Clarifications
Encyclopedia
"Clarifications" is the eighth episode of the fifth season of the HBO original series, The Wire
. The episode was written by Dennis Lehane
from a story by David Simon
and Dennis Lehane and was directed by Anthony Hemingway
. It aired on February 24, 2008.
, Andre Royo
, Domenick Lombardozzi
, and Michael Kostroff
do not appear in this episode.
and his claim to have killed Savino Bratton. Michael asks if Savino is dead, Chris does not answer and Michael mentions the rumors about Omar robbing a stash house. Chris and Snoop leave.
Officers Truck and Dozerman are approached by a limping Omar, who tells the police that two drug dealers nearby are carrying weapons. Truck and Dozerman arrest the offending dealers as Omar approaches the corner through a back alley. He passes Kenard and a group of other children torturing a stray cat and all except Kenard flee. Omar forces the drug dealers to move from the corner and throws their drugs down a drain. He walks to a nearby vacant house and demands the rest of the stash – threatening to go inside when there is no response. The stash is dropped out of the house and Omar throws this too down the drain while shouting about Marlo Stanfield’s fear of facing him.
Omar goes to a corner store to buy cigarettes and is shot and killed by Kenard, who then runs away.
Chris and Snoop, who are hunting Omar, receive a coded message from Marlo to organize a meeting. Marlo is surprised they had not heard of Omar's death. Marlo reports that Omar's killer is a young boy but knows nothing else. Chris looks displeased by the fact that he, Snoop and Michael failed at their task and an uncredited boy shot the Stanfield crew's nemesis. At the close of the episode, Omar’s corpse is at the morgue. One of the staff notices a tag, which lists Omar Little as an African American Male (AAM) on the bag for an adjacent Caucasian corpse. The assistant medical examiner realizes the tags have been mixed up, corrects the mistake and seals the body bags.
because of the concentration of homeless people in those areas and relates the varied timings of the killings. Carcetti asks McNulty for leads on a missing homeless man, Larry Butler, and McNulty reports no new information despite thorough checking. Rawls asks about the FBI profile and Daniels reports that he has arranged to visit Quantico to discuss the case. Rawls jokes about the killer's motivation and the sexual nature of the crimes. Daniels asks McNulty what else he needs to solve the case and McNulty requests surveillance teams ostensibly to follow known sex offenders and people of interest identified at the harbor. McNulty requests Carver; Daniels wonders why Carver was chosen instead of a man from the patrol districts where the murders occurred. McNulty claims that Carver’s past experience with prolonged investigations will be an asset. Carcetti asks Daniels what they are doing to prevent further murders and abductions amongst the homeless and Daniels says that they have extra cars assigned to areas where the homeless congregate and ten undercover detectives posing as homeless people. McNulty claims that he requires good undercover cars for the surveillance but that the motor pool is depleted. Carcetti authorizes car rentals if necessary and leaves the meeting. Rawls jokes that they now must catch the killer, but at least the mayor is finally willing to pay for the police department.
McNulty meets with Carver to discuss his joining the homeless murder investigation. Carver asks why McNulty chose Carver over a sergeant from the district where the murders occurred. McNulty admits there is a problem and closes the door. Carver tells McNulty that he does not want McNulty or his team to get hurt. McNulty says he is using resources assigned to the homeless detail to assist Lester Freamon to investigate a new lead on Stanfield. Carver guesses that Freamon is running a wiretap but McNulty denies any knowledge. Carver reveals that he gave Freamon the cell phone number Stanfield is using and McNulty continues to deny involvement. Carver guesses the bosses forced Freamon and is aghast that they are willing to allow the vagrant murders to go unsolved. Carver asks about the paperwork and McNulty offers to handle that. McNulty asks Carver to send him people willing to work. Carver confirms. Carver stops McNulty leaving to ask about cars and McNulty reveals that the department now has an account with a rental company.
Carver chairs a meeting with his newly assembled surveillance teams. Officer Bobby Brown is happy that unlimited overtime is available and Dozerman quizzes Carver about the other cases they might be working on. Carver explains that the Major Crimes Unit is running a drug investigation that might need surveillance work. The officers are very pleased when Carver gives them the keys to their rented vehicles.
In the homicide unit, McNulty discusses their new recruits with Freamon over the phone. Bunk approaches McNulty with a request to sign but cautions McNulty not to revel in the moment. Bunk takes the request to the crime lab and delivers it to the supervisor, Rob Lowenthal, claiming that his investigation is now tied in with the homeless murders. Lowenthal agrees to prioritize the DNA matching on Bunk’s case.
Kima Greggs tells McNulty they need to go to Quantico. As they leave the office, she asks if he has used the profiling team before. McNulty recalls one such instance, but says that he did not find the process useful. Greggs wonders why they are going if that is the case and McNulty says it is merely so that he can report that they have been there.
Greggs and McNulty discuss their relationships on the way to Quantico. McNulty asks Greggs if she misses her relationship with Cheryl; Greggs admits that she feels responsible for the end of the relationship but that she does not miss it. However, she does feel a connection to Elijah. McNulty says that kids are great and Greggs agrees before asking him about his relationship with Beadie. McNulty recalls Bunk telling him that he was no good for people (from the season 1 episode “Lessons”) and Greggs tries to soften the comment by asking if Bunk was drinking at the time – McNulty confirms that he was.
The FBI profilers begin to describe their assessment by noting the inconsistencies in the killer's behavior in terms of the timing of his crimes. They also recognize that the killer is unusual, as previous serial killers targeting the homeless have been on the street themselves, while the Baltimore killer is using a cell phone and is thus not likely to be homeless. The unit’s deputy director Arthur Tolan interrupts the meeting and brags about his work on high-profile cases and television series like CSI. The homicide detectives are unimpressed and Tolan leaves deflated. His subordinates tell McNulty and Greggs that Tolan was the lead investigator on the Unabomber case, but the detectives remain unimpressed, as that investigation stretched over 16 years and was broken only when the perpetrator's brother came forward as an informant.
The FBI agents continue the profile: they state the suspect is most likely a white male in his late twenties to late thirties, who is not a college graduate, but feels superior to those with advanced education, and is likely employed in a bureaucratic entity, possibly civil or public service. They continue that he has a problem with authority and a deep-seated resentment for those that have impeded his progress professionally. The sexual nature of the killings is thought to be a secondary motivation and the lack of DNA or saliva in the bite marks suggests possible post-mortem staging. The suspect is described as struggling with lasting relationships and potentially a high-functioning alcoholic, with alcohol being used as a trigger in the crimes. Finally they speculate that the suspect’s apparent resentment of the homeless may indicate a previous personal relationship with a homeless person; or the targeting may simply be an opportunity for the killer to assert his superiority and intellectual prowess. During the description, McNulty looks slightly disturbed, as it seems to describe him quite accurately. As they leave, Greggs asks for McNulty’s opinion and he tells her that the profile is "in the ballpark."
