Company You Keep, The (2012) Movie Script

A Federal Grand Jury in Detroit today charged the
thirteen top leaders of 'the Weathermen'
with plotting to bomb public buildings
in Chicago, Detroit, New York,
and Berkeley, California.
'The Weathermen' are the militant faction of
the Students for a Democratic Society,
only one of the thirteen is now in custody.
Never before has this nation fought a war which
so many Americans opposed
for so many different reasons.
Never has this dissent been
as emotional, as intense,
as is the dissent against
the war in Vietnam.
The bomb went off in the State Department
and did a lot of damage
another was detonated in Oakland.
Three suspects remain at large
after a security guard was shot and killed
during a robbery at
the Bank of Michigan.
The FBI has released the names
Mimi Lurie, Nicholas Sloan,
and Sharon Solarz;
all members of the radical anti-war group,
'The Weather Underground'.
Come on you guys, let's go.
- Bye Mom.
- Don't forget I have practice after school.
What are you still practicing for?
You already got into college.
- ...take out.
- Thank you sir, have a good one!
- Hey!
- Hey.
- That's $25.74, do you want that warmed up?
- No, Thanks
- Don't move! Hands in the air!
- Don't move, Federal agents!
Get on the car!
Hands behind your back!
Sharon Solarz, you are under arrest for
the murder of Hugh Kroessna,
You have the right to remain silent,
if you give up that right, anything you say
can and will be used against
you in a court of law.
You have the right to an attorney,
if you cannot afford one,
one will be provided for you.
Do you understand these rights?
Sharon Elizabeth Solarz,
one of the longest-standing fugitives
on the FBI's most wanted list
was arrested yesterday, just
outside Heatherton, New York.
30 years after the notorious Bank of Michigan robbery
that claimed the life of a guard.
- Good morning, Jess.
You're late.
Well, if I'm not here
they can't fire me, right?
You look beautiful!
- Thanks
Oh... look at that.
National story, right in our own
backyard, and where were we?
Hold on. Crime was Yukanowitz's, you fired him.
- Yeah, and I passed it on to you.
Along with the courts and the State house
and like 55 other things, I mean...
This... is news, Ben.
This!
We're a goddamn newspaper!
Remember?
So why don't you go out and write a nice little story
that informs our readers, while we still have a few?
I'm sorry, okay?
It's that bad, huh?
Do you still have your friend in the FBI field office?
In theory, although I'm not sure she
ever wants to speak to me again.
Y' keep telling me you're a good reporter, right?
- Right.
Prove it.
These were major radicals, Ben,
who know how to hide.
So how does the FBI
find her after 30 years? Hmm?
So, let me s... the State wants to sieze
private property in transfer, right?
Y... Yes, I know what 'imminent domain' is.
I will if I have to.
Court of Appeals exist for a reason.
Izzy!
- Yeah.
- You'd better be getting ready.
Aha...
And you're saying that satisfies public use?
Really?
Izzy! You ready?
Yeah.
Come on, we're gonna be late.
We're not gonna be late.
- You wanna bet?
My client bought it from his dad,
who bought it from his dad,
and hopes one day to
sell it to his son.
It's a great family, I'm sure
the jury would enjoy meeting them.
Okay.
Right on time!
- All set?
- Yup.
You got your lunch?
No...
So, what's last, math?
- No, I've got volleyball practice...
Oh, okay. I'll pick you up after practice.
- Okay.
Hey, what's your hurry?
Haven't you forgotten something?
- Billy.
- Hi, Mr. Cusinamo.
- Hi, sweetie!
Are your kids a little old for this school?
- I came to see you... you seen the news?
Oh, they're still reporting the news!
- Sharon Solarz
Go ahead, go ahead.
You know who she is, right?
- What?
She was busted, man. She was
arrested over in Heatherton.
Why are you telling me this?
- 'Cause Sharon's an old friend.
- Are you in trouble, Billy, y' know, or are you still on parole?
- I'm clean, man.
What's going on?
She called me, wanting to turn herself in to
the Feds. They're assholes, they don't care!
- But you can't get involved in someth...
- She's a friend, she needs a lawyer.
- Well, I can't give advice...
- They knew exactly where she was gonna be, Jim, alright?
Exactly. They knew.
- They knew exactly.
- Well, this is outa my league.
Out of my league.
I can't let her twist in the wind.
- I can't do it.
I have a kid that just lost her mom.
It's been a year...
Sorry.
