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Esprits Criminels
#405 : Sur la route

Résumé : L'équipe enquête sur les agissements d'un tueur en série, qui vient de frapper une nouvelle fois dans la ville de Modesto. Tout porte à croire qu'il choisit ses victimes en fonction de l'emplacement de leur maison, surtout si elles se trouvent à proximité d'une voie de chemin de fer. L'assassin tue brutalement ses victimes, puis s'installe pour la nuit dans leur maison, comme s'il était le propriétaire des lieux. Parallèlement, Morgan rencontre une femme qui semble le reconnaître alors qu'il se trouve dans un café.

Popularité


3.89 - 9 votes

Titre VO
Catching Out

Titre VF
Sur la route

Première diffusion
29.10.2008

Première diffusion en France
17.06.2009

Photos promo

Hotchner (Thomas Gibson) discute avec le chef de la police locale de l'affaire.

Hotchner (Thomas Gibson) discute avec le chef de la police locale de l'affaire.

Spencer Reid (Matthew Grey Gubler) est un agent spécial qui travaille pour le FBI.

Spencer Reid (Matthew Grey Gubler) est un agent spécial qui travaille pour le FBI.

Prentiss, Spencer et Hotch expose les faits aux agents de l'équipe et à la police.

Prentiss, Spencer et Hotch expose les faits aux agents de l'équipe et à la police.

Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler) touche le ventre de Jennifer Jareau (A.J. Cook).

Reid (Matthew Gray Gubler) touche le ventre de Jennifer Jareau (A.J. Cook).

L'agent Emily Prentiss (Paget Brewster) réfléchit à l'affaire de l'équipe de la BAU.

L'agent Emily Prentiss (Paget Brewster) réfléchit à l'affaire de l'équipe de la BAU.

Diffusions

Logo de la chaîne TV Breizh

France (redif)
Mardi 06.02.2024 à 00:10

Logo de la chaîne TV Breizh

France (redif)
Lundi 29.01.2024 à 01:55

Logo de la chaîne TF1

France (redif)
Jeudi 01.09.2016 à 22:50
1.31m / 13.4% (Part)

Logo de la chaîne CBS

Etats-Unis (inédit)
Mercredi 29.10.2008 à 21:00
13.97m

Plus de détails

Plus d'informations | N°070

Réalisateur de l'épisode : Charles Haid
→ Scénariste de l'épisode : Oanh Ly

→ Les acteurs principaux présents dans l'épisode :
- Thomas Gibson ... Aaron Hotchner
- Joe Mantegna ... David Rossi
- Matthew Gray Gubler ... Spencer Reid
- Paget Brewster ... Emily Prentiss
- Shemar Moore ... Derek Morgan
- A.J. Cook ... Jennifer Jareau
- Kirsten Vangsness ... Penelope Garcia

→ Les autres acteurs présents dans l'épisode :
- Meta Golding ... Jordan Todd
- Pepe Serna ... Ruben Garcia
- Andre Royo ... Armando Salinas
- Jim Cody Williams ... Modesto Bull
- Victor Warren ... Lieutenant Daniels
- Adrian LaTourelle ... Lieutenant Stark
- Mitch Carter ... Lockerford Bull
- Linda Bisesti ... Joann Nelson
- Omar Leyva ... Cesar Jimenez
- Julieta Ortiz ... Mlle. Ortiz
- Silvia Curiel ... Rose
- Marisa Quintanilla ... Angela Ortiz

Waitress: What can I get you?

Jordan Todd: I'll take a brownie. No, the big one in the corner.

Derek Morgan: Dessert for breakfast? Must be a special occasion.

Jordan Todd: I just got some good news.

Derek Morgan: Care to share?

Jordan Todd: Nope, don't want to jinx it.

Derek Morgan: Okay. I can understand that… Congratulations.

Jordan Todd: My mom always says to make time to celebrate the little victories.

Derek Morgan: I like that. Maybe I should take your mother's advice and get something sweet with my coffee.

Jordan Todd: Oh, yeah? What are you celebrating?

Derek Morgan: I'll think of something.

Jordan Todd: They must love you here.

Derek Morgan: What do you mean?

