Fur and Loathing

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Fur and Loathing
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episode

"Sexy" being taken in for questioning
Episode no. Season 4
Episode 5
Written by Jerry Stahl
Directed by Richard J. Lewis
Original airdate October 30, 2003
Episode chronology
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"Feeling the Heat" "Jackpot"

"Fur and Loathing" is the fifth episode of the fourth season of the television series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.

A grisly collision between a Mercury Sable and an eighteen-wheeler leads to a murder investigation at a furry convention. Meanwhile, a man is found dead in a freezer in an apparent robbery-homicide.

Contents

[edit] Plot

[edit] PAF-con (Grissom and Willows)

The episode opens with a woman, Linda Jones, driving along a road at night. She looks around on the road for something, and suddenly hits something with a thud. As she looks back to see what she hit, she swerves into oncoming traffic, and collides with an 18-wheeler truck. Later that night, while officers investigate the truck driver, Gil Grissom and Catherine Willows inspect Jones' car. They follow a set of extremely large animal paw prints off the road, and find another victim: a man in a raccoon fursuit. The next day, Grissom and Willows further investigate the "raccoon"; Grissom determines that the raccoon's cause of death was trauma by motor vehicle, implying that he was the "thud" that Linda Jones hit before her death. They also find a piece of blue fur in the raccoon's mouth.

The raccoon-man is revealed to be an Alcoholics Anonymous participant. While cutting the man out of his costume, a great deal of blood spills out, as it had nowhere else to escape; the forensics team finds a high-velocity bullet wound, thus adding to the man's known injuries. Back in forensics, the blue fur found in the mouth is confirmed synthetic, and the raccoon is identified as Robert Pitt, who was court-ordered to join AA after being arrested for driving under the influence. A sample of Pitt's digestive system reveals he had no alcohol in him, but rather ipecac (an emetic) and civet oil (an aphrodisiac).

Captain Brass and Willows investigate Pitt's residence, where they find a bedroom full of raccoon stuffed animals, as well as a calendar with a "PAF-Con" meeting at the Kings River Hotel marked for October 29-November 1, 2003. Willows and Grissom go to this PAF-Con - the Plushies and Furries Convention - looking for a "plushie" conventiongoer in bright blue fur to match the sample in the costume's mouth. Willows is perplexed at the sight of the furries in the hotel lobby, while the fascinated Grissom looks at the situation philosophically and psychologically; the two continue this contrast throughout the episode.

After Grissom attends a lecture at the convention, both eventually gain leads. Grissom buys a picture of "Rocky" (Pitt) with another furry from a photo vendor. "Sexy", a female blue cat, is brought in for questioning, and he reveals his real name to be Bud Simmons. Grissom recognizes the scent of civet oil on Simmons' cat suit, and tells him that the costume may have had a part in Pitt's death. Simmons admits that he and "Rocky" did partake in "scritching" - in this context, quasi-sexual caressing - and his costume is taken in for analysis. Pitt's semen is found on the costume, as well as ipecac and civet oil.

In the interview room, Bud Simmons reluctantly admits that his actions that night led to a "furpile" and some "yiffing" - in short, an orgy - but denies that he was the one to apply the ipecac and civet oil to his fursuit. Grissom and Willows make their way to a room at the convention where one such "furpile" is still going strong, and enter with a search warrant. Investigation of the fursuits of the participants reveals a wolf costume with ipecac and civet oil on its paws.

The wolf suit's owner, Mr. Lee, is brought in for questioning. Through a number of animal metaphors, Lee explains his actions, first admitting that he indeed applied the mixture to Simmons' "Sexy" costume. He reveals that "Rocky" couldn't get enough of "Sexy", and that apparently "Rocky" was a very promiscuous individual, as he believes all raccoons (or raccoon characters) to be. In fact, Pitt stole "Linda Lamb", Lee's girlfriend and the woman who brought him into the furry fandom, from him at the previous year's convention. Mr. Lee then reveals the lamb's real name - the collision victim, Linda Jones.

Grissom and Willows check the wrecked car and indeed see the Linda Lamb costume. They dismiss the theory Linda shot and killed Pitt because of his sexual association with other fursuiters. They then believe there was a spat, or 'car fight' and Pitt had left the car or been kicked out. Jones heading back to the hotel suggested she was heading back for Pitt.

