FBI: International (2021) s03e10 Episode Script

Red Light

1
[UPBEAT ELECTRONIC MUSIC]
- Damn, this city's unreal.
- Whoo!
It's just nice to walk around everywhere
after being cooped up
on the ship, right?
But what's with all
these Dutch women, huh?
It's like they got a stick up their ass.
I think it's the stick
up yours is the problem.
Oh, yeah? Really, huh?
- What's the next stop, boys?
- I'm not sure.
- Hey, uh, where are you going?
- My boyfriend's flat.
- [BOTH CHUCKLE]
- [SCOFFS]
Keep it together, Sutton. Let's go.
- Yeah, I'm working on it.
- My vote?
- De Wallen.
- Ah, I second that.
- The Red Light District?
- Yeah. What are you, Amish?
Yeah, the Red Light District.
Come on. You in?
Yeah, you're in. Let's go. Let's go.

What a trip.
Five months at sea,
no beer, no Internet, no cheeky-cheeky.
These women are doing God's work.
Well, look at that.
- You already made a new friend.
- [CHUCKLES]
Hey, smoke show, come on.
Go for it, Karloski.
No, you wanna check out
this cannabis café first?
No, no. Hey, don't change the subject.
Stay here. Right, focus.
Right here. Right here.
Hey! Hey, no photos!
This is not a sex museum.
You put your money where
your mouth is or move along.
Hey, we know how it works, okay?
Why don't you back off?
Delete the photos or pay the girl.
Look, did you not hear me, old man? Huh?
Yeah, you wanna shake
down some tourists,
that's fine by me, okay?
You run up on us, I'll kick your ass.
Okay, hey, hey, hey, hey.
There's no need for all that.
I'll just go in.
Yes. You enjoy yourself.
100 euros, 30 minutes.
- 50 for 15.
- Oh.
I guess I'll just do 15.
[DOOR CLOSES]
First time?
Yeah.
Relax. I'll take good care of you.
But no condom, no sex.
And no kissing.
[ROCK MUSIC PLAYING]

Well, his phone's still on.
I think our boy got lucky.
Nah, he wouldn't miss
a mandatory compliance inspection.
He's a "five minutes early
to everything" type guy.
Karloski, open up.
- Can you open this door?
- Hmm.
- Is this your room?
- No, it's a buddy of ours.
Oh, I'm sorry. I can't let you in unl
excuse me.
[DOOR LOCK BEEPS]
Coming in. Hope you're alone.
[TENSE MUSIC]
Ryan! No.
Oh, no.
Clear.
Oh, God.
He's dead.

Iowa, that's where you're from, Mom!
Land of the rolling prairie
and Slipknot.
We're flying there for
the family reunion next summer.
What's Slipknot?
It's a band.
You know what? Forget it.
- Will Nana and Pops be there?
- Sure will.
And Uncle Scott, Aunt Shannon,
all your cousins.
Will Nagymami and Nagypapi be there?
No.
That's dad's side of the family.
[DOORBELL RINGS]
- [DOOR BEEPING]
- Hello.
- Are you Amanda Tate?
- I am.
I need your signature.
What is it?
A summons to appear in court.

What have we got?
This morning a maritime
security contractor
was murdered in Amsterdam.
Cause of death lethal asphyxiation.
Ryan Karloski, Massachusetts resident,
former U.S. Army gunner's mate
I mean Navy.
He was only 25. Why did
he leave the military?
Amanda.
Sorry. Um, financial opportunities.
For the last five months, he was working
for the international
private security company
- Devos Maritime.
- That's a dangerous job.
Maritime security contractors
defend ships
from piracy, hijackings, terrorists.
How long was Karloski
in the Netherlands?
Since yesterday morning.
He was protecting a ship
that docked at the Port of Amsterdam,
a hopper dredger, whatever that is.
He'd only been to the country once prior
when the ship departed.
You know what?
How about we finish this
on the plane, yeah?
Hey.
Are you okay? You seem a little on edge.
Honestly, I've I've
never had to ask this,
but something urgent came up
that I have to deal with.
Mm-hmm.
Can I take the rest of the day off?
Yeah, we got your back.
Is there anything I can do to help?
No, it's just some stuff with my ex.
- Okay, go.
- Thank you.
Mm-hmm.
Andre, I'm gonna need you to hang back
and cover for Amanda, okay?
No sweat.
Thanks.
[SIREN WAILING]

