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Hey, david,
Anything from anywhere?
It's been two minutes
since your last call.
No.
Are you chewing gum?
Oh, it's just that
I started with math
that I used
For those bank robberies
a few years back.
Remember the charm school boys?
Right.
Amita:
See, normally, these kinds
of projections require
Sifting through tens
of thousands of data points
To divine deep patterns.
Right, and this time
the patterns were overwhelming,
Like a giant neon arrow
pointing at the next job.
If your numbers say it will
happen here, I'm sold, charlie.
Well, that's the thing
Uh, they don't say
it'll happen there.
What?
I pointed out
to charlie
The big arrow was pointing
directly away
From the charm school boys
original target--
The federal reserve shipments
of old cash.
Charlie:
And so then I asked myself
What if the new robbers
Had studied
the old robbers' tactics?
Could it be at all possible
That they were anticipating
our methodology-- choosing banks
Specifically
to divert our attention
Away from the real target?
Are you saying we're here
on a hunch?
Oh, I-I wouldn't call it
a-a-a hunch.
(mouthing):
Induction.
It's an induction.
Thank you.
It's an induction.
So this whole stakeout
Hinges on evidence
That basically guarantees
we're gonna fail?
I'm just talking it
through here, david.
And I feel 90% better.
I'm just curious, but where does
your equation indicate
The crew will hit?
You haven't heard anything
from ventura county, have you?
(mouthing)
(tires squealing)
Incoming!
(tires squealing)
(taser crackling)
Fbi!
Don't move!
(coughs)
Nikki:
I don't know about
the outfit, boss.
You kind of look
like an eagle scout.
Be prepared.
Woman (on tv):
A wild scene downtown today
As fbi agents thwarted robbers
wielding tasers, tear gas
And machine guns.
Hospitalized for tear gas
inhalation and minor injuries
Was the armored car's driver,
wesley till, 35
Of topanga canyon.
Next time be sure
To induct
the tear gas, huh?
Amita:
Wow.
Imagine the research
this could fund.
Yeah, that's exactly
what I was imagining.
(beeping)
another old one.
Something about old bills
this machine does not like.
The average lifespan
Of a $20 bill is two years.
This one made it up to 40.
Put it in the pile.
Machine
jammers get counted separately.
Amita:
There are three more here.
All 1969 20s.
There are four
in one bag?
Do you guys realize
what the odds are here?
No, but I'm guessing
we're about to find out.
Charlie:
Even factoring in the
superannuated nature
Of bills being sent to the
shredder, it's astronomical.
Well, run the serial numbers,
maybe they'll pop.
(beeping)
What was that?
It must be a marked bill.
Serial number's on the hot list.
Hey, that's d.
B.
Cooper money.
Seriously?
Who's d.
B.
Cooper?
You know the lifespan of
a $20 bill, but not
The most famous unsolved
crime in american history?
He hijacked a plane back in--
what was it, the '60s
David:
Got 200 grand from the airline,
Jumped out of the plane
and just disappeared.
So how does the ransom turn up
In the federal reserve
The day before thanksgiving,
A passenger
calling himself dan cooper
Showed a flight attendant
a bomb.
He made that flight land
in seattle
Where the airline gave him
And two sets
of parachutes.
Let all the
passengers go
And then took off again
with the flight crew.
Sometime in the next two hours
he lowered the rear stairway
Of the plane, parachuted out
over the oregon wilderness.
That's one hell of a heist.
The skill set involved:
Bomb making, parachuting,
aviation.
Colby:
Just the insanity of it.
You jump out of a plane
At night in a rainstorm over a
forest of a hundred foot trees.
He could have saved time
just shooting himself.
That's the consensus,
But cooper's body
was never found.
The agents investigating figured
that he died in the jump.
Charlie: Boy, I hope
that wasn't based
On these projections
of the potential landing zone.
What, you see a problem?
The formula they used.
It's kind of like
mathematical fondue.
