A Person of Interest
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“A Person of Interest” | |||||||
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Law & Order: Criminal Intent episode | |||||||
Episode no. | Season 2 Episode 23 (#45 overall) |
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Written by | Dick Wolf (creator) René Balcer (story and teleplay) Warren Leight (story) Stephanie Sengupta (story editor) |
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Directed by | Frank Prinzi | ||||||
Guest stars | Olivia d'Abo (as Nicole Wallace/Elizabeth Hitchens) Patrick Quinn (as Croydon's Attorney) James McCaffrey (as Daniel Croydon) Richard Joseph Paul (as Gavin Haynes) |
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Production no. | E3220 | ||||||
Original airdate | May 18, 2003 | ||||||
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"A Person of Interest" is a second season episode of the television series Law & Order: Criminal Intent.
Contents |
[edit] Cast
- Vincent D'Onofrio as Det. Robert Goren
- Kathryn Erbe as Det. Alexandra Eames
- Jamey Sheridan as Capt. James Deakins
- Courtney B. Vance as A.D.A. Ron Carver
[edit] Plot summary
In the final season episode, Detective Goren comes under intense pressure when he battles his old nemesis Nicole Wallace.
This time Nicole Wallace has resurfaced, as Elizabeth Haynes (nee Hitchens), having gained citizenship by marrying Gavin Haynes, a wealthy businessman. In an attempt to destroy Goren's professional reputation, she tricks the detective into hounding the wrong murder suspect.
Goren and Eames investigate the murder of nurse found slain in her home. They learn the victim had been a Air Force nurse until three months before her death. Within the Air Force, she was assigned to the Anthrax Vaccine Immunization Program. Shortly before she is murdered (on screen), she opened the door to a jogging partner (who is not shown). It is suggested that the partner may have been a lover. During the investigation, it is strongly suggested that the victim was a lesbian.
Goren and Eames are called to solve her murder because of her connection to anthrax, and their previous case which left them seeking the remaining anthrax bacterium. After determining that the nurse had obtained and sold boosters for the anthrax vaccine from a military contact, the detectives began tracing who might need the boosters. By tracking down a job application she submitted to the Haznostics corporation, they meet the Dr. Daniel Croydon, who is a Haznostics' Lab Director and formerly worked in the Army Bio-weapons Lab.
The detectives investigate Croydon and discover a very arrogant man who has never finished anything he started — including the PhD he included on his résumé. Croydon's wages are being garnished because he has fallen behind in his child support payments. Further, six years ago when his wife developed breast cancer, he did not take care of her. Originally he refuses to answer any of the police's questions, saying he knows they are attempting to frame him. It should be noted that the Major Case Squad unanimously agree that Croydon is the obvious suspect at this point. They think that under increased pressure, the suspect may reveal who has the missing anthrax.
At a press conference called by Croydon, Goren plays on his pathological arrogance to get him into an interview room. Once there, he attacks Croydon verbally, while Eames displays disapproval of Goren's tactics. The next day, Croydon is discovered hanged after apparently having committed suicide. During the ensuing press coverage, Goren's reputation is tarnished. Later, the detectives discover a clue that clears Croydon and proves that the evidence they thought they had was manufactured.
As Goren prepares to have dinner at a restaurant, Wallace appears at his table. She revels in his fallen status. It becomes clear Wallace's intent was to damage the credibility of his insights and theories, not just his career. She discovered the failings of Goren's father as a husband and a parent. Croydon, who "ran out on his poor, sick wife" and was a "deadbeat dad", was thus the perfect suspect to manipulate Goren's resentment. When Goren leaves the restaurant he finds Wallace with Gavin, her new husband. By making her "an honest woman", the man also made her a U.S. citizen.
The detectives discover that Wallace obtained citizenship unusually soon after her fairly quiet marriage. After they tell her they think Gavin bribed a judge to obtain her citizenship, she confronts the judge. Wallace informs him of the investigation and says she will pay any amount to keep him from implicating her husband in bribery. She is then arrested for attempted bribery. A.D.A. Carver reasons that if they can prove she obtained her citizenship under a false identity, Elizabeth Hitchens, then she will be declared a foreign national without standing. As a foreign national, they could compel a blood test to look for either the anthrax vaccine boosters sold or the missing anthrax bacterium.
During a tit-for-tat information exchange with Goren, Wallace says she used his parent's divorce decree to learn about his father. Goren tells her that she had just given up her one chance for happiness with Gavin because she came back after him. Goren adds that he had forced her to face the childhood abuse she never admitted to herself, as well as the fact that she had now become her own abuser. Wallace gave up Gavin "to shoot the messenger" — "That's the price of denial." As the interrogation seems to be going nowhere, Goren claims to find a leak in the evidence bag containing the anthrax. She refuses to believe him, so he runs an anthrax test in front of her. When the anthrax test displayed positive, Wallace remains unconcerned. She indicates that she had been immunized. Eames enters and tells her that while there was no record of Elizabeth Hitchens ever being immunized for Anthrax, Nicole Wallace was. Nicole's true identity thus proved, the detectives are able to arrest her.
[edit] Facts
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This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (April 2008) |
- The episode title, "A Person of Interest", is a word play which has two meanings within the episode. One suspect, named by the police as a "person of interest", is a government scientist who works with anthrax and falsely claims 'covert ops' experience. This accused domestic terrorist could be based on the case of Steven Hatfill. Additionally, the return of Nicole Wallace is of interest to both the detectives and viewers alike.
- During the investigation, Goren and Eames confront Gavin in his office, as they discover Wallace told him about Hitchen's embezzlement as well as the events at Hudson University.[1] According Gavin, he has been inoculated against the police's "lies".
- Goren discover that Wallace was vaccinated for anthrax in 1996 while in Bendigo, Victoria, Australia, and that Croydon was in there at the same time. He also learn that Wallace last received a booster in 2001, which means she is still resistant, but conversely, Hitchens was never vaccinated for anthrax.
- The detectives also discovered where Wallace crossed paths with Dr. Roger Stern.[2] In the previous episode, Stern's collection revealed the missing two grams of anthrax bacterium.
[edit] References
- ^ "Anti-Thesis" episode
- ^ "Zoonotic" episode
[edit] External links
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