Detective Layla Amrani.
Cameron Vo, nice to meet you.
Special Agent Scott Forrester.
Pleasure to meet you both.
I've seen suicides by asphyxiation,
but a gangland-style execution
I have to admit, this is a first.
Likewise. Any security cameras?
Only in the lobby, I'm afraid.
The bag was secured around
Karloski's neck with duct tape.
- No signs of forced entry.
- Any prints on the tape?
Yes, from one of his
colleagues, Shane Sutton.
He pulled the bag off his head.
In smothering cases, victims
usually put up a fight.
Was there any serious
injuries, trace DNA?
The medical examiner is
working on the report now.
We'll get you the results
as soon as possible.
Karloski's cell phone.
He received this text message
at 1:18 this morning.
"Leave 5K behind the lion statue
in Zorgvlied Cemetery at 10:00 a.m.,
or we will release photos from tonight".
- Local area code.
- Yeah, check it out.
Who the hell is "we"?
The victim was being shaken down.
By whom, I'm not so sure.
Any witnesses?
Uh, Karloski was partying with Sutton
and one of his colleagues from
the security team last night
Bernard Almaz.
He's the one who called 112.
Karloski was a real guy.
You know what I mean?
Like, a genuine guy.
We used to play poker every
night before we racked out.
Had a lot of heart-to-hearts.
Got me to open up about things
I'd never told anyone.
When was the last time you saw him?
De Wallen, around
12:00 a.m. this morning.
And the three of you were
staying here at the hotel.
Same floor, different rooms.
Look, we know who did it.
Give me the phone.
I'll show you the guy.
There he is.
That's the pimp who forced Karloski
to have sex with one of his whores.
These punters can't hold their liquor.
And then they start
taking photos of my girls.
Huh? What did they think
this is, a petting zoo?
Right now I think your
biggest concern is the murder
of an American who was caught
up in a blackmail scheme
after visiting one of your sex workers.
Blackmail? Ah, maybe
at other brothels, not here.
How so?
Locals, they complain
about too much sex,
too much noise,
too many beschonken people
in the streets.
Now the city has all these regulations.
Sex workers have empty pockets.
And what do they do?
They sell their customers' info
to the Bulgarian Mafia.
Where were you around 2:00 this morning?
Right here. My shift ended at 3:00.
Then I went home to my wife.
- Is this one of your ladies?
- Mm, Famke.
She's been renting from me
for five years.
I need to speak with her.
Haven't seen her, not since last night,
when your American came
back for round two.

Famke Hensen, 38, Dutch,
registered sex worker under
the Chamber of Commerce,
no priors.
The blackmailer's phone number
matches her contact info.
Owen Van Doorn, Dutch
I went through the CCTV
outside of the brothel.
His alibi checks out.
12:02 a.m.,
the guys argue with Van Doorn,
and Karloski enters the brothel.
12:35 a.m.,
Sutton and Almaz head back
to the hotel to call it a night.
12:50 a.m., Karloski walks
out of the brothel.
Ten minutes later, he
enters the hotel lobby.
1:21 a.m., he leaves the hotel
and returns to the brothel at 1:29.
1:48 a.m., he exits the brothel,
and he heads back to the hotel, alone.
My theory after getting
the blackmail text from Famke,
Karloski went back to the brothel
and refused to pay up.
At some point before or after
he returned to the hotel,
the killer enters his room.
Famke was evicted from the
address Van Doorn had on file.
I'll try and get a ping
on her phone number.
Let's get to it.
Hey, so, uh, what's the deal
with Amanda's ex-husband?
She likes to keep her
personal stuff personal.
Which is why I'm asking you.
Ex-fiancé, they were never married.
Bit of a control freak, if you ask me.
Your ex filed for sole custody
of your daughter.
No, we we had an agreement
to split custody 50/50.
An official agreement?
More of a handshake deal.
You're not a Hungarian citizen.
No, but László sponsors me
on a family-reunification visa.
We've always been on good terms.
Until now, apparently.
The last thing you want
is an ongoing custody battle.
It doesn't go well here
for, uh, noncitizens.
The best option
I can schedule a meeting
with a mediator this afternoon.
Does László really have a case
here, after seven years?
He absolutely has a case.

