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CHARLIE:
In pursuit-evasion,
one group tries to track down
members of another.
DON:
You just kicked in the door.
You're looking
for a third striker.
Let's say you're
the pursuer
and you occupy the same
node as your evader.
He's captured and removed.
However, if your evader
can find a way
to outmaneuver you, he escapes.
The goal here is to gain
an advantage over your opponent
by changing the movement rules
using variants.
DON:
A K-9 team.
(dog barks, students laugh)
Or you could change
the edge weight.
Get air support.
What if the K-9 team is busy,
the chopper's down for repairs
and backup is 20 minutes out?
What's pursuit-evasion say then?
Let's look at fish.
When fish sense disturbances
around them,
they go into a defensive reflex
called a C-start.
The snake has found a way
to introduce a variant
into the game.
As the fish approaches,
the snake ripples its body
towards the fish,
which sends the fish off
in the opposite direction.
You see, the snake anticipates
and then executes
a predictive strike
aimed at where
the fish will end up.
Know your opponent.
Is he a runner,
has he got any priors,
is he injured,
is he gonna roll over,
is he gonna try
to shoot it out with us?
It's a game.
Control it.
I swear I didn't know
it was you.
You don't want me.
I'm not worth
the trouble.
Oh, no.
It's not mine.
Just carrying for a friend.
Your friend Felipe Garcia?
Who?
Lie to your girlfriend when
she asks if you love her,
but don't lie to me.
Here.
Last I heard,
Garcia was serving two years.
Yeah? Last I heard, he escaped.
You called him the day before.
I rat him out,
I'm in the obits tomorrow.
(gasps)
This is Whisky 33.
I need a unit
at Wilshire and Bixel.
Just give me two hours.
I'll see what I can find out.
(chuckles)
Do I look like I just got hit
by the stupid stick?
I screw with you,
I know what happens--
I go to jail.
In an ambulance.
Hour and 59.
Get going.
Ticktock!
NIKKI:
So the snake just
sits around all day
and gets fat?
Hardly.
If the snake gets
too preoccupied with
chasing that fish
he could very easily become
someone else's dinner.
too preoccupied with
chasing that fish
Rise and shine.
(siren wailing)
(tires screech,
siren ceases)
Hands in the air!
All right, take it easy.
Put you hands in the air!
Lock your fingers
behind your head.
Gun!
Yeah, I'm an FBI agent.
You are under arrest
for the ***
of Vincent Costello.
Are you listening to me?
The same guy signs
both our checks.
I'm Agent
Ian Edgerton.
You have the right
to remain silent.
Anything you say can
and will be used
against you
in a court of law.
Do me a favor.
Call Don Eppes over at the FBI.
Prison is where
convicted felons go.
Aren't we
skipping a step?
Detention centers
are overcrowded.
This will give you a chance
to catch up
with some of your old friends.
You know,
the guys you put away for life.
DON:
Ian, do you know this guy?
Xavier Salazar,
top-ten FBI most-wanted list,
I arrested him
in Bogota, Colombia.
He's currently serving
a life sentence right here.
Salazar's been running a massive
*** ring from inside.
Ooh! It's true what
they say about a broken watch
telling the right time
twice a day.
You've been helping him;
letting key associates of his
run free.
Yeah, of course I have.
Half a million dollars
in an offshore account
with your name on it.
Transfers came from several
of Salazar's
holding companies.
I'm being set up.
Costello
was gonna give you up,
so you killed him.
(chuckles):
News flash--
the Easter Bunny,
he's not real either.
They found this in a sewer
about a block away
from where Costello was killed.
Someone must have stolen it
from my apartment.
We searched your place, Ian.
There was no sign
of forced entry.
Well, then I must be guilty.
Why were you
meeting him?
We've been trying to
shut down Salazar, too.
The key is his bookkeeper,
Felipe Garcia.
Garcia escaped
from here
a month ago.
Costello was ready to give me
Garcia's location.
Salazar must have found out
and had him killed.
Costello left me a clue:
B-17; it's a location.
B block, 17th cell.
I don't think
Garcia ever left here.
It's impossible.
Every prisoner
in here gets an I.
D.
bracelet
like that,
just like at a hospital.
Gets scanned once a day.
If Garcia's here,
he'd have shown up by now.
