Complete Recap and Spoilers and Download of The Closer S05E12 Waivers of Extradition

Emmy Nominee The Closer is a great show feeaturing Kyra Segdwick, yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Waivers of Extradition.

This is a The Closer spoilers filled post, so beware…

How to Download The Closer S05E12 Waivers of Extradition?

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Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E12 Waivers of Extradition

A young woman hangs out in a pool, talking on the phone. She hears a noise behind her. She turns, thinking it’s someone named Rob, but a black hand covers her face. A geyser of blood spurts into the pool.

Later, Brenda lifts the phone out of the water. The woman was viciously stabbed to death. There’s a pile of smoked cigarettes nearby. Her husband Rob found her. He tracked blood all the way out to the street, freaking out.

Flynn reports that Rob had been passed out inside from drinking, but woke up and came out to see the killer who was dressed “like a ninja.”

The vicim was on the phone with her cousin, who heard her say “Rob” and then heard a struggle.

Sanchez has the warrant. Brenda wants a consent form, too. She talks to Rob, who’s shaking and asks her when they’re going to find the killer. He signs the consent form.

No one’s buying the ninja story, but Brenda tells Sanchez to follow it up just in case.

At the station, Provenza snidely explains to Rob they haven’t found the man in black yet. As a point of procedure, Brenda says, they have to read him his rights. He gets upset, asking why they’re wasting time. She uses her special “I know you did it, it’s only a matter of time until I make you say so” bark. But Sanchez comes in and interrupts. Brenda powers on, but he reiterates. There’s something she needs to hear.

They play the 911 tape of a woman reporting a man in black in her back yard, 40 minutes before Lisa was stabbed. She saw his classic red Mustang with a car dealership sticker from El Paso on it. Sanchez asks Tao what he knows about ninjas. “What, because I’m Asian-American, I’m supposed to know all about ninjas?” Tao says indignantly, before telling them all he knows about ninjas.

Brenda talks to a Detective Landry in Texas about the suspect’s Mustang. When Brenda describes that the victim was stabbed between 25 and 30 times Landry interrupts, asking if the killer was left-handed and dressed all in black. Why, yes. Landry’s on his feet before he’s off the phone. He says LA is safe til nightfall, he’ll be there in four hours. Behind him in his police station are crime scene photos of stabbed young women.

Brenda walks in her front door to find her dad at her living room table. She apologizes profusely for forgetting to get him at the airport. He gives her grief, but niece Charlie (played by star Kyra Sedgwick and husband-episode director Kevin Bacon’s real life kid, Sosie Bacon) tells her he has no idea how hard Brenda’s job is.

Brenda apologizes again, saying she has to take a shower and go back to work. Charlie follows Brenda to the kitchen and tells her she’s not ready to go home yet. Fritz hears her make her case, saying she’s closer to Brenda and Fritz than anyone else in the world. Brenda says she’ll have to convince her grandfather to leave her behind. If she manages that, they’ll see what they can do.

“When I said I wanted kids,” Fritz says, “I didn’t mean other people’s.”

Brenda tells him not to worry, there’s no way Charlie will convince her dad.

Fritz has Brenda’s Fed database results. He found 85 murders resembling her killing and an old friend is on the task force in El Paso and will check in.

Brenda arrives in Pope’s office to find Detective Landry waiting. He thinks the killer stabbed a woman in El Paso four months ago and another two months after that. He withheld the ninja dress from news reports and thinks the guy is a white guy. He wants to catch the guy and take him back to Texas to execute him. Brenda doesn’t love that plan, so Landry suggests whoever gets the better evidence gets to take the killer to trial.

He tells them that the killer, who was driving a car from El Paso in California, was driving a car from California in El Paso.

Landry examines the red tacks the team has put all across the southwestern states. He recognizes some of the dots, and dismisses the cases as not their guy, removing the pins. Then he draws the connecting link between California and Texas: the I-10 freeway.

Fritz calls. The Mustang was sold to Jeffrey Webb of El Paso who recently moved to L.A.

At his house, Tao tells Brenda and Landry that Webb has six cars registered him and reports of domestic violence. Then Webb jogs up. Upon seeing the police, he asks if “that bitch” said he raped her. He takes off running, but Gabriel tackles him to the ground. Webb tells him his car was used in the commission of a homicide. Landry asks where Webb was last night. She tells him to back off, but he says Webb isn’t their guy. Webb doesn’t know where his car was last night. He dropped it off at a depot at the airport. He has a receipt. Brenda gives it to Tao to follow up.

Landry guesses that she’s figured whoever had the car was transporting it to the depot. Tao reports back that the driver’s name was Jesse Ray Moore and he dropped the car off that morning. Brenda sends Tao and Sanchez on the I-10 after him.

Tao runs to check the vehicle’s lojack.

A helicopter finds the truck from the air, and Gabriel pulls up to it, a semi-hauling cars parked at a gas station. It’s locked. They check the nearby businesses, but while they’re inside, the driver gets back in the truck and rams their car.

Sanchez races after him, and jumps on the side of the truck, clinging to the side door. The helicopter tracks them from the air and reports as Brenda converges. Sanchez breaks the passenger window, but Moore swats his gun out of his hands with a club as he barrels down the road.

The driver takes out another truck to try to knock Sanchez free, but he hangs on and manages to climb back in the window. He wrestles with the driver as the truck keeps moving, then is coming head on into Brenda and Tao in a sedan. They swerve at the last moment and the truck blows past.

Sanchez and the driver keep fighting as the truck comes upon a construction site. Sanchez manages to pull the semi’s hand break and it finally slows down as it crashes through traffic cones.

When it stops Sanchez tosses Moore from the cab to the ground then jumps out and kicks him good repeatedly in the ribs. Sanchez thinks his arm is broken. Brenda and the rest of the team converge and get Moore in cuffs. He shouts that he’s not saying anything without a lawyer.

Landry checks Moore’s neck and finds scratch marks. “Oh, that’s a good catch, I don’t think you’re tossing this one back,” he announces.

Back at the station, they go over their evidence, which doesn’t amount to much. He has a bag of various items, like a dog collar, make-up compact and other personal items, but they only have his prints on them.

Landry announces that those scratches could close his case. His second victim put up a fight. Brenda’s incensed to realize that Landry has DNA, even after he said no law enforcement agency had entered it. That was technically true, he says, he doesn’t have the staff to enter it quickly. He wants to leave with Moore. He leaves for an extradition order.

Brenda comes home to find Fritz watching news of the arrest on TV. Fritz doesn’t think it’s that big a deal if Texas takes him. But Brenda thinks that’ll mean they won’t find out everything he’s done.

Clay comes out in his bathrobe. He’s got something he wants to talk to them about. He says Charlie laid out a convincing argument for staying in California. He told her whether she stays or goes is up to Brenda. He doesn’t want to play the heavy. Nor does he want to spend time on a plane with a resentful teenager.

Brenda has a Brenda Moment.

The next day at work (with Brenda wearing a saucy up ‘do), Brenda’s ready to talk to Moore. Landry reminds her he invoked, but she says she’s planning to have him revoke his right to a lawyer then confess. She tells Tao to bring the camera with the big flash. Pope checks that she knows what she’s doing. She says she knows everything she needs to know. Moore ran, which means he wants to live.

Brenda goes in to talk with Moore and tells him they need him to undress. He strips. Tao takes out the huge camera and snaps away. Moore shields his eyes and says it’s blinding him. Brenda says she’s just giving him a taste of what it’ll be like when he goes to Texas and they strap him in the electric chair.

Watching from the viewing room, Landry is a little put out. “Well that’s not fair, we don’t electrocute people anymore, we’re not savages.”

Brenda continues with her word picture, including the phrases “seared flesh” and “brains boiling.” Then Sanchez takes his clothes. Brenda gives him a list of the 84 people executed in Texas in the past six months. And the empty list of people who died in California in the same time period. But, since he has a lawyer, she’s going to turn him over to Texas. “And trust me when I tell you, they will kill you dead,” she says.

He says he doesn’t want an attorney, he wants to talk to her. He says there are so many things he wants to say out loud, but he doesn’t know how to tell her. Brenda takes out his bag of souvenirs.

She asks him about the first thing he collected and asks him to show her. He reaches for the make-up compact. Brenda tries not to barf as Moore takes a whiff of it and says he can almost see “her” looking back.

He points to the city it came from and says that he caught the girl outside, maybe after her prom. They continue, with Brenda matching the souvenir to the city. Moore is really enjoying talking by the end. “Killing’s like having sex, you know – except you don’t have to talk when you’re done,” he laughs.

Seven hours later, they’re still at it, with Landry still watching.

Moore’s remembering staying with a woman as she died. Brenda asks if that’s all. He says 16 was it. The cats and dogs were just practice.

Brenda goes into the hall for some air. Landry tells her “well done.” He understands a confession to 16 murders is stronger than DNA.

Pope has assured Landry that after Moore serves his life sentences in California, Texas can execute him. Landry appreciates that.

He gives Brenda a file with the 16 victims photos from the last seven years. He sincerely congratulates her again.

Brenda looks through the faces. So many of them. She takes it in.

Then she goes back in to Moore and says she won’t be able to visit him in prison because she doesn’t get to Texas often. It appears his extradition order has gone through. Landry’s surprised to hear this, but he’ll take it.

Brenda comes home to a pre-emptive kiss from Fritz, who tries to prepare her for her dad. He says he’s got a flight at 10 a.m. and if Charlie doesn’t want to get on the plane, he’s leaving without her.

Brenda goes to talk to Charlie, who greets her by saying she thinks Brenda’s sending her back. She says she’s not the same person she was when she got here. Brenda says who she is stays the same where ever she is. Charlie asks if Brenda doesn’t want her there. Brenda chokes up, saying she does, but they gave her a second chance, doesn’t she think her parents deserve one, too? Brenda tells her she’ll be fine. “We’ll see,” says Charlie.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers and Download of The Closer S05E10 – Smells Like Murder

Emmy Nominee The Closer is a great show feeaturing Kyra Segdwick, yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Identity Theft.

This is a The Closer spoilers filled post, so beware…

How to Download The Closer S05E10 Smells Like Murder?

