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Numb3rs
Episode 3x05 - Traffic
That was a weird movie.
Yeah, from the reviews, I thought it
was gonna be more of a comedy, huh?
- I thought it was pretty good.
- Teenagers like boring movies.
You only like cartoons.
No.
I just don't like boring movies
about people in love.
- Can we get ice cream?
- No, we got to get home.
Oh, come on.
It's on the way.
Kind of.
Actually, Bud, it's-it's not at all.
You know?
- However
- You know you want to.
Oh, see, if you put it like that, then
Dad!
- Dad?
- Oh, my God! What was that?!
- Grab the wheel!
- I'm trying!
Dad! Dad!
Look out, you're gonna hit!
Look out!
Oh!
I got it!
- Dad?
- Dad?
Dad!
Lady luck.
Chance.
Randomness.
Human beings truly have
a hard time understanding it.
Raindrops fall randomly.
Now, which of these two images best
represents raindrops falling on a sidewalk?
Is it image A?
Image B?
Okay.
You're wrong.
Our brains misperceive evenness
as random,
and wrongly assume
that groupings are deliberate.
Because of this, people make all sorts
of irrational decisions.
Like, they-they won't work
in a high-rise building,
or they're afraid to live
in an earthquake-prone area.
And yet, a mathematical
assessment
tells us that you are far more likely
to suffocate in bed
than you are to die
in a terrorist attack.
You are ten times
more likely
to die from alcohol than
from being in an earthquake.
And it is three times more likely
that you will be killed while driving
to buy a lottery ticket
than it is that you will
that you will win the lottery.
They said he was shot.
Yeah, that's what we think.
Is there anyone who would want to
harm your husband?
No.
No one.
- I'm Don Eppes, FBI.
- Marla.
So, do you know
who did it?
Eh, not yet, but-but
we're working on it.
I heard on the news there were
attacks on the freeways.
- Yeah.
- That's true.
But we don't know if those incidents
are related to the, uh,
the attack on your husband at all.
Right, I mean, what we'd like to do
if we can is just take a
Excuse me.
Uh,
- Mrs.
Kinkirk?
- Yes.
- Your husband's stable.
- Thank God.
There are issues that
need to be discussed.
All right.
We'll give you a few minutes.
We'll wait for you down here.
Oh, please stay.
- Um
- I'll take these guys.
- Why don't we go hang out there, guys?
- Okay.
Thank you.
Come on.
It's all right.
Your husband sustained
a gunshot wound to his head.
Luckily, the bullet did not
penetrate far.
It's lodged in the
right occipital lobe.
Our neurosurgeon is confident that
he can remove it without further damage.
So, can you guys tell me anything at all
that you remember from what happened?
I heard a loud crash from the back.
I turned, and Pete was scared.
- From the noise.
- Right.
- And then I saw the blood.
- And I looked where Pete was looking.
- I saw Dad was hurt.
- So, what happened then?
I grabbed the wheel, and I tried
to keep us from crashing.
Yeah, well, that's smart.
You know, it's good thinking.
Now, right before the shot
is there anything that stood out?
Any cars or anything
that you might remember?
I don't know.
I think maybe there was a white truck?
- Okay.
- I didn't see who was driving it.
Sorry, I didn't see it.
Is-Is our dad going to be okay?
Yeah.
And, you know, we're gonna do
everything we can to find the guy.
We got seven freeway attacks
in eight weeks.
Four people dead.
You okay?
Well, you know,
I just lied to those kids.
No, you made them feel a little better,
Don.
It's a tough time, you know?
I'm an idiot, acting like
everything's gonna be normal.
Those kids need to believe that
if they're gonna make it through.
Come on, Dave.
Their lives are
never gonna be the same.
There's no indication of enemies,
financial or marital troubles.
Witness testimony and
tips came up empty.
All right, so what have we got here?
We got seven attacks in two months.
What do you think, Megan, serial?
Uh, if so, it's atypical.
All the MOs are different.
Yeah, the previous attacks we had
a wrist rocket, thrown rock,
brick, tire iron, golf club,
and then a rifle shot.
Now we're looking at a hand gun
from close range.
Victims don't fit a profile, either.
Yeah, it's rich, poor, Asian, Latino,
whites, across the spectrum.
