Not sure what else would fit the dialogue of that scene, Steven killing himself, and the ominous shot of their trailer other than Becky being dead.
Not sure what else would fit the dialogue of that scene, Steven killing himself, and the ominous shot of their trailer other than Becky being dead.
I thought the IRS tip-off was from Nikki. Varga immediately split, leaving his guys behind for Wrench, and she was waiting for him in the lobby. It wouldn't make sense that she was standing there exposed by herself against a potential group of armed killers unless she expected Varga to come down alone.
I don't have the link handy, but the lab tech's testimony is available in one PDF or another that's floated around. The "sweat" talk is particularly dubious because not only doesn't she ever say it was sweat, she outright says they don't know what it was. It was "discolored" and could have been blood, but there was so…
This article is embarrassing. You're quoting from something that cites REDDIT as a primary source, and most of this "evidence" has already been debunked.
"I don't know about that. Linden became "corrupted" in the moment she decided to kill the unarmed Skinner."
"The government?" It's the mayor of Seattle, not the CIA. And even if you were right (you're not) that Linden couldn't have convinced anyone, she still could have tried. Which is the entire point. She couldn't convince anyone of Seward's innocence either, but she still tried.
Nothing they could have done? They could have gone to the press, exactly as Linden threatened to. Even if their words weren't good enough, there were multiple bits of evidence that would have backed them. Skinner owning property right on the lake where the bodies were. The text Linden sent from Skinner's phone, well…
Was there something I missed in the ending, or did Linden and Holder both keep Skinner's guilt a secret and allow Joe Mills to rot in prison for murders he didn't commit? I mean, not only does that completely fly in the face of their characters, especially Linden who wanted so badly to save Ray Seward in Season 3, but…
I don't care whose card it is. None of them killed Rosie.
I don't care whose card it is. None of them killed Rosie.
They established the case as a national story in the aforementioned scene where people in Washington DC, all the way across the country, were watching Richmond on the news. And likening him to Gary Condit, whose story was also national news.
They established the case as a national story in the aforementioned scene where people in Washington DC, all the way across the country, were watching Richmond on the news. And likening him to Gary Condit, whose story was also national news.
I sure hope this review was meant as parody.
I sure hope this review was meant as parody.