Have you ever known
my instincts to be wrong?
I'm ready to go back to my cell.
(handcuffs clicking)
(loud metallic ***)
I'm betting I can crack
his windpipe
before you hit that button.
(strained):
Listen to him.
Give me the keys now!
Hey.
Edgerton may be the
FBI's top fugitive hunter,
but a social butterfly
the man is not.
Last 12 hours
he's made no phone calls,
went to the movies
by himself.
I mean, he's gonna kill a guy
with his own knife
and dumps it a block away?
(buzzer sounds) MAN (over P.
A.
):
Attention all personnel.
Prison is now in lockdown mode.
Attention all personnel.
Prison is now in lockdown mode.
He took the 2,000 hallway
to the south ramp.
He's on the roof.
Go! Go!
Phillips, get these off me.
He's on the roof.
Go! Go!
Nothing.
David?
Nothing!
Colby?
Nothing but daylight.
Edgerton is good,
but I don't think
he can make himself invisible.
All right.
We need to get
the security footage
from Thompson.
We need to look at all
escape routes, right?
And he said something
about block B-17.
So find out
who's housed there.
I know Edgerton's a risk taker,
but escaping from here,
that's a long shot,
even for him.
MAN (over P.
A.
):
Attention all personnel.
Prison is now in lockdown mode.
Attention all personnel.
Prison is now in lockdown mode.
Only place that ramp leads
is the roof.
Any cameras up there?
Edgerton broke
the cable.
Your guy knows how
to get himself lost in a hurry,
I'll give him that.
He's been hunting
fugitives his whole life.
If he wants to stay lost,
guy's gonna stay lost.
Hope you don't mind
if I disagree
with that last statement.
Janet Galvin, team leader,
Pacific Fugitive
Apprehension Squad.
You have Edgerton.
I have her.
Your boy's got
all the classic
pathological behavior
of a felon.
Really?
Loner, not much
supervision,
never sleeps in the same spot
two nights in a row.
Doesn't take much
for an individual like that
to flip to the dark side.
Dark side?
I've seen it before.
Spend your life watching
bad guys wearing $2,000 suits,
driving Ferraris, a
beautiful woman on their arm.
Only so many cheeseburgers
a man can eat
before he wants
a piece of filet.
Well, he's more
of a venison man,
and he likes to kill
his own dinner.
This is probably hard for you.
The one's closest
are usually the last
to find out.
Now if you'll excuse me,
I have a fugitive to hunt.
Marshals have jurisdiction
inside a prison, which means
this is my operation.
Of course, we'll keep
you apprised if we
find anything out.
I expect the same
in return.
Sure.
So, Garcia was never inside
cell block B-17.
Making nice
with the new kids
on the playground?
I'm trying, but I think they
just took our football away.
REPORTER:
He is one of their own;
Special Agent Ian Edgerton,
who is believed to be suspect
in the ***
of Vincent Costello.
Costello is a career criminal
who was stabbed to death
last night.
Now, what Edgerton's
possible motive
Now I know what
my brother means when he says,
"The only easy day
was yesterday.
"
The marshals have refused
to give a statement
*** suspect,
wanted fugitive.
That's just not the Ian Edgerton
I know.
Tell me about it.
Where I grew up in East L.
A.
,
dating bad guys meant
dating bad guys.
Hell, my prom date held up
the flower shop
he got my corsage from.
Wow.
Ian
is not those guys.
You know what Einstein said?
"A man should look
for what is and not for what
he thinks should be.
"
I'm looking,
but I'm still not believing
what I'm seeing.
What's your pursuit-evasion say
about this?
Oh, that all logic
goes out the window.
When a snake hunting
another snake?
Actually, no.
Game theory tells us
that if someone's feeling
unfairly wronged,
like Ian, their response
is rarely logical.
You know what?
Here.
Check it out.
Here's a hundred dollars.
So let's say a stranger tells
you to divide that
between the two of us
however you want.
(chuckles)
$30?
Really?
No offense,
but my 401(k) and the economy
aren't seeing eye to eye.
Okay, well, according
to the ultimatum game,
I can either accept
or reject this offer.
If I reject it,
neither of us get anything.
But I'm gonna reject it anyway,
because if you're
not gonna offer
me fifty-fifty,
I'm not taking it.
