CSI: New York--'Three Generations Are Enough'

CSI Files

Captain
Synopsis:

When an unidentified briefcase is found on the floor of the New York Mercantile Exchange, the building is evacuated and Mac Taylor and the bomb squad are called in. Mac uses a robot to get a print off the briefcase: the robot covers the case with a glass hood, emits a gas which reveals a print, which the robot takes a photograph of. The robot backs off and aims a laser at the case, causing it to explode. Among the debris, Mac finds a note with three bloody fingerprints on it that reads, "In case something happens to me."

Mac sends Danny Messer to analyze a DNA sample from the note. Aiden Burn already has a suspect: a commodities trader named Luke Sutton arrived for work that day but is now the only person unaccounted for. When Aiden tells Mac that Luke's apartment was ransacked, the two CSIs head over to the building to check it out. At the apartment, Mac notes that it looks like Luke was forcibly taken out of his apartment--a possible abduction. He finds metal shavings on the floor, and Aiden finds a magnetic device that erases electronic data, and notices that the computer's hard drive is missing.

Stella Bonasera and Don Flack are called to the site of an apparent suicide. Trina Ralston is found beside the church where she worked as a counselor. The two examine the roof where she fell from, but they can't find any signs of a struggle. But Stella notes that suicides often make a statement, and the fact that Trina left no note and was found by the side of the church rather than in the front indicates that no such statement was being made by her death.

Danny has a lead on the Sutton case: he found traces of cocaine in Luke's suitcase, as well as papers indicating he was investigating a colleague, Nick Lawson, on suspicion of illegal trading. Letters in Luke's briefcase reference a man named Charles, whom Luke was apparently reporting to. Danny goes to Lawson to get a DNA sample from him, but Lawson is uncooperative. He tells Danny that he doesn't know Charles's last name--he assumed he was a lawyer of some sort. Even when Danny tells him that he'll put in a good word for him if he cooperates, Lawson refuses to give Danny a blood sample.

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