Outcall services aren't my thing.
I got off work at 2:00 a.m.,
and I came here.
It's my brother's.
Can he confirm your whereabouts?
Ooh. Well, he lives in Brussels.
Is there a reason he'd need to?
[CHUCKLES] This guy.
Did you sleep with him last night?
Sort of.
"Sort of"?
It was his first time
paying for full service,
and he couldn't quite perform.
Hmm, so then why did he
come back to the brothel?
Well, to aggressively accuse me
of sending an extortion text.
He kept talking nonsense
about photos and cash
and a-a lion in a cemetery.
Do you have any idea
who might have sent it?
Well, men seem to be drawn
to the exotic submissive
market these days.
I bet he tried to give it another go
with one of those Eastern European girls
flooding into my country illegally.
Just stick to the questions.
My point is, they steal business
from local sex workers
and do anything for money.
Are you going to tell me
why you're here?
Ryan Karloski was murdered
shortly after he left the brothel.
"Murdered"?
And you think I had something
to do with this?
Well, the blackmail text
came from your phone.
I-I didn't send it.
Here
have a look if you don't believe me.

[CELL PHONE CHIMES]
We have a situation in De Wallen.
I'll be keeping this,
and we will be in touch.
[SCOFFS]
You didn't tell me anything!
No wonder you Americans
always get yourselves killed!

Move, move, move, move, move!
[PEOPLE SCREAMING]
Move!
- He's gonna kill him!
- [SHRIEKING]
- Vo.
- ♪

Calm down.
- You're under arrest.
- Let's go.
Take him.
[HANDCUFFS CLICKING]

Shane Sutton, 36, American,
and Bernard Almaz, 32.
Mother's French. Father's Ethiopian.
Raised in Indonesia.
Prior to working for Devos Maritime,
they served the navy
in their respective countries.
In 2016, Almaz ended his
service with the French Navy
due to drug-dependency issues.
And in 2019,
Sutton received a BCD
discharge for misconduct.
Big chicken dinner that
is one of the worst ways
somebody can be discharged
from the military.
There is no way Famke
iced a security contractor
with military training.
She could be under the thumb
of the Bulgarian Mafia.
But I already looked through her phone,
and we couldn't find the
blackmail text to Karloski.
That's because it was sent
to his cell via a spoofing app.
You can manipulate information
by transmitting it
to a recipient's caller ID display
to disguise the real texter's identity.
Someone used Famke's number
to frame her as the sender.
Couldn't get an ID on any suspect.
There's a bar on the top
floor of the hotel.
Too much foot traffic in the lobby
during the time of the murder.
I spoke to the hotel manager.
When Karloski returned to the brothel,
his door remained shut until
he came back to the room
at 1:52 a.m.
No key card was used to open
the door again from the hallway
until 10:14 a.m., when
the DOA was found.
So the killer didn't sneak
into the room.
Karloski let him in himself.
Okay, shady dudes are shaking you down.
Why would you leave your
service weapon in the safe
if they're at your door?
Because Karloski put his weapon away,
he wasn't threatened by the visitor,
and he willingly opened the door.
Autopsy results just came in.
You're all gonna want to see this.
[TENSE MUSIC]
[DOOR OPENS]
A few things aren't adding
up in our investigation.
Karloski wasn't killed by a sex worker,
a brothel operator,
or the Bulgarian Mafia.
He was killed by somebody that he knew.
You're accusing me now?
I called your former CPO
at Camp Lemonnier.
It turns out you were arrested
for domestic violence
in San Diego.
You got a DUI in Norfolk.
And you discharged your service weapon
during a bar fight in Djibouti.
That is not a great track record,
especially after the little stunt
that you pulled in De Wallen.
Yeah, well, I went back there
because no one else was doing anything.
I wanted some answers.
Wow, that worked out for you, didn't it?
Karloski's official cause of death
was not lethal asphyxiation.
He let his guard down,
allowing the killer
to crack him across
the back of the skull.
The crime scene was staged.
A hotel laundry bag
was placed over his head.
There are no ligature
marks on his wrist.
There is no DNA under his fingernails.
Karloski was unable to defend himself.
Look, I haven't killed anyone
since I served in the military.
Yeah, Karloski and I were both
stationed at Camp Lemonnier,
and I loved him like a little brother,
which is exactly why I referred
him to the Devos Maritime.
[KNOCK AT DOOR, DOOR CLICKS OPEN]
- Are we charging him?
- That's a great question.
Not yet.
Well, someone just posted
bail for him and Almaz.
- You're free to go.
- [SCOFFS]
I highly suggest that you stick around.
Oh, absolutely.
If the FBI can't tell east
from west with a compass,
I'll handle this myself.
That is the last thing
that you wanna do.