Maybe it was current
in the 1970s,
But, I don't know, there have
been some exciting breakthroughs
In modeling weather front
formation.
You know, if I cull
enough data
On military and civilian
drop statistics,
I could recalculate d.
B.
Cooper's chances of survival.
David: It would be amazing to
crack this thing after 40 years.
Hey, you think
the armored car robbers
Knew what they were stealing?
I doubt it.
Besides, when I mentioned
d.
B.
Cooper, they were shocked.
But they did think
it was kind of cool.
Nikki: Got a report back
from the crime lab.
The cooper bills showed
signs of prolonged exposure
To unusually hot,
dry air.
Also traces of gypsum dust.
That's drywall, right?
Guys, guess who worked this
case back in the '70s?
Roger bloom.
He's been around that long?
Colby: Could be a big help.
We would've never busted
The copycat bank robbers
if it weren't for him.
(phone ringing)
he had a bit of a man crush
On you, didn't he?
Well, he hates nikki.
He doesn't hate me.
(phones ringing)
he just doesn't get me.
You should probably knock
on his door in the morning.
What's with the phones
around here?
No, no comment.
I said no comment.
Someone leaked the d.
B.
Cooper
story to one of the blogs
(phones ringing)
so it's going crazy.
Which means we have
about ten minutes
Before tv vans block
the parking garage entrance.
(laughing)
(phones ringing)
Man.
(phone ringing)
Bloom: Why is it only g-men
ring the doorbell
At 6:30 in the morning?
Well, it's not my fault
You worked on every major
fbi case since patty hearst.
D.
B.
Cooper-- as soon
as I heard the news,
I knew you guys were
going to find my number.
Sunny-side up good?
Yeah, it's fine.
So what do you say?
You want to take another run
at the one that got away?
This is not
a good time.
I just started a security
consulting firm
To make ends meet.
Make yourself useful, will ya?
Get a plate
and put on some toast.
You know,
There's still a $50,000 reward
out there.
Not to mention
The publicity
for your new business.
All right, here's a tip.
It wasn't $200,000.
He got away with closer
to a million.
The bureau and the airline
downplayed the take
To weed out false confessions.
Something else
that's buried in your boxes:
Three weeks after the hijacking,
A search team finds
a corpse in a tree
In the landing zone.
Eddie sawyer.
Professional thief,
paratrooper from vietnam.
So sawyer was cooper?
Yeah, we thought so, too.
But none of the witnesses on the
plane could id his photograph.
And later on,
the autopsy told us
That he was stabbed to death
before he ever hit the tree.
Now, cooper did order
two sets of chutes.
Okay, so cooper was working
with another guy.
He knifed him
and threw him out of the plane.
That's the theory.
Amita:
David?
Hey.
How you doing?
Hey.
Charlie's working
from home today.
Um, well, actually,
I was looking for you.
Okay, here it is.
I have a date for,
uh, Saturday night.
It's the symphony.
I need some help
buying a suit.
Don't you have
a lot of suits?
They all make me
look like, uh
An fbi agent?
Yeah.
You know, I mean,
Don and I, we don't
have the same taste.
And colby's idea of dressing up
is a string tie.
Liz is out of town.
If I even tell nikki
that I have a date
You always look good.
Your clothes are great, so
I would be happy
to help you.
And not tell nikki.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
We scan the serial
number of every bill
That's sent
for shredding.
If those notes had passed
through our system,
My people would
have flagged them.
Not if someone
didn't want them flagged.
From the moment you drive in,
Every move you make is
observed and recorded.
And the guards
work in teams.
The only person
who's left alone
With the cash for
even a second
Is the armored
car driver.
That's wesley till?
And he's thoroughly searched,
and his personal cash
Is counted before and
after every shift.
What time
does he get in?
Well, he doesn't.
If your guys got tear gassed,
Wouldn't you give them
a week off?
No.
Actually, in my case,
I'm going to go make them
*** on his door.
Bloom:
Altitude: 9,800 to 10,000 feet.
