CSI: Miami--'Presumed Guilty'

CSI Files

Captain
<p><b>Synopsis:</b><p>Calleigh, Natalia and Delko testify in the murder trial of Alfonso Reyes, a golf instructor at Palm Court Country club accused of strangling a young woman named Lindsay Garland just six weeks ago. Lindsay's hair and saliva were found on Reyes' shirt, and the CSIs believe he strangled her with a belt, which, Reyes' defense attorney Derek Powell reminds the jury, was never found. After a quick deliberation, the jury finds Alfonso Reyes guilty--just as, in the morgue, Dr. Price and Horatio are re-examining Lindsay's body. When a blowfly emerges from the body bag, Horatio realizes something is awry: witnesses found Reyes with Lindsay's body in the locker room, but if a blowfly managed to lay an egg in her nasal passage after death, she had to have been killed or transported outside at some point. The team is back to square one with the case. Horatio talks to Powell and learns that a woman named Tammy Witten came forward at the last minute claiming she'd seen Lindsay in the passenger seat of a car after her death, but Powell dismissed Tammy, citing her record of drug use. Natalia and Tripp question Tammy, who is in the hospital after a near drug overdose. Tammy tells Natalia that she saw Lindsay dead in the passenger seat of a silver car, which sideswiped a wall driving away on Third Street. Natalia and Ryan go to the alley Tammy mentioned seeing the car in and discover paint transfer from the car as well as blowflies that are an exact match for the one found on Lindsay's body. After retrieving Lindsay's car from the impound lot, Delko and Calleigh go over it and find the paint transfer in the alley is indeed from Lindsay's car. They also find an odd blood pattern inside the car. In jail, Alfonso Reyes tells Horatio that he met Lindsay when she used to sneak into the country club looking for men. They had a brief affair, and the day of her murder they fought when he caught her sneaking onto the premises again. He tells Horatio she was involved with a club patron named Andy Durbin.<p>After Calleigh matches the blood pattern to a golf glove, Horatio questions Andy. It is Andy's friend, Kevin Sheridan, who rouses his suspicions. Horatio goes back to Lindsay's car and finds DNA residue in the air filter, but Kevin Sheridan refuses to give over his DNA--and Horatio is surprised to learn the man's lawyer is none other than Derek Powell. Horatio goes to the judge from the Reyes trial, Gregory Thorpe, but he won't give the CSI a warrant for Sheridan, a man he notes is a friend of the mayor. Horatio pays another visit to Reyes, who is incensed now that he realizes why Powell pushed for a speedy trial. He tells Horatio more about the day of the murder: he was ironing his uniform in the locker room and stepped away to take a call. When he returned, Lindsay's body was in his locker. Horatio gets the iron and Calleigh recovers skin from it, which matches the DNA from the flecks of skin in Lindsay's car's air filter. She's elated, until Powell shows up with an order to suppress the evidence because Calleigh made a stop after retrieving it and left it unattended briefly. Ryan pulls Sheridan over for a minor speeding offense and gets in his face, resulting in an altercation that allows Powell to file a complaint against Ryan on Sheridan's behalf. Horatio is forced to remove Ryan from active duty. Calleigh and Delko go over pictures Ryan took of Sheridan's car after their altercation and notice a prescription bottle in his car for the same drug Tammy ODed on. They examine the car closely and notice a eye visible through the broken taillight of Sheridan's car and suspect that Tammy, who has been missing since she checked out of the hospital, has been kidnapped by Sheridan.<p>Armed with the picture, Horatio is finally able to get the DNA warrant, along with a search warrant, from Judge Thorpe. Horatio and Delko find Sheridan with Powell at his house and serve Sheridan with the warrant. There's no sign of Tammy in either the trunk of the car or the house, so Horatio decides to hold Sheridan for 48 hours in the hopes that it will give them time to find her. After Sheridan is taken away, Horatio turns to Powell, who tells the CSI he's represented Sheridan for ten years. Though it would be a breach of attorney-client privilege to directly reveal if he knows whether Sheridan kidnapped the girl, Powell does mention another property Sheridan owns and was hoping to turn into a golf course. Horatio takes to the air in a helicopter to search for Tammy, aware that Sheridan used mylar blankets to conceal her whereabouts. The team finds her tied up in a cellar. The DNA from the air filter and iron pin the murder squarely on Kevin Sheridan, and he signs a confession in exchange for a deal. He romanced Lindsay, but when she put pressure on him to leave his wife and threatened to tell the woman, he killed her and tried to pin it on Reyes. Sheridan is offered a deal in exchange for turning over his accomplice: Judge Thorpe, who helped him hide the body and presided over Reyes' trial. Horatio goes to arrest the judge, who claims he didn't want to help but felt he had no choice. Horatio has little sympathy: he sent an innocent man to jail. With the real culprits under arrest, Alfonso Reyes is released from jail.<p><b>Analysis:</b><p><font color=yellow>P. Diddy</font> enhances rather than stealing the spotlight from what is an exciting, twist-filled episode. Sure, we know that Alfonso Reyes, the sweet-faced young man who is convicted of murder in the teaser of the episode can't be guilty of it--if for no other reason than the fact that he's convicted in the teaser--but it's definitely a shock when we learn the judge presiding over the trial is involved! Though we don't see much of Thorpe, the glimpses we do get reveal he's definitely a political player, a man who might not like that some people's connections put them virtually above the law, but one who understands this is the case and what's more, is willing to go along with it. <font color=yellow>Jim Pirri</font> gives the judge a world-weary air that almost makes the audience sympathize with him--until we remember that he's guilty of helping to move a young woman's dead body and cover up the crime by, as Horatio reminds the judge, sending an innocent man to prison.<p>Unlike the arrogant Kevin Sheridan or even the slimy Derek Powell, the judge doesn't immediately stand out as a villain. When Horatio comes to him asking for a warrant for Sheridan's DNA, the judge's reasons for refusing to grant it are understandable, albeit clearly political. And yet, he seems (and turns out to be) sincere when he tells Horatio to bring him something more substantial and he'll grant the team a warrant. When Calleigh brings Thorpe the photographs Ryan took of Sheridan's car, he balks in surprise and perhaps horror as he looks at them and turns to sign the warrant. Pirri gives us the sense that while the judge clearly made a serious, inexcusable misstep, he isn't a monster. He tripped my potential suspect radar when he wouldn't sign Horatio's warrant, but I'm glad he turned out to be a more complex character than the unrepentant Kevin Sheridan, who happily turns the judge over in exchange for a deal we know he most certainly does not deserve.<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/presumed_guilty.shtml">here</A>.<center></center>
 