Back in Baltimore, Bunk is called to the Omar Little shooting scene by Ed Norris. Women in the crowd outside are speculating that Omar was shot trying to rob the Korean-owned grocery store. Crutchfield is also at the scene and tells Bunk that he should have let him give Omar the years in prison as he would have been better off. Bunk glares at Crutchfield before assessing the body. Bunk thanks Norris for the call and speculates that Omar was killed professionally. Crutchfield admits that he thought the same but that the store owner witnessed the shooting and described the perpetrator as a short adolescent with a big gun. Bunk notices that Omar’s weapons are gone and asks if the perpetrator robbed Omar. Norris explains that the young hoppers took souvenirs from the body including the weapons. Bunk notices a piece of paper and picks it up with Crutchfield’s permission. It is a list of personnel in Stanfield’s organization and their corners. It includes Marlo, Chris, Monk, Cheese, Snoop, O-Dog, Savino, Cherry and Vincent. Savino’s name is crossed out. Bunk looks at the body and speculates that Omar was back on the hunt.
McNulty returns from Quantico to an empty house. He finds a note from Beadie that reads "Jimmy, one possible future. Be back tomorrow or the next day. Or not. Think about it. B." McNulty is horrified, as Beadie intended.
Lowenthal calls Bunk back to the crime lab the next day and reports a match to Chris Partlow from DNA found on Devar Manigault’s body. Lowenthal tells Bunk that he recognizes the name from the vacant murders but is aware there is no real link to the homeless killings. Lowenthal warns Bunk not to play him again. Bunk delivers Omar’s list to McNulty and tells him about Omar’s death. Bunk tells McNulty that Omar was hunting the Stanfield organization and offers the list as payback for McNulty’s assistance with the lab. McNulty asks Bunk to hold back on the Partlow murder warrant to allow Freamon to make a break in the Stanfield investigation and Bunk reluctantly agrees. Bunk tells McNulty that he made his case the honest way and McNulty claims that without the fake serial killer Bunk would still be awaiting the lab work. Ray Barlow approaches McNulty to ask for money to pursue an out-of-town lead over the weekend based on a case similar to a murdered transvestite. McNulty notices differences in the evidence and refuses. Barlow admits that he really wants to travel for a golf game and threatens to expose McNulty if he does not grant the funding request, so McNulty reluctantly agrees.
McNulty readies to leave the office when Greggs comes in carrying a pile of paperwork. She is planning to spend the evening working on the serial killer case and reviewing the files on known sex offenders and the background information on persons of interest present at the harbor when the call was traced, in order to compare them to the FBI profile. McNulty pulls Greggs into an interview room and comes clean about making up the serial killer. Greggs tries to tell McNulty he cannot carry on with his plan but McNulty tries to reassure her that it will all be over soon. McNulty offers Greggs a share of his resources to work her own cases and then leaves.
McNulty finds himself alone at Russell’s house again that evening and gets a call from Detective Christeson to thank him for the manpower he provided. Christeson has made an arrest on his case. Russell eventually returns with her children late in the evening. She refuses to tell McNulty where she has been and angrily informs him that next time he will be the one to leave, as she owns the house.
Russell warns McNulty that his family and closest friends are the only ones who will remember him when he is gone and that his colleagues and associates will not be at his wake. She urges him to reconsider his priorities. McNulty admits that he fabricated the serial killer. He tells her that he felt frustrated with his position when the Stanfield case was shut down and admits that he is unsure where his anger comes from or how he can make it stop. He explains that he has channeled funding to Freamon to continue the Stanfield investigation and admits that he cannot stand his actions. Russell warns of the possibility of McNulty being imprisoned for his actions and is angry with him for the various effects that his selfish actions might have on her. McNulty begins to tell Russell that he initially thought of himself as the hero of the story but then realized he was wrong, but she goes back inside the house as he is talking.
Freamon meets with the Maryland US Attorney with the evidence from the Davis investigation, hoping to take the case federal now that local prosecution has failed. FBI supervisor Amanda Reese and Agent Fitzhugh are also present. The prosecutor refuses to take the case because Bond has recast Davis as a martyr for the black community and made much of the federal casework inadmissible as the state senator has been found not guilty.
Freamon returns to manning the picture intercepts and finds a coded message from Stanfield with a clock face showing 10:55:34. He calls Sydnor to see which of their targets is moving and Sydnor reports that Marlo is driving eastbound on Baltimore Street. Freamon asks about Monk and Sydnor learns from Dozerman that Monk is southbound on Martin Luther King Boulevard. Freamon records the timing and targets involved in the meeting. Sydnor observes the meeting, which is at the corner of Argyle and Dolphin. Freamon records a new incoming message to Marlo reading 4:40:35. The other targets are all stationary and not using phones so Freamon speculates that there is someone on the network they have yet to uncover. Later Freamon intercepts another message reading 5:15:35. Sydnor has lost Stanfield following a traffic incident. McNulty arrives at the office and tells Freamon about Bunk getting the murder warrant on Partlow. Freamon is concerned that an arrest could drive the Stanfield organization to change their pattern, but McNulty reassures him that Bunk agreed to hold the warrant for them. McNulty also reports Omar’s death and delivers his list to Freamon. Freamon recognizes Cheese Wagstaff’s name. Freamon had realized Stanfield was wholesaling to other dealers but McNulty theorizes that the note shows him as being part of Stanfield’s organization. McNulty prepares to leave and admits that he has told Greggs about the plan. Freamon is shocked that McNulty has told another person and asks how she took it. McNulty shakes his head and leaves.
Sydnor tries to pick up Stanfield by checking the location of the other surveillance cars. Karen reports that they have tailed Snoop to Edgecomb Circle in the Northwestern District but Freamon does not recognize the location. Sydnor pulls out an atlas to find it and realizes that the page number corresponds to the code the dealers are using.
After work Freamon tracks Clay Davis to a bar. Freamon asks the Senator’s companion to give them privacy while Davis buys drinks and Freamon then surprises Davis on his return. Davis is initially jocular about his recent victory in the court case until Freamon threatens him with the prospect of renewing the charges at the federal level and adding the false information on the Davises' mortgage application. Davis assumes Freamon is trying to blackmail him for money and Freamon tells him that he will instead have to give answers in a few nights' time.
