- The Cold Case team reopens the 1950's case of a Marine who supposedly went AWOL after discovering his remains stuffed in an oil drum half a century later.
- Remains found in an oil drum at the Philadelphia are identified, by dog tags, as belonging to Jimmy Tully, a Marine who went AWOL while on leave in 1951, opening up a murder case for the first time. Among the witnesses and suspects are members of his unit, his sergeant, a beautiful girl and a jealous guy from a Navy bar that the victim visited while on leave. As usual, all of these people are still alive and in Philadelphia. In the end, the murderer confesses and Tully's family can be proud of him, finally.—Dave Goldhirsch
- When human remains and dog tags are found inside an old oil barrel when the illegal dumping site is being cleared, the team re-qualifies as murder the disappearance of Jimmy Tulley, a 17-year-old Marine who was reported AWOL on his last night of Philadelphia shore leave in 1951 before shipping to the Korean front. He was popular, from a military family, and volunteered like his buddy and softy protege Lenny Snow, who was constantly picked on by their platoon sergeant, and falsely blamed for an officer's stolen revolver, a prank from a macho comrade. There also were bar fights, a lovely girls he charmingly snatched away and a boxing defeat inflicted to -again- Navy men, also in shore leave.—KGF Vissers
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