You know, maybe instead of one sociopath,
we have a bunch of copycats.
Maybe there's no pattern at all.
That's what I just said, Charlie.
There's no pattern.
A single assailant, or a bunch of copycats
both imply a pattern.
No.
What I'm suggesting here is,
these groupings of shootings
might, you know, very well be random.
- Seven completely unrelated attacks?
- Sure.
Consider this.
An MP3 player
has a random shuffle function, right?
It uses an algorithm to create
a random order to play the songs.
But, when people listen to
their random shuffle mode,
they do perceive patterns.
That's just pure coincidence.
People swear their MP3 players
like to play certain songs.
I know, mine has a thing
for ZZ Top.
Right, right.
And that's exactly it;
that human beings perceive patterns
where there just aren't any.
All right, look, you know,
until we know different,
then we're gonna pursue these
as individual crimes, all right?
- Hey.
- Hey,
Larry, do you have a minute?
Yes, I have the eight and a half minutes
it takes me to walk to my office.
Now, if we need more time,
I guess we could choose a longer route,
maybe stop and contemplate
the turtle pond.
Or we could just keep
talking at your office.
Yeah, it's not
as scenic, but sure.
You know, I'm finding
it a little strange,
uh, being a professor after
being a student for so long.
Oh.
We have all been there,
my young friend.
I mean, I feel like I should be going
to lectures, not giving them.
You know, I run into former teachers
every day who act like nothing's changed.
That's why, you know,
people usually leave the school
where they earn their doctorate
and go off and teach elsewhere.
But, what, CalSci made you
an offer you couldn't refuse?
I don't know.
Maybe I would have been
better off on the East Coast.
No, no, no, no.
Come on,
this is not about geography.
Listen,
you yourself
must embrace this new role.
'Cause only then will others
be able to see you differently.
Wow.
Larry, even for you,
that was profound.
I guess you just caught me
when the caffeine was kicking in.
Come on.
I get the concept of
random clusters, I do,
but road rage is associated
with certain factors,
none of which are present
in any of these cases.
Wait.
When you say factors,
you mean, like, what, like weather?
Yeah, and bad traffic, and
racial conflicts, and accidents.
Stuff that makes people tense
and angry.
All right, so,
it's not a typical streak.
No, and there's something else;
the youngest boy, Pete,
said he thought he saw a
white pickup truck.
Now he thinks he saw the same truck
drive by his house that morning.
What? A white pickup truck?
I mean, they're all over the place.
He says both had a bobble-headed
hula dancer on the dashboard.
Yeah? What do you think?
I think he's nine, and
he's been traumatized,
and he's searching, but it opens up
the possibility
that Jeff Kinkirk
was stalked, you know?
That he's not
a random victim.
All right.
Well, look,
play both sides.
I mean,
get a list of white pickup trucks from
the DMV and-and work it with the guys.
What's the other side?
Well, the wife said she didn't think
the husband had any enemies,
but, I mean, maybe she was hiding
something from us.
Okay.
I took out the garbage,
helped Pete with his homework.
Everything's good at home.
Hey.
How's he doing?
They got the bullet out.
Now we just have to wait.
Did you find
the white truck?
Not yet, Pete, but,
I mean, we got a lot
of people working on it.
Guys, I need to speak to your mom
for a minute.
Is that okay?
Your son Pete thinks he saw a white
pickup truck the day of the shooting.
Now it's possible that that same truck
was near your house that day.
- Someone was following Jeff?
- Yeah.
Any reason for that?
No.
I-I can't think of anything.
Does your husband have any problems at work,
or with neighbors, anything at all?
No, there's nothing.
Anyone want to hurt you?
- Me?
- Yeah.
Not that I know of.
Marla, somebody tried to kill
your husband, and,
I mean, you have no idea
about who or why?
It doesn't make sense.
I mean, it could be something minor.
Just even a-a fight over a parking space.
That's just it.
You have to understand Jeff.
He'd let someone else
have the parking space.
If he has a flaw, it's that
he tries too hard to be nice.
Okay.
All right,
that's-that's all I need.
Come on.
That's all right.
Thought we were looking
for a white truck.
I've checked 177 so far.
I'm just also
checking some other factors.
Looking at traffic, weather,
employment,
time of day, day of the week.
Looking for a pattern in a series
of random events?