My security contractors
they work for a highly
reputable company,
Devos Maritime.
I bailed them out because the
ship is leaving this afternoon.
Does the shipping company
run background checks
- on all of its employees?
- We do.
Then why did Shane Sutton not get dinged
for his misstep in Djibouti?
We're not looking for stockbrokers.
These men are a specific breed.
But Karloski
he was a good kid.
How long had he worked for you?
This was his first mission.
You know, when young men
are stuck on a ship
for five months
they eventually need
to blow off some steam.
I tried to warn him don't overdo it,
'cause when things go wrong,
it's always at a port of call.
What was the ship's last route?
Uh, we departed the Port of Amsterdam.
We moved south along
the coast of Morocco.
We stopped at Dakar, Abidjan, Lagos,
and then we returned north
to the Netherlands.
You'll have to delay
the ship's departure
until we finish our investigation.
I wish I could.
And believe me, I'd love
to know who killed Karloski.
But hopper dredgers maintain waterways
for vessels moving
billions worth of cargo.
So, unless your credentials
say "Harbor Master",
this ship is leaving.

Once Karloski's co-workers are at sea,
the Dutch police lose jurisdiction,
and they could flee to a country
with no extradition.
If they bumped off Karloski,
it was for a reason,
either a deal gone south,
or he witnessed something
he shouldn't have.
The Gulf of Guinea
is West Africa's cocaine corridor,
and the Netherlands,
a global cocaine hub.
I looked into their financials.
Karloski purchased a flight
from Amsterdam to Boston
that left this morning.
Well, Captain Veerman failed to mention
he was bailing on the next trip.
Well, he quit the navy
for financial opportunities,
so maybe he was just lining his pockets
- and then wanted out.
- Got a lead.
When the ship reached service
off the coast of Amsterdam,
Karloski placed a call to
a law firm in Massachusetts.
His uncle, Jim Briggs,
is one of the attorneys.
Wake him up.
[CRYING SOFTLY, SNIFFLES]
I just I don't believe it.
I just [CLEARS THROAT]
Last time I saw Ryan, he, uh,
graduated from the Academy.
[CRYING]
He had everything in front of him.
Just take all the time you need.
[CLEARS THROAT, SNIFFLES] I'm sorry.
[CLEARS THROAT]
[BREATHES DEEPLY]
Well [CLEARS THROAT]
I knew something was wrong when
he came to me for legal advice.
Um [CHUCKLES]
I had to remind him I don't
specialize in criminal law.
What sort of legal advice?
He kept tossing around hypotheticals.
What charges would someone be looking at
if they witnessed something illegal
in international waters,
uh, but didn't report it?
I asked him what it was.
Uh, he said smuggling.
Drugs?
People.