You're turning down free money
because you want to punish me?
People have a tremendous
desire for revenge.
Even if it's
at the risk
of hurting themselves.
So Ian's goal isn't to escape,
it's to punish someone.
It's a four-story drop--
if Edgerton jumped,
there'd be plenty of evidence
for us to find.
I don't get it, where
the hell is the guy?
My best guess: the
elevator shaft.
Might've rode down on the
top of one of the cars
and snuck out on
a different level.
GALVIN:
My boys already cleared this.
I guess you didn't see
the yellow crime scene tape?
I need to remind you
who's running this operation?
Well, I guess it
would be you--
you got the nice,
laminated map here, right?
Look at this, Colby.
It's got all these colors;
much nicer than ours.
It's all yours.
This actually is a lot
better than ours.
What's with all
this extra detail?
Prison underwent earthquake
retrofitting a few years back.
This shows the before
and after.
Look at this right here.
There's an access hatch
in that vent.
It was covered over, it looks
like, during the renovation.
Well, I guess your boys
missed this, huh?
How would Edgerton
even know about that?
'Cause he's been
bringing prisoners
here for 20 years.
(grunts)
Well, take a look at this.
Don't think we
need a DNA test
to tell us who
that came from.
(sighs)
Nah, he's not in here.
DAVID:
Section 5A is clear.
How is this sitting with you?
Ian and I went
to a Dodgers game,
not a chapel in Vegas.
I can still do my job.
I was asking for your
insight as an FBI agent.
Things aren't looking
too good for him.
Three of Ian's CI's
were drug runners for Salazar.
The most useful CI's
are usually the dirtiest ones.
That's why they have
the good information.
I was LAPD during Rampart.
Some of the best cops
I knew went down.
So Ian
is the last person I
would expect to be on the take.
Marshals said
they covered about 60%
of the rooms connected
to the air vent.
Here we go.
(door creaks loudly)
(brief clatter in distance)
(low, mechanical humming)
It's nothing.
(grunts)
(alarm ringing)
All right, all right,
take it easy, take it easy!
COLBY:
Don, you need to take the shot,
you just take it.
Too late, you should've
shot right away-- now
you're thinking too much.
That's when
you make mistakes.
I thought
you were innocent, Ian.
I am.
Yeah, I can see that.
Don't let him get in your head,
Don, you do what you need to do.
I've got him.
I've seen
you shoot, Galvin--
you're not that good.
He's not gonna
hurt Colby.
He knows he'd be dead
one second later.
Yeah, then go ahead
and pull the trigger, Sinclair--
kill your own partner.
Don't do anything
stupid, okay?
There's a way out of this.
Looks like we've got ourselves
an honest-to-God
Mexican standoff--
who's blinking first?
You want to die,
fine by me.
It's your decision, Don--
you know what I'm capable of.
THOMPSON:
Eppes, don't back down.
All right, David, get 'em out.
Get out.
Get out!
Come on, move.
Up.
Let's go, move!
Let's go.
What the hell
do you think you're doing?
Trying to save a life.
Look, we all want the same thing
here, okay? So back off.
THOMPSON:
Set up a CP.
Deploy SWAT.
DAVID: Slow your roll, okay?
Listen, there's an
FBI agent inside there.
We are taking tactical command.
This is
a United States
penitentiary-- my turf.
Hey.
We're handling negotiations.
Fine.
It's your guy's neck
on the line in there.
You do the talking.
For now.
What happened in there?
I had a shot,
and I didn't take it.
Don, come on, talk to me.
Look, I need some time.
Just you're in charge.
Let me be clear about something.
(grunts)
The FBI
the marshals
they put me
in this situation.
Ian
(scoffs)
I knew you were
a nine ball,
but, you know, I considering
your track record,
I figured it was okay.
Let me ask
you something.
How many HRT's
you been on?
Fifty-seven.
And how many times did
the perp wind up in jail?
Forty-one.
What happened the
other 16 times, Ian?
(sighs)
I had to clean my gun
when I got home.
There's two things you got
to understand about me, Granger.
Number one,
I didn't kill Costello.
And two?
There's no way
I'm going to jail.
I hate to be the one
to break this to you,
but you're already here.
You're hardwired in.