Call Maggie Hart,
Lockwood and Dunlop, Philly.
Okay? She's great.
Better'n me.
Sorry.
Please set it here.
Go ahead.
So... you moved her this morning?
Why do you care? I thought
you were covering politics now.
Well, I'm multi-talented.
How come she was arrested here if she's been
a Vermont housewife for thirty years?
You'll have to ask her that.
You know, it's funny you should mention it, Dee
'cause from what I hear people give
jailhouse interviews all the time.
Who do you think you are,
The New York Times?
You say New York Times like it's 1985
and you're still impressed.
You're just a local beat reporter.
- I love it when you do that with your hair.
This is a national news story,
I think you should go home and tweet about it.
I don't tweet.
- Right! You don't email either.
Can I just see the case file?
For old times' sake? Please?
Just because we hooked up in college
I'm gonna give you access to FBI wiretaps?
Wiretaps? What wiretaps?
- This is why I don't talk to you.
And we didn't just "hook up" in college, okay, we were...
- I have to go.
New sheriff in town?
- How can you tell?
Well, that's how it usually goes, right?
Big case like this, they usually
bring in someone from out of town?
Grab all the glory?
Course, the local field office should
at least get credit in the local paper.
Why don't I go put in a good word for you!
I'm a very social guy...
Billy Cusimano.
- Organic grocery guy?
It didn't come from me.
- No, just a well-placed, extremely attractive government source.
Cusimano
Hey Dad! Here?
- Yeah.
Hello!
Billy Cusimano?
My name's Ben Shepard,
from the Albany Sun-Times,
I wanted to ask you a few questions
about the Sharon Solarz arrest?
You can, but why would I comment about that?
- Well, you know her, don't you?
No, I don't.
Quick search of police records shows you
and Sharon together in Mendocino in 1971.
I've never been to Mendocino.
That's not true, is it? You were dealing hash there
for an outfit called the Brotherhood of Eternal Love.
Which is a great name, by the way.
Sharon been in touch recently?
Look, I know she called
you prior to her arrest.
You talked to Jim Grant.
- No, I talked to the FBI, who's Jim Grant?
Who is the FBI?
- Well, they had you on a wiretap here for a while,
so it seems you're growin' somethin' more
than tomatoes and potatoes here, Billy.
Shit. That's why I pay taxes, right?
So Big Brother can... hack my fuckin' phone!
Who's Jim Grant?
- He's a lawyer, man.
Lawyer? Sharon's?
- Nah, he wouldn't take the case.
Look, kid...
Sharon called me wanting to turn herself in...
- Turn herself in?
Nope, I'm not saying anything else.
Everything here is off the record.
Ah, see... it doesn't work that way. You gotta say
"off the record" before we have the conversation.
Who says?
- Those are the rules.
There's rules for what you people do, huh?
So, what did she say?
- She said that I did great
and that she was very impressed.
What'd I tell you?
Yeah?
- Hi... uh, is this Mr. Grant?
This is Ben Shepherd from the Albany Sun-Times?
- Oh... yes.
Just wondering if you care to comment
on the Sharon Solarz arrest?
- What?
- The Sharon Solarz arrest, you declined to take her case...
Yeah, you know... I'm just sitting down to dinner right now.
I gotta call you back, okay?
Uh, sir... I ju...
As the turbulent decade drew to a close
the Students for a Democratic Society,
the leading student group
opposed to the war in Vietnam,
had its power usurped by a more militant faction,
known as the Weather Underground Organization.
Frustrated with years
of non-violent protests
that had failed to end the war,
the so-called "Weathermen" decided the best
way to stop America's involvement in Vietnam
was to bring the war home.
The Weathermen radicalized the anti-war movement,
and carried out a series of bombings
against government institutions including
bombing the Pentagon, the U.S. Capitol,
and the State Department.
No group has been more successful
in carrying out attacks on U.S. soil.
What's wrong?
- Nothin'.
You look weird.
- I'm fine, honey.
You're lying.
- I'm not lying...
You are lying, because you're smiling.
I'm not smiling.
- "I'm not smiling."
Well maybe I'm happy?
Here. Come on, eat.
And then get ready.
Hey!
- Hey.
- You Jim Grant, by chance?
- Not by chance.
Would you follow up on those
counter-signatures from Roger?
Yep.
I'm Ben Shepherd, Albany Sun-Times, we spoke on the phone.
I just figured I'd come by and say hi...
I don't really have anything to say...
Oh, and Susan, would you pull out the Rochester files for...?