If these yobs are really
smuggling people,
this is a route that Europol
has never seen before.
The Sahel is a region in
Africa with violent militants
and limited resources
likely where the migrants
would be coming from.
We're looking for locations large enough
to hide migrants underneath
the nose of the crew.
They're usually transported
in shipping containers,
but since we're looking
at a hopper dredger,
the hull is our best bet.
It's easy access, where
someone on the outside
could provide food, water,
empty buckets.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]

- [DOOR CLANGS OPEN]
- Get down.
[WORKERS SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY]
Okay.
Let's go.

[METAL GROANS, CREAKS]
That's weird.
Hey! Hey!
Come here.

[SNIFFS] Smells like bleach.
[COUGHS]
They deep-cleaned it.
We are digging in an empty mine.
Must've transported
migrants on the last trip.
I'll need something else
to issue arrest warrants
uh, fake passports, documents maybe.
No way this was a one-man operation.
Ah.
"Sekou"?
Uh, It's a male given name from Africa.
Not a smoking gun
but something to go off.
Cramming people in here
for weeks, if not months?
I mean, they could have died
from heat stroke, suffocation.
Maybe some did.
You remember that guy who
ripped him off in Senegal?
Yeah, now, Ryan could
stand up for himself.
They came to collect,
he didn't wanna pay.
I wish he would have.
Ah, don't tell me.
You still haven't figured this out?
We'd appreciate it if you
could come by the station
and answer some follow-up questions.
Oh, let me guess the career hooker
with 2,000 miles on her tires
denied all involvement.
Who would have thought, huh?
Some skank prostitute lying to a Fed.
I'll answer your questions.
What is this?
If you're innocent,
I suggest you do the same.
What are you trying to say
to me right now?
I think he's already said it.
Why don't you just back up.
You didn't just assault
a federal agent, did you?

[CHUCKLES]
Ah.
No, that's fine. I got nothing to hide.
Good.
Let's go.
Amanda accepted a new
position with the FBI
that involves dangerous operations.
She promised she wouldn't
be doing fieldwork.
- That was a lie.
- We saved a six-year-old girl!
Do you know that my ex
has a gunshot wound?
My daughter is a Hungarian citizen,
and her safety's at risk.
Mr. Horváth, why do you feel
you can take on sole custody
as a single parent?
He won't be. We are engaged.
[SOFT TENSE MUSIC]

I've made every allowance for László
so that Lili could grow up
with his family.
Not only did I give up
my life in the U.S.,
I took a job below my skill level
for seven years
so that we could raise her in Hungary.
Budapest has become my home.
And now that I have my dream
job, I'm not giving it up.
This isn't to hurt you, Amanda.
- I am doing this for Lili.
- You're doing this for her!
Please calm down, everyone.
I know this is hard.
But, unfortunately, Ms. Tate
won't be able to take Lili
outside of the country when she leaves.
What does that mean?

I'd like to discuss this
with my client in private.
Of course.

It's from the immigration
office in Budapest.
László is going after your ability
to live in Hungary.
You will no longer have
a valid Hungarian visa
as of next month.
Meaning?
He's revoking his sponsorship.
You'll have to return to the U.S.
to hash this out with Immigration.
But
we could make a counteroffer.
Like what?
You go back to your
old job, nice and safe.
Give him 70% custody for now.
He has to sign the paperwork
so you can stay in the country.

Karloski was killed with his back turned
by someone that he trusted.
And I know that you cared
a lot about him.
So, if there's something
that you wanna say,
now's the time.
- I'm gonna need protection.
- You have my word.
[EXHALES DEEPLY]
Sutton killed him.
How do you know?
Because I heard him
talking through the wall,
inside Karloski's hotel room
at around 2:00 in the morning.
What was he saying?
I'm not sure, but it was Sutton.
H-his voice started getting louder,
a-and it sounded like Karloski
was trying to apologize
or calm him down, and then
nothing.
Why didn't you say anything earlier?
[TENSE MUSIC]
There's this sign inside the ship
"If you see something, say something".
Someone crossed out
that last "something"
and wrote "nothing".
On the high seas,
you learn to keep your mouth shut.