Here we go.
Hey, Ian
told me that he
sometimes gets down
when he's not out on a hunt.
I didn't think much
of it at the time,
but now I don't know.
Maybe it means something.
Okay.
(line ringing)
(phone rings)
I'll keep it simple.
G5 fueled on the tarmac at LAX
and a Beatles reunion.
DAVID:
I want to know what I have to do
to get my partner
out of there safely.
There's only Paul and Ringo--
shouldn't be too hard.
Yeah, you want
to play around.
I got 20 marshals
out here, itching
to turn this into a bloodbath,
okay?
Get me Professor Eppes
on a video feed
in the next 20 minutes.
I need to know that Colby
is all right.
He's fine.
And as long as no one
does anything stupid,
like a crisis entry,
which I'm sure
the marshals are pushing for,
he'll stay that way.
Ian.
It's me.
Betancourt, it's been a while
since I've heard your voice.
Yeah, well, you stopped calling.
Yeah, uh
fugitive hunt
in the Abajo Mountains.
Cell phone service
really sucked.
Back out on the hunt.
That must've made you happy.
I'll tell you
what will make me happy,
is to have my friends trust me.
Hey, we do.
I do.
Really? That's why you're
keeping me on the phone,
so the marshals kind find
a way to take me out!
Taking Colby hostage
is not gonna help your case.
If you're innocent,
we'll prove it.
I spent my career
putting my *** on
the line, thinking
it'll make a difference, and
how does the Bureau repay me?
By putting me behind bars!
By believing *** like Salazar!
No one's convicted you
of anything yet.
Yeah, sure they haven't.
If Charlie's not
on my computer screen
in the next 19 minutes, it's
gonna get real messy in here.
DON:
Basic rules.
Prolong the situation,
ensure the safety
of the hostages,
and, um, to
Keep
To keep things calm.
Right.
I think I've
got it down.
Okay.
I mean, he's going
to try to test you,
you know, with
with unreasonable demands.
And I thought synthetic
differential geometry
was confusing.
All right.
This is Eppes.
I got him.
Patch us through.
Hey, Ian?
Sorry to drag you
into this, Professor,
but I need your skills.
Uh
listen, I need to ask you
about Colby.
How is he doing?
Here.
Everything's going
to be find, Charlie.
Just listen to what he has
to say, all right?
Satisfied?
Uh, yeah, and, uh,
how are
how are you doing, Ian?
Oh, fine,
except for the fact
that I've been set up
for a ***
I didn't commit,
and I'm looking at a trip
to the death chamber.
How about you?
Surprisingly nervous.
Find your Zen quickly.
You're the only one
who can help me out here.
Salazar was afraid
that Garcia was going to testify
against him,
so he ordered him to be whacked,
but Garcia escaped
before the job got done.
Escaped felons--
isn't that what they pay you
to do?
Ha!
Outside, Garcia had nowhere
to turn for money
but Salazar's people.
He wouldn't have lasted
ten minutes.
But inside the jail--
that would be the perfect place
for him hide until he could talk
to the cops
and guarantee protection
for himself.
You think Garcia is hiding
inside the prison system?
Using someone else's identity.
What I was trying
to tell your brother.
The prisoners all wear
I.
D.
bracelets.
Easy enough
to get off.
And once you do,
you're lost in the system.
How many prisoners are there?
Okay, now I understand
why you called me.
You're talking about a
longitudinal socializing process
as it applies
to the prison population.
Sounds complex.
It's very.
Well, hopefully not too complex,
because Colby's really counting
on you to get the right answer.
Edgerton seems pretty confident
that Garcia
is still in the system.
And what do we have
on the escape?
Well, marshals
found this
in the exercise yard.
Did a cell check ten minutes
later-- Garcia was gone.
So, what actual proof
do we have that he left?
This is a video
(typing)
of visitors leaving the jail
before it was
locked down.
Now, those two
were cleared.
Marshals think this
is Garcia.
See, his pants
are short.
They figure he got clothes
from the lawyer,
but the size was off.
Yeah, wait, wait.
Look at this.
Says he's a righty.
This guy's opening the
door with his left hand.
Okay, Charlie, you're
looking at 6,000 prisoners.
Maybe not.