You don't know what I'm gonna ask you yet.
- ..the report for my deposition? Do what?
I said you don't know what I'm gonna ask you yet.
Well, you're a reporter.
Well, I could just put "Refused
to answer any questions."
What?
- I'm just doing a little background, sir.
Okay.
- Thank you! (Thank you.)
No, no... we're off the record here.
Which part?
- All of it...
whatever it is we're gonna be talking about here,
otherwise, you can leave now.
No, that's fine.
It's not important.
So, did Sharon Solarz contact you
prior to her arrest?
Does it matter?
Since you already printed that she did?
Actually, what was printed was that she may have approached
a public-interest lawyer who declined to take the case.
But your name was never mentioned.
There are 25 lawyers in the area.
Nine do criminal,
six do accidents,
five do deeds, and four do closings...
and then there's me.
I wasn't insinuating...
- The hell with accuracy, huh?
Be vague, be accusatory, and whatever sticks? Is that how it works?
- Nothing I wrote was false.
You made it seem like I was
harboring a known fugitive.
We can issue a correction.
- Sharon Solarz... did not contact me,
and I have no involvement in her case.
Really?
- Really.
Do you know she's now being represented
by a Margaret Hart in Philadelphia?
Right.
- Ms. Hart was a classmate of yours in law school?
Mm-hmm.
Lawyers know each other,
that's news?
Yeah, but you did refer Ms. Hart
as counsel, didn't you?
Says who?
- Ms. Hart herself, this morning.
Maggie Hart is one of the best
defense lawyers in the country.
But why pass this off? I mean,
that's what doesn't make sense to me.
Cases like this don't come around very often,
I'm sure I don't have to tell you that.
'Cause Sharon Solarz deserves a
better defense than I can provide.
Deserves? That's
an interesting word choice.
You know, it may seem untrue to you,
but we do live in a free country
and people are entitled to
a decent defense.
Now look, I got work to do.
You've handled First Amendment cases,
labor cases, you worked
hand-in-glove with the ACLU...
I mean, this is right in
your wheelhouse, isn't it?
Is this what you came here to talk about?
- I'm not sure yet.
Well, that pretty well sums up why journalism
is dead. Now, do you mind?
Why did Billy Cusimano come to you?
- I don't know.
Well, how well do you
know Billy Cusimano?
- I don't, really.
I mean... you do, really.
You represented him a few years back,
on a drug case, you got him off.
- I represent a lot of people, Jesus...
Mist... Look, I'm not trying to offend you, Mr. Grant, I'm...
Oh, I'm not offended. You're
pretty much exactly what I expected.
Susan, I'll call you from the car.
Sir...
Mr. Grant... look, I'm just trying to put the pieces together.
- Hey. Look, look... Listen...
I didn't take the case because I'm a
single parent with a private practice
and too much on my plate, alright?
If I could have helped, I would've.
Because you are sympathetic to their cause?
You agree with her tactics?
You know, clearly you have
some kind of an agenda here,
I don't have time for this bullshit.
- I don't, actually...
I don't care much for either side.
So, what? That makes you fair and balanced?
You know... it's a funny thing. Thirty years ago, a smart guy
like you probably would've been involved with the movement yourself.
I hope you get what you're
looking for, kid. Take care.
Thank you
Hold one sec'... hang on.
Thank you for doing this.
- No worries, mate. I got you.
Thank you.
Hey, guys!
Sorry I'm late.
- Not a problem, we're having fun.
You do your homework?
- Of course.
Ah, good...
Thank you.
I'm the one who did it.
- Oh, ooh... well, thank you.
She's getting better every day.
- Yeah...
Hey.
I'm sorry, can you walk me through that research, please?
- Yeah.
Thank you.
It's... uh, all basic stuff,
He was, uh, born in Bakersfield, California...
attended Iowa State University,
University of Virginia Law...
uh, met his wife while working at the... Planet... Earth...
Earth First Foundation?
- Yeah...
and came up here,
started his own practice.
This his wife?
What happened to her?
Car accident. 48-years-old.
Wow... that's horrible.
Yeah, you meet a younger woman, you have a kid...
she's not supposed to die on ya'...
supposed to meet a car salesman
and move to Vegas, like mine did.
Anything else?
- Umm... house is paid for,
he's obviously a responsible single parent...
pillar of society, do-gooder...
lot of pro bono work...
Right. So basically, nothing I can
turn into a story. Great.
Hello, Dan?