Jordan Todd: You throw out your first cup of coffee and then you get back in line for more. So, either you love paying for bad coffee, or you did all that just to talk to me.

Derek Morgan: You got me.

Jordan Todd: Have a nice day, Derek.

----------

Spencer Reid: So wait, she knew your name?

Derek Morgan: I don't know how i could forget a face like hers.

Spencer Reid: You've been with so many girls that you can't remember all their names?

Emily Prentiss: Oh, come on, are you surprised?

Derek Morgan: This has never happened to me before.

Spencer Reid: It hasn't happened to me before either.

Emily Prentiss: Well, it can't happen to you. You have an eidetic memory.

Derek Morgan: Besides, you only got one name to remember.

Jennifer Jareau: Okay. Six victims have been killed in a series of burglar homicides all over central California. In order... Bakersfield, Fresno, Chico and, two nights ago, Alan and Brenda Paisley in Sacramento.

David Rossi: Big area. Are we sure it's the same unsub?

Jennifer Jareau: His DNA was found in all the homes.

Aaron Hotchner: They hadn't connected it because he crossed jurisdictional lines.

Jennifer Jareau: The head of the Sacramento field office has established a multi-agency task force and he wants us to run point.

Derek Morgan: Looks like we got a lot of investigators on this one.

Aaron Hotchner: We'll streamline it if we need to.

Jennifer Jareau: You should know that they've already named him the "highway 99 killer."

Aaron Hotchner: We'll deal with that when we get there.

Jennifer Jareau: He targets 1 to 2-person households. He kills the victims while they sleep.

Spencer Reid: Blunt force trauma with objects found at the home. Multiple bashes to the head.

Jennifer Jareau: After he kills the victims, he ransacks the homes for valuables.

Aaron Hotchner: Which is not unusual for a night time burglary-homicide. What's unique about this unsub is that after he kills them, apparently he sits down to dinner in their homes. They found his DNA all over the food and the table.

David Rossi: Are these burglaries that turned into homicides or homicides that turned into burglaries?

Derek Morgan: Between the two offenses, it seems the primary motivation is homicide. Otherwise, he would have just stolen the items and fled.

Jennifer Jareau: But he stays there for hours. He eats their food, he tries on their clothes, he showers, he even sleeps in their beds.

Emily Prentiss: It's like goldilocks became a serial killer.

Jennifer Jareau: They've got plenty of DNA, but they found no fingerprints.

Emily Prentiss: He doesn't take their cars. So, how does he get there?

Jennifer Jareau: No witness reports of strange cars on the street.

David Rossi: No prints, no gun, no noise, no car, no witnesses. This all adds up to prior experience.

Spencer Reid: There's a record on him somewhere.

Aaron Hotchner: And until we find it, he's moved on to another town.

Emily Prentiss: Which could be anywhere.

----------

Emily Prentiss: "Plenty sits still. Hunger is a wander." Zulu Proverb.

----------

Jennifer Jareau: So, four homes in about five weeks. The first one at the beginning of September in Bakersfield. Then Fresno a week later. Chico eight days after that.

Spencer Reid: Then he changes direction, heads south to Sacramento at the end of September.

Jennifer Jareau: These crime scenes are spread out over 400 miles. I mean, how many serial killers move around like that?

David Rossi: Not many.

Spencer Reid: Of the ones who do, we categorize them into two subgroups. In one model, he's an itinerant homeless person, someone who's been displaced.

Derek Morgan: With the second type, their occupation allows them to travel. He could be killing while on business.

Jennifer Jareau: A truck driver make sense?

Spencer Reid: Long-haul truck driver Bruce Mendenhall shot his victims and disposed of their bodies at truck stops, across at least 4 different states.

Emily Prentiss: But Mendenhall targeted mostly high-risk victims, prostitutes and hitchhikers, he picked up right off the highway.

Aaron Hotchner: A truck driver's "MO," he'd use his rig for getaway. Somebody would have noticed a tractor trailer parked in the neighbourhood.

David Rossi: How about someone in corporate sales? They still travel.

Derek Morgan: Or computer professionals. They travel to install software.

Emily Prentiss: Or someone in real estate. Like a land assessor.

Jennifer Jareau: They just discovered a new murder, in Modesto.

Spencer Reid: He went south again.