(keyboard keys clacking)
velocity: 170 knots.
Winds: Outside,
west, 15 knots.
(trilling)
Okay.
That brings us
to a landing
Right around Here.
"hey, look at me.
I'm hanging in a tree, dead.
"
Strange enough to watch you
revert to childhood,
But it wasn't even your own.
Those were your brother's toys.
This is a detailed map
of the terrain of d.
B.
Cooper's
Landing zone, constructed
in order to calculate
His odds of survival.
Which, by the way,
defies sense.
Why jump here,
when the terrain clears out
Only 70 miles later?
Well, the time was calculated by
a dip in the nose of the plane.
No one actually saw him jump.
So, we shift the jump time.
Mm-hmm.
You know,
back when that was happening,
It seemed like someone hijacked
a plane every other week.
And the only name
we ever remember
Is d.
B.
Cooper.
(chuckles)
Probably because
you never found him.
No, it was probably because
of the times, you know?
All that anti-establishment
stuff going on?
I wasn't anti the country.
I was bleeding for it.
Some of us felt
That the country and the
establishment weren't the same.
Yeah, and some of us were
shipped home in cargo.
You know who
my hero was?
Freddy o'casio.
He saved my unit
from a six-hour firefight.
Not some lowlife
who jeopardized
for a quick payoff.
Six minutes.
If cooper had jumped
only six minutes later,
Uh, the terrain would
have cleared out somewhat,
And that would have
increased his chances
Of survival
considerably.
Congratulations.
Your hero might have
survived after all.
Doesn't make sense.
Yeah, tell me about it.
I came in here looking
for a watering can,
And I found my past
under attack.
Cooper had to assume
those bills were marked.
Boy, 50% is a high risk of death
for a payoff he couldn't use.
Next time, I'll use a hose.
Armored car
driver maybe,
But if wesley till
has d.
B.
Cooper's money,
He isn't spending it
on rent.
Hey, explain
something to me.
If the hijacker called
himself dan cooper,
Where did "d.
B""
come from?
Press.
One article
called him "d.
B.
Cooper,"
Every other reporter
repeated the mistake.
The bureau ran
the name dan cooper.
Turns out he was a hero
Of a french comic book
in the '60s.
Cold.
No reception.
I'm gonna step out
and get some bars.
Phew.
(rhythmic thumping)
(thumping ceases)
(steady buzzer sound)
(buzzing ceases)
"prolonged exposure
to hot, dry air.
"
(knocking)
Oh, man.
(grunting)
Oh, man.
"1969.
"
(gun ***)
Hands in the air.
Friend, you walked
into the wrong house.
On your knees.
Now.
Fbi.
Drop it, pops.
You're agents?
Then you can show me a badge.
My apologies.
I thought you were a burglar.
Who are you?
Ray till.
Wesley's uncle.
We're spending the holidays
camping in the sierras.
Call wesley at work.
He'll clear it up.
Mr.
Till,
There's something
we need you to see.
Is this your nephew?
He was the finest man I know.
The kind of man I wish
I could've been.
The money in the wall,
Any idea where it came from?
Wesley didn't care about money.
Didn't even own a tv.
(pills rattle)
Multiple myeloma.
Doctors give me
about four months.
I'm sorry.
You don't need to be.
Since I found out,
I've been using my time better,
Doing things that matter.
That's nice ink.
My whole unit got it
One drunken weekend
in da nang.
We were part of
the biggest
Combat jump of the whole war.
David:
Wesley till gets a job
Transporting money
to be shredded.
So he shows up to work
with marked d.
B.
Cooper bills
And he goes home
with unmarked cash.
The fed records how much
personal cash the drivers get
Onto the trucks with.
Till was showing up
with anywhere between
So, over 11 months,
He could have swapped out
$63,000.
If you add in the 160 grand
we found in his wall,
And so where is
the other $777,000?
Slight correction: $771,000.
$5,880 washed up in
The columbia river in 1980.