Oh, dear, Professor
Eppes wouldn't approve.
Okay, but here's the thing.
None of these attacks can be linked
to the typical causes of freeway violence
like bad traffic and hot weather.
- Gang shootings.
- Seven random freeway attacks,
and not one of them fits a profile
of a random freeway attack?
Yeah, I see what you're saying.
At least some should have typical causes.
All we have are invisible assailants
and no motives.
Yeah, I mean,
is it possible for something to be
too random to be random?
- I'm sorry, too random?
- Yeah.
Too ran
Uh, something can be a little random.
Something can be very random.
But, no.
No, no,
not, not too random.
Why?
Well, we're just kind of assuming
that all these freeway attacks
are a series of random events,
but not one of them can be linked
to the typical causes of freeway violence.
You mean, like road rage,
I mean, stuff like that?
Yeah, actually.
stem from arguments between drivers,
especially if one or
the other has something called
Intermittent Explosive Disorder.
Oh, we used to call that
having a screw loose.
My dad had
that screw loose,
but, uh, explosive rage
can be a little more serious.
People can erupt into violent anger for
seemingly no reason.
- I see what you're saying.
- Okay.
You're saying that in
this particular string,
there are none of
the typical causes.
Mm-hmm,
and what are the odds of that?
I would say
that they're not very good.
What if there's a pattern that
you're just not able to detect?
Hidden variable theory.
The idea that, that nothing in this world
is ever really random,
that there is some influence or
some force that we can't detect.
Isn't it, like, weird that none of
these attacks are typical? Not one?
Weird, yeah.
Unlikely, yeah.
Impossible, no.
How's it going?
White pickups checked:
One thousand three hundred and seven.
Only about 162,000 left to go.
Oh, just think of the sense of
accomplishment you'll have when you're done.
Right.
How you doing?
Looking for connections between people,
you always find more
than you expect, you know.
Yeah, most of it doesn't
mean anything, though.
Two victims wore the
same brand of jeans,
went to the same college.
I got one I want to take a look at.
These two victims
used the same car wash?
I want to get a list of employees,
see if anybody has a record.
All right, I'll check
with the local cops.
Victims number two
and number five,
Henry Rains and Cece Smith.
They're both patrons
of the Valley Car Wash.
Now, Rains got into a yelling match
with one of the workers there.
Two weeks later, he's
killed by a rifle shot.
What was the fight about?
He accused the worker of
taking money out of his car,
started getting loud with him,
so the car wash manager
had to call the cops,
but Rains split
before they got there.
- So who did he accuse?
- Calvin Oates.
Five years ago,
he's thrown out of a bar.
Comes back, fires a handgun out
the front window from a moving car.
Car wash have links to any
of the other victims?
Still working on it.
All right, it's thin,
but go pick him up.
Manager special today.
$11.
95.
Wax, underbody, tire dressing.
What air-freshener?
We let the FBI garage take
care of all that, thank you.
Hey, we're looking
for Calvin Oates.
Oh, man, I just had
this suit cleaned.
Hey, you, back up!
Back up!
Give me the bat, give me the bat.
Thank you.
Next time, leave it
to the professionals.
You're fired.
Come on.
Dude said I stole his money.
He started screaming,
coming at me.
I didn't do nothing.
When the manager called
the cops, he split.
- So why'd you run?
- Stupid.
- Yeah.
- When cops show up, I get lost.
I didn't think they'd bother
to chase me 'cause
I didn't do anything wrong.
Well, that guy must have
made you furious.
He called you a thief in front of
your boss and your co-workers.
Don't start the psych crap.
I've been in anger management therapy
for three years.
I know when someone's
pushing my buttons.
You got a lot of buttons, huh?
That therapy was court-mandated
as a condition of your parole.
Yes, and believe me,
I am now the poster boy
for anger management.
That must be one ugly poster.
Yeah, time cards show him at
work when Rains was shot, so
- You don't think he's the guy.
- Either there isn't a guy
And it's seven
unrelated incidents.
or, if it's one guy, he's definitely
a lot smarter than this dude.
Hey.
All right.
- We just got another one.
- Well, there you go.
Victim was a 28-year-old
computer tech.
She died instantly.