Aaron Hotchner: Right, when we land, Reid, JJ and I will go to task force headquarters. The 3 of you...

David Rossi: Modesto.

Aaron Hotchner: We're going to log some miles on this one.

----------

Liman: I'm agent Liman.

Jennifer Jareau: Hi, agent Jareau. These are agents Hotchner and Reid.

Liman: We reserved this room for you.

----------

Aaron Hotchner: Who named him this?

Liman: I did.

Jennifer Jareau: I'm gonna go get started on that memo.

Spencer Reid: I'm gonna help you.

Liman: I figured he's on highway 99, why not call him the "highway 99 killer"? I got CHP.to beef up presence all over highway 99.

Aaron Hotchner: Hang on, slow down. We're going to distribute a memo to all the investigators, retracting the name.

Liman: I don't understand.

Aaron Hotchner: Gary Ridgeway, the Green River Killer, was burying the bodies of his victims in the remote woods outside Seattle. Investigators never thought to look there because they were too busy only looking in the green river area.

Liman: All due respect, we're not finding bodies in remote woods. These are five homes in cities connected by one major highway.

Aaron Hotchner: But by calling him this, you are detrimentally influencing the investigation. And you're establishing a relationship in the minds of the investigators with only this highway.

Liman: Point taken. Fire number one put out. Anything else, sir?

Aaron Hotchner: Are these people all involved in the investigation?

Liman: Yes, they are.

Aaron Hotchner: That's too many.

Liman: What?

Aaron Hotchner: It's our experience in task force situations that excessive personnel can be counterproductive.

Liman: These people have come from far away. They've been on the case long before you.

Aaron Hotchner: I understand that, but in order to function effectively this task force needs a focused headquarters free from the congestion of auxiliary personnel. These officers will be much more helpful in their hometowns… Are we in agreement?

Liman: I'll start sending people home.

Aaron Hotchner: Thank you.

Liman: All right, listen up, guys.

Spencer Reid: How'd he take it?

Aaron Hotchner: He'll get over it.

----------

Daniels: I'm detective Daniels.

Derek Morgan: How are you doing? Agent Morgan. Agent Rossi. Agent Prentiss.

Daniels: This way… You see something?

Derek Morgan: It's what I don't see. What I don't hear… There's no dogs barking.

Emily Prentiss: No sign for an alarm system.

Daniels: No system.

David Rossi: They have outdoor lights.

Daniels: Neighbours said they weren't on.

Derek Morgan: This house has the three basic things that a burglar looks for.

Emily Prentiss: No dog, no alarm and definitely no lights.

David Rossi: Tells us the unsub's patient enough to find a house that's vulnerable.

Daniels: There's the neighbour.

Emily Prentiss: I'll talk to her.

----------

Derek Morgan: Nail polish remover?

Daniels: I think so.

Derek Morgan: He gets under the sink?

Daniels: How'd you know?

Derek Morgan: I've seen this kind of thing before with burglaries when the criminal is a substance abuser… Oftentimes they huff household cleaners, just so they can get high.

David Rossi: What was his point of entry?

Daniels: Laundry room through an unlocked window.

David Rossi: Explains where he found the murder weapon.

Derek Morgan: Serious overkill. He's killing with rage.

David Rossi: How does a man with such rage calm himself down enough to make coffee and eggs?

Derek Morgan: He's disorganized, picks an opportunistic weapon at a crime scene, strikes with rage...

David Rossi: Organized enough though, to follow a ritual after he kills. Cools off. Cleans up, goes through their things, eats.

Derek Morgan: Intense rage followed by a long period of calmness spent inside the house.

Daniels: Is that unusual?

David Rossi: Very.

Daniels: Can you explain what he does with his clothes?

David Rossi: His clothes?

----------

Emily Prentiss: Did you happen to notice any strangers in the neighbourhood last night?

Joann Nelson: No. Nothing like this has ever happened around here.

Emily Prentiss: When was the last time you spoke to or heard from the Sullivans?

Joann Nelson: I saw Larry this morning on the balcony when I went out to get the paper.

Emily Prentiss: And what time was that?

Joann Nelson: About 5:30 am.

Emily Prentiss: Mrs. Nelson, are you sure you saw someone up there this morning?