Check out RlsLog

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E10 – Smells Like Murder

Things are slow as Provenza fills out a crossword puzzle and ignores the postman bringing in the mail. He calls for Buzz to sign for packages. There’s a big one that doesn’t belong to him. It’s COD to Major Crimes. They open up the box and find a cooler inside. The gang all peers in. At the mention of duct tape Provenza perks up.

Cut to the team standing in the hallway as the bomb squad does its thing. A bomb guy gives them the all clear.

Sanchez wants to dig in, but Provenza suggests they move it first. Brenda’s not there. Her office will do. Gabriel wants to call the chief, but Provenza thinks they shouldn’t bother.

They open up the cooler. They’re immediately overpowered by the strong stench of a soggy dead body. Now it’s time to call Brenda.

Provenza interrupts Brenda and Fritz’s futile attempts to entertain her niece Charlie (note: teens do not find Hollywood Blvd’s stars cool) with word that they ended up with a crime scene. She asks where it is. He pauses.

Cut to her office again, the cooler being opened and everyone gagging again. Brenda’s unclear how Jack in the Box ended up in her office.

Fritz and Charlie wait outside her office.

The box was sent by Greg Lewis from self storage. Tao arrives with scented candles. The coroner arrives, declaring it smells like murder. He’s brought gangly, Brenda-crushing Terrance with him. He’s Dr. Terrance now.

Brenda goes to apologize to Fritz and Charlie. They’re not sure what to do with Charlie. She offers to cook dinner. Her motives are somewhat unclear.

Brenda interviews Greg Lewis. He says he reported the suspicious box to the LAPD four times over the last few months. Someone told him to send it to them. He’s curious to know what was in it. He’s tickled to hear the news, just what he guessed. He found the box in unit 943, rented by Doug Courtney, whose debit card expired. He couldn’t reach him.

On his rental form, they find that Courtney listed his parents’ mobile home. He has a record for minor stuff. He drives a red Camaro. The only activity on his bank account was from an offshore account. There was plenty of money still in it. The team places bets on where he might have fled to after offing Mr. Jack Box. (Provenza takes Mexico, Sanchez goes with Thailand and Tao speaks up for Kuala Lampur, in part because it’s fun to say.)

Dr. Terrance calls for Brenda. He opens with: “Sorry it’s taken so long, but I’m having a hard time getting this guy out of your box.” (And…rimshot!)

He lifted his fingerprints. It’s Doug Courtney.

At the house, Fritz signs for a small package. It’s for Charlie, from a friend back home. Fritz tries to decide whether to linger to see what’s in it, but opts not. He leaves as Charlie texts furiously.

Brenda and Gabriel go to talk to Mr. and Mrs. Dobson, Doug’s parents. She quizzes him on questions that might be on the detective’s exam. She reminds him that Doug wasn’t reported missing, so they might be interviewing suspects.

Inside, Mr. Dobson quotes Bible verses to Brenda and says his son was into drinking and sex. He clarifies that Doug was only his step-son and was hard to reach, whereas he’s had success with his mom, Sarah. The last time they saw him was three years ago. Sarah tries to say Doug seemed better then, but he shuts her up.

Brenda asks if Doug left anything behind last time and purposefully spills iced tea as she does. She goes to get a paper towel as Mr. Dobson asks why they’re really there. Brenda sees a red Camaro parked in the carport outside.

Gabriel’s about to officially notify them when Brenda interrupts, saying that Gabriel is there because they think Doug was the victim of identity theft. She says she’ll let him explain as she goes out and looks through her car.

Gabriel vamps, with something about Brazil and $20,000 in charges.

Outside, Brenda opens the dusty Camaro. She finds bundles of lottery tickets in the glove compartment and pictures of him with a woman, plus mail addressed to him and Tara Latimer. She takes a gym bag out of the trunk and leaves. At the office, Flynn goes through the bag full of swim trunks and gear and decides Doug was a surfer. Tao reports more than 200 lottery tickets, all with the same numbers. Gabriel says Doug’s mail from his PO Box showed he owed money to everyone. Dr. Terrance arrives with a cause of death. He says Doug was well preserved but had two bullet wounds to the back.

He’s putting the time of death at May 21, 2006, sometime after 6:12 p.m.

He pulls out newspapers that were in the bottom of the cooler from May 21. And a receipt for two hot dogs and a 40 oz from 6:12 p.m.

Provenza talks with Tara in the interview room. She met him at the casino where she worked. He gambled there. They moved in after a month. She has no idea how he paid the rent after she left. She says the landlord hated him.

Cut to the landlord, saying he hated him and Doug was always spinning stories about why he was short on rent.

Tara notes that the lottery numbers he played were his and his parents’ birthdays. She seems to think he’s a big loser, and that his job was fake.

Cut to Jordan Wallace, his best friend from high school who acted as a reference, but never employed him. Wallace owns a global real estate company now. The three don’t have kind words for Doug. Tara calls him a pig, the landlord calls him an a–hole and Jordan calls him a leach.

Doug owed Jordan $10,000. Jordan remembers Doug not showing up when he went over to help him move his stuff into a storage facility.

The landlord found his place empty. Tara told him Doug moved his stuff to the storage facility. He hated him because Doug slept with his daughter.

Tara hated him because he cheated on her and took all her money.

Brenda calls them all suspects.

Back at home, Brenda arrives to find Charlie cooking. Brenda asks what the delicious smell is. Charlie says it’s a surprise, but she promises they’re going to have a lot of fun tonight.

Brenda sniffs her way through the house and finds brownies in Charlie’s room. She takes one. Rur-roh.

Later, she wobbles out into the dining room, a little too relaxed. She tells Charlie they need to talk. She had a brownie. Or two, or three. Charlie looks totally freaked out. But Brenda says they’re the best brownies she’s ever had in her entire life. Brenda is stoned out of her freaking mind.

Later, lying on the living room floor, Brenda talks through the case, trying to figure out who could have done it. But then her words start to sound funny and she’s singing Willie Nelson.

Fritz comes home to this scene, his wife on her knees, singing to him. He looks at her eyes, immediately figures out what’s up and asks Charlie what’s going on. Brenda shows him the brownies. He suggests she go to bed.

Fritz is not amused. “Who the hell do you think you are, bringing marijuana into my house?” he asks Charlie. He figures her friend sent her weed – and he signed for it. He asks her if she knows what could have happened if he’d eaten one, telling her he’s in AA. He’s yelling. “It’s not my fault you’re a drunk,” she says, snottily.

He picks up her phone and finds her friend’s number. He’s calling her parents. He tells Charlie to go to her room and that she’s going home as soon as possible.

Brenda comes out, asking about the fuss. Fritz tells her they’re sending Charlie back. This spurs a Brenda realization, even while stoned. She writes down “send back.” And then she takes a nap.

The next day, she doesn’t understand her note. At work, Gabriel tells her Mrs. Dobson is waiting for her in her office…which still smells like decomposing Doug.

Mrs. Dobson says she has information on Doug that she couldn’t tell her in front of her husband. She said Doug keeps in touch with her. He’s been writing, until about five months ago. She hands over the letters.

Doug was in Hawaii, then Australia.

Later, Tao says the postal cancellations are valid. But how did a man who’s been dead for three years send mail so recently?

Dr. Terrance appears, having been summoned. She tells him about her contradictory evidence. He respectfully tells her she’s wrong.

He found two hot dogs and malt liquor in Doug’s stomach, which matches with the receipt dated 2006. Terrance starts to get prickly, saying if she finds fault with his conclusions he’d be happy to send Mr. Box back to her….

Brenda has her “send back” realization again (with better chances of remembering it this time). She thanks Terrance profusely and wraps him in a hug that Sanchez has to help her out of, making Terrance’s year.

She sends people out for plastic sheets and four coolers. Whoever killed Doug is going to be surprised when he’s sent back, she explains.

Pope comes in later to find coolers wrapped in plastic and duct tape. “Oh, please tell me we haven’t been sent four more dead bodies,” he says. Brenda says it’s part of the plan. Each cooler has a GPS and video camera. They’re going to his parents, landlord, ex-girlfriend and friend. Whoever doesn’t open the box is innocent. Because if they don’t open it, they know who’s inside. (The money came from the last of Buzz’s grant.)

The team watches the video monitors as nothing happens. Tara opens her cooler. Flynn collects on his bet. Tao says Wallace is moving his cooler.

Brenda doesn’t want the murder suspect to see a cop car in the rear view. She borrows Buzz’s Prius over his pleas to keep it safe and that he just washed it.

In the hybrid, Brenda continues quizzing Gabriel for his test. The main reasons for murder are jealousy, revenge and profit.

They rule out jealousy as a motive for Jordan Wallace. When they come to profit, Gabriel notes all Doug had was the Camaro and the $6,500 transferred from his off-shore account.

Brenda calls Fritz. He bought a ticket for Charlie for 7 a.m. the next day. But Brenda wants to talk about another kind of ticket.

At the office, Tao watches Mr. Dobson and the landlord open their coolers.

Brenda tells Gabriel that Fritz confirmed that Jordan has recently been to all the places Mrs. Dobson got letters from.

Tao calls, reporting on the cooler openings. And he’s figured out the motive. Doug’s numbers hit the lottery on May 19 for $15 million, but Jordan cashed the ticket.

By the GPS, they see Jordan has pulled off the road. The drive up in sneaky Prius silent mode and get out to find Jordan digging a hole.

Brenda tells him she’s guessing if they open the cooler they’re going to find someone they’re looking for. Gabriel opens it so Doug can’t see the contents. Back in the office, Tao gets a good remote video angle of Gabriel fake reeling from stench before announcing that Doug is in the box.

Brenda tells Jordan that usually she likes confessions, but digging a hole in the desert for a body is good enough. She asks him about the lottery numbers. He denies that he killed Doug for the winnings. Brenda pauses as she accuses, so Gabriel steps in and finishes up laying out the evidence about the letters.

Brenda says sending letters to Doug’s mom was cruel, but Jordan says he gave her something Doug never did: attention. He says Doug would have blown all the money at the casino. They arrest him.

Walking back to the car, Gabriel thanks Brenda for all her support with the detective prep. At the Prius, Brenda grimaces when she thinks she sees a dent. It’s hard to tell. The car is caked with desert dirt.

Back at her office, Brenda breaks the news to Doug’s mom, including that he won the lottery. She’ll get it as his only next of kin. Brenda suggests she might use the money to stand up for herself. She feels horrible for giving up on her own son. Brenda asks how a mother can give up on her own child.