The killer had to lug this cinder block
up to the top of the tunnel entrance,
time the drop to hit a car,
and avoid being seen by witnesses.
That took work and planning.
I doubt it was vandals
or some crime of impulse.
You think she was
targeted or just unlucky?
I think she never
knew what hit her.
Hey.
Pythagorean theorem,
law of cosines,
metrics.
- Equivalence principle.
- Back to basics.
You know, I spent the weekend
at Politzer's
and he completely disassembled
my 11-D supergravity theory.
So here I am in ten dimensions
with two pea-brain solutions,
electrically and magnetically charged
respectively to the C-field
You still sleeping
in your office?
Yeah, sleeping, living.
Cuts down on the morning commute.
- You must find a new place to live.
- No.
- You can't live out of your office.
- No, I'm not going to be out there
choosing wall colors
and toaster ovens.
Look, I just want
to be thinking about gravity.
How do you expect
to have company over?
- What company? Who?
- Oh, I don't know.
Who, I may-- who, what,
M-Megan, maybe?
Oh, oh, oh, listen.
If you propose to start
discussing my love life,
then I'm gonna find yours
to be fair game.
Ah, point, point.
Point to Professor Fleinhardt.
Hey, so, speaking of Megan,
she comes by the house the other day,
wants to know if a
sequence can be too random.
- It's funny.
- I
just fail to see
the humor in this.
Too random,
you know,
as in excessively random.
Yeah, I'm, I'm following you.
I will now ask you
a series of questions
and I would like you to answer simply
in the affirmative or the negative.
- Okay.
- This discussion of randomness.
Was it somehow related
to the freeway attacks?
- Yes.
- Okay, might she be concerned
that all of the attacks
have different MOs?
- Yeah, but
- And given seven random attacks,
- all with different ***
- Eight now.
Okay, eight random attacks,
all with different methods.
I mean, might not she just find
the improbability of all this
just a little bit disconcerting?
Larry, you know, I can,
I can roll a pair of dice
eight times and never get
the same result twice,
and that would still fall
within the realm of random.
Yeah
but something that doesn't repeat
is not by definition random.
- Shuffle mode.
- Hmm?
Shuffle mode.
Why am I such an idiot?
I think I've
found new attacks.
- These are insurance claims?
- Mm-hmm.
There's damage reports
of objects striking cars.
- Smart angle.
- I have my moments, I think.
I was trying to find related incidents
that didn't result in any bodily injury.
Objects used include a rock,
a large slab of marble,
a lead weight, a steel pipe.
- No injuries, so no police report.
- Exactly.
- Megan.
- Hey.
- I am so sorry.
- What's the matter?
You were right,
I was wrong.
- About the freeway attacks?
- Yeah.
- Remember shuffle mode?
- Yeah, the patterns that aren't there.
Controlled by an algorithm that creates
a random order for the songs,
but the order isn't really random
because
the algorithm
won't ever repeat a song.
Just like the freeway
attacks don't repeat.
That's what I was saying!
So these attacks could be
the act of one person
Who's trying to make them
look random.
Thank you.
Let me show you something.
All right,
here are five new incidents.
Five? I-I didn't hear about that
on the news.
Oh, these cases haven't
been included before now.
- Megan just found them.
- All right, now,
let's look at them chronologically
with the others.
That's a fairly regular pattern,
showing increasing frequency.
Thank you.
Okay, I'm going to call this one.
I am 99% sure.
The varied methods
are an attempt to avoid any
discernible pattern
Which is in itself
a pattern.
Yes, but what the
perpetrator can't hide
is the intensity of his need.
The compulsion is growing,
so the time between acts is
getting shorter and shorter.
Classic serial killer.
We're looking at one guy.
You guys, check this out.
Just found that five
of the 13 victims
were involved in serious injury accidents
over the course of the last two years.
Oh, yeah?
Think that means anything?
No, I'm not sure if that would
hold true for any similar group or not.
Maybe call a CHP
accident specialist.
- And the department of insurance.
- Five of 13--
that's less than half, man.
Yeah, I don't know if it's
just coincidence or not.
Well, let's find out.
So, Professor, you think
it's safe to drive, huh?
Even with this crazy person
out there attacking cars?
People get killed in
car accidents every day.
It's not like you worry about
that when you get on the road.
Uh-huh, speak
for yourself.