Joann Nelson: Well, it was still dark out, but yes, I'm sure… Why?

Emily Prentiss: Your neighbours died around 1:00 am.

----------

Daniels: When we found the deceased, the shirt was placed over his chest. The pants over his legs.

David Rossi: This is the first time we're hearing this.

Derek Morgan: Look at his clothes, Rossi, the dirt stain.

Daniels: Why would he cover up the body?

David Rossi: He wears their clean clothes, sleeps in their nice bed, and then puts his dirty clothes on the male victim's body. This might be some form of transference.

Daniels: Transfer of what?

David Rossi: By symbolically dressing Mr. Sullivan in his clothes, he's equalizing their status.

Derek Morgan: Mr. Sullivan has all these things and he doesn't. This guys got a problem with his station in life.

David Rossi: He can't bring himself up on his own, so he makes himself feel better by destroying others and living their lives.

Derek Morgan: That might be why he stays so long. He needs that time just so he can feel at home.

David Rossi: And pretends this is all his. He's playing out his fantasy.

Derek Morgan: Given this behaviour, the dirty clothes, the cheap drug choice, I'd say we're looking for someone who's homeless.

Daniels: How does a homeless man move about the state like this?

David Rossi: I have one idea.

----------

Spencer Reid: Yeah?

David Rossi: Reid, are you in front of a map?

Spencer Reid: Yeah, I am now.

David Rossi: I think I know how the unsub's getting around. Do you see tracks linking Bakersfield to Sacramento?

Spencer Reid: He's hopping trains.

----------

Woman: Honey… Honey.

----------

Derek Morgan: The guy we're looking for is using freight trains to get around. He targets homes within a mile of the tracks.

Modesto Bull: Bulls and ‘bos don't usually cross paths.

David Rossi: Bulls and ‘bos?

Modesto Bull: They call rail cops bulls we call them ‘bos, as in hobos.

David Rossi: You're saying you rarely see hobos around here?

Modesto Bull: I see them plenty but to tell you the truth, I'm nothing more than an armed scarecrow. They see me coming, they get the hell away. Their biggest problem is with each other.

David Rossi: You mean turf disputes?

Modesto Bull: You get two of them in one boxcar, it usually gets ugly.

Derek Morgan: So, if a 'bo jumps off one of these trains in a new town, is there someplace he goes first?

Modesto Bull: The jungle. That's what they call the camps. Local one's a couple of hundred yards that way.

David Rossi: Do you happen to have a vending machine in here?

Modesto Bull: Yeah.

----------

Spencer Reid: Where are you?

Emily Prentiss: I'm just off highway 99, the whole drive up from Modesto, all I see are crops. Just rows and rows of crops. Farmlands.

Spencer Reid: You can't see that from standard road maps.

Emily Prentiss: The railway track runs parallel to highway 99 most of the way. I think I'm seeing a lot of what the unsub saw.

Spencer Reid: Most of central California is one big valley, a flat basin completely surrounded by mountain ranges on all sides, supported by rivers, lakes and aqueducts. It's ideal for farming.

Emily Prentiss: Well, I don't know what it gets us, but I think we should at least factor it into the conversation.

Spencer Reid: I agree.

----------

Penelope Garcia: Go ahead, guys, I'm listening.

Spencer Reid: Garcia, I need you to look into small farm towns all over central California, track all unsolved homicides that involved night time burglaries in homes within a mile of train tracks.

Penelope Garcia: Oh, you think there's more?

Spencer Reid: I don't know. Let's get started.

----------

Aaron Hotchner: I'd just like to reiterate that this unsub is not getting around on highway 99. His travel is linked in close proximity to railway lines.

Spencer Reid: He's targeted 5 homes and killed 8 people in 6 weeks. We're looking for a male, indigent transient between the ages of 25 and 45.

Emily Prentiss: He's fit enough for the physical demands of train hopping, or "catching out" as they call it.

Aaron Hotchner: He'll be bruised from jumping on and off trains and he might also be beat up from just defending himself in any kind of turf wars.

Emily Prentiss: He may look homeless, but he's taking clothing from his victims' homes so he'll be the only transient on the tracks in clean clothing.

