this girl.
[sobbing.]
[tires screeching.]
Guy said the real estate agent hired them to lay floor in the basement.
- Keep 'em here.
- Yeah.
Down here! I got dirt.
I got something.
We got something.
Got something right here.
There it is.
Is she breathing? Let's get her out.
I read about this place.
The black site.
News said it's where you go before you're read your rights.
I see there's no cameras, so let me be clear: You touch me, and that is a seven-figure lawsuit that I win.
We found her.
Jennifer.
You beat her, and you strangled her.
Once he realized Ruby was pregnant, had no use for Jennifer.
You have no proof of any of this.
We got your prints, GPS history.
We can put you at that house.
Jamie Lynn's giving her statement right now.
She has the right to an attorney.
She waived it.
There any other victims out there now might be the time to tell us.
I would like to speak to my attorney.
You know, after 26 years, I've seen just about every horror people can do to each other.
I don't know.
I mean, all this time I thought if I put enough guys like you away the streets would be a safer place.
And you're right, there's no cameras down here.
So it's your word against mine.
You grabbed for my sidearm.
He can't do this.
And yet.
- Take the gun.
- Stop.
Come on.
Grab for the gun.
Help! - Reach for it.
- Help, someone! - Help me! - Reach for the gun.
Help, someone! Someone help! Okay, please.
Please, please.
Please.
You smell that? That's the smell of fear.
- Please? - Yeah.
Please! Please! Please! Please! Please.
Please? Please.
Now you know what it's like to beg for your life.
Please.
[crying.]
Please.
He was everything to me.
Now I have nothing.
You, um you have your life back.
And I think you're a very brave woman.
Sergeant, this inventory thing Platt's got me doing we seem to be missing a maroon Jeep.
Seized on a narcotics bust? I know it was rough today.
What you guys did makes us all proud to be part of 21.
So what are you gonna do? About the baby? About everything.
Think I want to keep it.
I just I want one good thing to come from this.
You know, I was shot, the day I found out my wife was pregnant with our daughter.
I was wearing a vest, and, uh I blacked out.
Patrolman found me, gave me this.
It's yours now.
- The bullet? - Yeah.
The one that didn't kill me.
You know, you remind me of my dad.
Here, just call this number, okay? - Thank you.
- Hey.
So you know, no one calls them "scrunchies" anymore.
Why not? They're scrunchy.
- True.
- Ruzek.
Laptop.
- Seriously? - Hey, I heard about a copper getting stripped for six years over a stolen burner phone, so, yeah, I'm serious.
You know what? You know what I think? I don't think this has anything to do with the laptop.
I think it's about her.
You want to bust my balls, look like a tough guy, right? - Adam.
- No.
You must see what's happening here.
I'm not making it up.
Dude's obviously into you.
So you know what? You want to date her? Be my guest.
Just get the stupid laptop, Adam.
Hey, look.
I'm sorry you got dragged into all this.
I just I honestly I just wanted to get the laptop back Ruzek and Burgess.
- And Roman.
- Uh-huh.
That sounds like a horror movie right there.
It'll probably be a PG-13 deal.
Nobody's gonna kill anybody.
Hey, shots on the house.
Just something that I created in honor of Mouch and Platt.
Two great tastes that taste great together.
- Hermann, thanks.
- Huh.
[coughs.]
Unlike gin and scotch.
Why would you do that to somebody? I don't know.
Stupid.
That's disgusting.
All right, what else? [Clears throat.]
Burgess did ask me for advice about dating a partner.
Yeah? What did you tell her? You know, just That there is one thing that's really hard.
What's that? Hey, you can tell me.
[sighs.]
It's just that, you know, when you work together all day and you got to be professional, and you can't tell him that you bought a new outfit and it's sitting in the apartment, still in the box.
Okay, we're out of here.
We got to go.

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