Okay, so this bill swapping,
It's not like holding up
a drugstore, right?
It takes planning,
It takes patience,
a lot like the hijacking.
All right, that's a compelling
argument if till was
Alive in 1971.
His uncle was.
And he's an ex-paratrooper.
Colby:
Wait a minute.
That's what you're going with,
That uncle ray
is d.
B.
Cooper?
They didn't find a
body or a parachute.
That cash in that wall had
to come from somewhere.
Come on.
I can't be the only one
Thinking that it's
at least possible.
You want to put
A lunch on it?
Make it two lunches.
I just I hate eating alone.
Two burritos from
the vending machine.
Burritos?
I'm hedging,
all right?
But that's a lot
of coincidence.
Might be worth it
to see what uncle ray does next.
Let me know what else
you find out.
Nikki:
Okay.
Back to the boxes.
Roger, you want
to help me out?
Oh, that's what I came for.
She'll grow on you.
Yeah.
Yeah, maybe.
David, hey.
So I pulled
Some pictures from magazines,
just to get a sense
Of what you're thinking.
Well, I was thinking
something more simple,
But not too loud,
but, um
That would still
make a good statement.
Well, do-do you like
a particular color?
I think it's really all about
the fabric.
Yeah, well,
that's important, too.
Well, maybe you could just
pick up a couple
Of the ones that you like
And I could
pick out one.
I could just return
the rest.
Okay.
Thanks.
Uh-huh.
Bye.
Even accounting for the safer
drop zone,
Cooper's risk/reward ratio is,
like, massively out of line.
Maybe the guy wasn't good
at math.
These are patterns that are
hardwired into the human brain.
And not only humans:
The behavior of monkeys,
And fish and the way
That bees choose flowers.
Well, if our mice are only
concerned with the reward,
Then their distribution
would correlate
With the concentration of food.
But barn owls hunt much more
effectively over open terrain
Than in brush.
How many mice will brave
the dangerous open terrain
For a feast
and how many will choose
The less-rewarding brush?
Each mouse weighs danger, food,
risk, reward.
So to make that jump with bills
That he had
to assume were marked,
Cooper was like a mouse that ran
Into the middle of a field
looking for food
That he didn't even think
he was able to eat.
Right.
Maybe that's it.
The risk is the reward.
Like an adrenaline high.
Speaking of adrenaline,
by the way, this morning
Dad made an
offhanded comment
About d.
B.
Cooper being
a folk hero.
And it started this whole
argument about the '60s,
And just the way
that bloom reacted,
Honestly, I'm glad that he
doesn't carry a gun anymore.
Actually, I think he does
carry a gun.
He really went off on dad.
The guy's a vet.
He comes home and-and people
are calling him "baby killer.
"
You don't think
That dad ever called anyone
a baby killer?
No, but sometimes I'm not sure
he really gets
What guys like bloom
went through.
Hey, check this out.
Hmm?
Every month,
wesley till
Wired money to a flower store
in westminster;
Total of $62,580.
That's about what we think
he was swapping out of the fed.
Yeah, and westminster's
Little saigon.
And uncle ray
is a vet.
Now, it's funny how this case
keeps circling back to vietnam.
Yeah, listen to this.
Uncle ray trained soldiers
in parachuting
Before being deployed.
His unit was accused
of committing
War crimes in a village
called nu bac.
What kind of crimes?
Doesn't say.
Oh, hello.
Look who else was in nu bac:
Specialist edward sawyer.
This is the guy they found
in the tree.
See, I'm beginning to think
That colby and david owe you
a burrito;
Three kinds of cheese.
I knew I should have held out
for that surf and turf.
David:
In a room with a dozen
computers and free wi-fi,
He uses microfilm.
Colby:
According to his tax records,
He's been living
On the oregon side
of the klamath mountains
For the last 25 years.
They have internet servers
in the mountains, right?
I'm gonna take you camping,
if only for entertainment value.
I'll get the car.