Yeah, hold on.
You think I got a hold of some
prostitute's phone number,
ran it through a spoofing app,
and then framed her for
the murder of my friend?
- Just answer the question.
- That's insane.
You guys gotta get your act together.
- Can I go now?
- No.
We placed you inside
Karloski's hotel room
at the time of the murder.
Really? And who told you that?
A confidential source.
Then I'm done talking.
I want a legitimate attorney,
one from the States,
not some Dutch clown.
Whatever you say.

- Any luck?
- Sutton lawyered up.
Almaz's testimony was speculative.
I don't think I can hold
him much longer.
Hey, I've been meaning
to ask are you Moroccan?
Oh, yes, first generation.
I came over with my mother
when I was ten.
Well, I am a third-gen Vietnamese.
- Oh.
- But I bet
it must have been really hard
moving to a new home at ten.
Uh, it was at first.
You know, people call
Amsterdam the city of sin,
but for an immigrant from Morocco,
it was the city of freedom
eh, or it was to me, anyway.
Yeah.
My grandfather he escaped
the Vietnam War on a boat.
He got robbed by pirates,
and he spent ten years
away from his family
before he could save enough
money to bring them to the U.S.
[CHUCKLES]
And here we are getting paid
to do what we love for a living.
Yeah.
I think about that exact
thing all the time.
[GLASSES CLINK]
[CELL PHONE CHIMES]
Got something.
[DEVICE CHIRPS]
Hey, Raines. Any word from Amanda?
Radio silence.
We figured out how the
migrants are being smuggled.
Using terminal cameras,
we monitored the crew's movement
at every port where the ship docked.
When they disembarked in Lagos,
20 men and women of African,
Indian, and Asian descent
boarded the dredger
disguised as dock workers.
Smugglers must be raking
in like, what, 10K a head?
We should bring in the captain,
see what he knows.
Before that, we may have a witness
who might be able to ID the smugglers.
Once the ship arrived
at the Port of Amsterdam,
the migrants waited
for the crew to leave,
and then they scattered into the city.
We pulled footage from
dozens of CCTV cameras,
and the majority of them got on a bus.
But one entered a parking garage
three miles from the port,
where a vehicle was
waiting to pick him up.
We captured an infrared
image of the plate,
registered to a Kadia Camara.
She works at a Malian restaurant
there in Amsterdam.
[TRADITIONAL PERCUSSIVE MUSIC PLAYING]

Kadia Camara?
Yes.
We're looking for this man.
Have you seen him?
No, I-I've never seen him before.
That's funny, because we saw him getting
into your car last night.
[TENSE MUSIC]

[SHOUTING IN BAMBARA]
[OBJECT SHATTERS]
[PEOPLE SHOUTING]

FBI! Stop right there!

[BREATHING HEAVILY]
- What's your name?
- Moussa Camara.
- Where's your paperwork?
- I don't have it.
Why is that?
[BREATHES SHAKILY]
I came to the Netherlands
to be with my family,
to work, to send money
to my children in Mali.
Did you pay the smugglers
to bring you here on a ship?
[SOMBER MUSIC]
What would you do to keep
your family alive?
Those men were not smugglers.
They were monsters.
They took our money and
gambled with our lives.
But it was my brother who lost.
How many people were on the ship?
20, but only 16 survived.
That little room it was so hot.
We are gonna find the men
who exploited you and your brother.
But I need you to help us identify them.
[SUSPENSEFUL MUSIC]

