CSI Files
Captain
<p><b>Synopsis:</b><p>Grissom joins Catherine and the team at a crime scene on a rainy night: the badly scraped up dead body of a man lies on the ground. Marks on his wrists indicate he was bound, and given the damage to the body, Catherine posits he may have been tied to the bottom of a car and dragged to his death. Doc Robbins points out postmortem stab wounds on the body, as well as puncture wounds around the man's nipples. While Catherine examines tire treads at the scene, Nick is able to identify the man from the personalized shirt he wore. Along with Brass and Riley, Nick goes to the house of their victim, Ian Wallace, and finds evidence of a scuffle as well as magazines with a woman's name on the subscription label: Justine Stefani. Dr. Robbins determines Ian's cause of death was strangulation, and Grissom notices burn marks on the man's tongue which, when taken with the nipple puncture wounds, leads the CSI supervisor to conclude the man may have been into S&M. Grissom leaves the lab and goes to the house of Lady Heather, claiming to want insight into the case. She tells him the nipple markings are from needle play and the tongue burns could be from a kind of shock treatment, leading Grissom to conclude their victim was a submissive. Back at Ian Wallace's house, Riley finds a box with S&M bondage gear under Ian's bed, labeled with the name 'Lower Lynx'--a bondage club. The CSIs talk with the owner of the club, a woman named Michelle, who claims not to know Ian but after pressure from Nick and Brass, leads the CSI and the detective to the back room, where they discover a pair of metal chopsticks--possibly the instrument of the tongue shocks.<p>Lady Heather posits that Ian was keeping his S&M lifestyle secret from Justine, whose personal effects don't indicate she was into bondage. The case gets markedly more complicated when Justine's burned body is found inside her SUV in the desert. The CSIs determine she was hit with her own car. The CSIs trace the last phone call on Justine's cell to a man named Martin Devlin, who sells insurance. He tells Brass that he had called to sell Justine insurance but that she hung up on him before he made the sale. After matching Michelle's DNA to the chopsticks used on Ian, Nick questions the dominatrix, who admits to an affair with Ian, but claims they never went to each other's houses. When Wendy matches DNA blood splatter from Ian's house to Devlin, the CSIs haul him back in, finding the same needle marks around his nipples that Ian had. His aggressive female lawyer quickly puts a stop to the questioning. Archie retrieves records from Devlin's phone and find he erroneously sent a text meant for Justine to a wrong number. The text has a picture of Ian--and Devlin's lawyer having sex. The lawyer admits she, Ian and Devlin did a "scene" together at Lower Lynx and then she followed Ian home. After they had sex, Devlin burst in and fought with Ian over her, but the two left after that--with Ian still alive. With nothing to link either the lawyer or Devlin to the scene, the CSIs are at a dead end, left to wonder if Ian and Justine were the victims of random violence. At Lady Heather's house, Grissom admits to Heather his real reason for coming to see her: a goodbye video message Sara sent him, claiming his "not making a decision" to leave Las Vegas with her was in fact "making a decision." Heather agrees with Sara's conclusion and offers to let Grissom stay with her.<p><b>Analysis:</b><p>Episodes without conclusions are risky. It goes beyond the episodic nature of the <i>CSI</i> franchise--and with episodic TV there is no guarantee that the viewers who watched the first installment will be there for the second, or vice versa--and ventures into presenting an episode that, on its own, is unsatisfying. The <i>CSI</i> shows often hinge on coincidences--someone is able to match a tire tread to a specific car or trace a specific chip from a casino--but the idea that three people could be tied to two victims and not a single one have anything to do with their murder is hard to swallow. Even harder to swallow is that the CSIs come up with a pretty lame theory: random psychos broke into Ian and Justine's house after the melee went down with the Lower Linx crowd and killed Ian and Justine. After the intricate story that comes before, the theory that it could have just been a group of random psychos is a let down, to say the least.<p>Of course, this might not be the end of the case; there's a good chance it might be revisited in a later episode. One hopes it will be, if for no other reason than to give the audience a definitive conclusion to a case they've already invested an hour in. I realize the CSIs can't always solve every case and that sometimes they hit a wall, but to leave this one open-ended would be a mistake. The first episode to feature the Miniature Crime Scene Killer, <A class="link" HREF="http://www.csifiles.com/episodes/csi/season7/built_to_kill_2.shtml">"Built to Kill Part Two"</a> ended without an arrest, but even in that early episode, it was clear from the precision of the murder and the miniature reconstruction that it was the introduction of an on-going mystery rather than a case that would simply go down in the books as one of the ones the CSIs just couldn't solve. Realistically, I hate to criticize anything that makes the show more authentic--and not being able to solve a case now and then is indeed realistic--but after an entire episode has been devoted to it, it leaves the viewer with a distinctly unsatisfied feeling. Maybe this case will be revisited, but the end of the episode doesn't really make it clear one way or another.<p><HR ALIGN="CENTER" SIZE="1" WIDTH="45%" COLOR="#007BB5"><p>To read the full reviews, please click <A HREF="http://www.csifiles.com/reviews/csi/leave_out_all_the_rest.shtml">here</A>.<center></center>