At the hotel, the valet for Jones' car identifies Jones and Pitt, noting that Jones was angry and Pitt was intoxicated. Flashbacks reveal the new hypothesis. Pitt, still in costume, enters the car, sick from the ipecac. Jones believes he's gone back on alcohol, and the combination of this and his attendance in the furpile makes her extremely angry. Later on, Jones is mad because Pitt is still too delirious or stubborn to remove the mask, and he insists on being let out to vomit. The gunshot still remains unexplained.

Back at the location of Pitt's death, Willows and Grissom find the bullet, which struck from a very steep trajectory. They figure out that Pitt was probably on all fours, and when they see a ranger truck driving along a cliff that would be the perfect location for the trajectory of the bullet, they consider the fact that Pitt was not killed as a man but as an animal. Grissom and Willows identify the ranger, who, in recounting his night around the time of Jones' vehicle collision, states that he saw a "coyote" - Pitt - at the side of the road and shot it to protect his own dogs.

The episode ends with Grissom and Willows incredulous at the full scope of Pitt's murder. A final flashback recounts the time after Pitt left the car - doubled over in sickness, Pitt is still throwing up when the ranger sees him and fires. Jones turns around to pick Pitt up, and hits him as he crawls across the road. Willows sums the incident up as a simple "domestic dispute gone mad," while Grissom calls it "Fur and Loathing in Las Vegas".

[edit] Big & Best (Stokes & Sidle)

At the Big & Best warehouse, Al Sesto is dead, frozen to the freezer floor. Nick Stokes and Sara Sidle determine the victim died trying to escape and was hit with a shotgun blast. In the next room, Sam Vega is investigating Petey, the warehouse's night guard. Caught in a lie about his whereabouts , he confesses to an extended time away from his post. He states that a man named George came by looking for Sesto before Petey left, and he ate an In 'n Out burger when he returned. George's car remains in the parking lot, and Vega investigates. Al Robbins later helps remove Sisto from the freezer floor. Stokes looks at the blood spatter at the scene and takes some pellet samples, then finds an unidentified black object and collects it.

The black object is a fragment of a shotgun stock. A gray substance it is identified as adhesive; the conclusion is that the shotgun owner attempted a very inexpensive repair of the gun's stock. Meanwhile George Bartell, enters the police department with blood on his hands, reporting a crime. Upon interrogation, Bartell reveals that he sells expired ice cream for cash, and was going to let Sesto in on the scheme when they found someone smashing the candy machine. The gunman then shot Sesto, knocks out Bartell and locks him in the trunk of his car. When he comes to, he twists a tire iron loose and opened the trunk to escape. George becomes a suspect, however, when a drop of blood is found on his jeans; he is held for further questioning.

Looking over the situation in the warehouse and the single drop of blood on Bartell's pants, Stokes and Sidle initiate an experiment, showing that although blood spatter at room temperature will stay largely adherent to the surface it hits, spatter in a freezer tends to freeze immediately and bounce off as a number of pellets. They surmise, then, that such a pellet hit Bartell's pants, and given the angles George could not be the shooter. While pondering the identity of the man behind the murder, they get word that George's clothing also had a number of paint chips on it, all dual layered - factory-applied burgundy car paint topped with cheap blue house paint. This, combined with the cheap adhesive found on the gun fragment, lower Sidle's and Stokes' opinion of the killer.

The adhesive on the gunstock fragment is identified as granite surface adhesive. As there are few granite specialists in the area, this narrows the search for the gunman down considerably. A man named Virgil is brought in for questioning after being found in connection with both the car and the granite company. Despite the evidence, Virgil denies knowing Al Sesto, remains quiet and demands a lawyer.

George Bartell and Virgil see each other in the halls of the police department. Virgil, forgetting to remain silent (and proving himself as dimwitted as the scientists believed), explicitly admits to the murder by saying he "should have shot [George] in that freezer". George realizes his absentmindedness when he remembers everything he'd innocently told Virgil, including the vending machines and Petey's lax attendance on duty.

[edit] Critical analysis

[edit] Cultural references

[edit] Portrayal of furries

See also: Furry fandom#Sex and furry fandom

Members of the furry fan community felt the show deliberately misrepresented elements of their subculture for the purpose of entertainment, although some expected no less.[1] Complaints ran from the lack of any real (or fun) events on the convention schedule[2] to the incredibly high proportion of fursuiters, participating in novel activities (the "furpile orgy") which would lead to hyperthermia almost immediately.[3] Several singled out Rocky's projectile vomiting scene as particularly unrealistic, as well as the fact that his suit was lined with latex.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links