Brenda arrives home to find Fritz about to take Charlie to the airport. She tells Charlie to take her bags back to her room. Charlie wants to go home, but Brenda threatens her with federal charges.

Fritz isn’t thrilled. He calls Charlie self-centered and disrespectful. Brenda calls her 16. Brenda points out that he’s the one who wants kids, and if he can’t handle this… She says they can’t give up on her. She wants them to hold onto her a little while longer so she knows she has someone she can rely on. Fritz says that’s exactly what a good mother would say. He asks if she would have really arrested her.

“No,” Brenda tells him, “I would have let you do it.”

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E09 – Identity Theft

Emmy Nominee The Closer is a great show feeaturing Kyra Segdwick, yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Identity Theft.

This is a The Closer spoilers filled post, so beware…

How to Download The Closer S05E09 Identity Theft?

Check out RlsLog

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E09 – Identity Theft

Brenda waits anxiously in an empty courtroom. Her mama Willie Ray comes in with her surly too-cool-for-school teenage niece Charlene, who immediately informs her aunt that she goes by “Charlie” now. Brenda doesn’t have to stay and testify, she explains, the defendant confessed while she and Fritz were on their honeymoon. It’s just an allocution.

A nerdy, clean cut teenage dude comes into the courtroom and, upon seeing Charlie, starting telling her how hot she is in French. Commander Taylor doesn’t understand why Brenda is there, but she says Tao asked her to show up because they never had a chance to interview the suspect before he asked for a lawyer. She doesn’t think it’ll take long.

The defendant Russell Clark (Bruce Davison) is brought in. The nerdy teenager, James Clark, leaps up and shouts hi to his dad. Brenda whispers to Tao that he doesn’t seem schizophrenic to her. Tao says he went back on his meds.

The judge prepares to hear the plea to murder in the second degree. His son was receiving some sort of holistic cure from a Dr. Milano, which Russell’s mother in law was paying for. But, Russ says, it made James much much worse. The judge checks that Russell visited the Dr. one day and attacked and killed him. Yes, Russell says. The judge asks how he strangled the doctor. Russell pauses, then says he used his bare hands.

This doesn’t seem to sit well with Brenda or Tao. A look at the autopsy photos of the victim clearly show a thin ligature mark.

The prosecutor asks for a continuance. The judge says they’ll reconvene at 4 p.m. tomorrow.

Out in the hall, the doctor’s wife Robin (Cynthia Watros), also a doctor, asks how much longer things are going to take. She wants to get their stuff back.

Commander Taylor tells Brenda this isn’t his fault. She waits to hear why. He says he picked up father and son, but five minutes in the dad say he did it and lawyered up. Taylor hasn’t even seen the autopsy photos.

Brenda needs to know why Russell lied. She begs off a trip to Disneyland. Fritz points out that she’s the only one who wanted to go, they want to go to Venice Beach. Charlie texts, uninterested. Then James Clark comes out and goes to talk to her, reciting French poetry. He gives her a poem then smiles like an idiot, bows, and leaves. Charlie looks at what he gave her – he drew pictures of her.

Back at headquarters, the team gets back into the case. Brenda and Tao talk to Russell. She asks how James is.

Russell says he’s hoping to get back to MIT, where he had a scholarship – and where he was arrested for walking around campus naked. Twice. Russell says his wife died before James went to college. Russell says James is a disorganized schizophrenic, and doesn’t have multiple personalities. He says Keith Milano is no doctor, he and his wife are con artists. He wrote letters begging Milano to return his mother in law’s money and stop treating him.

They found Milano’s office ransacked. Brenda wants to make sure James didn’t do it. Russell says James is innocent and doesn’t deserve to be shipped to some mental institution.

Russell doesn’t know anything about the implement that was used to kill Milano, but suggests they find it. He asks to go back to his cell.

Watching the interview on the video feed, the rest of the team gives Taylor the stink eye. Again, he says it’s not his fault. Really, it’s not.

Later, he tries to make up for it by recreating the crime scene in an interview room. They found $600 in Keith’s desk drawer and his wife had a couple grand. Robin Milano was out delivering meds.

Flynn shows Brenda a bill. The Milanos were making about $300,000 a month.

Brenda wonders why the patients before and after James didn’t seen anything. “There are all good questions, Chief,” Sanchez says, “but by the time we would have asked them, Mr. Clark had lawyered up and made a deal with the DA.”

Taylor jumps in, saying that’s right.

Brenda wants to know where the other patients and the receptionist were. She also wants to talk to James, but Taylor warns her he’s not very solid, even on his meds.

Back at home, Willie Ray serves chicken and dumplings to the family as Charlie texts sullenly. When Brenda asks her how she’s liking LA she replies she’d tell her, but she’s not allowed to have her own opinions.

Willie Ray then tells them about her super idea that Charlie spend the rest of the summer with them. Brenda takes a big swig of wine as Charlie explains her parents hate her right now. She starts texting again, but Willie Ray takes her phone. Fritz starts to make a speech about how they don’t use their phones at the table, but Brenda’s rings. Charlie laps up the hypocrisy as Willie Ray tries to explain that Brenda’s working. “It’s OK, I’m used to adults making rules for me that they don’t live by themselves,” Charlie says.

Done with her call, Brenda asks Charlie if she’d like to see James when he’s off his meds. She says sure. As Brenda gets up she pantomines “no Charlie for the summer” to Fritz. With them out of the room, Fritz asks Willie Ray what’s really going on.

She explains that Charlie has decided to stop listening to her parents so they took her, but Clay won’t disclipline her and she’s uncontrollable.

Meanwhile in the bedroom, Brenda and Charlie watch a video of the truly uncontrollable James, who is dishelved and twitchy, yelling and nervous – complete opposite from his polished and pressed presence before. He’s telling Tao that Milano wouldn’t talk to him. Charlie can’t believe it’s the same kid.

On the tape Tao says James’ hand looks hurt. He says the office was dark and he wouldn’t answer his questions and his dad told him to sit back down, and his friends wanted out, but he wouldn’t open the door. It comes out in a babbling, incoherent rant.

Charlie wonders if James did it. Brenda says he may have just told them it was premediated when he said the office was dark.

The next morning Brenda talks to her brother to “make sure” Charlie staying is OK with them. Fritz already told Willie Ray they’d try it for a week. Fritz says he knows what’s going on with Charlie. They think she’s smoking pot, had sex with her ex-boyfriend and is making some bad friends. Fritz wants to think of it as a dry run for kids.

Brenda thinks of a way to make Charlie useful. She wants to take her to work. Willie Ray objects. Brenda suggests they let Charlie decide. “Which would you rather: museums with Grandma or schizophrenia murder suspects with me?”

Charlie opts for cops.

At the station, Flynn and Provenza have tracked down the other patients scheduled for that day. Most have since died, the others were all canceled by Keith Milano himself.

Sanchez brings James Clark in. He hugs Brenda. He thinks her voice is “odd.” Brenda asks him to talk in her glass-walled office, where Charlie is waiting nearby. He says yes.

Brenda positions him where he can see Charlie and gives him some chocolate. He says he remembers what happened, but not the chronology.

Brenda walks him through it. The receptionist was gone (or maybe he was invisible, he says) and Dr. Milano called for him. The office was dark. He starts to get upset, but looks at Charlie and calms down. The blinds were usually up, but not that day. Dr. Milano wouldn’t answer him. His friends told him to inspect — that’s what he calls the voices when he’s off his meds.

He politely asks for another chocolate. He says his dad was either there already or after and he was mad. And he searched the office, which upset James, so he punched the wall.

Brenda asks why James’s dad was upset. Because Dr. Milano was dead. Tao reviews just to be sure, James came in when Dr. Milano called and Dr. Milano was dead, then his dad came in and started searching around.

He says his dad wanted to know why he strangled the doctor and how he did it. He says he did it with one of his socks, which he put back on.

Charlie listens to the video feed of James saying he used to make his dad proud, but doesn’t anymore. But he thinks he is behaving very well today.

The prosecutor watches James’ confession and says she’ll happily try him or his dad. They decide. The sock theory doesn’t hold up much better since it looks like he was strangled by something heavier. Pope wonders if maybe Russell was telling the truth.

Looking at the crime scene photos, Brenda has a thought and breezes out. She wants Russell brought back and tells them not to release the office contents to Mrs. Milano. Brenda’s going shopping.

As 4 p.m. approaches, the prosecutor and the team wait. Brenda comes back with a shopping bag. Mrs. Milano is in the hallway, upset that she can’t have her stuff. Brenda says she can have some of her stuff and politely ushers her into the interview room that’s still made up like the crime scene. Brenda flips on the camera for Provenza and Buzz’s benefit.

Brenda starts packing up the scene as the prosecutor watches in the viewing room, confused. Mrs. Milano asks why they haven’t wrapped things up yet. Brenda explains that Russell didn’t know things about the crime he should have. Mrs. Milano says they obviously fought, but Brenda says no one heard anything until James punched the wall.

Tao says Russell saw James standing over Milano and thought he’d done it, so he searched for the murder weapon. He came up empty.

Brenda’s guessing that Mrs. Milano took it with her. She holds up a clutch purse from evidence, with no strap. She was able to find one just like it. She pulls it out of her bag – it’s has a metal chain that’s detachable.

Mrs. Milano asks what her motive would be. Brenda says it was money. Russell was telling the truth that Keith had agreed to stop treating James — and all their patients, maybe even returning some of the money.

They tell her they have a witness. James said Dr. Milano called him in and because Keith was already dead, James had to mean her and she slipped out the back door.

Mrs. Milano says they argued about money, Keith said they were charlatans, and it got physical, and the chain accidentally wrapped around her husband’s neck. She swears it was an accident. But Brenda doesn’t think it was.

The office was dark when James got there. She closed the blinds because she didn’t want anyone to see her strangling her husband. Tao reads her his rights.

Watching in the viewing room, the prosecutor says the confession’s no good because they didn’t read her her rights before questioning her. But Provenza and Taylor note that they didn’t hear Brenda asks a question. They suggest the next time she wants to close a case without asking a question, this is the way to do it.

Fritz and Willie Ray drop by in time to see Russell reunited with James, who’s busy chatting with Charlie. Russell thanks Brenda.