Here.
The guy who just left,
what was he looking at?
Oh, mr.
Till isn't in trouble,
is he?
You know him?
Every few weeks
He shows up,
spends all day here reading.
Sometimes a few days
in a row.
Today it was old newspapers;
Seven rolls.
Okay, well, I'm gonna need
all of them.
Do you have a library card?
Uh
I mean,
I've been meaning to get one.
Remember, in the
vietnamese culture,
The more deferential
you are
To the proprietor,
the better.
You get tough,
you get nothing.
I know how to talk
to people, roger.
Hello.
Can I help you?
Fbi.
If you have a moment,
we'd like to talk to you
About some money
that was wired to your store.
The $63,000.
You have some idea
where it's from?
Actually, we were gonna ask you.
When the money first appeared,
I told the bank
It must be a mistake.
They said it wasn't.
Wait a minute.
You get money every month,
You have no idea
where it comes from,
You just pocket it,
you don't ask any questions?
No, I tried to return it,
But the bank couldn't
trace the sender.
I didn't want any trouble
from the irs,
So I had them write a
letter verifying my story.
Thanks for the
diplomacy lesson.
Okay, all right.
I know.
You got to admire
a well-executed stonewalling.
Letter and everything.
Do you like vietnamese food?
There is a takeout place
about three blocks up that makes
An unbelievable pho.
Oh, please tell me that's
not some breed of dog.
No, that's some breed
of noodle soup.
You have to broaden
your horizons, miss.
Colby:
He's going into
teddy antell's place.
David:
What is till doing with
the biggest silver
And jewelry thief
on the west coast?
Well, it's a social club.
Maybe he wants to socialize.
Right.
(three gunshots)
(engine revs)
(siren wailing)
(tires screeching)
(jazz music playing)
Fbi.
(handcuffs clicking)
Nikki:
Doa's guy russo,
Teddy antell's
right-hand man.
We tossed russo's car.
Blood smears turned up
Consistent with
wesley till's type
And papers taken from his house.
Well, do the dna.
I say we close
the wesley case now.
So how did uncle ray
close it first?
I was looking for a lady
I used to know.
And you just happened to run
into your nephew's murderer,
And you shot him.
Well, all I did
was walk in a door.
He drew and shot first.
As I'm sure the bartender's
already told you.
Yes, he did.
I'm roger bloom.
They asked me to look
at your service file.
I was up in the central
highlands, near laos.
How was it over there?
I saw what I saw.
You saw more.
You blew the whistle
on your own unit
For a massacre at nu bac.
All I did was not cover it up.
David, he's
being modest.
In nam, if you stuck
your neck out,
If you spoke up,
you knew what was gonna happen.
They'd suppress
your commendations,
They'd write you up
for dirty boots,
A bullet hole
in your helmet.
And if you were
really stubborn,
They sent you out on the wire,
Where the bullet
with your name could find you.
Lucky it only had
My first name.
Yeah.
You went home with
a medical discharge.
Report's buried,
End of career.
And that's the way it was
over there.
You always paid
for what you didn't do.
I'm not much
for swapping war stories.
David:
Well, here's your
service photo.
Here's a composite sketch
of the suspect
From a 1971 hijacking.
The money we found
In wesley's wall is
from that hijacking.
We knew that he was using
his job to launder it.
Bloom:
The army screwed you.
A million dollars,
That's a lot of payback.
Fellas, I promise
I am not d.
B.
Cooper
Or jimmy hoffa
or amelia earhart
Or the abominable snowman.
Am I being held?
What do we do with this guy?
We can hold him for russo,
but it won't stick.
It doesn't have to.
Teddy antell will make sure
Till doesn't last
a week in jail.
Right.
If we release him,
Then he disappears
back into the mountains.
Nikki:
And if he does?
We closed wesley till's ***.
At the end of the day,
How important is
a 40-year-old crime?
You're seriously asking why
we're interested in solving
The most famous hijacking
in history?