Freamon returns to the office to find that Sydnor has cracked the clock code. The time shown gives a location to meet, with the second hand indicating the atlas page, the hour hand the longitude (1 to 11 corresponding to grid squares A to K) and the minute hand intervals the latitude (with five-minute intervals indicating the grid square). Each grid square has a prearranged meeting location. Sydnor is perplexed that the code gives only a location and not a time to meet, and Freamon postulates that the meetings are to happen within an hour of the message being sent because the locations are tightly grouped within a half hour of driving of one another. Freamon makes a connection between the messages where none of the surveillance teams saw a subject moving. He recognizes that the second hand is always on 35, indicating the page for East Baltimore in the atlas, and guesses that Cheese is involved in the East Side meetings. Sydnor is surprised to hear Cheese’s name in connection to Stanfield. Before Freamon can explain, Greggs arrives. She chastises Freamon for his involvement and refuses to listen to any explanation, telling her colleague before exiting that she is not good with the plan.
, if there is any work available. Poot asks his age and Dukie claims he is 18 – Poot laughs at him and Dukie admits that he is only 15. Poot explains that the manager will not hire anyone under 17. Dukie goes to leave and Poot stops him, having recognized him as a friend of Namond Brice. Poot tells Dukie that he used to run the Fayette corners and Dukie remembers him. Poot explains that he eventually got tired and then recommends that Dukie go back to the street for a while and then apply for a job at the store when he is older. Dukie leaves the store and continues on down the street. Dukie has similar results at other stores and restaurants but finds a junk man struggling to lift a fridge. When Dukie injures his hand helping, the man offers to pay him 10 dollars to work for the rest of the day. Dukie is dropped off at Bug’s school at the end of the day and Bug is surprised by his new career as an arabber. The junk man offers Dukie more work the next day.
Norman Wilson arrives at the meeting bearing bad news. He has been called by a Washington Post reporter seeking comment on a story about a Prince George’s (PG) County politician named Dobey opposing Carcetti’s party nomination as the Democratic candidate for governor. Wilson has also learned that Congressman Upshaw may support Dobey, creating an even greater threat to Carcetti. Steintorf doubts that Dobey could take the State House, but worries that a battle in the Democratic primary would cost them much needed resources for their own campaign against the Republican incumbent. Wilson asks Carcetti who he met with when he visited PG County last month to drum up support. Carcetti’s contacts are all white and Wilson suggests that Carcetti will have to quell the potential insurrection.
Carcetti and Wilson travel to PG County and meet with Congressman Upshaw. Carcetti promises to do whatever it takes to make their relationship right and asks why Upshaw would back Dobey when it hurts everyone. Upshaw clarifies that he thinks it would only really hurt Carcetti. The two elected politicians share an animosity for the governor. Carcetti gives the congressman his word that their frustration will end when he is elected but Upshaw tells Carcetti it will cost a lot more than his word to keep PG County in his camp.
Back in Baltimore, Carcetti meets with Nerese Campbell and Clay Davis to discuss the threat from Dobey. Campbell and Davis appear friendly but use the opportunity to secure promises from Carcetti in exchange for their support against Dobey. Campbell asks for Carcetti’s endorsement to replace him as mayor, while Davis asks for three seats on the liquor board and Carcetti offers him one. Davis offers to raise funds for Carcetti’s campaign in exchange for a second seat. Carcetti remarks that he is afraid of the damage that Davis can do with two seats on the liquor board and Davis pretends Carcetti is joking.
At the vigil Carcetti gives a rousing speech about the issue of homelessness and the serial killer plaguing the homeless population. Campbell, Wilson and Steintorf look on approvingly and Scott Templeton is also taking notes from the audience.
Carcetti returns home and quickly reviews his performance on the television news. His wife Jen congratulates him on the performance. Carcetti tells her about the negative aspects of his day with the compromises he has been forced to make to fend off opposition from Dobey. Jen is disappointed as Carcetti told her he would prefer to endorse Bond over Campbell. Carcetti reveals that Upshaw has asked for a pledge to send half of any federal funding for Baltimore for schools or crime to Prince George's County. Jen is horrified at the prospect of giving up so much of Baltimore City’s needed funding, but Carcetti rationalizes that if he does not get elected, then Baltimore will receive nothing.
As Haynes returns to the office, Jay Spry stops him to pass on a message from the reception desk: a visitor wants to discuss Templeton’s story about a homeless Iraq veteran. Haynes’ suggests that Templeton should take the meeting, but Spry explains that the man claims that Templeton has been avoiding his calls. Haynes reluctantly heads downstairs and greets the visitor. It is Terry Hanning, the subject of Templeton’s story. Haynes tells Hanning it is an honor to meet him but Hanning does not shake his hand and instead asks who he is. When Hanning learns that Haynes edited the piece, he calls him a liar.
Haynes arranges a face-to-face meeting between Hanning and Templeton and sits in on the discussion. Hanning angrily confronts Templeton about a fabricated element in the story – Templeton has written that Hanning’s unit was in a firefight when Hanning clearly told him in Episode 5-07 (“Took”) that his vehicle was hit by an elevated IED (Improvised Explosive Device), injuring his comrades, and that there was no further action. Hanning is aggressively confrontational when Templeton claims that his notes show otherwise. Templeton repeatedly asks to be allowed to finish and then threatens to end the discussion if he is not allowed to tell his side of the story. This prompts Hanning to deliver the epigraph: “A lie ain’t a side of a story. It’s just a lie.”
Haynes asks both men to calm down and asks Hanning about his alcohol consumption. Hanning angrily asserts that he would not sleep under a bridge sober. Haynes sympathetically explains that when he is drinking, he has a tendency to embellish a story. Hanning agrees that is often the case when telling a story, but claims that there are certain things that happen and are never altered in the retelling. Templeton again tries to convince Hanning that their conversation was different from what Hanning remembers. Hanning responds by asking Templeton what would happen if one of the Marines he served with read the story and noticed the fabrication. Templeton has no response and Hanning asks for him to leave.
Outside, Haynes tells Templeton that they will investigate the complaint by checking Hanning’s service record and verifying the story with the men he served alongside. Haynes insists that they will attribute the complaint to a misunderstanding, but that if any of the details of Templeton’s story prove to be incorrect, they will print a correction. Templeton is annoyed with the outcome, while Hanning remains distraught. Haynes reenters and Hanning tells Haynes that Templeton also lied during the meeting – they were drinking chocolate milk when he told the story, not coffee as Templeton claimed.