Charlie asks if James will go back to living with his dad. She says it looks like it, and she’s part of the reason why.

Willie Ray walks out of the office with her daughter, excited to see her getting through to Charlie.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E08 – Elysian Fields

The Closer is a great show feeaturing Kyra Segdwick (and soon enough her daughter too), yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Tapped Out.

This is a The Closer spoilers filled post, so beware…

How to Download The Closer S05E08 Elysian Fields?

Check out RlsLog

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E08 – Elysian Fields

Brenda sleeps on her couch. She wakes up enough to go into the bedroom. As she closing her bathroom window she notices the screen is torn. She hears a noise. She grabs her gun. She goes cautiously into the living room, where she sees a broken bowl on the floor. She picks up the phone. She tells Gabriel to send units to her house. It’s Stroh (the rapist defense lawyer who got away) – he’s there. She sees a hooded man running towards her. Panic sets in.

She wakes up. Gabriel is calling to tell her about the body they found.

At the hillside scene, she learns about the male victim in his late 40s, shot twice in the head. There are treadmarks from an SUV or a truck. She asks Gabriel to pull some more files. He knows she’s still on the Stroh case.

Flynn comes down the hillside, trying to brief Brenda. He’s upset. Gabriel tells her the body is pretty awful. It is. The victim is a bloody pulp. His legs are ground to the bone – probably pulled behind a car. He died between 1 and 4 a.m.

It’s Howard Greeson. The name means something to Flynn – he killed two girls in the ’90s, but they couldn’t prove it. The lead detective was Joey O, retired. Flynn suddenly seems cheerier about the nasty body.

In the morgue, the coroner tells them the body has broken ribs, snapped wrists, dislocated shoulders, a busted femur and shattered hip. In other words, he was dragged behind a car.

He was also beaten while he was still alive. And, for added weirdness, the drag wounds aren’t fresh: he was dragged two nights ago. The killer waited 24 hours to kill him. The coroner assumes he was given pain killers to keep him quiet.

Flynn suggests they say he dragged himself, a suicide. Tao reports nothing weird on the hillside.

Commander Taylor is bringing up Joey O. Provenza is thrilled. O wrote him up for using curse words, which Provenza finds “bulls—.”

Joey Olin (Tom Skerritt) comes up. Someone notices he’s lost weight. He brought his own file on Greeson’s alleged victims, including his fiance, Diana. Then there was Katie West, who moved in with him later with her six year old daughter. They never could find the bodies.

Joey asks where they found the bodies. Elysian Park. The same place they thought the bodies were buried.

Brenda calls for the cadaver dogs.

Back at the park, Provenza asks how O’s wife is. He’s divorced. Provenza mentions that he’s dating someone, she’s 29.

The dog starts barking. They find what looks like a body in a trash bag. And another nearby. They were recently dug up.

O asks that they not disturb the bags to check for prints. It looks like Greeson was tortured for the location of the bodies, then shot twice in the head and his wallet left so he could be easily ID’d.

Brenda and Fritz have some light dinner conversation at home, discussing murderers. She tells him they found Greeson’s girlfriend at home with a black eye. She doesn’t know who could have gone after him, except maybe the families of the dead girls. Speaking of family, Brenda’s mom has called again, wanting to know when her niece can visit. He tells her she needs to make time for her family. The comment is loaded with “let’s have a baby now” subtext.

Brenda’s phone rings. It’s Provenza, telling her the girl’s families are there. She’s not happy to hear Joey O made notifications to their families. “You see what I mean,” she tells Fritz, “this is what happens when I leave the office.”

She goes in to work. Diana Clarkson’s dad Jake and sister Amy are there along with Katie West’s brother Todd and daughter Jena. And Greeson’s girlfriend Kim is in interview 1.

Brenda pulls Joey O aside. She wants to know who gave him the authority to notify the families. She says they don’t have official IDs yet. He says he has relationships with the families, but she informs him it’s her case. He says maybe she’s never had a case like this that stays with you. She flashes back to more of the Stroh case, the one that’s been eating at her. Then O mentions the DA. She’s not happy he talked to him.

She tells him the way to close his case is to close hers. She wants to know who of the families is capable of something like this. O says they’re not suspects. Fine, she’ll start with him. He has a sidearm, right?

When Flynn tries to stop her from going on, she shoots him down with a death glare.

The .25 automatic that killed Gresson is probably his own gun, he was a security guard. Olin suggests she contact Vegas, where he was living. He suggests she look there.

Sanchez reports that Greeson’s girlfriend was upset about his death, but didn’t cry. Flynn says he’ll find something to hold her on.

Pope shows up. He tells her to focus on the fact they’re close to solving two cold cases.

They talk to the families. Pope mentions three investigations. Todd, a victim’s sister, is appalled that they’re wasting time investigating Greeson’s murder. Sanchez brings Kim Sherman, the victim’s girlfriend, through. She recognizes Todd and says he came to their house. Todd says he told her the truth about what Howard did. Flynn sees an opening. “So tell me, when a classy dame like you is dating a double murder, how many dinners does he have to buy you before he gets to smack you around?” he says.

She smacks him, hard. And that’s assault on a police officer. They can hold her.

“You’re welcome,” he tells Brenda.

Brenda asks Todd about his visit to Howard’s house. He starts to answer, but Joey interrupts. Todd asks for a lawyer. So does Jena. And then so do the other family members. The dad says he’s calling a press conference, even after Pope tries to talk him out of it.

When they leave, Brenda tells Tao to bag the families’ cups for prints and called Ricardo Ramos, ubiquitous reporter, about the press conference.

Brenda lets Olin know they’ll be taking his case from there.

The next day, Brenda and Sanchez talk to Kim Sherman. She says Todd West showed up at their house a couple times, telling stories about what Howard did.

She says Todd yelled at “Howie” and punched him and Howie had to pull a gun to get him to back off. Howie was angry after. Sanchez wants to know about the missing truck and gun that was supposed to be at her house. She says she hasn’t seen either since last week. She asked him about the dead girls and the way he looked at her, she thought he was going to kill her. It was the first time he hit her.

She thinks he might have been at a bar in Culver City.

Later, Brenda and Pope chat with Ricardo, who tells them he got alibis from the families. But he’s only sharing if he gets to talk to Joey O. He says his initial check shows all the alibis hold up except Todd’s. He mentions that Todd and Katie West (the victim) were twins.

Out following up in Culver City, Tao and Gabriel find a green truck on the street. The keys are in the ignition and there’s a shovel and steel cable in the back, gun in front. And, by the way, the cab seat is absolutely covered in blood.

At the office, the coroner positively IDs the bodies as the two victims. And he found high levels of morphine in Greeson’s system. “Good call, doctor,” Brenda tells him. “Yes,” he says, “it was.”

Tao reports the casings from the crime scene match Greeson’s gun and prints pulled from his truck match Todd’s. Brenda wants him brought him. Provenza reminds her he has a lawyer. She glares at Olin then tells him to arrest him, then.

In her office, Olin tries again to tell her Todd’s not a murderer. He thinks Howard knew whoever he went with that night at the bar because no one saw a fight.

Fine, she tells him, he can just wait while Todd sits in jail for two years awaiting trial before he closes his last case. Or, he can have Todd come in without a lawyer. She asks him how badly he wants to close his case, because it’s not going to happen until she finds out who killed Howard Greeson.

Flynn brings Todd in and sits him in the hall next to Joey, who suggests he sit down with Brenda and tell her the truth. He says if Todd tries to duck behind a lawyer, it’ll just make things worse. Flynn watches the exchange and tells Olin he’s doing the right thing. Olin says he feels sick.

Olin watches with Buzz and the gang in the interview room as Brenda sits down with Todd.

She tells him there’s a lot of evidence against him, including a shaky alibi and his prints on the victim’s truck. He admits he wanted him dead, but he wanted to find his sister more. The prints are probably from when he went to Howard’s house.

Brenda looks at the crime scene photos. She asks if he knows anyone who takes or has access to morphine. Todd says no.

Todd admits going to Howard’s house. Brenda asks why now. He got tired of waiting. Since Joe’s retired, no one’s done anything. Brenda asks him why Joe wasn’t doing it anymore. Todd pauses then says he wants his lawyer back.

Brenda goes into the interview room and talks to Olin. She noticed Todd said he wanted to see his sister again, but the person who dug up the bodies was looking more for the scene of a double murder than his sister.

Flynn goes on alert as Brenda notes that he knew Howard and Howard might have gone with him willingly. “So tell me, detective, how much more time do you have?” she asks him.

She couldn’t understand why someone would do something like this now, but if you factor in the weight loss and the prostate he told Tao he had removed and the queasy stomach due to what she assumes is the morphine he’s taking, she figures he’s dying of cancer.

He has three to six months he says. Brenda asks Flynn to read him his rights. He doesn’t. Olin waives his rights.

Brenda asks him how, as a decorated member of the law enforcement community, how could he do something like this? “The Make-A-Wish Foundation refused to do it for me,” he says. Then he says he didn’t want to die without getting those girls justice. He tells her she might understand some day. And anyway, now that her case is closed, they can close his, right?

Just as long as he has proof Greeson lead him to the girls. Olin recorded the whole thing, he admits it all. But it’s not for the faint of heart. He says he drove to the desert, hooked him to his truck and drove all night.

Olin puts his head in his hands, sick.

Flynn visits Brenda in her office. He’s wondering, Olin doesn’t have much time left, and some might say what he did was justified… could she talk to the DA? But she asks what if he has a list with a few more scores to settle. She asks him to book the audio into evidence, she doesn’t want to listen to it. Neither does he.

Brenda opens her desk drawer and sees a picture of Stroh.

At home, she finds Fritz in bed. He says her mom called again. He thinks it’s too late to call back, but Brenda does anyway. She checks the lock in the bathroom as she talks to her mom, telling her she misses her.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E06 Tapped Out

The Closer is a great show feeaturing Kyra Segdwick (and soon enough her daughter too), yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Tapped Out.

This is a spoiler filled post, so beware…

How to Download The Closer S05E06 Tapped Out

Check out RlsLog

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E06 Tapped Out

Over breakfast in a diner, Flynn looks askance at Provenza as he eats (gasp!) melon. Provenza’s gf of nine weeks, Lauren, says his diet makes him feel old (Flynn says it’s his age). The two bicker as police cars race by sirens blazing outside. The sirens mercifully drown out Provenza’s recitations of what looks to be very dirty sex acts, but is his aerobics routine.