I can not believe you're calling me!
I know.
- This is a goddamn nightmare...
Dan...
- I don't want anything to do with this.
Dan, you're my brother.
I need your help.
Go ahead.
Ray, who's your best reporter?
Mansfield.
- Mansfield?
Bullshit.
Please, have a seat.
- Look...
So, at first I think Grant is trying to
link up with the others,
help negotiate a deal, bring them in,
like Solarz tried.
Yeah, well... that would make a good story.
- It gets so much better...
So I go and I look at the man's history,
right, see if he has any known
associations to the Weathermen.
Nothing.
- So?
Nothing on the man at all...
the man doesn't exist before 1979.
Look at this...
I had it wrong, Ray.
He's dead.
Jim Grant is not trying to represent
Mimi Lurie or Nick Sloan.
Jim Grant is Nick Sloan.
I'm tired.
- I know, sweetheart, but we have to get an early start.
For school?
- No, we're not going to school.
Then where are we going?
- Well, we're gonna go on a little trip.
A trip?
- Uh-huh.
Breaking news this morning
from the Albany Sun-Times
reporting former seventies radical fugitive
Nicholas Sloan has been discovered in Albany,
living as a lawyer
named James Grant.
Sloan is wanted for murder, and has been
on the run for more than thirty years.
Alright people, what do we have on Grant?
His EasyPass paid a toll at 4 this morning
on I-87, heading north,
ah, the border's already been alerted.
We have an agent talking to his secretary.
- Why don't we have a better picture of Grant?
We're working on it.
- Well, what about from his house?
Just waiting on the warrant.
Their bodies are so bendy.
Do you know this one's name?
Border security cams are still being
checked, there's no matches yet.
Does Grant have any family?
- A daughter, 11.
Is she with him? Call the school.
- She didn't show.
Both parents deceased,
brother in New York.
Alright, put a tail on the brother,
I want bank accounts, credit cards,
tracked not frozen.
Where are we on the Title three?
I wanna bug every place
this guy is known to go, I mean...
somebody, somewhere knows something,
and someone's going to talk.
Now, come on people, this guy's been
making us look bad for thirty years now.
Let's not be stupid.
Welcome to the Rosewood.
May I take those, sir?
- No thanks, we're fine.
Right this way...
Just one moment...
There you go!
- Thank you.
Enjoy your stay, Mister Graves.
- Thank you.
What's that?
What happened?
- It's behind the napkin.
What?
- "What?"
Evil eyes.
So, tell me something... what, uh...
What was the best thing that happened to you today?
Um... well... I got a pet seal,
well, not pet seal,
but a little seal doll.
And does it... did you give it a name?
I named her Harper.
Harper? Why Harper?
- Yeah... 'Cause it's a harbor seal...
Har-bor.
- Yeah. So it's Harper. Harbor. Harper. Harbor.
Oh, I get the connection.
So, right... well where is it? Where's Harper?
Hmmm... not there.
Somethin' you should love you
should keep close to, you know?
We're disappointed in you.
- Hah! You're disappointed in me!
Daniel Sloan is on the move,
we're tracking him.
See you soon.
Daniel Sloan has stopped at
the Rosewood Hotel.
We're keeping a safe distance.
You two canvas the stairs.
You take the elevators.
Hey, what's that noise?
It's a goddamn fire alarm.
Okay, lock down the building now,
no one goes in or out.
Not if there's a fire.
Daddy? Dad!
Come on!
Okay, what the hell is happening?
- They're evacuating the building.
Shit! It's a diversion!
Contact the local police and fire department,
notify them that we have a dangerous fugitive,
send them a description of Nicholas Sloan.
Alright, what do we have on the brother, and where is he?
- I have no idea...
and the place is completely jammed,
and there's too many people... I can't...
I got him!
East stairwell!
Don't move!
Stay right there!
Monroe's got him! Don't move!
- I'm her uncle! The girl is my niece.
I'm her guardian, I have papers.
- Let me see!
Don't be scared,
it's okay, honey.
He's got custody papers,
it's Sloan's daughter.
Jesus Christ.
- Alright, he handed her off, he can't be far.
Send the second team down to the basement,
and post two officers outside.
Charles, around the corner. You come with me.
Eyes on the crowd.
Subway! Woods,
let's check the subway.
Nothin' here.
- Let's go.
Sir, we can't find him.
- Come on, people.
Sir, how long have you been in contact with Nicholas Sloan?
- No comment.
Is that his daughter?