Look, if you're worried about
the freeway killer, you know,
take the bus.
The bus does not go everywhere.
In case you missed it,
we live in Los Angeles,
the city of the car.
You know, people in L.
A.
spend
That's four full days of waiting
for the car in front of you to move.
I'm getting road rage
just thinking about it.
But, seriously, you are twice
as likely to hit a royal flush
on your first hand of poker than you are
of being a victim of this freeway attacker.
Yeah, but I'm not afraid
of hitting a royal flush.
I'll still be around
to play the next hand.
You want me to behave irrationally
and tell you that, yes,
I would prefer if
my only living parent
stayed off the roads
until we catch this guy, okay?
There, I said it.
You happy?
No! I have to drive
to Culver City.
My mall project.
I I don't know why
I let you do this to me.
- I should see it coming.
- Yeah, but you never do.
Hey, look who's awake.
Hi.
Honey, this is
the FBI agent I told you about.
Anything new?
Well, what we're working with
is that in five of the attacks,
the victims have been involved
in a serious car accident.
So we're checking on the others,
but, uh no?
Jeff hasn't had so much as
a speeding ticket since we were married.
No, I you know, I'm careful.
I worry about the kids.
A couple years ago,
I saw this
bad accident where this little boy
was hurt.
It was terrible.
- Yeah, you say you saw this?
- Yeah.
An SUV ran through this light
and smacked a sedan.
I tried to help out at the scene.
I gave a statement to the police.
Jeff Kinkirk was the only
witness to an accident
that left a six-year-old boy
badly injured.
Now, Kinkirk says he saw the
boy's father run a red light.
Father said he didn't.
But both insurance companies
went with Kinkirk's account.
Well, a lot of people
witness accidents.
Yeah, but they don't all end up
with gunshot wounds to the head.
It's such a strange motive
for a series of attacks.
Yes, it is, because
serial attacks generally have
a sado-*** component to them.
The assailant needs to
see the victim suffer.
But not this guy.
He wants to inflict
serious damage,
but he's happy to do
it from a distance.
And he's not that intent on
killing every victim.
So how would
the profile break down?
Likely male,
and meticulous and educated.
History of road rage,
problems with anger.
Might have difficulty
holding a job.
He identifies with the victims.
He feels a sense of injustice.
He's probably a victim of
a violent crime himself.
Or someone close to him is.
Well, we could get a list of
major injury accidents
and cross-check them
against the victims.
Yeah, we'll let Charlie run whatever we
come up with, and get a suspect list going.
- Yeah.
- Yeah, anything will help.
What do we have, five million
drivers in L.
A.
County?
The optimization algorithm
can be translated into software.
You know what?
I think Amita has it.
But there's stuff
in here we can use.
I mean, how's it going
with Amita?
Huh?
Oh, good, good.
No, yeah, she's-- I mean,
we're both pretty busy right now.
- You know, she's a professor now.
- Yeah.
- It's always tough, huh?
- What's always tough?
The whole thing, you know?
It's just tough.
- How you doing with Robin?
- Yeah, well,
it is what it is.
Yeah.
I know you don't like to talk
about who you're seeing.
Hey, Charlie, if I have
anything worthwhile to say,
believe me, you'd be
at the top of my list.
You know who else doesn't like
to talk about his love life?
Your boy Larry.
- What do you know?
- I know Megan thinks he's
beautiful.
Beautiful?
What does he say?
It's difficult to decipher
through all the, you know,
the cosmological metaphors.
But he does really seem to
really like her, you know?
Hey, here we go, I found it.
All right.
Okay.
Before we run Amita's program,
I need to draw up some parameters,
because there's a component
we're neglecting.
- What's that?
- Traffic.
I mean, this guy's been attacking people
in broad daylight,
on busy roads,
running the risk of being seen.
- Right.
No witnesses.
- So he must be planning carefully.
- He probably plans escape routes.
- Yeah, possibly.
All right, so if we can
look at the traffic patterns
in the vicinity
of the attacks,
that'll give us a chance to guess
at those escape routes,
which will give us a more general idea
of where he goes afterward.
Right, 'cause he'd definitely want
to avoid traffic in each instance, right?
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Now, traffic flows
just like any other, you know,
dynamic fluid flow
in a closed system.