Pope joins them, shedding “chief” for the day and there for his ride along, to be “one of the guys.” He wants to break down walls in the department to unite divisions. He’s distracted by the growing scene outside. Provenza solves the problem by closing the blinds.

Pope feels like checking out the scene, because, golly, he’s a police officer. He strolls into a parking garage to assess the scene. He’s immediately recognized by a guy in a suit who turns out to be Detective Richard Tracy, a new transfer to central division. Flynn and Provenza stroll on over, Provenza still mid-fruit. Tracy says he just called major crimes.

He lays out the crime. The victim was found at 7:30 am. in the parking garage. There was a close range shot to the face. “That suggests a personal attack, right?”

His wallet was there and a resident heard two shots and saw a woman run past. Then a BMW stopped behind the building and something was dropped out and a patrolman found a gun. He shows them the evidence in evidence bags, then helpfully offers to log it all in for them. They all work for the same woman, after all, Lady Justice.

He asks for their cards and they hand them over, all smiles and brown nosing. Pope is impressed that he stopped to check things out even though he was on his way home for the day. That’s the kind of police work he wants to see. After he drives off, the guys are surprised by a shrieking young woman. She continues the histrionics back in the interview room with Brenda.

Watching in the interview room Pope asks Gabriel why they never showed up at the scene. They never got a call.

The shrieking woman, Marie, says the victim’s name was “Intrigue,” but his real name was Mark Bernstein. He died in her building.

When Brenda implies she might be responsible, Provenza replugs his ears, bracing for a shriek. Brenda flees to the hallway where she checks on the status of the evidence. It hasn’t been logged in yet.

As the team walks into the squad room, Sanchez picks up on the name Intrigue. He knows of him, the “Hook-Up King.” The Intrigue Technique was a way to pick up women. On the phone Pope asks what does someone mean there’s no detective by that name?

Brenda listens and pulls out a binder as Pope identifies himself on the phone. She finds something in the binder and goes to clarify something with Pope…they handed all the evidence over to a Detective Dick Tracy? Pope gets off the phone quickly.

“OK,” he says, “now, this is definitely a major crime.”

Brenda asks Pope how they got snookered. “Tracy” knew Pope’s mission statement and the caliber of the bullets used at 10th and Grand on Tuesday.

Brenda calls for warrants on Intrigue’s and Marie’s apartments. At the victim’s place, the doorman is surprised the LAPD is back after just clearing his apartment. He checks the card he was given. Lt. Provenza of the Major Crimes Unit.

He took DVDS, books, bills. The doorman helped him carry out three boxes of stuff. As she asks him more questions, he says the questions are the same as the ones “Provenza” asked. Mark never had female visitors because one of the rules was that a man’s home is his “sanctuary.” Sanchez nods knowingly.

Gabriel finds a binder marked “Tapped Pilot Rough Cut,” but the DVD is gone.

Flynn thinks “Tracy” is acting more like a wannabe detective than killer. Which leads Brenda to think his next step might be to notify the family.

They arrive at Intrigue’s brother’s house. Ken answers the door, clearly having been crying. He thinks they’re from Crisis Response. “Chief Pope” told him to expect them when he was there an hour ago.

Two business cards down, one to go, Flynn notes to Provenza. “You served the warrant, Pope did the notification, I wonder what the hell I’m doing right now?”

Jill, a cable network executive, is in the living room. They were going over plans for the episodes. She says the show for Slag TV is going to be huge. Brenda explains that Crisis Response likes to make sure the notification was done properly as she asks her questions. “Chief Pope” wanted to know who Mark went home with the night before. They told him Jill’s assistant Marie would know, but she’s not answering her phone (probably because she’s in their interview room at the station).

When Ken leaves the room, Jill says she thought Ken had a crush on her assistant.

Pope wants to know how “Dick Tracy” knew so much about him and the department. Back at the office they go over the new public transparency web site which, among other things, has cheesy photos of Pope astride a horse plus quotes from past speeches and frequently updated case details.

Intriguing Endeavors made $12 million last year and the FBI is investigating some offshore questions. Brenda may have a deal not to share info with Fritz, but Pope doesn’t have that deal, he says.

Our saucy heroine realizes they know something “Tracy” doesn’t, where the victim spent the night. Tao updates the on-line case file.

Cut to Tracy knocking on a door and identifying himself as Lt. Andrew Flynn to the woman who answers the door: Brenda. Buzz films as Flynn slams him against the wall and Sanchez and Gabriel take pleasure in arresting him as he insists he’s the police.

Back at the office, Buzz tries to show Provenza how to work the interview room web cams.

Flynn reports that Marie drives a company car, a BMW.

Fritz saunters in, saying the FBI was investigating the company because of questionable release forms signed by women used in on-line videos. With Mark dead, the profits go to Ken.

“Dick Tracy” is really Jonathan Baird and he has no criminal record. He scored high on the LAPD exam twice, but failed the psychological portion. Gabriel reports that Baird has great handwriting, but his notes are all in some sort of code. Tao’s having no luck with the victim’s computer, it won’t boot.

Brenda and Flynn visit Baird, who’s feeling “incredibly underappreciated.” He doesn’t want to debate, he wants to arrest a killer. He gets fired up, telling them they’re losing time. He asks to be referred to as “detective” while he’s on duty.

He shouts at Brenda and Flynn, saying he’s way farther along on the investigation than they are. Brenda tries a new approach, asking if he has a theory on the crime. She asks him to bring them up to speed.

In the squad room, he draws a careful diagram of the parking garage, with the word “MURDER” written really big, with an exclamation point – per proper police protocol, we presume. “The parking garage, cold, dank, unforgiving, as mundane as evil itself…” he begins. Brenda interrupts but he shouts that he has to set the right tone.

Then he describes how he thinks Intrigue was killed. Eventually he mentions the witnesses’ name and a description of a thin woman leaving the scene.

Finally, he says, the TV show they were working on will provide motive. He turns to Tao, telling him that even if the computer doesn’t boot up, you should still open the D drive. He pops out a DVD.

A TV pilot plays, showing Intrigue teaching his classes and later picking up a woman in a bar and going home with her – filming them in bed using his cell phone. A graphic explains that “she got tapped.” Classy stuff. Finally, Intrigue goes to his car, saying a clean getaway is important, which is why his car has a silent alarm.

Later, they show the woman he picked up watching the footage and reacting with some colorful descriptions of what she was going to do to him. They filmed eight episodes. “He did this to eight women and he only got shot once?” Brenda exclaims.

Brenda goes back to Baird, wanting to know what’s on Intrigue’s computer, which Baird locked with a password. He says he’ll tell her if she can transfer to her squad. Brenda says sure and Baird finally figures out she’s lying when his request for a badge and a gun is met with dull stares. As they haul him away he shouts for his union rep.

Gabriel rounds up the eight women from Tapped. Brenda wants four in each room and she tells Gabriel to add Marie the Screamer to the line up when she says, but not a minute before.

Provenza brings in one of the witnesses.

Baird wishes Brenda good luck solving the crime without Intrigue’s computer password. She gets in his face, as is her way, telling him she might charge him with accessory after-the-fact. He asks if she ever gets tired of playing the bad cop.

Brenda finds Pope, who’s sitting glumly. She tries to reassure him they’re close to solving the case, which should help smooth over the morning’s incident. But Pope says when it goes to trial Baird will testify that he handed over all the evidence, including a loaded gun, so he’s screwed either way.

“Maybe not,” says Brenda. She tells him she could really use his help.

Brenda walks up to Baird, calling him Detective Tracy and asking for the evidence. He says he’s not going to give her any of that because she’s not his boss. “But I am,” Pope says, hands on hips. He continues, doing his best Western lawman impression, telling “Detective Tracy” that Brenda isn’t treating him properly and doesn’t respect things like he does. He gives up the password: Crimestoppers.

Tao, Brenda and Pope go through Mark/Intrigue’s computer. They find the focus group results. Tao prints them as Buzz says Jill the TV exec is in the interview room.

Brenda tells Jill she has a bad surprise for her. Gabriel brings in Marie. Brenda asks Jill if she’ll testify she knew about Marie’s ongoing affair, Jill says yes. Brenda asks Jill to calm Marie down, telling her to place in front of the camera.

Jill goes in and the witness points to someone on Provenza’s computer screen. He calls Brenda and tells her she has her ID.

Pope uncuffs Baird. No, he’s not free to go, but Pope does think he deserves to see the confession.

They usher all the women out of the interview room except Jill as Flynn reads her her rights. She denies her involvement, but Brenda says she knew Marie was sleeping with Mark, which means she knew he’d be leaving her place, per the rule, early in the morning. She also had access to the black BMW. And she lied about it being a big hit. The focus testing showed the audience loathed the concept and the star.

And the eye witness saw her leaving the scene. Brenda thinks she killed him to save her career.

She explains that when she signed him she thought he had a likable vulnerability, but it turned out on camera he was a psychopath. She told him to change his approach, but he wouldn’t listen. His web business was still booming. He used her just like he used every other woman, Jill says.

In the interview room, Dick Tracy/Baird is impressed by Brenda. “You just tapped out,” Brenda tells Jill.

In the squad room, Baird writes his report, with flourishes of purple prose irritating everyone when he shouts that he knows what he’s doing. Gabriel quietly asks Brenda why she’s having him write a report. Because when he says “served a warrant” it means “forged legal documents,” went into the victim’s apartment = trespassing, removing evidence = theft. And when he signs it it’ll be his confession.

Brenda stops in Pope’s office, where he’s reading Flynn and Provenza’s great fiction of the morning’s events. He’s still worried about what happens when they go to trial. But Brenda talked to the DA, who found the victim despicable and agreed to a plea. Pope worries what the team will think of him if he lies in his report. Brenda says they’ll think he’s one of the guys. They lie to him all the time. It’s the one thing that unites every division of the LAPD.

Brenda slings her purse over her shoulder and gives Pope a big wink. “Nighty, night, crime stopper.”