- No comment! I wanna get her home.
Fugitive terrorist Nicholas Sloan had apparently
been practicing law in Albany for three decades,
under the name James Grant, before he was exposed
recently by a reporter from the Albany Sun-Times.
This shit should already be over.
We need better intel.
We've grilled the brother.
Have we gotten anything out of Sharon Solarz?
- No, she's refusing to talk.
She'll talk to the local reporter,
she's already said.
Well, what do we know about him?
- He's... nothing reporter, local.
Okay... let's get him in.
Can you try and pull it together?
- Of course.
I'm serious. Cornelius is already pissed.
- Yeah.
Hello there.
- I'm Special Agent Cornelius, you must be Shepherd.
Yep.
The prisoner is considered dangerous,
you do not accept anything from her.
No letters, packages, or messages of any kind.
Your time starts now.
Hello.
- Wow, you're much younger than I thought you'd be.
Well, that's always nice to hear.
I didn't mean it as a compliment.
Well... still, thank you.
- You did me a favor when you wrote that article.
I wouldn't mistake it for sympathy.
No... just clarity.
Yeah... clarity.
So, let's talk clarity.
Okay.
You were on your way to
New York to turn yourself in?
How does Billy Cusimano fit in?
- Billy's my friend, and he did nothing but encourage me to...
turn myself in if I thought that
that would bring me peace.
Mmm... you know his phone was tapped?
- Yeah. They got lucky.
And you got unlucky.
- Yeah.
Why now, after thirty years?
You don't have kids, do you?
- No, I... I barely have furniture.
Well, if you do, you
realize that they change you.
I have two, a boy and a girl...
- Mm-hmm.
and I waited until I thought they were
old enough to be able to handle it,
but still young enough that... I can...
So was it a crisis of conscience?
Hmm?
Remorse for past transgressions
that became intolerable?
The past thirty years in a sentence! Ha.
Wow, it must be nice to see
the world so cleanly.
Didn't you once?
Most of us led very sheltered lives,
we had no real relationship with violence.
But at that time, all these...
kids were... taking to the streets
in, uh, Japan, and France, China, Angola,
There was revolution, and I
wanted to be part of it.
Sure! Sounds groovy.
You think we were all just a...
bunch of doped up hippies running around.
It was hardly groovy,
our government was murdering millions,
and we could see...
horrifying images, on the news... magazines,
My Lai, Selma...
made us crazy, we didn't know what to do, we...
we, uh, protested, we sat in, we got our sculls cracked
and the war just kept escalating.
And then there was Kent State, and Jackson State, and...
kids our age... were being murdered
by our government... on campuses.
It's not our finest hour.
- It wasn't abstract, there was a draft.
You would've gotten a number, and then...
all you could do is just wait.
And everybody knew somebody that was going over,
or somebody who was not coming back.
You never get over that.
- Apparently not.
It sounds to me like justification,
I find it hard to believe that the only
option available to you at the time was violence.
Well, we thought that sitting at home while your government
committed genocide and doing nothing about it, that that was violence.
What about you?
What are you willing to take a risk for?
I don't know. I know that I wouldn't
blow up a building. I wouldn't kill anybody for anything.
Yeah, well... dissent can be dicey.
But you can't get to my age
without some regrets.
Would you do it again?
If... I didn't have kids,
and old parents that I love,
Yeah, I would do it again.
Smarter, better... different.
But I'd do it, yeah.
We made mistakes,
but we were right.
Hmm... and is Nick Sloan right?
He has a daughter much younger than yours,
that he abandoned in a hotel room.
People do what they have to do.
- Well, what are you doing then, here
with me? I mean, you...
you had a choice in all this after all.
Well, look at me. It doesn't matter what I say, unless...
I say it to somebody who's interested in the truth.
And it seems, as if you're interested in the truth.
Most people aren't.
What are you gonna do?
- My job.
Good.
And what do you think Jim... Nick...
what do you think he's doing now?
Maybe you should figure that out.
- Hmm.
Look, if my coming here in
any way was responsible for...
him being found out, well that
was not my intention, and he knows that.
We never betrayed each other,
not once, any of us, over all these years,
and I'm not about to start now.
What about Mimi Lurie?
Is she out there living a good, clean, productive life?
- Anything's possible.
Mimi and Nick...
were different.
Radicals? Yes.
But also lovers.
Did you ...
- Time's up, sir.
Thank you for talking to me.
- Thank you for listening.