You know, it's like the
water in your house.
Water flows due to
pressure and release.
What is the optimum
length and width of the pipe?
What are the number of branches?
How many release points are there?
I mean, it's a little more
complicated for traffic,
but partial differential
equations can help us
calculate the optimum number
of lanes, on- and off-ramps,
signal synchronization.
And-and I can use data
from road sensors,
traffic cameras and
satellite imagery.
I mean, hell, I can even factor in the
street light algorithms used by the D.
O.
T.
This is fairly high-level math.
All right, so ten out of 13
have been involved
in some sort of
serious injury accident.
Six are directly involved.
There's a lawyer
for an insurance company,
two accident witnesses
and a tow truck driver.
And we're still trying to
connect the last three.
Yeah, unfortunately,
this guy works to a schedule, and,
you know, he's due now.
Oh, look! It's CalSci's
live-in cosmologist.
Listen, don't laugh.
I think that couch of mine
has finally fused my vertebrae.
What's going on, Larry? Is there
something you want to talk about?
No.
I find any discussion of my inner feelings
to be potentially catastrophic.
It's like a star--
burns up all of its own fuel
and then finally collapses
in on top of itself.
Well, I was just trying to be
supportive here, Larry,
not destroy a solar system.
- Who needs a caffeine fix?
- Hey, you know what Renyi said?
He said a mathematician is a machine
that turns coffee into theorems.
Hmm.
Thank you for getting
on this so fast.
Hey, I don't want to be shot or
struck by a brick while driving
any more than the next person.
You know, I guess there's nothing
to be done about meteors-- well, just yet.
No, Larry, even the FBI
can't stop meteors.
No, not yet, but someday.
We'll have plasma cannons,
steam rockets.
Anything interesting?
Well, I loaded the data
into the modeling software.
It should produce a clear graphic
of the flow of traffic after the attacks.
- Look, I'll put it up on the LCD.
- Great.
Also, I compressed time,
so that 30 minutes plays in 30 seconds.
Hmm.
And what's this?
It's a traffic anomaly--
a street adjacent to the freeway.
Pull it up.
Huh.
Look at that flow.
Optimized in one direction,
all the cross streets are backing up.
Pull up another one.
Yeah, there it is again, wow.
And this timecode is telling us
that this is after the shooting attack.
Yeah, it's like someone opened up an escape
valve for traffic coming off the freeway.
It's more like an escape route.
Come an, get out of the way.
Get out of the way, lady.
Ma'am?
Ma'am, roll down your window.
Kathryn Krager.
She's 46 years old,
she has two teenage children.
She works for the City of Bellhaven.
- Notify the family?
- CHP's at the house now, actually.
All right, we got to see if she fits
the traffic accident scenario, right?
This is the second gunshot wound
at close range.
That's new.
All the other ones were
different forms of attack.
What? Different guy?
No, I think it's the same guy, he's just
not afraid to repeat himself now.
- Yeah, he thinks we can't catch him.
- Hm-mm
And he might be right.
Come on, you know
we can get this guy.
All right, if you say so.
And how about
the next one on deck?
What's going on with you?
Nothing.
No record the victim was
ever in a traffic accident.
That was Krager's boss--
city manager for Bellhaven.
He said that two years ago,
a neighborhood submitted
a petition for a light
at a blind intersection,
and Krager was in charge
of overseeing the traffic budget.
And she turned
down the petition.
So she wasn't actually involved
in an accident herself.
Somebody might blame her
for causing one.
All right.
So an accident happened six
months after Krager denied
a request to have a traffic
light put at this intersection.
Three people in two vehicles.
One person survived: Brennon Sommers.
His wife, the driver of the
other vehicle died at the scene.
And Sommers suffered
a head injury.
Anger and impulse
control problems.
He's lost his job,
he's living on disability.
He's been arrested twice
since the accident,
although the charges
were dropped both times.
Well, I can see where he might blame Krager
for not putting in the stoplight, right?
Yeah, but she wasn't the first victim.
I mean, why kill other people first?
Well, maybe his first victim
set him off some other way,
and then once he got going,
he went back for Krager.
Brennon Sommers!
Put your hands up and
walk over this way.
What is this about?
Put your hands up and
walk over this way.
Get your hands up!
Turn around right now!
What?! What?!