Haynes edits a story from Mike Fletcher about homelessness in the city and compliments the work. Fletcher remains modest and reveals that he was helped by a source – Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins – and says he felt that Bubbles would make a good story. Haynes is intrigued by the details Fletcher has so far and asks his reporter to spend some time with Bubbles and see what comes of it. Fletcher worries about the rest of his beat and Haynes reassures him that he will be covered for a couple of weeks. Gutierrez arrives with some late-breaking police stories – the murder of 34-year-old Omar Little in a grocery store and a row house fire that killed two. Haynes checks what space remains in the paper and then tells Gutierrez to write a short story on the fire only.
At the end of the day Haynes edits Templeton’s story from the homeless vigil and is disappointed to see that the anecdote in his lead has been attributed to an unnamed source despite the vigil being a public assembly that was well-attended. Haynes approaches his line manager, Metro Desk Editor Steven Luxenberg, and tells him that he plans to remove the lead because it violates the paper’s sourcing policy. Haynes asks for Luxenberg to back him up when the inevitable confrontation occurs. Luxenberg agrees with Haynes’ decision. Haynes calls Templeton over and gives him the news. Templeton asks Haynes to consider the quality of the quote in the lead and Haynes tells Templeton that the outstanding quality is part of his concern. Templeton says “to hell with you if you think I made it up” and Haynes explains that the lead violates the sourcing policy. Templeton angrily returns to his desk and makes a display of his anger. Templeton’s posturing attracts Thomas Klebanow’s attention. After a discussion with Templeton, Klebanow approaches Haynes. Haynes is quick to state his case and when Klebanow asks for further discussion, Haynes explains that he has already had the discussion with Luxenberg. Haynes tells Klebanow that he feels that he has done his job and followed the paper’s sourcing policy but that as Managing Editor, Klebanow can overturn the decision. Haynes then leaves the newsroom.
The WIRE
the WIRE is the student-run College radio station at the University of Oklahoma, broadcasting in a freeform format. The WIRE serves the University of Oklahoma and surrounding communities, and is staffed by student DJs. The WIRE broadcasts at 1710 kHz AM in Norman, Oklahoma...
. The episode was written by Dennis Lehane
Dennis Lehane
Dennis Lehane is an American author. He has written several award-winning novels, including A Drink Before the War and the New York Times bestseller Mystic River, which was later made into an Academy Award-winning film. Another novel, Gone, Baby, Gone, was also adapted into an Academy...
from a story by David Simon
David Simon
David Simon is an American author, journalist, and a writer/producer of television series. He worked for the Baltimore Sun City Desk for twelve years. He wrote Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets and co-wrote The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood with Ed Burns...
and Dennis Lehane and was directed by Anthony Hemingway
Anthony Hemingway
Anthony Hemingway is an American film and television director. He has directed episodes of The Wire, CSI: NY, and Treme. Before becoming a director he worked extensively as an assistant director in television and film....
. It aired on February 24, 2008.
Epigraph
Homeless Marine veteran Terry Hanning says this as a rebuttal to journalist Scott Templeton while they're arguing, cutting each other off, and Templeton wants to tell "[his] side of the story."Title reference
The title refers to Haynes telling Templeton that he may have to submit a clarifications and corrections piece for Templeton's embellishing of Hanning's story. It may also refer to McNulty coming clean about his ruse.Starring cast
Although credited, Deirdre LovejoyDeirdre Lovejoy
Deirdre Lovejoy is an American actress. She is most notable for her role on the HBO television series The Wire as Rhonda Pearlman. She graduated from the University of Evansville with an undergraduate degree in theatre....
, Andre Royo
Andre Royo
Andre Royo is an American actor. He is best known for his role as "Bubbles" in The Wire , and has had guest starring appearances in Fringe, Party Down, and How To Make It In America.-Career:...
, Domenick Lombardozzi
Domenick Lombardozzi
Domenico "Domenick" Lombardozzi is an American actor best known for his role as Thomas "Herc" Hauk on The Wire. Lombardozzi was inspired to act by the film State of Grace.-Filmography:...
, and Michael Kostroff
Michael Kostroff
Michael Kostroff is an American actor. He appeared on the HBO program The Wire as defense attorney Maurice Levy. Kostroff starred in the fifth season of the series and appeared in all four earlier seasons as a guest star.- Biography :...
do not appear in this episode.
Guest stars
- Amy RyanAmy RyanAmy Ryan is an American actress. She has been nominated for an Academy Award and Golden Globe for her performance in Gone Baby Gone and is also known for her roles in the HBO series The Wire, playing Port Authority Officer Beadie Russell; In Treatment, playing psychiatrist Adele Brousse; and The...
as Beatrice "Beadie" RussellBeadie RussellBeatrice "Beadie" Russell is a fictional character on the HBO drama The Wire, played by actress Amy Ryan. She was featured prominently in the second season, after she discovered thirteen corpses in a container on the Baltimore docks.... - Tray ChaneyTray ChaneyTray Chaney is an American actor. He appeared on the HBO program The Wire as Poot Carr.Chaney began his entertainment career as a dancer at the age of four winning competitions at the Apollo Theater. He appeared in the 2003 music video "My Baby" by rap artist Bow Wow. He later appeared in The Wire...
as Malik "Poot" CarrPoot CarrMalik "Poot" Carr is a fictional character on the HBO drama The Wire, played by actor Tray Chaney. Poot is a drug dealer in the Barksdale Organization who slowly rises through the ranks, but ends up serving time in prison as his institution collapses around him... - Felicia PearsonFelicia PearsonFelicia Pearson is an American actress, author, and rapper. She is best known for playing a character of the same name, Felicia "Snoop" Pearson, on The Wire. She wrote a memoir titled Grace After Midnight.-Biography:Pearson was born to two incarcerated drug addicts and raised in an East Baltimore...
as Felicia "Snoop" Pearson - Marlyne AfflackMarlyne AfflackMarlyne Nayokah Afflack is an American actress best known her role as Nerese Campbell on The Wire. She also played an attorney in the FX drama Damages and Thomasina, the efficient palace secretary and aide-de-camp, on the NBC series Kings...
as Nerese Campbell - Megan Anderson as Jen Carcetti
- Benay Berger as Amanda Reese
- Doug Olear as Terrance "Fitz" Fitzhugh
- Joseph Urla as Maryland District US Attorney
- David CostabileDavid CostabileDavid Costabile is an American actor. Born in Washington, D.C. He is best known for his recurring television roles on The Wire , Flight of the Conchords , Damages , and Breaking Bad...