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer – S05E05 – Half Load

The Closer is one of the most important police shows nowadays, and yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Walking Back the Cat.
If you haven´t seen the show and don´t want to be spoiled… get out of this post… if you stay, is under your own responsibility…

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Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer – S05E05 – Half Load

Fritz and Brenda drive. She’s still bumming over the loss of Kitty. All his (her) stuff is in the back seat for donation. Sgt. Gabriel calls Brenda. There’s a body at Father Jack’s community center. Fritz turns the car around.

The victim is Reginald Gray, a 35-year-old black man, shot in the back of the head. It’s a major case because the center is city owned.

Commander Taylor shows up with Ricardo Ramos, pesky reporter. Reggie’s soggy from the 10:30 sprinklers last night. With an hour to kill before the coroner comes for the body, Flynn spitballs a few reasons for the victim’s murder, listing alphabetically: “A) a–hole, B) because, C) criminal.” Father Jack hears and gets huffy defending Reggie as someone who helped keep kids out of gangs.

Father Jack won’t let Brenda search Reggie’s room in the church without a warrant. Taylor points out they can’t be sure it’s Reggie since they can’t roll him to remove his wallet. Ricardo helpfully notes the victim’s work shirt says “Reggie.” “Well,” Brenda says to him, “if there’s one thing you’ve taught me, Ricardo, it’s don’t believe everything you read.”

After handing out assignments, Brenda asks Sanchez what else she needs to know about the neighborhood. He takes her to the church, where he pauses at the altar to cross himself. He takes her up to the roof (which gives Brenda a chance to climb a ladder and show off her ridiculously buff arms). Sanchez tells her they’re in gang central, with three major gangs and one made up of rejects. One does dope, one does weapons, another does car theft and the last, more dope.

Back at the office, Lt. Flynn surmises Reggie’s death had something to do with gangs. Reggie painted over gang graffiti three times last month, including yesterday.

Buzz comes in, needing help translating government language in a letter. He thinks he won a federal grant for new surveillance equipment. He got $70,000.

The coroner explains his findings to Brenda and Gabriel. Reggie was shot with a .32 caliber semi-automatic that should have left a casing. They found none. It looks like it was fired from a distance. He was having old gang tattoos removed.

Gabriel suggests a community meeting to reach out to possible witnesses. Brenda hastily shoots the idea down, refusing to share info with the public.

Later, Pope confronts Brenda about conducting an illegal search of the church, against Father Jack’s wishes. He suggests she play nice. They go into a meeting with Father Jack, where he accuses them of leading a witch hunt. To calm him, Brenda steals Flynn’s idea of a community meeting. Father Jack warns them the community won’t go easy on them.

Cut to Pope in uniform with citizens yelling at him. Brenda asks for help from the crowd and is greeted with total silence. Ricardo actually is helpful for a change, asking people if they know about possible motives. Reggie’s mom defends her son, saying his death had nothing to do with his time in prison. “How many children do we have to bury before this ends?” she cries.

A man says the police don’t care, that there was a shooting at a store nearby last night and the police just drove by. Brenda whispers to Provenza to look into it.

Cut to the gas station, where Tao and Gabriel find .32 caliber bullet casings. Sanchez surveys the scene and asks Tao for some lasers.

Back at the center, Brenda talks to Reggie’s mom, promising to find who did it. She says people there need something to believe in.

Provenza tells Brenda no report was filed at the gas station last night, officers drove by but kept going when no one was there. Upon hearing about the casings she wants to leave the meeting, but Pope explains she’ll be staying.

Sanchez runs back through the church, stopping to cross himself at the altar again. Buzz joins him on the roof. From the gas station parking lot, Tao points his laser, moving it toward the community center blocks away per Sanchez’s direction. He moves it slightly and it hits Flynn standing where Reggie was outside the church. He was shot in someone else’s gun fight, Sanchez says. “What kind of sense does that make?” Sanchez says, looking up to the heavens, “I mean, c’mon.”

At home in a spare bedroom, Brenda stares at info from the case of Philip Stroh, the rapist defense attorney who got away.

She notes how quiet it is without Kitty, then he subtly says it could be noisy again. Why, this bedroom would hold a kid.

Brenda talks about Reggie’s mom and the randomness of death, asking how she can consider having a kid knowing that happens. Fritz tells her the same way ER docs do, or undertakers. They took the same risk getting married, knowing what could happen to the other. He tells her she’s so good at imagining the worst, just once she should try imagining something better.

In the interrogation room, Brenda and Sanchez sit with a kid named Tommy Martinez, who called 911 about the gas station shooting. They listen to the call. Brenda thanks him for making the call and asks what else he saw. He tells her he doesn’t want trouble, but that he saw a guy in a Cadillac fire a gun. He doesn’t want to say anything about the gangsters, two 19th St. Destroyers that he recognized. Brenda repackages the “imagine something better” speech Fritz just gave her, telling him they’re trying to make it safer and he can help.

He tells her he got the license plate. He says the cops just drove through last night. Brenda’s surprised, but he says that’s what the cops always do.

They bring in Kelvin Blake, the car’s driver. He has a 20 year old rap sheet, but Flynn says he seems OK. He voluntarily turned in his gun and it matches the bullet that killed Reggie. Brenda says that doesn’t prove he fired it. Cmdr Taylor reports that Robbery Division says there’s been a string of high end car robberies in the area.

Sanchez comes in, announcing that he got Tommy to ID the gang members, by (falsely) promising him he wouldn’t have to testify.

In her office, Brenda talks to Kelvin, who says he was protecting himself. He doesn’t know he killed someone. He says he was at the register when he saw two boys coming from across the street. He got back in his car and they blocked him. He says he pulled the gun on them and they laughed, so he fired in the air to show he was serious.

Brenda asks him to think very carefully about his answer to what he was thinking at the time. He says he was afraid. She shows him the photo arrays. He picks them both out.

Then Brenda asks him if he ever wondered where the rounds were going to end up. He gets very concerned, sincerely. He bursts into tears when she tells him what happened. Through his sobs, he asks if Reggie had a family as he puts his head in his hands.

Flynn brings the suspects in. Tao shows off Buzz’s fancy new equipment, with which they can watch the interview rooms wirelessly from the main room.

Gabriel gives Brenda the suspects’ rap sheets and says they’ve been ID’d for three other carjackings in the area. They’re in the viewing room. They greet her by calling her a “bitch.” The second time, Sanchez slams one against a file cabinet.

They ask if they recognize Kelvin on the monitor. One says they were just complimenting the car while the other glares at him for talking. She tells them Kelvin shot Reggie, and that she just wants to know what happened Friday night. The only thing she cares about is murder. Sanchez says they want their help, and how often does that happen?

They say Kelvin shot at them before they even got in the car. Brenda asks them to write down what they said. They clarify that they only tried to steal the man’s car, and Brenda says she totally understands. They start writing.

Watching on the monitor, Provenza wonders why Brenda doesn’t look happy. They think it’s because she’s wondering how she’s going to explain things to Reggie’s mom.

After Dumb and Dumber stop writing, Brenda says she should probably explain the felony murder law, which says if you’re involved in a robbery, say, trying to steal a car, and if someone dies, it’s murder. They’re completely befuddled as they’re handcuffed and led away.

At the community center, Brenda talks with Father Jack. She talks about the randomness of Reggie’s death, but he doesn’t believe in random. Brenda says there was no motive in Reggie’s death and where there’s no motive, there’s no meaning. Father Jack says it’s up to them to give his death meaning. She turns and sees people working on repainting the center’s graffiti covered walls. He says it brought the community together, including the police. One by one, the team removes their jackets and gets to work painting.

Lt. Flynn says painting won’t change anything, it’ll just be covered in graffiti next week. “Well, Brenda says, looking at the church, “until then….” She picks up a roller.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E04 – Walking Back the Cat

The Closer is one of the most important police shows nowadays, and yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Walking Back the Cat.
If you haven´t seen the show and don´t want to be spoiled… get out of this post… if you stay, is under your own responsibility…

How to Download The Closer 4-Walking Back the Cat?

Check Out RlsLog for The Closer S05E04.

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E04 – Walking Back the Cat

At home, Brenda puts dinner on the table like Suzy Homemaker. Work’s been slow. Fritz comes home to see her efforts with mild horror. He tosses a box in the cupboard, but she sees it. He grimaces, knowing dinner — mashed potatoes and meatloaf — is ruined. It’s Kitty’s ashes. Brenda starts crying when she sees the ashes are in a paper bag. She transfers them to a Ziploc container which she tosses in her purse.

Finally, they sit down to cold dinner. Fritz mentions that if things really are that slow, maybe they could do the FBI a favor. They need to find a guy named Austin Blair – quietly.

At the office the next day she tells Pope about the 26-year-old. She tells Pope it’s a special request, but doesn’t say from who. Then she starts crying – she forgot to take Kitty out of her purse that morning. She takes the container out and puts it on Pope’s desk. Fidgeting, he says she’s too high-ranking to do it, so he’ll send Commander Taylor.

Provenza shows a handsome woman around the squad room, introducing Lauren to the team, including Flynn as “my go-to guy.” She says she’s heard all about him, but he dryly says she’s a complete surprise to him.

Taylor returns with the missing persons file on Austin, reported a month ago by his boyfriend Travis. There was no follow up report because they think Travis just filed it to find out who Austin was sleeping with.

Nobody knows why Brenda wants the info, but they go along.

Provenza introduces Lauren to Brenda, pausing awkwardly while trying to figure out what to call her. Sanchez asks how old she is.

The team reports – his credit card has been used all over and his mortgage payments are current. The coroner reports he has four possible matches.

Brenda and Gabriel go check on the bodies. When the coroner hears the date he went missing and that he’s gay he realizes it was after a circuit party called HelLA (Hell and L.A.- get it?). He gives them some “Gay Culture 101,” explaining that the parties are like gay raves.

The coroner announces he has a match and in walks Fritz and another suit. Fritz is ticked at the missus. Someone from Missing Persons called around to find out why the interest in Austin Blair.

They positively ID the body. “On the bright side,” Brenda says, “at least he’s not missing any more.”

The coroner reports his findings. He had only GHB and alcohol before he OD’d and choked on his vomit. Fritz’s No. 2 asks the coroner for his full report and Brenda smells the case getting away from her.

Back in the squad room, everyone has to sign a form to be temporarily deputized into the FBI so they can learn about the case. Provenza walks back in with Lauren and Flynn tells him about the forms. “But it’s only temporary,” Flynn says, “like love.”