Not when you put it like that.
Do yourselves a favor,
just kick till loose.
There's a 50 grand reward
on the hook.
It gives you guys time,
And trust me, uncle ray
is not disappearing on me.
That might be our
least bad solution.
Hey, so you
got into it
With my dad, I heard.
I follow the rules
all the time.
Everybody else is doing
whatever the hell they want.
It might seem like, you know,
ancient history to some people,
To me, yesterday.
I was 15,
and we had this gardener
Who worked on the street,
This, uh, mexican guy;
he had a funky walk.
And me being the idiot
that I was
Would-would do the walk
for everybody on the block.
Well, my dad
saw me one day,
And I'm telling you,
he had me on my knees
Pulling weeds
for two weeks in August.
So, the talk about rules,
I learned all about the rules
from him.
I have a favorite, but I'm
not gonna tell you which.
Okay.
Yeah, the, uh
Those are Those are good.
They're good.
I could get
something else.
What about, like-like,
tweed, you know?
Tweed?
You know, or-or pinstripe
is nice as well.
Tweed or pinstripes.
No, no
You ready?
Uh, I got to go.
I'll call you, okay?
Thank you.
(jazz music playing,
pool balls clacking)
Crime scene tape is down.
This is a private club again.
Well, we're here for
an intervention, teddy.
Look at you.
Drinking alone,
I mean, how can you run a
criminal enterprise responsibly?
A funny guy.
I liked you feds better
Back when you were
j.
Edgar hoover types.
That'd be him.
Totally humorless.
Any idea why guy russo killed
An armored car driver
named wesley till?
Teddy:
Typical g-man.
Pin your crime on a dead man
before he's even
In the ground.
Here's a hint
for you.
in his wall,
Another 771 out
there up for grabs.
You already have
all the answers.
Why not talk to each other,
Leave me out of it?
Because the guy
russo underestimated
Just happens to be
wesley till's uncle.
And we had to
let him go.
I don't think russo
Wiped his butt
without a phone call from you.
So second most
important thing is
Wesley's uncle
doesn't figure that out
And come gunning for you.
I'm supposed to ask what the
most important thing is, right?
That nothing happens
to wesley's uncle.
Should a piano fall on his head,
worse things fall on yours.
I mean, that was a
little bit funny, right?
Bloom wouldn't
even listen.
Wouldn't even listen.
I mean, it was like
Being in the, uh
Charlie:
In the '60s
All over again.
Yeah, exactly.
We'd marshal arguments, and
they impugned our patriotism.
They hated us
Because we stood up against
the establishment.
Amita:
Well, part of
marshaling an argument
Is making sure
your conclusions aren't skewed
By preconceived notions.
And your point?
Bloom destroyed his career
trying to get justice
For his sister.
Then he was nearly killed
Trying to clear his name
with the fbi.
And?
Um, maybe he's not
so much pro-establishment
As he is
anti-airplane hijackers.
Never mind.
Well,
I guess I just lost
Some daughter-in-law
points there.
You notice how
I kept my mouth shut.
Yeah, I did.
Yeah.
I already had one uncomfortable
moment with my brother.
Thank you.
I got it.
I have no idea where that guy
came from, you know.
It's like, there was
my mom, my dad, me,
And then there was don.
Off playing with
g.
I.
Joes and guns.
I thought you guys
Weren't allowed to play
with toy guns.
We weren't.
He got his
from this kid
Across the street,
uh, kenny caldwell.
Why don't you just pay
With your university id?
It only works on campus.
Most restaurants near campus
accept id payments.
Alternative currency.
Well, it actually only works
when you give them the id.
Are you still at it?
(sighs)
Yeah, we got seven rolls,
Each spanning months,
dates all over the map.
You know,
it took me half a day
Just to find
a microfilm machine.
Look, just keep
it simple, matt.
I mean, there's something in
these back issues that led
Ray till to teddy's club.
We just need to figure out what.
Well, that's easy to say,
But I've been here all night.
