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Episode Guide - inaf iasf bologna

Episode Guide - inaf iasf bologna

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C.S.I. New York <strong>Episode</strong> <strong>Guide</strong><br />

payment. It is also confirmed that Byrne is clean and use to run a bodega. Meanwhile, Jo figures<br />

out that the torso of the victim was moved from its original dump site. They need to know where<br />

the torso was placed originally. Meanwhile at the bodega, Byrne’s daughter is informed about<br />

the mishap. She tells Don that her father had no enemies and was a good man. Meanwhile,<br />

certain other clues are gathered by the CSI at the bodega. In fact, pieces of lint are found stuck<br />

to various parts of the bodega. The victim was possibly killed and then dragged, leaving a trail of<br />

the lint from the victim’s sweater.<br />

In the basement is found a cigarette butt, with traces of blood. Also found is a mop, with<br />

traces of blood in it. It was the basement of the bodega, where the victim was chopped up. It<br />

is baffling as to why the victim would clean up a crime scene, but make the crime public. Mac<br />

believes the washing up of the crime scene was done by the perp, as means of concealing himself<br />

and not the murder. They still can’t figure out why the perp didn’t want the head to be found.<br />

It is also found out that the there is cuttlefish ink residue on the victim’s body part found in<br />

the garbage. Cuttlefish it turns out is only served in one restaurant in the garbage van’s delivery<br />

route, and that too once a week. They pinpoint the locations where the body parts were found,<br />

on a map. It turns out each of the parts were found in the corners of every street.<br />

Mac tells Jo that the four corners are the corners of Hell’s Kitchen. The killer has marked his<br />

territory. Mac then finds the victim’s head under a car. The COD it is found out is a gunshot<br />

wound to the head. The victim was shot from behind. Sid then shows Mac that the perp has left<br />

his actual signature on the face of the victim. Meanwhile, Jo tells Mac that there were fingerprints<br />

found on a piece of furniture in the basement of the bodega. There was piece of plaster found<br />

there which had blood, not from the victim. There was also a small piece of currency note found.<br />

So plaster, money and blood are the three things that have come in contact with the saw, before it<br />

was used to cut up the victim. The signature in the meanwhile, matches ten names from the NYC<br />

database. One guy from the list has several complaints launched against him for harassment.<br />

It turns out the guy Coleman is buying property around the area by intimidating the property<br />

owners. Byrne probably didn’t want to sell, making him an enemy. Don pays Coleman a visit.<br />

Coleman admits to eyeing Byrne’s property, but admits Byrne won’t sell. He is then told about<br />

Byrne’s death, and asked how his signature ended up on a dead guy. Coleman recounts how he<br />

paid Byrne a visit, to persuade him to once again sell. Byrne turned him down once again. He<br />

then signed a check and slapped it onto Byrne’s face. He says that is how the signature got there.<br />

Meanwhile, Mac fixes up a date for the night. Later, Mac and team are informed that the ballistics<br />

report for the present case matches with multiple hits that took place from the 1971-78. The gun<br />

had been quite ever since, till recently it did its job again.<br />

The gun after so long could have been possibly used by anyone, it seems. Mac feels somebody<br />

is out to make a statement, and Byrne is just the beginning. Meanwhile, just as Don is walking<br />

down the road, there is a huge blast in a nearby van. Don is thrown to the ground, but safe.<br />

The same unfortunately can’t be said about the driver of the van. The driver it seems was into<br />

full time racketeering for the Russian mob. This time it was cigarettes he was delivering. Mac<br />

feels this incident might be connected to Byrne. Later, forensics works their magic on the van,<br />

and fish out clues. A finger print is found in its bottom, which matches a finger print on their<br />

database. The photograph of the guy Kieran whose fingerprint it is; is recognized by Danny.<br />

It’s a guy who he had seen outside the bodega the day after the murder. He was one of<br />

the guys chirping, saying how he would get to the killer before the CSI team did. Later Don<br />

and Danny pay the guy’s boss a visit searching for him. He isn’t there but they question the<br />

owner of the bar where is works. The owner claims he knows nothing. Meanwhile, Mac cancels<br />

his date with Christine, as he has work. Meanwhile, it turns out the van driver was delivering<br />

counterfeit cigarettes; a very lucrative business. The cigarette butt found in the basement was<br />

also a counterfeit, but not the same make. Meanwhile, Kieran is brought in for questioning. They<br />

tell him, they have found his print on the van, so there is no escaping guilt in this crime.<br />

Kieran admits to the bombing. He tells them he did it alone, and no one helped him. He then<br />

describes how he did it. It was vengeance for the van driver killing Byrne. He was told by people<br />

he trusts that the van driver Zorloff, is the one who had surely killed Byrne. Meanwhile, it’s<br />

discovered that Zorloff didn’t kill Byrne. He was in custody when Byrne was killed. It turns out<br />

that the gun used for the crime was owned by Declan Callaghan Senior, who is the father of the<br />

Junior Callaghan, who owns the bar that Kieran works in. The senior Callaghan died in prison,<br />

so his son must have inherited the gun. It is also discovered that Declan Junior threatened one<br />

594

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