Garcia lived in a specific cell,
which means he was only exposed
to a portion
of the prison population
each day.
Still, it's got to be
a thousand people.
We don't have time
to interview them all.
Well, with longitudinal
socializing process,
we may not have to.
Detention facilities
are breeding ground
for criminal enterprises,
aren't they?
And that's going
to help us?
It's like the TV show Survivor,
where every contestant
is assigned to a tribe
and each player
competes in challenges.
The players have to use
their individual skills
in order
for the tribe to succeed,
so that when they go
to the Tribal Council,
if they've built
their alliances correctly,
they survive.
Jails aren't
that much different.
The networks
that are established in jails
offer significant financial
and logistical resources
to criminals.
The petty thief blends his
skills with the gunrunner,
or the accountant
who embezzled millions
allies with the drug kingpin
who can launder his money.
And so a longitudinal
socializing process looks for
the most beneficial patterns
in relationships.
Who Garcia
would have had
to build alliances with
in order to survive
being whacked by Salazar.
I can run data and narrow
down possible matches.
But I need your help
in analyzing final candidates.
Let's do it.
Stale.
Hey.
I know how you could get
yourself a nice, hot pizza.
Sorry, but you're worth
a little more to me than that.
I could've gone for Eppes.
But you know what it's like.
I know what it's like, how?
Everyone in the FBI thought you
were a spying for the Chinese.
The one man who could prove
your innocence was dead.
I mean, hell, even your partner
thought you were guilty.
This is nothing like
what I went through.
If you're waiting on the
Stockholm syndrome to kick in,
it's going to be a long night.
If I get a hold of that gun,
I won't hesitate
to take you out.
Department of Corrections
just sent over Garcia's file.
He was serving two years
for obstruction of justice.
Wait.
So he should have been
in minimum security.
Yeah.
Apparently
Garcia thought so, too.
He wrote multiple letters
to the prison board.
Claimed his life
was in danger.
What, they just
ignored it?
No, they signed off
on several transfers.
But each time,
the orders were rescinded
at the very last minute.
Well, why's that?
That information's probably
available at the prison.
Thought you might want
to get back in the game.
Questioning my judgment?
No.
My own, maybe.
Give yourself
a break.
You know, we might
turn out to be right.
Is that why you
didn't take the shot?
You think he's innocent?
I hope so.
Don't worry.
Colby's in good hands.
I just spoke with Don.
He and Charlie are
narrowing down their list.
I'm not going to sit around
and do nothing
while your boy wonder
plays with his abacus.
I'd like to probe
the perimeter,
see if I can't get a
camera under the door.
Edgerton's a master
at tactics.
He is going
to be expecting that.
THOMPSON:
This thing may not end
the way you want it to.
We need to be ready.
Look, it's a mistake.
I'm not asking
your permission, Sinclair.
Go.
(Galvin yells,
Edgerton chuckles)
Damn it! Pull back!
(laughs)
Eh, it was just a few volts.
Enough to send a message.
Yeah?
What message is that?
"I'm a sociopath who
enjoys hurting people"?
I always liked you, Granger.
Served in the military,
not afraid to mix it up.
We're not so different.
Really?
'Cause from where I'm sitting,
I'd say we are.
Just the facts, ma'am, huh?
Hmm.
Dragnet.
I used to love that show.
It's what made me want
to become a cop.
I bet it did.
The beginning, when Joe Friday's
describing Los Angeles?
Shots of the beautiful
women on the beach?
No, the end.
When the prisoner would hold up
his plaque for the mug shot.
The announcer would
tell you his sentence.
Charlie won't let me down.
It's possible you
don't have all the facts.
What is it exactly
you expect he's going to find?
You know, Joe Friday never
actually said that line?
But enough people
repeat something, and soon
enough, it becomes the truth.
It doesn't mean it's right.
Okay.
So, these are
the 53 most likely convicts
that Garcia could have
switched bracelets with.
We'll start with Guy Baker.
Mm-mmm.
What do you mean, mm-mmm?
Look, he's got
three kids.
There's no way he's
going to cross Salazar.
Okay.
How about Jorge Ramos?
Yeah, maybe.
I mean, his father-in-law
makes Salazar look small-time.
Anything happens to his
daughter or his grandkids,
Salazar's dead.
Orlando Casindo.