as Thomas Kleabnow - Todd Scofield as Jeff Price
- Brandon Young as Mike Fletcher
- Michael Stone Forrest as Frank Barlow
- Ed NorrisEd NorrisEdward T. Norris is an American radio host and former law enforcement officer in Maryland. His talk show, the Ed Norris Show, airs on WJZ-FM in Baltimore, Maryland. Norris, a 20-year veteran of the New York Police Department, served as police commissioner for Baltimore from 2000 to late 2002...
as Ed Norris - Gregory L. Williams as Michael Crutchfield
- Bobby Brown as Bobby Brown
- Rick Otto as Kenneth Dozerman
- Ryan Sands as Lloyd "Truck" Garrick
- Dave Ettlin as Dave Ettlin
- Donald Neal as Jay Spry
- Robert Poletick as Steven Luxenberg
- Jim Ancel as unknown
- David Goodman as Budget Advisor
- Robert G. McKay as Congressman Albert Upshaw
- William F. ZorziWilliam F. ZorziWilliam F. Zorzi is an American journalist and screenwriter. He worked at The Baltimore Sun for almost twenty years and covered politics for the majority of his career. He has also written for the HBO television series The Wire.-Journalism:...
as Bill Zorzi - Connor Aikin as Jack Russell
- Keenon Brice as Bug
- Aubrey Deeker as Terry Hanning
- Thuliso DingwallThuliso DingwallThuliso Dingwall is an American actor. He is best known for portraying Kenard on the television series The Wire. Dingwall is from Clinton, Maryland.-External links:...
as Kenard - Reggie A. Green as Arabber
- Leroy Graves Jr. as unknown
- Amy Lee as Store Clerk
- Russ Widdall as Ron Lowenthal
- Curt Boushell as Andy
- Joe Inscoe as Deputy Director Arthur Tolan
- William Johnson as FBI Agent
- Paul Morella as FBI Profiler
- Dennis Hill as Detective Christeson
- Melody Williams as Woman at crime scene #1
- Melvina Williams as Woman at crime scene #2
- Mary Beth Wise as Karen
Uncredited appearances
- Kwame Patterson as Monk
- Jason Moffett as Tony - surveillance team
- Brian E. McLarney as Brian McLarney - surveillance team
- Marcus Hamm as Marcus - surveillance team
- Sophia Ayoud as Cary Russell
Omar
Michael Lee meets with Chris Partlow and Snoop Pearson to report his confrontation with Omar Little, Omar’s pronounced limp and use of a crutch. Michael relates Omar’s promise to kill Stanfield's minderMinder
A minder is a person assigned to guide or escort a visitor, or to provide protection to somebody, or to otherwise assist or take care of something, i.e...
and his claim to have killed Savino Bratton. Michael asks if Savino is dead, Chris does not answer and Michael mentions the rumors about Omar robbing a stash house. Chris and Snoop leave.
Officers Truck and Dozerman are approached by a limping Omar, who tells the police that two drug dealers nearby are carrying weapons. Truck and Dozerman arrest the offending dealers as Omar approaches the corner through a back alley. He passes Kenard and a group of other children torturing a stray cat and all except Kenard flee. Omar forces the drug dealers to move from the corner and throws their drugs down a drain. He walks to a nearby vacant house and demands the rest of the stash – threatening to go inside when there is no response. The stash is dropped out of the house and Omar throws this too down the drain while shouting about Marlo Stanfield’s fear of facing him.
Omar goes to a corner store to buy cigarettes and is shot and killed by Kenard, who then runs away.
Chris and Snoop, who are hunting Omar, receive a coded message from Marlo to organize a meeting. Marlo is surprised they had not heard of Omar's death. Marlo reports that Omar's killer is a young boy but knows nothing else. Chris looks displeased by the fact that he, Snoop and Michael failed at their task and an uncredited boy shot the Stanfield crew's nemesis. At the close of the episode, Omar’s corpse is at the morgue. One of the staff notices a tag, which lists Omar Little as an African American Male (AAM) on the bag for an adjacent Caucasian corpse. The assistant medical examiner realizes the tags have been mixed up, corrects the mistake and seals the body bags.
Homicide unit
McNulty addresses police commanders, Mayor Carcetti and Norman Wilson at a Comstat meeting. McNulty reports that the killer is working in Southern BaltimoreBaltimore
Baltimore is the largest independent city in the United States and the largest city and cultural center of the US state of Maryland. The city is located in central Maryland along the tidal portion of the Patapsco River, an arm of the Chesapeake Bay. Baltimore is sometimes referred to as Baltimore...
because of the concentration of homeless people in those areas and relates the varied timings of the killings. Carcetti asks McNulty for leads on a missing homeless man, Larry Butler, and McNulty reports no new information despite thorough checking. Rawls asks about the FBI profile and Daniels reports that he has arranged to visit Quantico to discuss the case. Rawls jokes about the killer's motivation and the sexual nature of the crimes. Daniels asks McNulty what else he needs to solve the case and McNulty requests surveillance teams ostensibly to follow known sex offenders and people of interest identified at the harbor. McNulty requests Carver; Daniels wonders why Carver was chosen instead of a man from the patrol districts where the murders occurred. McNulty claims that Carver’s past experience with prolonged investigations will be an asset. Carcetti asks Daniels what they are doing to prevent further murders and abductions amongst the homeless and Daniels says that they have extra cars assigned to areas where the homeless congregate and ten undercover detectives posing as homeless people. McNulty claims that he requires good undercover cars for the surveillance but that the motor pool is depleted. Carcetti authorizes car rentals if necessary and leaves the meeting. Rawls jokes that they now must catch the killer, but at least the mayor is finally willing to pay for the police department.
McNulty meets with Carver to discuss his joining the homeless murder investigation. Carver asks why McNulty chose Carver over a sergeant from the district where the murders occurred. McNulty admits there is a problem and closes the door. Carver tells McNulty that he does not want McNulty or his team to get hurt. McNulty says he is using resources assigned to the homeless detail to assist Lester Freamon to investigate a new lead on Stanfield. Carver guesses that Freamon is running a wiretap but McNulty denies any knowledge. Carver reveals that he gave Freamon the cell phone number Stanfield is using and McNulty continues to deny involvement. Carver guesses the bosses forced Freamon and is aghast that they are willing to allow the vagrant murders to go unsolved. Carver asks about the paperwork and McNulty offers to handle that. McNulty asks Carver to send him people willing to work. Carver confirms. Carver stops McNulty leaving to ask about cars and McNulty reveals that the department now has an account with a rental company.
Carver chairs a meeting with his newly assembled surveillance teams. Officer Bobby Brown is happy that unlimited overtime is available and Dozerman quizzes Carver about the other cases they might be working on. Carver explains that the Major Crimes Unit is running a drug investigation that might need surveillance work. The officers are very pleased when Carver gives them the keys to their rented vehicles.