Aaron Hotchner: The trains and the rail yards are his home and when he gets tired of these, he chooses a house to make his own.

Spencer Reid: He'll have a pronounced red, dry rash around his mouth and nose, what's commonly referred to as a "sniffer's rash."

Liman: How do we know that?

Aaron Hotchner: He takes household cleaners and we believe he's abusing them as psychoactive inhalants. Nail polish remover, glue, paint thinner, lighter fluid, whatever is the cheapest high available.

Spencer Reid: They're referred to as "tollyheads" because they derive a high from sniffing toluene, a chemical solvent. Once inhaled, the effects are felt instantaneously.

Emily Prentiss: We believe he's living out a fantasy in these homes. The fantasy is that it is his house for the night. He spends hours enjoying the comforts of his victims' homes. Upon leaving, he takes clothing, money, jewellery, and small electronics. If you get close to him, you won't miss him. He will smell like a combination of human filth and paint thinner.

----------

Derek Morgan: See that?

Old Hobo: We're not looking for Jesus today.

David Rossi: We're not with a church. How about a favour for a favour?

Old Hobo: Not interested.

Young Hobo: Speak for yourself… Y'all want some mulligan stew?

David Rossi: No, thanks. I'll pass.

Derek Morgan: We're looking for someone who's been burglarizing homes.

Young Hobo: Wasn't me. Wait. Y'all talking about Texas?

Derek Morgan: He recently moved through Modesto. May have tried pawning off some electronics, some jewellery.

Old Hobo: Oh, yeah, I remember him. He sold me some nice diamonds.

Young Hobo: He's just kidding.

David Rossi: This guy's jumping trains from city to city. He breaks into people's homes and kills them while they're sleeping. Do you still think it's funny?

Derek Morgan: What's your friend over there doing?

Old Hobo: He's telling the next 'bo who comes around to watch out for cops.

Derek Morgan: Got a lot of symbols around here... Like this one. Can you tell me what they all mean?

Old Hobo: Depends on how fast you can get me a bottle of whiskey.

Young Hobo: And some more nutter butters.

----------

Jennifer Jareau: He's kicking a lot today.

Spencer Reid: In the third trimester, there's an average of 30 foetal movements per hour. Babies kick to explore movement and strengthen muscle.

Jennifer Jareau: Have you ever actually felt a baby kick? You feel that?

Spencer Reid: Does it freak you out?

Jennifer Jareau: No, not at all. Why? Does it freak you out?

Spencer Reid: Very much so.

Jennifer Jareau: Okay… Hey, Garcia.

Penelope Garcia: Bad news alert.

Spencer Reid: Hold on one second. Guys?

Liman: What is it?

Spencer Reid: I had Garcia look into all unsolved burglary homicides in central California, paying particularly attention to small farm towns.

Penelope Garcia: I found his DNA in three more cities.

Liman: How did I miss this?

Spencer Reid: Small towns don't always link their evidence up to state or national DNA databases.

Aaron Hotchner: It can happen when unsubs cross jurisdictional lines.

Emily Prentiss: What are the cities, Garcia?

Penelope Garcia: Tehachapi, Vacaville, and Orange Cove. All farm towns. All super far away from highway 99.

----------

Derek Morgan: Okay. Thanks, JJ. The unsub's killed in three other small towns we didn't know about.

David Rossi: Where do these murders sit in the timeline?

Derek Morgan: One of them was before Bakersfield. Small mountain town called Tehachapi.

David Rossi: If that was his first, we need to find out what happened at that house.

----------

Emily Prentiss: You considering it?

Spencer Reid: Considering what?

Emily Prentiss: Having baby geniuses one day.

Spencer Reid: Hello?

Penelope Garcia: I've noticed in the cities, including the new ones we've discovered, there's a spike in the sales of certain crops during the time the unsub is there. Last week of august, apples in Tehachapi. First week of September, tomatoes in Bakersfield. Second week of September, fall squashes in Fresno.

Emily Prentiss: So he's in town for a big harvest.

Spencer Reid: We have an unsub riding trains town to town during big harvests who doesn't have a car or permanent residence.

Emily Prentiss: Migrant farm worker.

----------

Angela Ortiz: Ma! Pa! Mommy! Mommy!