No.
Look.
His sentence
is almost up.
(chuckles)
You're amazing.
You know?
The more stressful
the circumstance,
the more
clarity you have.
Yeah, well, look,
my life were on the line
and someone asked you
the square root of 2007?
give or take a digit.
See, that's
clear thinking.
I could have ended this
back at the prison.
What, by killing Ian?
I mean, it's what the textbook
says to do.
You know, after seeing
the destruction at Hiroshima,
Robert Oppenheimer spent
the rest of his life
fighting nuclear proliferation
and totally destroyed
his career,
but he valued the lives of his
friends and family even more.
You know,
I'm thinking your instinct
was self-preservation.
Galvin's got a second-degree
burn on her hand.
Thompson, I warned
you not to go.
What, are you
on his side now?
I cannot keep this jail
in lockdown forever.
We can't even get
a visual on your guy.
He could be dead,
for all we know.
(phone rings)
You're not going in, okay?
Not yet.
Sinclair.
Hey, David.
We've narrowed down
the list of potential prisoners
that Garcia switched
bracelets with to seven.
Pete Lugo.
Sean Pineiro.
Hakeem Watkins.
Terell Post.
Robert Ortiz.
Randy Shannon.
And Matthew Nunn.
Empty cell.
Records indicate
he's in courthouse holding.
Which one's Matthew Nunn?
Hey, come here.
(grunts)
Where's Garcia?
I never heard of the man.
Think harder or I swear,
you'll be serving your sentence
plus his, his,
and maybe his, too.
I don't know.
That's
the truth, I swear.
The dude said he'd
get $1,000 to my wife
if I switched
bracelets with him.
Damn it!
(phone rings)
Find him?
DAVID:
We're having some problems.
Charlie needs some more time.
You are going to make me hurt
this man to prove my point!
Ian, don't.
Ian? Ian?
Your boy's losing it.
What's my
best option?
Explosives.
We'll go through
the wall.
You give me 20 minutes,
I'll end this thing.
Do it.
All right, these are
the prisoners waiting
to be taken back
to the jail.
And there's Garcia.
As you can see,
we don't know
which van he went on, or whose
bracelet he's wearing now.
And every prisoner
that Garcia switched bracelets
with has increased
his chances of survival.
The first bracelet got him
out of his cell block,
and the next one
got him
to the courthouse.
Tell me where he's going next,
I'll buy you a new Rubik's Cube.
It's pursuit-evasion.
I knew we'd be back to the snake
and the fish.
Nope.
Two children
playing hide-and-seek.
The seeker counts to 50
and begins looking.
But kids don't go from room
to room in an efficient manner.
They run to places like
the basement or the attic first,
places that offer
the best hiding spots.
In a similar manner,
we look at prisoners
who could have switched
bracelets with Garcia
at the courthouse and rank them
based on where they're housed,
or who has the safest hiding
spot from Salazar and his men.
You know, when I was, like, 12,
there was this kid,
Ricky Caroll,
the bully who used to terrorize
the neighborhood.
So one day,
me and my friend,
we, uh, hid out
and waited for him
and jumped him.
And?
And we beat the crap out of him.
Then I got home and I told
my old man what happened,
and, uh, he beat
the crap out of me,
and said it was better
to fail with honor
than to win by cheating.
Think I should just quit?
Trust my fate to a jury?
I'd rather see you
have your day in court alive
than have to stand
at your funeral, Ian.
Why don't you
let me help you,
the right way?
(sighs)
You see the way I live.
I can carry my life
in a backpack.
My idea of a
five-star hotel is
an insulated sleeping bag
and a waterproof tent.
(chuckles)
What the hell would I even do
with $500,000?
Have you even taken a moment
to think about that?
(typing)
(computer trilling)
What am I looking at?
Garcia's transfer orders.
All signed by the same person.
By the same marshal:
Frank Thompson.
All right, we're good
to go, boss.
Hey, hold on a sec.
If that's some authority from
the DOJ, I don't give a crap.
They're Garcia's transfer
orders,
denied seven times by you.
And with good reason.
THOMPSON:
You ever work a jail?
Ever have three prisoners
jump you,
nothing to defend yourself
with but a flashlight?
No.
But all of a sudden
you're an expert
on how things are done
around here.