Isn't this where charlie
Comes up with an algorithm
or something? Just
You know what, when I was,
uh, stationed in tel aviv,
This guy, he had stashed
a brick of plastique explosives,
We just couldn't
figure out where.
And I realized
that there was
A sewer line near
where he worked.
My boss made me and three other
agents wade through raw sewage
For nine hours
while he went to the beach.
After we found
it, this guy,
He didn't even say "thank you.
"
So thank you.
Now, pick up
the pace.
(sighs)
I asked if anyone at the
bank found it suspicious
That the source of tina tran's
money transfers were concealed.
Nobody could answer.
The risk-reward analysis.
So they didn't follow up,
they just sent a letter?
Yeah, apparently.
I don't think
they're hiding anything.
They're just plain
incompetent.
Well
All right, great.
So what do we do now?
It's not worthless!
What?
We've been assuming
That cooper's ransom
was worthless
Because every bank in america
Was looking for
the serial numbers.
But what about
overseas?
You see, the money's value
in the equation increases hugely
In a foreign country
where the dollar is accepted
Alongside the local currency.
And in 1971
Vietnam.
Right? The risk-reward.
No, no.
Till was a
paratrooper.
He was even more aware
of the risk.
The algorithm points to
Desperation,
the kind of desperation
That would compel one to,
I don't know,
Pull a loved one
out of a burning building.
Like a daughter?
All right.
(sighs)
Would it make you feel better if
I donated the money to the fbi?
You were born in
vietnam, right?
Yeah.
Did it happen to be in
a village called nu bac?
How did you know?
Your father,
was he an american soldier?
My mother never discussed
my father.
Believe me, I-I asked.
She died a few years
after we came here.
I thought about looking
More than once.
I don't mean to open wounds.
Anything you
can tell me
All right.
First roll.
December, 1971.
There's an article
on edward sawyer's death.
The dead guy found in the tree
In the d.
B.
Cooper
landing zone.
There's no mention of that.
But it does say he's survived
By his wife pauline
And their four-year-old son,
edward sawyer jr.
Okay?
All right.
Fifth roll.
pauline sawyer antell.
Survivors include her son,
edward antell.
Teddy antell is sawyer's kid.
The son of d.
B.
Cooper's
partner.
D.
B.
Cooper stabbed
teddy antell's dad
Then threw him out
of an airplane.
Antell saw wesley on tv.
Must've connected the name
with all the news reports
About the d.
B.
Cooper money.
He sent russo to kill wesley
To flush out uncle ray.
This is about revenge.
He wants the man
that killed his father.
Great work.
A few years after
tina was born,
An american soldier
came to their village
And gave her mother
money.
A lot.
He paid for their way
here, then disappeared.
I mean, she's till's daughter.
She's got to be.
There's your burning building.
Vietnam in 1971.
Call charlie.
It'll balance his equation
and brighten his day.
(tina screaming)
(car doors closing)
(tires squealing)
I always think of this one case.
This little girl was kidnapped
And the cops are pretty sure
it's a family friend,
And so they search his place.
They find nothing.
So they go back again.
They get all the big boys,
the senior detectives.
They didn't find anything,
either.
Well, the guy confesses.
He says he's got her
In a room he built
underneath his garage.
And they all go back again,
And they still can't find it.
I mean, it's that well-hidden.
And that was one house.
Bloom:
Why kidnap tina tran?
If antell's looking
For payback for his father,
Why not just kill his daughter?
Flush till out?
No.
Guy with no
phone, no address?
If teddy knew how to get
to till in the first place,
He wouldn't have
had to kill wesley
Till called him out.
Tina tran is antell's leverage.
All right.
So, then, where?
You know, I think
I can pin down the location
By plotting till's known
locations along with antell's.
But he isn't local, so he's
going to have to find a place
He knows better than antell,
who's from here.
Critical data points.
Clear board.
Bloom:
The library.
Till knows the library
like the back of his hand.
