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Weren't we told during the case where a stripper Nick knew was murdered in CSI that if a CSI got arrested they'd lose the job?
It's possible that there's just different procedures to follow in NY than in LV. At the very least though, Hawkes would have been suspended from his job for the duration of the investigation.
Kimmychu said:
Thank goodness, I thought I was the only one too! I mean ... 'Saving Ryan's Privates'?! And it's a spoof of a war movie? Chock full of men covered in sweat and dirt? How gay can a porn title get! :lol: :devil:
Faylinn said:
When Captain What's-his-name made the comment about 'science geeks with a penchant for committing felonies' (or something similar), I had to rewind and listen again. Now, I don't think Danny could have become a cop in the first place if he committed a felony (although I'm not entirely sure on that one), but I'm thinking that maybe he was suspected of being involved at some point maybe...could it have something to do with him bailing Louie out, as he said at the end? When he was talking to Shane, the line about how you tell yourself that 'he couldn't do this, not this' (again, not an exact quote) stood out to me. So maybe he tried to keep Louie out of trouble when he did something serious? Maybe that was tantamount to being involved to some of the cops...I'm very curious about Louie's past, and just how involved Danny was with him...
When the Captain said that, I also would have thought Flack might come to Danny's defense. Now don't get me wrong, it was Stella's place to say something since she was the one being addressed, but Flack didn't even react--this is the same guy who shoved a cop in "On the Job" for making assumptions about Danny shooting the undercover cop. Um, what happened? Danny has shown that he's not the best friend in the world ("Charge of this Post," anyone?), but Flack has always been a guy to stand up for the CSIs. I'm going to assume that he didn't hear the part about beating some sense into Danny, because if he didn't say anything there... I know Don is concerned about how the other cops see him, and he obviously shows a great deal of respect to Captain Whoever-he-is, but it just seemed a bit out of character that Sheldon is a suspect, the team is being taken off of the case, Danny is personally insulted--and nothing from Flack? Um, yeah...
Danny in the scene with Shane was really funny to me. I'm not sure why. He just seemed so nervous and out of his element. I like that they didn't make him just sort of swagger in there like he's tough shit.
:lol: I loved that he ducked out of his way to check it out, and he picked it up with a glove and everything. :lol: Don't want your fingerprints coming up on a porn DVD, Danny? :lol:That was so gay porn. And Danny certainly seemed interested in it...
Yeah, I thought about it after I made that post, and the Minhas thing/"RSRD" plot seems like a much more realistic option. I'm not sure why I didn't consider that initially. :lol:Either way, I doubt he could actually be a felon and still be working as a CSI. I think it was just a cruel dig.
Definitely. Don has taken a lot of heat, and I'd expect him to be more respectful to the Captain than to the random cop on the street, so added together could be the reason he kept his mouth shut. *shrug* I'm still not entirely happy with the scene, but I can see why it was done right. In "On the Job" Danny was in trouble, but that wasn't the case this time.I haven't rewatched it, but part of it could be that Flack is already taking so much heat over Truby that he just didn't need any more grief. Mac said in the last ep that Flack was being talked about a lot, so I'm sure he's a little more reserved than usual. But, I think if he'd thought Danny was in serious danger, he'd step in--he always has before...I have no doubt that if it had just been Danny and Flack there, Flack would have stepped up and gotten between his captain and Danny.
Absolutely. Carmine did such a good job on that scene, and there was still a certain subtlety to it, to the way his voice sounded and his hands shook. Very very wonderfully done.It made it more real to me, and makes Danny seem more human. Again, it's the little stuff like that that Carmine just nails, and it makes Danny seem like a real person, not just a cardboard standard issue cop character.
I believe Hawkes would be able to have his record expunged, so no arrest would appear. Then, a defense attorney would have no ammunition to utilize against him.It's also possible that, jurisdictional procedural differences aside, that the CSI would also have a damned good case of wrongful dismissal. Here we had a case where it was clearly a setup and there was very little that Hawkes did that compromised the investigation. The bouncer clearly did not get a good look at him, nor was there any concrete evidence that he was guilty.
If a defense attorney chose to use the arrest alone out of context to call his integrity into question, it would suggest that they had a weak case, IMO. Yes, we've seen many a defense in many a procedural use such shady tactics, but that doesn't necessarily get the evidence tossed nor does it build a more solid case.