Pope gives Provenza an approving nod over Lauren.

Fritz begins the briefing, which turns out to include no information whatsoever.

Provenza goes to find Lauren in the screening room, where Buzz is supervising her. He says good bye and she says she loved meeting his friends. She plants a wet one on him and sashays out.

Austin’s father, Dr. Blair comes to the squad room. Austin’s his step-son. He thinks Austin’s been arrested again. Brenda tries to ask a few questions but he gets anxious and demands information. Brenda tells him about the OD. He pauses for a moment then says “you people” and walks out. Brenda and Gabriel race after him asking questions, but he tells them to talk to Travis.

At Austin’s house, they keep Travis put while they conduct a search. They find a bag full of cash and bottles of water in the fridge that Tao guesses are laced with GHB. They still haven’t told Travis what’s going on, and Flynn breaks it to him bluntly, that he’s in the morgue. Then they arrest him for drug possession and murder.

Brenda calls Provenza to check in. He tells her everything they found and also about a business card Sanchez found. It’s Fritz’s.

Pope ambushes Brenda in the hall. They’re wondering if Austin might have been a government informant. She assures him she didn’t know that. Pope isn’t happy it seems like the FBI expected them to clean up their mess. Fritz calls Brenda into the hall.

He explains that his team finding him would have jeopardized a major drug deal. Fritz thinks everything is going very well for them, she’s providing them good cover. She thinks it’s an OD, as did the coroner and Austin’s dad, but Fritz suggests maybe she proceed as if it weren’t.

Brenda and Tao interrogate Travis, asking about the $30,000 in GHB and $80,000 in cash. Travis says Austin didn’t use drugs. Brenda takes a hard line with him, until he’s crying and yelling defensively, while seeming genuinely broken up over the loss of his boyfriend. Travis says the night Austin left he said he had a big meeting with his boss in L.A. Travis called his boss, who told him he left with another guy. He didn’t know what to believe. Brenda realizes he’s saying Austin worked for the circuit party, HelLA. His job was selling drugs all over the country for them, Travis says.

Then he mentions his boss, Peter Benjamin, and Fritz and FBI No. 2 tell Buzz to turn off the recording equipment. Buzz tells Fritz he doesn’t work for him, so they shout in her earpiece that she’s done.

At home, Brenda and Fritz argue. She wants in on the Peter Benjamin interview, but he’s giving her tons of guidelines. They’re yelling as Fritz sets out Chinese. “I hate this feeling of not knowing everything you know,” she says. Then she tries another tack, choking up and starting to cry over Kitty. “That is so not gonna work,” Fritz says, and she shuts it down. She asks if he’s using the investigation to get back at her for something. He says his first loyalty is to her.

Then he says he’s going to show her something that she’s going to have to pretend she’s seeing for the first time when she sees it later. He takes out a flash drive from the wire Austin was wearing that night.

They watch the footage from inside the party. In the bathroom mirror, Austin doesn’t look like he’s doing very well, then he passes out.

The next day, they finish watching the footage with Peter Benjamin. Brenda waits about 15 seconds before asking a question, then fishing in her purse to flip on a tape recorder. He pretends he doesn’t know Austin was dealing. He says their doctor treated him with an IV, revived him and he assumes he left fine. Brenda says she has three witness who’ll say HelLA employees dragged him into an alley.

Benjamin’s lawyer objects, saying they didn’t agree to take questions implicating him in anything. Fritz asks to talk to his lovely bride in the hall. He’s not pleased she lied about the witnesses, but she says if they didn’t lie to each other all the time they’d never get at the truth. Her tape recorder beeps. He hears it. She’s in full Brenda Snit Mode at this point and hands him her FBI badge saying she quits and is looking into his death as a murder, which is what Fritz says the FBI wanted in the first place.

Back at the squad room, Tao says Dr. Morales found no puncture marks, which means Benjamin lied about the IV. And he took four times the recreational GHB dose, so someone probably spiked his drink. She thinks someone knew about the wire. They look at his shirt, which was ripped where the wire was. The wire is missing.

They find his keys and they wonder where his car is. Travis says it’s Austin’s dad’s car.

At Dr. Blair’s house, he rushes out to turn off his car alarm and finds Brenda and the team there with a search warrant.

Fritz and No. 2 drop in the viewing room as Brenda talks to the doctor. He says he took the car back from Austin’s house. But he never drove home. Brenda tells him they also searched his office and found supplies for a professional drug lab to make GHB. He says he uses the chemical to clean the wheels of his car.

Gabriel asks if he’s ever heard of Peter Benjamin. Then Brenda accuses him of being in the drug business. She says the LAPD doesn’t care about the drugs, she just wants to know who killed Austin.

He says Austin introduced him to Benjamin. They thought they could give the Feds Benjamin and go free but when he told him he wanted out, he threatened them. “So Austin tried to protect you, and you went and got him killed?” Gabriel says.

Dr. Blair says he didn’t know what had happened until Benjamin called him to pick up the car and told him he’d better keep making the drugs or the same thing would happen to him.

Brenda and Frtiz meet in the hallway. They swap her drug dealer for his murderer — and the LAPD gets to keep the cash. As she walks away, Fritz turns to his No. 2 and says “See? Did this not turn out exactly the way I said it would?”

The FBI men go get Dr. Blair and arrest him for a whole mess of stuff.

Back in the squad room, Provenza gives her the evidence bag full of cash. Travis waits in her office. She gives Austin’s things to Travis, including the cash. She says they can’t prove where the money came from. He gives it back but she tells him it’s not disloyal to Austin’s memory to take it. He does.

At home, Fritz says he asked her for a favor to take her mind off Kitty. She says if she hadn’t brought him (her) to work, Pope never would have let her look into the missing persons file. They sit in front of the TV and watch one of Kitty’s cat sitting DVDs. He (she) rests in a proper urn on the mantel.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E02 – Blood Money

The Closer is one of the most important police shows nowadays, and yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Blood Money. Fifth season premiere of The Closer
If you haven´t seen the show and don´t want to be spoiled… get out of this post… if you stay, is under your own responsibility…

How to Download The Closer S05E02 – Blood Money

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Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer S05E02 – Blood Money

Pope narrates LAX security camera footage for Brenda, focusing on former real estate mogul Allan Summers. He’s being investigated by the FBI for fraud and embezzlement. He’s also being sued by employees of his home construction company for their lost pensions.

He was met at the airport by his car service but somewhere between the airport and his home, Summers and the chauffeur disappeared. They’ve been gone 12 hours. His wife told a bank he’d been kidnapped and was requesting an odd amount just over $1 million. Detective Mickey Mendoza is there to help.

Pope now notices that Brenda’s cat Kitty is in a nearby crate. She’s sick and Brenda has to give her medicine. Buzz plays some footage from the parking lot. It shows Allan driving himself from the lot.

Sanchez tries to give info on the driver Mario Gomez (Miguel Sandoval), but is distracted by Mickey’s general hotness. They try to sort out who’s the suspect and who’s the victim when Provenza walks in with a pocket full of sunshine. They catch him up. He’s super excited for a grid search of the airport parking lot. Pope wonders if they have a Breathalyzer there.

Pope tells Brenda to assume it’s a kidnapping and keep their involvement on the q.t., which means no contacting his family.

She gets Gabriel working on following up with Gomez’s regular fare who reported him missing, Catherine Ortega.

Brenda talks to her. She knows his wife died of cancer and he’s newish to the area. She also knows he was “an illegal” and thought someone had been following him.

They visit his apartment. When no one answers, Mendoza kicks down the door. They find blood on his bathroom towel and a fresh steak laid out, which implies he expected to be back shortly.

They meet Provenza with Gomez’s town car near the airport. There’s a ton of blood all over the front and back seats, too much to lose and live. But no bodies. Brenda gets Tao to work on the blood spatter. It’s not just a kidnapping anymore.

In her office, Brenda talks sweetly to Kitty and prepares to give her her IV. Pope gets stuck assisting. She tells him the blood on Mario’s towel matches the type in the car. But in order to check the blood in the car against Summers’, she needs to contact his family for his type. Pope tells her, again, that she’s not allowed to call or meet with them.

She’s also trying to figure out the weird amount the kidnapper asked for. She doesn’t think Gabriel is up to figuring out the numbers. But she doesn’t want to ask Fritz for help since they’re keeping their professional lives separate. She starts crying over Kitty as they talk about the case. Pope’s patting her on the shoulder, comforting her as she cries when Fritz walks in.

He tells her the FBI feels pretty dumb since they were monitoring him. He offers to help, but she turns him down. But then wonders, what they might say.

Hypothetically, they’d unfreeze Summers’ accounts so the family could pay the ransom. As Brenda says this would make her like a banker, she has an epiphany. Fritz packs up Kitty and goes.

Summers’ wife and son go into the bank. Members of the team are undercover inside, including Brenda and Gabriel inside the bank, posing as, yep, bankers. His wife isn’t feeling very cooperative. Brenda identifies herself, saying they need their help to be able to pay the ransom. Summers’ blood type doesn’t match the blood in the car. His son says the relatively small amount of the ransom is what makes him believe it’s legit and not his dad.

They want him to get the kidnappers to put his dad on the phone and let them tap it. Mrs. Summers says they have no choice but to cooperate even though all Brenda has done is frighten and insult them. She finishes up by telling Brenda to go to hell.

Provenza thinks the demands aren’t from Summers since there’s $5 million in the account . They’re waiting for proof of life over the phone before unfreezing the account. The kidnappers call Mrs. Summers. Allan talks to his wife and tells her he’s fine and he’s worked out a very good way of handling it. The kidnapper gets on the phone (and if you watch “Medium” you might recognize the voice) and tells them how to drop off the denominations so that Allan doesn’t end up “like the guy who picked him up from the airport.”

Brenda says they need to contact Mario Gomez’s next of kin. At his computer monitoring the bank account, Gabriel turns to listen to Brenda. When he turns back the balance has gone down by exactly the amount the kidnappers are asking for. Brenda looks at him like he failed her.

Brenda tells Pope it’s the FBI’s fault for letting them unfreeze the account. Gabriel traced the transfer to the Cayman Islands. Gabriel apologizes again, saying maybe Daniels could have done a better job. Brenda lets him off the hook.