----------

Emily Prentiss: He left a shirt on his male victim again.

Spencer Reid: That's not all he left. "Modesto couple victims of highway 99 killer." This was printed before we released to the press he's using trains to get around.

Emily Prentiss: He's taunting us, telling us he's smarter than we are because we got his mode of transportation wrong.

Aaron Hotchner: The more confident he gets, the more he's experimenting with his ritual.

Spencer Reid: The first few murders were 5 to 8 days apart. This one was just one day since Modesto. If we don't find him soon...

Emily Prentiss: Goldilocks will be sleeping in someone else's bed tonight.

----------

David Rossi: His first murder. We're trying to find out why it started here.

Stark: Mildred Younce was 68 years old at the time of her death. Lived by herself. She would have been an easy target for a burglar.

Derek Morgan: She was killed in her bed just like the others.

David Rossi: But no signs of a break-in?

Stark: We think she may have left her windows open.

David Rossi: Who was your best suspect?

Stark: We found 17 sets of prints in there. Most of them belonged to transients. She was known to offer food in exchange for work around the house.

Derek Morgan: Hey, what would I find further down this road here?

Stark: Well, there's train tracks down there.

Derek Morgan: Rossi, not just train tracks.

----------

Emily Prentiss: This couple is Hispanic. The previous couples were Caucasian. He switched his victim profile.

Aaron Hotchner: I don't think he knows or cares what race they were. I think this house was just an easy target.

Spencer Reid: Yeah?

Jennifer Jareau: So, we got something. Jewellery stolen from the home in Sacramento turned up at a pawn shop in Modesto. Garcia just sent you a picture from the security cam.

Spencer Reid: Yeah, I got it.

Jennifer Jareau: Employee said he was about 5'8", slight, late thirties, dark skin. With a red rash around his mouth.

Aaron Hotchner: Circulate the picture, JJ.

Jennifer Jareau: I'm already on it.

----------

Penelope Garcia: As it turns out, all the big farms set up housing camps for the workers during harvest. But these camps are partly subsidized by the state, thus they require ID and a strict sign-in policy, giving us a way to track migrants. So, I called the camps and they're busy faxing me the lists i requested.

Jennifer Jareau: All right. Well, we need to see if any of these farm workers travelled the same route as our unsub.

----------

Derek Morgan: Remember this one?

David Rossi: Yeah. Safe camp.

Stark: How do you know what all these signs mean?

Derek Morgan: We had a little help. Rossi, safe water.

David Rossi: When it's not dry. Here's another one.

Derek Morgan: Oh, yeah, the train. Catch you out here.

Stark: This is Mildred Younce's address.

Derek Morgan: Okay. The cat means friendly old lady. The "the" means she trades food or shelter for work. At 718 Maple.

Stark: So whoever knows this code knew Mildred Younce opened up her house to strangers?

David Rossi: If you wanted the house to yourself, the only thing standing in your way is a defenceless little old lady.

Derek Morgan: Yeah, JJ. Go ahead.

Jennifer Jareau: Hey, Morgan, there's an apple farm about three miles away from Mildred Younce's house.

Derek Morgan: Yeah. We saw it on the way over here.

Jennifer Jareau: Can you and Rossi go there and see if they kept employment records? Hotch wants a list of people who worked there the few days before Mildred was killed.

Derek Morgan: All right. We're on our way.

----------

Jennifer Jareau: Hey, update from headquarters. Rossi and Morgan are on their way to that farm in Tehachapi. I found a representative from the local housing authority, Cesar Jimenez. He's expecting you. Press release went out to the media with a photo from the pawn shop. And I'm waiting to hear back from Garcia about tracking migrants who may have travelled the same route as our unsub.

Aaron Hotchner: JJ, what are we going to do without you when you go on maternity leave?

Jennifer Jareau: You think I'd just leave you hanging?

Aaron Hotchner: Does that mean you have a plan?

Jennifer Jareau: I don't know. You'll see.

----------

Aaron Hotchner: I'm agent Hotchner.

Cesar Jimenez: Cesar from the housing authority.

Aaron Hotchner: These are agents Prentiss and Reid.

Emily Prentiss: Good morning.

Spencer Reid: Good morning.