I was an architect.
And now
I-I can't concentrate.
I can't read for more than
a minute at a time.
And that's
Kathryn Krager's fault?
Who?!
Who is that?!
Oh, I think you know.
I mean,
you wrote a letter to the L.
A.
Times,
because Bellhaven wouldn't
put in a traffic light.
She was behind
the decision.
I blamed the city, yeah,
but I-I-I never knew
who made the decision.
And you do get into
a lot of fights.
Maybe because people
don't treat you fairly?
No, because I have anger
and impulse problems.
You see, it comes with
the frontal lobe damage.
I'm trying to deal with it.
- By seeking out people who hurt you?
- No! Nothing like that!
I'm in group therapy,
that's all.
I used to be a nice,
easy-going guy.
Hard to believe, huh?
Doctor says he couldn't lift a cinder block
or fire a weapon accurately.
We found no firearms,
or evidence at his house
- linked to any of the crimes.
- Yeah, he's close but not out guy.
- Close? What do you mean?
- Someone like him, you know.
More capable or angrier.
Hey, you guys.
Charlie's got something
he wants show us.
All right.
Hey, Chuck,
what do you got?
Hey, I've got probable escape routes,
gathered straight from traffic data.
Now, these reb routes have
the highest level of probability.
Yellow routes,
next highest.
- Blue routes, least likely.
- Okay, good.
Why don't you guys go check them out.
You know, see if you can find a witness,
- right?
- All right.
Here you go.
Field trip, I love it.
You drive, I'll navigate.
I remember it was the day
of the shooting,
You know, I had just heard
the report on the radio.
Couple minutes later,
this truck blows by.
What made you notice the
truck, was it speeding?
No, that's not unusual.
No, it was that, uh,
I see this pick-up,
you know, coming up fast,
and then
the light goes red.
- Wait a minute, did you say pick-up?
- Yeah, yeah, white pick-up truck.
Eh, the light's red, like I said, and
he doesn't slow down.
So I figure he's gonna run it
and then it goes green again.
After only a couple seconds.
- You're sure about that?
- It's my job to watch the light.
Can you describe the truck,
maybe you got a look at the driver.
Mmm.
Late-model,
American make I think.
White, like I said.
I couldn't see the driver, though.
It was just a white dude
with sunglasses.
Okay.
Anything else?
Maybe there was, uh, something
on the dash possibly?
Well, there was,
now that you mention it.
Uh, I couldn't see what it was,
though.
All right,
thank you.
Infamous white pick-up.
Sounds like the one Jeff
Kinkirk's son said he saw
just before he watched
his father get shot.
Crossing guard's story
about that light changing
You thinking
what I'm thinking?
Yeah, that our killer somehow figured out
how to tamper with the lights.
Yeah.
- Hey, you.
- Hello.
Yeah, aren't you supposed to be
at the string theory symposium at USC?
Now how do you know
I'm not there?
- One of those kind of days, is it?
- Oh, well, aren't they all.
- Larry, is everything all right?
- Everything?
Well, I'm not sure that I can account
for the state of all matter, but
You know exactly
what I'm talking about.
Stop trying to Fleinhardt
your way around answering me.
What is it exactly that you
want to know?
If sleeping
in your office
and missing an event
important to your field of study
constitutes something that I need to,
be concerned about.
Well,
as I previously explained.
I'm sleeping in my office
because I don't wish
the distraction of finding
and furnishing a residence.
Fine.
Fair enough.
And the symposium?
I'm hoping to be unavailable
due to a pressing
social engagement.
You're choosing dinner with
Megan over string theory.
The two are not incompatible.
- But thank you.
- For what?
For looking after me.
It's so good to know
that if I ever stray from the rational
plane, you will be there to accost me.
Thanks, you know I need--
Any-- Anytime.
Hello?
Oh, this modern age.
We think the freeway killer
uses a device like this.
It emits a pulse of infrared light,
causes traffic lights to change.
They're legal only
for emergency vehicles.
All right, well, that explains
how he's getting through traffic then.
Disrupting lights should leave a record
in the system, times and places.
There's cameras
all over Los Angeles,
on buildings, and intersections,
at ATM machines.
Okay, so we can check
the locations and the times
- against the web cam logs.
- Use them to get a photo.