In the homicide unit, McNulty discusses their new recruits with Freamon over the phone. Bunk approaches McNulty with a request to sign but cautions McNulty not to revel in the moment. Bunk takes the request to the crime lab and delivers it to the supervisor, Rob Lowenthal, claiming that his investigation is now tied in with the homeless murders. Lowenthal agrees to prioritize the DNA matching on Bunk’s case.
Kima Greggs tells McNulty they need to go to Quantico. As they leave the office, she asks if he has used the profiling team before. McNulty recalls one such instance, but says that he did not find the process useful. Greggs wonders why they are going if that is the case and McNulty says it is merely so that he can report that they have been there.
Greggs and McNulty discuss their relationships on the way to Quantico. McNulty asks Greggs if she misses her relationship with Cheryl; Greggs admits that she feels responsible for the end of the relationship but that she does not miss it. However, she does feel a connection to Elijah. McNulty says that kids are great and Greggs agrees before asking him about his relationship with Beadie. McNulty recalls Bunk telling him that he was no good for people (from the season 1 episode “Lessons”) and Greggs tries to soften the comment by asking if Bunk was drinking at the time – McNulty confirms that he was.
The FBI profilers begin to describe their assessment by noting the inconsistencies in the killer's behavior in terms of the timing of his crimes. They also recognize that the killer is unusual, as previous serial killers targeting the homeless have been on the street themselves, while the Baltimore killer is using a cell phone and is thus not likely to be homeless. The unit’s deputy director Arthur Tolan interrupts the meeting and brags about his work on high-profile cases and television series like CSI. The homicide detectives are unimpressed and Tolan leaves deflated. His subordinates tell McNulty and Greggs that Tolan was the lead investigator on the Unabomber case, but the detectives remain unimpressed, as that investigation stretched over 16 years and was broken only when the perpetrator's brother came forward as an informant.
The FBI agents continue the profile: they state the suspect is most likely a white male in his late twenties to late thirties, who is not a college graduate, but feels superior to those with advanced education, and is likely employed in a bureaucratic entity, possibly civil or public service. They continue that he has a problem with authority and a deep-seated resentment for those that have impeded his progress professionally. The sexual nature of the killings is thought to be a secondary motivation and the lack of DNA or saliva in the bite marks suggests possible post-mortem staging. The suspect is described as struggling with lasting relationships and potentially a high-functioning alcoholic, with alcohol being used as a trigger in the crimes. Finally they speculate that the suspect’s apparent resentment of the homeless may indicate a previous personal relationship with a homeless person; or the targeting may simply be an opportunity for the killer to assert his superiority and intellectual prowess. During the description, McNulty looks slightly disturbed, as it seems to describe him quite accurately. As they leave, Greggs asks for McNulty’s opinion and he tells her that the profile is "in the ballpark."
Back in Baltimore, Bunk is called to the Omar Little shooting scene by Ed Norris. Women in the crowd outside are speculating that Omar was shot trying to rob the Korean-owned grocery store. Crutchfield is also at the scene and tells Bunk that he should have let him give Omar the years in prison as he would have been better off. Bunk glares at Crutchfield before assessing the body. Bunk thanks Norris for the call and speculates that Omar was killed professionally. Crutchfield admits that he thought the same but that the store owner witnessed the shooting and described the perpetrator as a short adolescent with a big gun. Bunk notices that Omar’s weapons are gone and asks if the perpetrator robbed Omar. Norris explains that the young hoppers took souvenirs from the body including the weapons. Bunk notices a piece of paper and picks it up with Crutchfield’s permission. It is a list of personnel in Stanfield’s organization and their corners. It includes Marlo, Chris, Monk, Cheese, Snoop, O-Dog, Savino, Cherry and Vincent. Savino’s name is crossed out. Bunk looks at the body and speculates that Omar was back on the hunt.
McNulty returns from Quantico to an empty house. He finds a note from Beadie that reads "Jimmy, one possible future. Be back tomorrow or the next day. Or not. Think about it. B." McNulty is horrified, as Beadie intended.
Lowenthal calls Bunk back to the crime lab the next day and reports a match to Chris Partlow from DNA found on Devar Manigault’s body. Lowenthal tells Bunk that he recognizes the name from the vacant murders but is aware there is no real link to the homeless killings. Lowenthal warns Bunk not to play him again. Bunk delivers Omar’s list to McNulty and tells him about Omar’s death. Bunk tells McNulty that Omar was hunting the Stanfield organization and offers the list as payback for McNulty’s assistance with the lab. McNulty asks Bunk to hold back on the Partlow murder warrant to allow Freamon to make a break in the Stanfield investigation and Bunk reluctantly agrees. Bunk tells McNulty that he made his case the honest way and McNulty claims that without the fake serial killer Bunk would still be awaiting the lab work. Ray Barlow approaches McNulty to ask for money to pursue an out-of-town lead over the weekend based on a case similar to a murdered transvestite. McNulty notices differences in the evidence and refuses. Barlow admits that he really wants to travel for a golf game and threatens to expose McNulty if he does not grant the funding request, so McNulty reluctantly agrees.
McNulty readies to leave the office when Greggs comes in carrying a pile of paperwork. She is planning to spend the evening working on the serial killer case and reviewing the files on known sex offenders and the background information on persons of interest present at the harbor when the call was traced, in order to compare them to the FBI profile. McNulty pulls Greggs into an interview room and comes clean about making up the serial killer. Greggs tries to tell McNulty he cannot carry on with his plan but McNulty tries to reassure her that it will all be over soon. McNulty offers Greggs a share of his resources to work her own cases and then leaves.
McNulty finds himself alone at Russell’s house again that evening and gets a call from Detective Christeson to thank him for the manpower he provided. Christeson has made an arrest on his case. Russell eventually returns with her children late in the evening. She refuses to tell McNulty where she has been and angrily informs him that next time he will be the one to leave, as she owns the house.
Russell warns McNulty that his family and closest friends are the only ones who will remember him when he is gone and that his colleagues and associates will not be at his wake. She urges him to reconsider his priorities. McNulty admits that he fabricated the serial killer. He tells her that he felt frustrated with his position when the Stanfield case was shut down and admits that he is unsure where his anger comes from or how he can make it stop. He explains that he has channeled funding to Freamon to continue the Stanfield investigation and admits that he cannot stand his actions. Russell warns of the possibility of McNulty being imprisoned for his actions and is angry with him for the various effects that his selfish actions might have on her. McNulty begins to tell Russell that he initially thought of himself as the hero of the story but then realized he was wrong, but she goes back inside the house as he is talking.