Cesar Jimenez: Good morning.

Aaron Hotchner: Thank you for meeting us here.

Emily Prentiss: Does this man look familiar to you?

Cesar Jimenez: Hard to tell.

Spencer Reid: Have you had any complaints in the camps? This man would show disruptive behaviour.

Aaron Hotchner: He might be stealing things from other workers, starting fights. He sniffs chemicals to get high.

Cesar Jimenez: Well, our facilities have a zero tolerance policy. No drinking, no drugs, certainly no violence… Anyone who cannot follow these rules would be kicked out.

Emily Prentiss: Have you kicked anyone out recently?

Cesar Jimenez: The camps in this area are at full capacity. We have to turn people away.

Aaron Hotchner: Thank you.

Cesar Jimenez: Mucho gusto.

----------

Aaron Hotchner: If he's pawning the jewellery he's stealing to get money why is he still working in the fields?

Emily Prentiss: Here's another question. Why is he circling the farm towns at all?

Spencer Reid: There are over 140,000 miles of tracks in this country. He could go anywhere.

Emily Prentiss: But he's still in California.

Aaron Hotchner: Something's keeping him here.

----------

Spencer Reid: What is it?

Penelope Garcia: Okay, mini-lesson. Migrants travel and work in these groups and the groups are called Cuadrillas. Now, I have found one such Cuadrilla that was in Chico at the same time as our unsub. And then I checked and they were in Sacramento and Modesto and Vacaville at the same time as our unsub as well.

Spencer Reid: What about the first town?

Penelope Garcia: I got employment records from the apple farm in Tehachapi. This Cuadrilla last worked there two days before Mildred Younce was killed. Now, here's the whammy. An Armando Salinas checked in with this group in Tehachapi. But then, he falls off the map. There's no sign of him in any of the camps.

Emily Prentiss: Interesting.

Penelope Garcia: Double whammy. Customs and immigration have a rap sheet on him for theft and assault and he's wanted in connection to some burglaries.

Spencer Reid: There's the record we've been looking for.

Penelope Garcia: Triple whammy. His fingerprints were one of 17 found at Mildred Younce's house.

Aaron Hotchner: Get us his photo and get JJ to get it out to the media. We're going to need the public's help.

Penelope Garcia: Sending you his mug… The group that he's been following, they checked into Lockeford early this morning. That's not far from you.

----------

Cesar Jimenez: [Speaking Spanish]

Agent: Stop.

Aaron Hotchner: Let them go. Let them go… We're sorry to interrupt your evening. But we've come here because we need your help.

Cesar Jimenez: [Speaking Spanish]

Aaron Hotchner: Go ahead and read out the names of the men in the Cuadrilla.

Cesar Jimenez: [Speaking Spanish] "Ricky Zaparilla, ruben Garcia, Felix Zapato, Olman Hernandez, Roberto Hernandez, Arturo Torres, Tony Guzman."

Emily Prentiss: Sir. [Speaking Spanish]

Ruben Garcia: Si. [Speaking Spanish]

Emily Prentiss: It's his brother. Por favor.

----------

Emily Prentiss: [Speaking Spanish]

Ruben Garcia: [Speaking Spanish]

Emily Prentiss: [Speaking Spanish]

Ruben Garcia: [Speaking Spanish] He likes to know where I'm going.

Emily Prentiss: Why does he have to follow you? Why isn't he with you anymore?

Ruben Garcia: He's not a good worker. He got us fired from a big job. My Cuadrilla wanted him gone.

Emily Prentiss: So you kicked him out?

Ruben Garcia: Si.

Emily Prentiss: Your brother has been following you ever since. Burglarizing homes and killing people in every city.

Ruben Garcia: Is that where he gets the money from?

Emily Prentiss: What do you mean?

Ruben Garcia: He's been leaving me money at the camps.

Emily Prentiss: Does he know you're in Lockeford right now?

Ruben Garcia: I found this at the camp today.

Emily Prentiss: Just… Un momento.

----------

Emily Prentiss: The killings started in Tehachapi. I think his brother rejecting him must have been a stressor.

Spencer Reid: Morgan and Rossi made it here, they're with rail security. Hotch and Liman are patrolling neighbourhoods.