A wonderful review, as always.

I thought P. Diddy, just as you said, only added onto the various plot twists and such, but only in a way that you want to see him back to interfere once again.

The only thing I can honestly say I enjoyed about this epsiode, other than P. Diddy's appearance was the scene they did at night. They don't do enough of those on "Miami."
Even on a cloudy day. Everything is all sun, all the time, stereotyping Miami to the bright sun-shiny place it should be. Does it not rain in Miami EVER? I mean, no clouds? Nothing...
I know that Vegas's team works the night shift, but NY's team seems to work around the clock.

But Miami, there's nothing... Not dark, no major night scenes. We're lucky to get a pre-title scene that's during a dark time. The last episode I remember to be based at night/in the dark was the Eclipse & Sun-allergic man.

Sure, it's Florida, but "arise, fair moon, and kill the envious sun."
 
Excellent review, dahling. :)

I wasn't so fond of Diddy, but at least the character was marginally interesting. (However, I do wish Derek's speech patterns had been different from Diddy's own speech patterns. He said bedda, like 'you know bedda than that.' *facepalm* But maybe that's just me.)

There was something slightly ambiguous in his final scene that implied (to me anyway) that maybe he didn't know Kevin had kidnapped Tammy. (I'm probably wrong, but there you go. :p)

It always amuses me to see actors who have appeared in the other shows - such as the judge, who also played the trapeze artist in NY's season one episode "Blood, Sweat and Tears". :p However, I felt that the judge's involvement came out of nowhere and was merely added to be a last-minute 'twist'.

Anywho - I liked Ryan getting a bit rowdy in an attempt to get something on Sheridan. It reminded me a bit of Danny - since NY seems to be filing Danny's teeth down under the pretense of 'growing up', it's nice to have another character whose act first, think later approach might get him into trouble (while making him interesting and passionate at the same time). Horatio is no Mac, but I will be interested to see how he reacts if Ryan gets himself into a pickle. His reaction when he told Ryan to hand over his gun and badge was a wasted opportunity (is it just my memory or did he stand with his back to Ryan in that scene?) - the need to have Horatio be this caricature standing stoically by is getting tired, and it deprives the show of some warmth (the kind that doesn't come from lots of yellow and orange).
 
An excellent overall review.

Having Horatio take Ryan's badge away (again) seems more than a bit hypocritical. There have been too many times to count where Horatio & Eric have stepped way too close to the line & merited the same treatment yet they have never been punished. I'm a bit tired of the writers using Ryan as the general whipping boy in this regard -- after he was dismissed and went through the mess of all those other jobs I think he's learned his lesson & they need to get a little more creative.

And would it kill Horatio to actually call him 'Ryan' instead of Mr. Wolfe? After all the years working together it's stupid and distancing. But then we rarely get any kind of meaningful, face to face, emotion from Horatio anymore. I was watching first season episodes and it was so refreshing to see Horatio joke with Speed about his dating, and interact in meaningful ways without the posing and constant profile shots.
 
Hey! That was a good review. I liked this episode, it was interesting to see P. Diddy master those difficult "legal terms". Anyway, what was a rare sight was the shot they took at the night scene, it was good and well played. Even though it made me laugh to see H almost jump off the helicopter!!!
 
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