Criminal Minds (TV Series)
In the Blood (2013)
A.J. Cook: Jennifer Jareau
Photos
Quotes
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Sgt. Joe Mahaffey : Told Dr. Reid he could use my office. Must be 30 books piled up on my desk
Jennifer Jareau : Well, that's either light bedtime reading or he is actually onto something
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Jennifer Jareau : Do you know the boyfriends whereabouts?
Penelope Garcia : He's in Alaska, so his alibi is a solid as a pre-globally warmed glacier!
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Jennifer Jareau : So, I looked it up. No witches were ever burned at the stake in Salem.
David Rossi : Really?
Jennifer Jareau : Death by fire was strictly a European thing.
David Rossi : Moral of the story, be selective where you practice your witchcraft.
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Aaron Hotchner : We're looking for a physically fit male from his late twenties to mid-thirties.He's brazen, confident, and organized.
Derek Morgan : This person may be a moral vigilante. Abby Stafford had drug issues, Gloria Carlyle moved in with her boyfriend, Parker Mills was a sexual deviant.
Dr. Spencer Reid : Moral vigilantism typically has its roots in repression and guilt. This generally manifests itself in low self-esteem and self-loathing. By punishing others, the unsub may also be punishing himself.
Aaron Hotchner : He's also literally branding his victims. We're not sure why, but he's likely marking them as his own.
Alex Blake : His organizational skills suggest someone who can get and keep a full-time job.
David Rossi : But the work is likely low-level. His impaired social development would not allow him to move very far in the professional world.
Jennifer Jareau : Consequently, this is someone most comfortable working in solitude, having minimal interaction with others.
Derek Morgan : And this makes it a challenge to determine how and where this person is choosing his victims.
Dr. Spencer Reid : The two female victims were reserved and studious; Parker Mills lived quietly in the margins of conventional society.
Jennifer Jareau : So the killer may frequent or work in locations that attracts this type of person. Uh, places of solitude, contemplation.
Alex Blake : Museums, gardens and parks, bookstores.
David Rossi : His choice of a city square, rather than a remote canyon, means he's gaining confidence.
Derek Morgan : But the recklessness of killing in such a public space suggests that this confidence may be stemming from a delusion.
Jennifer Jareau : He may believe he's in a place in time that makes him invulnerable.
Aaron Hotchner : And if his delusion is gaining in strength, then his next killing may be riskier and more dramatic. Thank you.
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Jennifer Jareau : We profiled the unsub as delusional. What if Stoughton being a great-great-great whatever is just part of his delusion?
Aaron Hotchner : Or the discovery of being a direct descendant triggered the delusion.
Dr. Spencer Reid : He'd look into his ancestry.
Sgt. Joe Mahaffey : That would be easy to do here. Salt Lake City has the largest family history library in the world.
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[last lines]
David Rossi : Well, I guess this is proof positive that ancestry ain't all bad.
Penelope Garcia : How about a toast to the 30 or 40 of us?
Dr. Spencer Reid : Cheers!
Derek Morgan : Cheers!
Jennifer Jareau : Cheers!
David Rossi : Salute!
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Jennifer Jareau : What's up, Spence?
Dr. Spencer Reid : There's something strange about this one branch of the family tree. Garcia?
Penelope Garcia : Talk to me. I am fluent in genius.
Dr. Spencer Reid : Roy and Becky Danary. They died in 1985, leaving behind a son named William Danary, but there's no record of what happened to him.
Penelope Garcia : The Danarys were Peace Corps workers in Ecuador. They died in a car accident there... and you're right, their kid just sort of vanished. Let me do some digging, and I will call you back.