Emily Prentiss: Okay. I think it's time to get these guys going. Excuse me. Could we have your attention, please? Everybody? This is Armando Ruis Salinas. He is 38 years old, a Mexican national. We believe he is currently in the vicinity of Lockeford and its outlying towns.

Spencer Reid: He'll only target homes within a mile of train tracks. You'll be assigned search quadrants.

Emily Prentiss: Think the way a burglar would. Pay close attention to houses that have no exterior lights on, no security alarm signs or barking dogs nearby. Let's go.

----------

Emily Prentiss: Are you surprised the police are looking for him?

Ruben Garcia: He's my half-brother. I wasn't around for him when he was young. He's been in trouble all his life. Was in jail in Mexico. I thought if he came to work with me, he would change… I'm grateful to work but Armando hated work, hated the camps. Always complained he never had a nice bed to sleep on.

----------

Liman: What if he's already inside a house?

Aaron Hotchner: Then we'll find more bodies in the morning.

----------

Ruben Garcia: When he was a kid, he slept on the floor… In jail, he slept on the floor… All he ever talked about was having a house of his own… A bed to sleep on.

----------

Reporter: The suspect is considered extremely dangerous. Authorities believe he is still in California. The FBI is warning residents to lock all doors and keep all lights on through the night. In other news, college tuition fees jumped a record...

----------

Dispatcher: Suspect seen fleeing the 400 block of Pear Blossom Avenue. All units respond.

----------

Spencer Reid: Morgan, that's in your area. I'm gonna send Hotch for back-up.

----------

Agent: I saw him run down toward the trains! But I lost him. There's over 100 freight cars on these tracks. About a third of them are open boxcars. That's where he'll be hiding.

David Rossi: Middle. I'll take south. You go north. We don't think he's armed, but he is very dangerous.

----------

David Rossi: We got a train, Morgan.

----------

Derek Morgan: FBI! Stop! I got him, Rossi!

David Rossi: Hotch, Morgan's chasing the unsub on a moving train. They're heading south towards town.

----------

Aaron Hotchner: I'm on it. Come on. You're driving. Get me up next to that train.

----------

Emily Prentiss: I'm so sorry.

----------

Emily Prentiss: "Beyond the east the sunrise, beyond the west the sea, and the east and west, the wander-thirst, that will not let me be." Gerald Gould.

----------

Spencer Reid: You guys have plans tonight?

Derek Morgan: I was thinking about getting a burger.

Emily Prentiss: Oh, I could eat.

Jennifer Jareau: Oh, hey, guys, I wanted to introduce you to someone. This is agent Jordan Todd. She'll be taking over for me while I'm on maternity leave.

Jordan Todd: Agent Jareau's told me so much about you all. You must be agent Prentiss.

Emily Prentiss: Yes. Nice to meet you.

Jordan Todd: Hello, Dr. Reid… And agent Morgan. Nice to see you again.

Derek Morgan: Nice to see you, too. So this must be the good news.

Jordan Todd: This would be my brownie.

Emily Prentiss: You two have met?

Derek Morgan: Briefly.

Jennifer Jareau: Well, agent Todd comes to us from 7 years at counter-terrorism.

Jordan Todd: I'm really looking forward to working with the behavioural analysis unit.

Jennifer Jareau: We're starting her training now.

Spencer Reid: You're training her right now?

Jennifer Jareau: Well, we're kinda running out of time. So... Let me introduce you to the rest of the team.

Jordan Todd: Yeah. I'll see you all in the field... Team.

Emily Prentiss: We're looking forward to it.

----------

Emily Prentiss: So, is there anything you want to tell us?

Derek Morgan: Nope.

Emily Prentiss: Your forehead's sweating.

Derek Morgan: No, it's not.

Emily Prentiss: Oh, he's avoiding eye contact.

Spencer Reid: His blink rate just sped up.

Derek Morgan: You know ,guys, I don't think I want that burger too much anymore.

Emily Prentiss: Oh, come on. You can't run from us.

Derek Morgan: Oh, watch me.

Kikavu ?

Au total, 137 membres ont visionné cet épisode ! Ci-dessous les derniers à l'avoir vu...

lolhawaii 
25.02.2024 vers 03h

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