Him
he was in charge.
- Were these men involved?
- Not that I know of.
I never interacted with them.
We know you killed Karloski.
We know about the migrants.
So, unless you cooperate fully,
you're gonna spend the rest
of your life in a 6x8 cell
no bigger than the space you
crammed all those people in.
I didn't cram anybody anywhere.
That was all Veerman, the ship's master.
All I did was get people
on the ship and off
and deliver food and water.
Veerman's the one
who spearheaded the entire operation.
How did Karloski get mixed up?
He got hip to what was going on.
Came to me about it.
I guess he didn't know I was involved.
And I begged him to keep his mouth shut,
even offered to cut him in on the deal.
And he said he was in.
Then he goes to Veerman, rats me out.
And unknowingly put a bull's-eye
on his own chest, right?
Yeah.
Well, he should have
just taken the money.
How did you get Famke's phone number?
Veerman had it.
He'd been to her a few times.
So I steered Karloski to her last night
to get the ball rolling.
What was Sutton's role in all this?
[SCOFFS] Nothing.
Until the whole Famke thing
didn't work out.
Then Veerman wanted to pin it on Sutton,
which is why I came forward first.
Get my story out there, see if it stuck.
You killed Karloski in his
hotel room, didn't you?
He made his move. I made mine.
[TENSE MUSIC]
The Dutch police will be in here
to get your formal statement.
Hey.
Did it almost work?
Did I almost get away with it?
For a while, yeah.
When did it all fall apart?
When the FBI showed up.

[TIRES SCREECH]
[PEOPLE SHOUTING]
Split up. Stay on comms.

We've got a runner!
Stern of the boat engine room.

[GUNSHOTS]
Gun!
Europol! Drop your weapon!

Target is still on the move.
I got eyes on him. He's on the deck.
[DRAMATIC MUSIC]

Stop right there.
Pieter
Put the gun down.

Pieter, put the gun down.
You put your gun down!
Pieter, don't do this.
I'm not spending the rest
of my life in prison!
Don't move.

- How much time do I have left?
- Moussa, listen.
Look, I know I'm getting deported.
But, please, let me say
goodbye to my sister.
I will never see her again.
You helped us take down
a global smuggling ring.
You are not going anywhere.
Now you have the legal right to live
and work in the Netherlands.
[SCOFFS]
T-thank you.
Thank you so much. Thank you.
Someone's here to pick you up.
[SOFT MUSIC]
[CRIES SOFTLY]
[SNIFFLES, CRYING]

[SIGHS]
[LOCK CLICKING]
You are free to go.
Almaz and Veerman
think they'll ever be out
on the street again?
I very much doubt it.
Well, if they are, you let me know.
[CLEARS THROAT] Hey.
You know, cases like this,
I wish I'd kept up on my piano
lessons like my mom wanted.
Low-rent casino lounge in Reno,
three barflies ignoring me,
nice layer of secondhand
smoke hanging in the air?
[CHUCKLES]
My music basically drowned out
by the nearby slot machines.
[SIGHS]
Doesn't sound too bad right about now.
- It's never too late.
- Don't tempt me.
- [BOTH CHUCKLE]
- What is this?
It's, uh, for Moussa's
brother who didn't make it.
So the family is having
a funeral for him in absentia.
Layla and I are passing the hat.
Don't ever change, Cam.
[CELL PHONE CHIMES]
[SOFT DRAMATIC MUSIC]

[SIGHS] What?
Amanda's resigning.

[SIGHS]
[SNIFFLES]
You were saved in extremis.
What what does that mean?
It's a legal term "at
the very last moment".
László is calling the whole thing off.
He will agree to keep it
at 50/50 custody.
What? What about my visa
and the immigration
You don't need it.

What are you doing here?
Scott wanted me to give you this
official protection against
legal jurisdiction in the EU.
All FBI agents have one. Why don't you?
Legat Connelly always kept
me on temporary duty.
You're part of the Fly Team now, Amanda.
We look out for each other.
[SIGHS]
- Can I give you a hug?
- I mean
[LAUGHS]

[CRYING]

[TENSE MUSIC]

[WOLF HOWLS]
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