In the office, Tao has reconstructed the inside of the Town Car by putting huge photos up on wipe boards and desks. He thinks he knows what happened and it makes no sense whatsoever. It was staged. There were no smudges or blood outside. He thinks someone took a bucket and dumped it around inside.

Brenda remembers Mario’s regular fare said he became his sick wife’s nurse, so he might know how to draw blood. But it would have taken weeks of planning and he would have had to have known Allan.

They go back to the security tape. The driver doesn’t hold up Allan Summers’ name card until he sees him. He recognized him. So it’s not a murder anymore. It’s a kidnapping. Again.

They’re on to Gomez as the suspect. Brenda’s still stuck on the weird ransom amount. Gabriel comes in with the case files from the FBI. He’s done some math. If each employee suing Summers got their money they would have gotten the ransom amount: $1,190,476.19.

They start through the employee files looking for someone who matches Gomez.

Pope meets Commander Taylor at Mario Gomez’s house. He’s really Mario Vargas, born and raised in L.A. He spent the last 20 years working for Summers’ company. His apartment was part of the fake ID he established.

Flynn and Provenza go through Vargas’ things. He has 15 photos of the same house in his kitchen. Flynn asks Provenza what’s with him. He says he hasn’t slept in two days, his back his sore, his neck his stiff and he hurts in places he didn’t know he had. Aha, Flynn deduces, Provenza is seeing someone.

They find Mario’s plane ticket in a bag in his house.

On the phone with Mickey, Sanchez reports to Brenda that Vargas is driving up the street, but is alone. Brenda tells Sanchez to tell Mickey to go with Plan B. Sanchez finds this very exciting.

Brenda calls Mario, accurately identifying herself. She keeps him on the phone until he rounds the corner, saying she has one tiny question for him. He sees her as he drives by. She asks him if he’s wearing a seat belt.

Then a car peels out and rams him. Detective Mickey, the hot chick driver, jumps out of the car like Sanchez’s dream girl and cuff’s Gomez/Vargas.

After Gabriel reads him his rights, Brenda talks to Vargas inside his house. He plays dumb about Summers being missing. He blames Summers for his wife’s death. When he lost his job, they lost their health insurance. She got pancreatic cancer. To save them their last $5,000 she shot herself because her treatment was too expensive.

Brenda asks if this is what his wife would want him to do. He says if she wants to know where Allan is, he’s “in a hell of his own making.”

They drive to the house that Vargas had photos of all over his house. It’s an abandoned tract home. Summers is dead in the kitchen.

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer Season Premiere – S05xE01 Blood Money

The Closer is one of the most important police shows nowadays, and yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Blood Money. Fifth season premiere of The Closer

If you haven´t seen the show and don´t want to be spoiled.… get out of this post… if you stay, is under your own responsibility…

How to Download The Closer S05xE01 – Season Premiere

Check Out RlsLog

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer Season Premiere – S05xE01 Blood Money

Birds chirp and a sprinkler waters in a bucolic suburban setting. And then a 911 call in which a woman says four people are dead in a house across the street. Squad cars arrive. Then more. Then Flynn, Tao and the rest of the team, followed by Mrs. Fritz Howard, Brenda Johnson (in a snazzy pink tench). Gabriel tells her there are four dead inside, including two kids. (So apparently he didn’t transfer out. No sign of Daniels yet…)

A kids cartoon in Spanish in on the TV inside. They were eating breakfast. Whoever did it came and left through the front door. The victims are covered with blankets. The coroner comes in, late, saying he went to the wrong address. A few minutes later, Provenza comes in having done the same thing.

Brenda pulls back a blanket to see a young girl holding a doll. There is a box of chocolate bars spilled nearby. Sanchez reports neighbors saw the father leaving at the same time he does every morning. Flynn is sure it’s the dad. Brenda tells Buzz to restart the camera – against protocol – so the defense can use that statement in court. But he does it.

The victims are two young girls, their mom and their grandmother. The coroner puts the time of death at 7:30 and 9 a.m. The father was seen leaving at 8:15 a.m.

Provenza and Flynn leave to pick up the dad, Victor Rivera, at work. He has a criminal record, domestic violence charges that were dropped.

Back at the squad, Brenda is oh-so-thrilled to see Commander Taylor walk in with the reporter Ramos. Provenza comes back in a serious snit and takes it out on Gabriel.

Flynn says Rivera complained the whole way over. She and Gabriel go in to talk to him. Ramos watches as Brenda talks to Rivera. He clearly doesn’t know his whole family is dead. About the domestic violence, he says he’s going to church and is doing better. After enough questions he starts to get agitated. Brenda tells him his whole family is dead. He cries and then throws up. Ramos is delighted to have the vomit exclusive.

Tao, Flynn and Sanchez set up hidden cameras in a hotel room. Buzz doesn’t quite have sound working when Rivera arrives. He rigs the hotel phone from the adjoining room as Rivera tries to think of anyone who would have a grudge against his family. A neighbor who thinks he ran over his dog, a boy in his wife’s class. He’s tired and wants to go home. Brenda explains that his life is going to be scrutinized.

He asks her to pray with him. He begs for forgiveness for what he did to his family. He confesses to an affair. From the other room, Flynn, Gabriel and the rest hoping for a confession are disappointed.

Rivera is sobbing and wracked with grief as Brenda peppers him for information about his mistress. Sanchez gently calls her off and hands him a Bible.

Brenda asks Provenza to stay the night and watch Rivera with her. He pulls a sleeping mask from his pocket and says sure, it’s not like he has anything else going on in his life.

Flynn meets with the mistress, a waitress named Aria. She says Victor couldn’t have killed his family, he’s a good man. She cries for his kids and mentions he was a watchful father, wouldn’t even let them have sweets.

Sanchez wakes up Brenda in the room with Victor. He’s still sacked out.

Provenza and Brenda meet up in the hall, where he reports Flynn’s anti-sweet findings. Odd, since a giant box of chocolate bars was found at the scene.

Driving Brenda back to the crime scene, Provenza rhapsodizes ostensibly about Victor dumping Aria, and the vagaries of love but instead sounds like a man recently dumped. He stops, realizing he made the same mistake again, driving to 26th Place instead of Street, which is two blocks away.

Brenda gets out. They went there first and so did the coroner.

She knocks on the door and a stoned-looking youngish loser answers. Before she can get a question out, a black SUV pulls up and a man with a badge grabs the guy from inside and ushers him into the SUV saying it’s FBI business. Brenda is, naturally, perturbed.

At home, Brenda carps to Fritz about his FBI buddies. The name on the house title is a woman with a teenage grandson named Hector Cruz.

Fritz urges her to work with the system for once, instead of always making everyone angry.

She picks up the phone.

She comes in to Pope’s office to find a narco detective Nick Carey already there. But he didn’t get her message. He’s just there to yell that she went to Hector Cruz’s house. He’s been working with the police and FBI on a joint drug task force to dismantle a huge drug ring run by Tavio Baran.

Carey doesn’t buy that she went there accidentally. She wants their file. After some yelling, Pope explains that there is no scenario in which her quadruple murder doesn’t take precedence over his drug case and he will be sharing. Especially since the target of the investigation, Tavio Baran, also has all his info since he’s acting as his own lawyer.

They go through the 967 pages from Carey’s file. Provenza brings in the candy bars from the scene. They’re from a high school, not the victim’s school. Brenda thinks someone selling candy would have lowered the family’s guard.

Gabriel finds something interesting in the file. He and Brenda meet with Carey. They show him a page from his file where he wrote Hector’s address. Brenda points out that he got Victor Rivera’s family killed. Carey says gee, he’s sorry.

They watch the tapes of Baran talking to his pregnant girlfriend in prison. They talk about a witness against him and his girlfriend promises to do whatever she can. At the mention of love, Provenza leaves the room, disgusted. The video is from the day before the murder. At the end it looks like she’s leaning into check out his junk as he looks down her shirt, steaming up the glass. But he never told her who or where. According to her schedule, she’ll be meeting with him tomorrow.

At home, Fritz watches the video and tells Brenda that he took Kitty to the vet. As she gets out of the shower, she talks to him about how Baran would have passed the info. She wipes off the fogged up mirror and has a Brenda Revelation.

At work the next day, Provenza reports that Tavio’s girlfriend Dina has a sister selling candy bars at the high school. They get a warrant for Dina’s house.

In the prison, Dina walks in to meet with Tavio. Instead, she sees Brenda on the other side of the glass. Through the prison phone, she waives her rights. Brenda congratulates her on her pregnancy. Then she shows Dina a picture of Hector, saying he’s the witness against Tavio and an attempt was made on his life. “An attempt?” she says.

Brenda tells her she killed the wrong people. She lays out how Dina stopped by with the candy then probably asked to use the bathroom. And who would say no to a pregnant woman? Dina starts to leave, but the team surrounds her on the other side, one holding up the murder weapon they just found at her house. Brenda continues, explaining how Tavio gave her the address. He wasn’t steaming up the glass because he was turned on, he was writing. Brenda breathes on the glass and 214 26th Pl. shows up. The glass hasn’t been cleaned. Then Brenda tells her babies of single mothers born in jail go straight for adoption, but if she confesses she’ll arrange for a family member to raise her baby.

She confesses, screaming that she did it for her family. “And you really thought executing other people’s children would give you that?” Brenda says.

At the office, Brenda packs up the Baran file and Sanchez brings in Victor Rivera. Sanchez is going to let him sleep on his couch. His sister is coming to get him tomorrow. Sanchez asks for the day off to go to the funerals. Of course, says Brenda. She watches at Sanchez takes the photos of Rivera’s family off the crime wall and gives them to Victor.

Brenda comes home, calling for Kitty. Fritz says hello and tells her Kitty’s not doing so well. She’s still at the vet. Brenda upset that she might not see her again. “Why didn’t I know that this could happen?” (And a hint at the season’s theme of a loss of power is laid…)

Author: MollyWillow for IMDB

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer Season 4 Episode 15 Double Blind

The Closer is one of the most important police shows nowadays, and yesterday it aired an all new episode of The Closer, called Double Blind.

If you haven´t seen the show and don´t want to be spoiled.… get out of this post… if you stay, is under your own responsibility…

Complete Recap and Spoilers of The Closer Season 4 Episode 15 Double Blind

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