What do you think are
the chances of that though?
More cameras, better odds.
- What do you say guys?
- Hey.
All right,
so here's what we got.
We been through hundreds of
web cams at intersections
indicated by Charlie's analysis
of traffic light disruptions.
We got this.
Traffic web cam from
La Brea and the 10 freeway,
at 15 minutes
after attack number 9.
Three seconds before he drove
through that light,
it was hit
with an infrared pulse.
No license visible.
No way
to identify the truck or the driver.
And this, what's this?
Uh, that's some sort of decal.
Pulling together
a lot of string.
That the crossing guard witness
saw the killer--
That the guy in this photo is the one
who changed the light.
Well, maybe you're right.
I mean, maybe that's our guy.
We're getting something.
I'll flip it around and print it out.
Does that say H-T-S-U.
Head Trauma Survivors United.
- Yeah?
- Yeah.
Brennon Sommers,
the guy we suspected.
I think he's
part of their Northridge chapter.
There's something on the bottom
of the decal that's not quite legible.
Well, it could
be Northridge.
Now that would not
be random chance.
So far we have eight current
and former members
that we can link to freeway
attack victims.
I ran the members through the DMV.
Two have white pick-ups.
One's a 74-year-old lady.
The other is Mitchell MacKenzie,
MacKenzie was in a motorcycle
accident a year ago.
He suffered a head trauma.
Two months after he joined the support
group, the freeway attacks started.
Well, that must be it, right?
That must be how he's choosing,
- is through the support group.
- His accident was a hit-and-run.
So he's got no target
for all the rage.
He could be acting
on behalf of the other victims.
That's not the kind
of support anybody expected.
Mitchell's close
to many people in the group.
It's common for
trauma victims to feel like
nobody understands
what they've been through
except other victims.
Dr.
Brewer, do you discuss the
freeway attacks in your group?
It's come up in meetings.
- I remember I made a note about it.
- What was your note?
Mitchell talks
a lot at meetings,
has an
opinion on everything.
But on the topic
of the freeway attacks,
he's been quiet.
Thank you.
Excuse me.
- Eppes.
- Don, I think MacKenzie could be the guy.
We just got a hit
on his credit card.
A gas station in Long Beach.
So I got
David Colby and LAPD on their way.
Come on, man.
Come on!
Get out of the way!
Get the hell out of the way!
- Get your hands on the wheel!
- You! Just wait!
- Get your hands on the wheel!
- I'm coming out, right now.
- Put them on the wheel.
- Don't shoot! I get to talk!
- I'm only trying to do what's right!
- Hey!
Innocent people
hurt and killed!
And those responsible
just walk away!
Somebody has to pay.
That's all I do.
I make things right.
I make things right.
What are you sitting
in the dark for?
Just thinking.
Thank God you caught
that guy, huh?
Five deaths,
six people injured.
And tomorrow I got
Hey, you had a lot
of tough ones lately.
Maybe you should think
of taking some time off.
Yeah, don't I wish.
Donny, it's not good for you
to get this way.
Ah, Dad, what are you talking about?
This is the way I am.
- No, no, listen to me, Donny
- Look, it's just, you know, sometimes
Hello.
Hey, Don,
glad you're here.
I found something interesting
that I want you to look at.
Oh, yeah, what's that?
You know how I thought that all
the freeway attacks were a random series?
Yeah.
They weren't.
They weren't.
Because,
yeah, MacKenzie was behind all of them,
but he didn't actually
start the sequence.
- What are you talking about?
- A hit-and-run driver
started the sequence
when he hit MacKenzie.
The head injury that
MacKenzie sustained
left him unable to control his
impulses, control his rage
Oh, come on, Charlie, the man is still
responsible for his actions.
Yeah, of course.
Except that the guy
that hit MacKenzie was never apprehended.
He totally got
away with it.
- Is this his accident report?
- Yeah.
Megan called the CHP for me,
and I just I-I thought it was something
you might want to look at.
Yeah, I think I see
where you're headed.
What? The guy's tire treads,
paint and metal.
Yeah, there's tons of information.
I mean, I can help you with this.
- You know.
- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, Charlie,
this is good.
Yeah, this is
There's enough information.
- You got a pen?
- Yeah.
- We can narrow down the suspect list.
- Definitely, definitely.