Major Crimes Unit
Freamon intercepts the coded message from Marlo to organize a meeting with Chris. He calls Sydnor to see where the surveillance teams are and Sydnor reports that they are still setting up. Sydnor continues the briefing and assigns Dozerman and Truck to follow Monk Metcalf, Bobby and Brian to follow Chris and Snoop with Karen and Tony to pick up Snoop if they split up. Marcus and Angela will serve as back-up while Sydnor tails Marlo himself. Sydnor describes the organization's typical pattern and tells his people where they can usually find their targets at the beginning of each day. Sydnor reminds his people that they are being covered by McNulty for paperwork and that the evidence they gather will not be needed at trial – it is just to uncover the pattern in the meetings.Freamon meets with the Maryland US Attorney with the evidence from the Davis investigation, hoping to take the case federal now that local prosecution has failed. FBI supervisor Amanda Reese and Agent Fitzhugh are also present. The prosecutor refuses to take the case because Bond has recast Davis as a martyr for the black community and made much of the federal casework inadmissible as the state senator has been found not guilty.
Freamon returns to manning the picture intercepts and finds a coded message from Stanfield with a clock face showing 10:55:34. He calls Sydnor to see which of their targets is moving and Sydnor reports that Marlo is driving eastbound on Baltimore Street. Freamon asks about Monk and Sydnor learns from Dozerman that Monk is southbound on Martin Luther King Boulevard. Freamon records the timing and targets involved in the meeting. Sydnor observes the meeting, which is at the corner of Argyle and Dolphin. Freamon records a new incoming message to Marlo reading 4:40:35. The other targets are all stationary and not using phones so Freamon speculates that there is someone on the network they have yet to uncover. Later Freamon intercepts another message reading 5:15:35. Sydnor has lost Stanfield following a traffic incident. McNulty arrives at the office and tells Freamon about Bunk getting the murder warrant on Partlow. Freamon is concerned that an arrest could drive the Stanfield organization to change their pattern, but McNulty reassures him that Bunk agreed to hold the warrant for them. McNulty also reports Omar’s death and delivers his list to Freamon. Freamon recognizes Cheese Wagstaff’s name. Freamon had realized Stanfield was wholesaling to other dealers but McNulty theorizes that the note shows him as being part of Stanfield’s organization. McNulty prepares to leave and admits that he has told Greggs about the plan. Freamon is shocked that McNulty has told another person and asks how she took it. McNulty shakes his head and leaves.
Sydnor tries to pick up Stanfield by checking the location of the other surveillance cars. Karen reports that they have tailed Snoop to Edgecomb Circle in the Northwestern District but Freamon does not recognize the location. Sydnor pulls out an atlas to find it and realizes that the page number corresponds to the code the dealers are using.
After work Freamon tracks Clay Davis to a bar. Freamon asks the Senator’s companion to give them privacy while Davis buys drinks and Freamon then surprises Davis on his return. Davis is initially jocular about his recent victory in the court case until Freamon threatens him with the prospect of renewing the charges at the federal level and adding the false information on the Davises' mortgage application. Davis assumes Freamon is trying to blackmail him for money and Freamon tells him that he will instead have to give answers in a few nights' time.
Freamon returns to the office to find that Sydnor has cracked the clock code. The time shown gives a location to meet, with the second hand indicating the atlas page, the hour hand the longitude (1 to 11 corresponding to grid squares A to K) and the minute hand intervals the latitude (with five-minute intervals indicating the grid square). Each grid square has a prearranged meeting location. Sydnor is perplexed that the code gives only a location and not a time to meet, and Freamon postulates that the meetings are to happen within an hour of the message being sent because the locations are tightly grouped within a half hour of driving of one another. Freamon makes a connection between the messages where none of the surveillance teams saw a subject moving. He recognizes that the second hand is always on 35, indicating the page for East Baltimore in the atlas, and guesses that Cheese is involved in the East Side meetings. Sydnor is surprised to hear Cheese’s name in connection to Stanfield. Before Freamon can explain, Greggs arrives. She chastises Freamon for his involvement and refuses to listen to any explanation, telling her colleague before exiting that she is not good with the plan.
Dukie
Dukie walks down the street kicking a can. He passes a sporting goods store and goes in. He asks the salesman, Malik “Poot” CarrPoot Carr
Malik "Poot" Carr is a fictional character on the HBO drama The Wire, played by actor Tray Chaney. Poot is a drug dealer in the Barksdale Organization who slowly rises through the ranks, but ends up serving time in prison as his institution collapses around him...
, if there is any work available. Poot asks his age and Dukie claims he is 18 – Poot laughs at him and Dukie admits that he is only 15. Poot explains that the manager will not hire anyone under 17. Dukie goes to leave and Poot stops him, having recognized him as a friend of Namond Brice. Poot tells Dukie that he used to run the Fayette corners and Dukie remembers him. Poot explains that he eventually got tired and then recommends that Dukie go back to the street for a while and then apply for a job at the store when he is older. Dukie leaves the store and continues on down the street. Dukie has similar results at other stores and restaurants but finds a junk man struggling to lift a fridge. When Dukie injures his hand helping, the man offers to pay him 10 dollars to work for the rest of the day. Dukie is dropped off at Bug’s school at the end of the day and Bug is surprised by his new career as an arabber. The junk man offers Dukie more work the next day.
Politics
Mayor Tommy Carcetti and Steintorf meet with their budget advisor to discuss freeing up funding for the police department now that the homeless murders are their priority. The budget adviser suggests cutting funding for public works and snow removal to avoid cutting school funding. Carcetti checks that police operations will be fully funded and the advisor confirms that the department funding will be back at the level before the cuts. Steintorf comments that it is time to focus on crime to avoid leaving them vulnerable to criticism. The budget advisor reassures Carcetti that the homelessness issue is gaining him traction and recalls the governor being criticized for cutting funding to programs aimed at preventing homelessness. Carcetti tells his advisors that he is going to be giving a speech at a candlelight vigil for the homeless later that week.Norman Wilson arrives at the meeting bearing bad news. He has been called by a Washington Post reporter seeking comment on a story about a Prince George’s (PG) County politician named Dobey opposing Carcetti’s party nomination as the Democratic candidate for governor. Wilson has also learned that Congressman Upshaw may support Dobey, creating an even greater threat to Carcetti. Steintorf doubts that Dobey could take the State House, but worries that a battle in the Democratic primary would cost them much needed resources for their own campaign against the Republican incumbent. Wilson asks Carcetti who he met with when he visited PG County last month to drum up support. Carcetti’s contacts are all white and Wilson suggests that Carcetti will have to quell the potential insurrection.