Or it's the library.
All right, till!
We're doing this now!
Ray:
It was your father's
idea, the hijacking.
I went along with
it because
Because I thought
He was man enough
to pay his debts.
Teddy:
Careful, old man.
I got your daughter here.
He needed me
to pull it off.
My intel background.
Jumping skills.
So you used him,
then shivved him
And threw him out of a plane.
The shiv was his.
He was waiting for me to get
him safely on the ground.
I got him before
he could get me.
You're not talking
your way out of this, till.
My father gets justice tonight!
Justice? For eddie?
In nam, he was known
for two things:
Selling army goods
on the black market
And raping village girls.
(tina gasping)
Say that again.
Say it again!
What, I stutter the first time?
Take a damn dna
test, teddy.
She's not my daughter.
She's your sister!
I've been cleaning up after
your father for 38 years.
Since the day I didn't stop him
in nu bac.
I would have raised
you as my own.
But your mother
If any man
ever called out
For a killing,
it was eddie sawyer.
But wesley?
My nephew never hurt a soul.
And for what?
An old, dying man?
Fbi!
Drop the gun please.
I had it handled, but thank you.
(siren wailing)
(indistinct radio transmissions)
Bloom:
Why? She's not
even your daughter.
The usual.
Love, I guess.
Someone had to take
responsibility.
closing d.
B.
Cooper.
You'll be buying
dinner next time,
And I don't
mean burritos.
All right.
Just between us,
What did you do with
the rest of the money?
Nu bac.
Fixed a lot of things
over the years.
You know, that van is
just filled with gear.
There's not a lot
of room in there.
You'd show up tomorrow
And give these guys a
statement, wouldn't you?
I hope you don't
change your mind.
'cause when he turns
that corner, he is gone.
We'll never see him again.
David, d.
B.
Cooper could
never have survived that jump.
Alan:
So, uh, what do you think
I can get for this?
While any estimate
of the supply
Of broken plastic
assault rifle
Squirt guns must, absent
extensive market research,
Remain speculative, the demand
can be assessed as zero.
Well, why don't we just leave
it on kenny caldwell's doorstep?
Amita:
What about this?
Oh, hey, that
can't be sold.
Can't sell that.
That's my rock tumbler.
I used that to make
All your father's day gifts.
How could I forget, huh?
The watch band,
the cuff links
You wore them every day.
A father's love.
Oh, no, no.
Oh
Oh, that's, um, the '70s.
Oh, I know.
And charlie
will give you $20 for this.
I will?
I'll take five.
I know the perfect person
for this suit.
Hello.
Sorry.
Hey, guys.
Hey, what are you doing
with this?
I was making room for amita.
I totally used to rule
the neighborhood
With this puppy.
Yeah.
You ruled
the neighborhood?
Don:
I did.
What are
you talking about?
Roger, you should see the range
on this.
Seriously, I used
To just have them all
on the block, just like
(imitates gunfire)
Let's set up
a historic reenactment.
Vets versus hippies.
Me and dad versus
the two of you.
Don:
A total blowout.
Come on.
We'll kill them.
You can set up
a field of fire.
That does not qualify you
as a vet.
'cause it's
It was more of a state
of mind, right, alan?
That's right.
That's right.
Mm-hmm.
The same way scraggly hair
and a four-day growth of beard
Doesn't make you a rebel.
You know one time,
on one of those freedom rides,
This alabama state trooper
hit me with his baton
So hard
that the baton broke.
Yeah.
I still have a scar.
See? And this is how
tough your dad is.
You did not fight back.
You're right.
Weren't supposed to.
What's with
the slack jaws?
Give the man a beer.
Don:
I want to talk about
this reenactment thing.
We're the fbi.
Get tear gas.
I mean, you guys are dead.
We can bring a book of
beatnik poetry or something.
Can I make a toast?
Don:
Sure.
To scars--
those we've already earned,
And those that are coming.
I'll drink to that.
Hear, hear.