DAVID:
So you're saying
this is normal protocol?
THOMPSON:
Salazar wanted Garcia
transferred.
I knew moving him
was part of his plan.
Part of his plan, how?
Garcia goes
to a different prison,
meets new contacts and Salazar's
*** ring continues to grow.
Keep Garcia here, at
least it's contained.
Now, let me do my job,
get your partner home.
Let's go.
(phone ringing)
Sinclair.
Garcia switched bracelets
with a prisoner
whose number is between
and 223-527-996.
That's about 112 names,
right, Charlie?
Yeah.
But they're all in
the maximum security wing.
If Garcia's in solitary,
then we've got him cornered.
Thompson, wait!
(loud metallic ***)
(line ringing)
(phone ringing)
I'd better hear Garcia's voice
on the other end
of this phone.
Hey, we located him, all right.
I need to talk my partner
right now.
It's David.
Still alive.
We found Garcia.
He's in maximum security
so it's going to take us
a few minutes to get to him.
Maybe in the meantime, I could
send you guys in some food.
Some Italian, you know,
maybe some Mexican.
No food.
Just Garcia.
Five minutes.
Garcia got himself transferred
to maximum security.
He must've been really afraid
of Salazar.
He could've figured out a way
to get to a cell block
Salazar didn't control.
He picked a spot
that no one can get to.
A place that's being
watched 24-7.
Salazar can't operate without
help inside the jail.
A marshal?
Garcia knew all along who,
but Costello was killed
before he could give me
the exact location.
You let yourself be arrested.
I had to get in here.
It was my best chance
to find Garcia.
It was crazy, man.
I needed Charlie's help.
If I would've rabbited,
nobody would've listened
to a fugitive.
EDGERTON:
Five more minutes.
Five more minutes
and Garcia
will give us Salazar's partner.
We may not have
that much time.
The bit about the food--
Mexico, it's me and David's
distress word.
That means Thompson's
getting ready to breach.
So ask yourself, Granger,
why is Thompson pushing
to make entry?
Why wouldn't he at least listen
to what Garcia has to say?
He wants to protect himself,
and now he's got to kill me.
Breach has control.
Ten
nine
eight
seven
Just the facts.
six
Just the fact.
five
four
three
two
one.
Hands!
Hands!
I got him!
I got him!
Just in case you don't shoot
any better than you think.
Where the hell
is Galvin?
(gunshot)
(handcuffs clicking)
(heavy breathing)
NIKKI:
Galvin's been working
for Salazar for two years now.
EDGERTON:
She convinced Thompson
to reject all of Garcia's
transfer orders.
And set up the phony accounts
under your name.
Thompson?
Only thing he's guilty of
is trusting Galvin.
Well, here's
where I get off.
Hey, just until
the courts open.
I'll get a judge to officially
release you.
These days it could be a while.
Any chance of a conjugal visit?
Yeah, sure.
As soon as they get cell service
in the Abajo Mountains.
He's all yours.
You see?
Your gut was right.
Hey, there's one thing
I know for certain.
If I'm ever held hostage,
I hope it's you on the other
side of that trigger.
Oh, well, you
I might let 'em keep.
(sighs)
Wow.
Took you long enough.
Oh, please, none of this
would've happened
if you didn't fight
like a girl.
Come on.
If anybody acted like a girl
in there, it was you.
Should've heard
yourself on that phone.
You're all,
"I just want to make sure
my partner's all right
in there.
"
Down right
embarrassing.
If I let you die,
you know the kind of paperwork
I'm going to have to fill out?
All right, I can just kiss
my promotion good-bye.
(sighs):
Now,
this feels good.
Guess you won't mind
driving then, right?
(chuckles)
Why am I always going to bed
when everyone else is waking up?
Well, at least this time
you're not alone.
I'm right here
with you.
Thanks.
It's like when
we were kids.
We used to stay up all night,
and sneak downstairs
and watch TV.
Oh, yeah.
And we'd lie to Mom, right?
And then what'd she say?
Oh, "Only the truth
will set you free.
"
And we'd lie to Mom, right?
And then what'd she Hey.
Ian bet his life on you, kid.
Could say the same thing
about you.
You sure that's why
I didn't pull the trigger?
Oh.
I'd bet my life on it.