Carcetti and Wilson travel to PG County and meet with Congressman Upshaw. Carcetti promises to do whatever it takes to make their relationship right and asks why Upshaw would back Dobey when it hurts everyone. Upshaw clarifies that he thinks it would only really hurt Carcetti. The two elected politicians share an animosity for the governor. Carcetti gives the congressman his word that their frustration will end when he is elected but Upshaw tells Carcetti it will cost a lot more than his word to keep PG County in his camp.
Back in Baltimore, Carcetti meets with Nerese Campbell and Clay Davis to discuss the threat from Dobey. Campbell and Davis appear friendly but use the opportunity to secure promises from Carcetti in exchange for their support against Dobey. Campbell asks for Carcetti’s endorsement to replace him as mayor, while Davis asks for three seats on the liquor board and Carcetti offers him one. Davis offers to raise funds for Carcetti’s campaign in exchange for a second seat. Carcetti remarks that he is afraid of the damage that Davis can do with two seats on the liquor board and Davis pretends Carcetti is joking.
At the vigil Carcetti gives a rousing speech about the issue of homelessness and the serial killer plaguing the homeless population. Campbell, Wilson and Steintorf look on approvingly and Scott Templeton is also taking notes from the audience.
Carcetti returns home and quickly reviews his performance on the television news. His wife Jen congratulates him on the performance. Carcetti tells her about the negative aspects of his day with the compromises he has been forced to make to fend off opposition from Dobey. Jen is disappointed as Carcetti told her he would prefer to endorse Bond over Campbell. Carcetti reveals that Upshaw has asked for a pledge to send half of any federal funding for Baltimore for schools or crime to Prince George's County. Jen is horrified at the prospect of giving up so much of Baltimore City’s needed funding, but Carcetti rationalizes that if he does not get elected, then Baltimore will receive nothing.
The Baltimore Sun
City Desk Editor Gus Haynes smokes on the loading dock with Jeff Price and Bill Zorzi. They discuss Templeton’s recent phone call from the homeless serial killer and Price jokes that he once interviewed a psychopath too – Dick Cheney. Zorzi asks Haynes if Templeton is telling the story straight and Haynes cites the police involvement as supportive of Templeton’s story. Price brings up the photographs Templeton was sent. Zorzi remarks that they will be writing about the homeless until December. Price is confused, so Haynes explains that the Pulitzer Prize submissions follow the calendar year and that the paper will remain focused on one issue until the submission deadline passes.As Haynes returns to the office, Jay Spry stops him to pass on a message from the reception desk: a visitor wants to discuss Templeton’s story about a homeless Iraq veteran. Haynes’ suggests that Templeton should take the meeting, but Spry explains that the man claims that Templeton has been avoiding his calls. Haynes reluctantly heads downstairs and greets the visitor. It is Terry Hanning, the subject of Templeton’s story. Haynes tells Hanning it is an honor to meet him but Hanning does not shake his hand and instead asks who he is. When Hanning learns that Haynes edited the piece, he calls him a liar.
Haynes arranges a face-to-face meeting between Hanning and Templeton and sits in on the discussion. Hanning angrily confronts Templeton about a fabricated element in the story – Templeton has written that Hanning’s unit was in a firefight when Hanning clearly told him in Episode 5-07 (“Took”) that his vehicle was hit by an elevated IED (Improvised Explosive Device), injuring his comrades, and that there was no further action. Hanning is aggressively confrontational when Templeton claims that his notes show otherwise. Templeton repeatedly asks to be allowed to finish and then threatens to end the discussion if he is not allowed to tell his side of the story. This prompts Hanning to deliver the epigraph: “A lie ain’t a side of a story. It’s just a lie.”
Haynes asks both men to calm down and asks Hanning about his alcohol consumption. Hanning angrily asserts that he would not sleep under a bridge sober. Haynes sympathetically explains that when he is drinking, he has a tendency to embellish a story. Hanning agrees that is often the case when telling a story, but claims that there are certain things that happen and are never altered in the retelling. Templeton again tries to convince Hanning that their conversation was different from what Hanning remembers. Hanning responds by asking Templeton what would happen if one of the Marines he served with read the story and noticed the fabrication. Templeton has no response and Hanning asks for him to leave.
Outside, Haynes tells Templeton that they will investigate the complaint by checking Hanning’s service record and verifying the story with the men he served alongside. Haynes insists that they will attribute the complaint to a misunderstanding, but that if any of the details of Templeton’s story prove to be incorrect, they will print a correction. Templeton is annoyed with the outcome, while Hanning remains distraught. Haynes reenters and Hanning tells Haynes that Templeton also lied during the meeting – they were drinking chocolate milk when he told the story, not coffee as Templeton claimed.
Haynes edits a story from Mike Fletcher about homelessness in the city and compliments the work. Fletcher remains modest and reveals that he was helped by a source – Reginald “Bubbles” Cousins – and says he felt that Bubbles would make a good story. Haynes is intrigued by the details Fletcher has so far and asks his reporter to spend some time with Bubbles and see what comes of it. Fletcher worries about the rest of his beat and Haynes reassures him that he will be covered for a couple of weeks. Gutierrez arrives with some late-breaking police stories – the murder of 34-year-old Omar Little in a grocery store and a row house fire that killed two. Haynes checks what space remains in the paper and then tells Gutierrez to write a short story on the fire only.
At the end of the day Haynes edits Templeton’s story from the homeless vigil and is disappointed to see that the anecdote in his lead has been attributed to an unnamed source despite the vigil being a public assembly that was well-attended. Haynes approaches his line manager, Metro Desk Editor Steven Luxenberg, and tells him that he plans to remove the lead because it violates the paper’s sourcing policy. Haynes asks for Luxenberg to back him up when the inevitable confrontation occurs. Luxenberg agrees with Haynes’ decision. Haynes calls Templeton over and gives him the news. Templeton asks Haynes to consider the quality of the quote in the lead and Haynes tells Templeton that the outstanding quality is part of his concern. Templeton says “to hell with you if you think I made it up” and Haynes explains that the lead violates the sourcing policy. Templeton angrily returns to his desk and makes a display of his anger. Templeton’s posturing attracts Thomas Klebanow’s attention. After a discussion with Templeton, Klebanow approaches Haynes. Haynes is quick to state his case and when Klebanow asks for further discussion, Haynes explains that he has already had the discussion with Luxenberg. Haynes tells Klebanow that he feels that he has done his job and followed the paper’s sourcing policy but that as Managing Editor, Klebanow can overturn the decision. Haynes then leaves the newsroom.