They did unforgivable things,
but you gotta appreciate the commitment.
No, you don't. Appreciate the fact that the
bank guard they murdered had two small kids.
It's just hard to reconcile the woman with her past.
Sir, don't allow yourself to get spun by these people
- I don't "get spun."
Well, you've been pretty soft on her
from the very beginning.
We're the good guys here,
but you seem not to care.
You write an article that blasts my team
publicly for doing our jobs well,
and you make light of decent...
- No. No, I didn't blast anybody. She was turning herself in, that's her...
No! There was no deal. We had intel,
we tracked her, we made the arrest. Now...
Where's that article? We took a
thirty-year fugitive off the street,
and would have gotten her partner if it
hadn't been for some two-bit journalist interfering...
Would you even know who he was,
if it wasn't for me?
Well, you do seem awfully tied in to these people,
Solarz only talks to you, you meet with
Sloan two days before he disappears,
Givin' him a big head-start, if not more...
Perhaps you're a little more interesting
than I initially thought?
We're bringing these people down,
and I hope I don't find you in my way.
Agent, I need you to report to an OPR review.
Don't ever ask me for anything again.
What are you talking about? I thought we were bonding?
- I feel like I just watched you get hypnotised in there...
"I was just young, female, and opposing injustice"?
That's her justification? That was offensive!
I'm not arguing that point...
Where are you guys on the Sloan thing?
You think you're gonna find him?
I think he knows how to run,
which means he has an advantage.
Terrorists justify terrorism, Ben.
Don't get confused here.
Don't tell me you have to go
when you don't have to go!
- Hello?
- This is Ben Shepherd, Albany Sun-Times.
- Yes?
- Dr. Sloan, I've spoken directly to your
brother. I've spoken to Sharon Solarz...
Yes?
- I have something to tell you, sir...
it's important that we speak.
- Go ahead... be quick.
Two minutes, but not over the phone.
I don't trust phones... yours or mine, for that matter.
You get here before ten.
- Perfect! Thank you, sir.
Yes, we are currently outside the home of Dr. Daniel Sloan,
brother of fugitive Nick Sloan.
We have no new information to report at this time,
but we are continuing to monitor the situation...
Ben Shepherd.
-Yeah?
Albany Sun-Times.
-Yeah...
Maulik Banjali of Reuters...
- Hey! What's goin' on?
No interviews.
No interviews?
- Yeah.
Hi, uh... Ben Shepard, Albany Sun-Times,
Dr. Sloan's expecting to see me?
- Yes, he is, sir. You can go right up.
Thank you.
Dr. Sloan, Ben Shepard. I'm sorry I'm late.
- Ah, yeah...
Thank you.
Beautiful...
So, uh... tell me what you need to tell me.
W... uh... We sh...
Okay, um...
Well, your brother obviously counted on you a great deal...
Were you two close growing up?
- He was my older brother,
I looked up to him. I was a kid,
I didn't understand what he was doing.
You said you had something to tell me.
- I'm just trying to figure out why you're helping him?
Well, I'm helping my niece,
she's innocent in all this.
And your brother?
They blew up buildings.
It's been well-documented.
Do you approve of that?
- Of course not.
Now, if you have nothing more to ask, I think that...
- Do you think he's coming back for his daughter?
Is that what he's doing?
- Excuse me?
I'm trying to understand his thinking process.
I mean, why not take his daughter with him?
You know, why not change his name and disappear?
He obviously knows how to do that.
You said you had something to tell me.
Obviously, that's not the case.
So, I think we're done here.
We didn't ask for this.
I don't condone what he did...
and I certainly don't appreciate you
manipulating your way into my house.
You need to leave.
- Are you enrolling her in school?
'Cause I tell you, this situation doesn't
look like a permanent situation to me,
and I'm guessing not to you either.
So, what is he doin'?
Buying himself time for something.
- I dunno, for what?
I don't know, I'm asking you.
Your brother's nothing if he's not logical.
And right now, nothing he's doing...
makes any sense if he's guilty.
Help yourself...
You know... you should...
Holy shit!
It's right over here, lumber yard.
Don't worry, nobody's watching.
They're on Daniel.
They'll get to you, soon enough.
Yeah, well... anyone works for me
is an ex-con anyway.
Boy, this is some operation you got here.
- Yeah...
Yeah... ya' got redwood, ya' got
pine, and cedar in there...
Western Red Cedar... you can smell it.
It's a fire meth(?) and certified.
Yeah, I can see you're still into
herbal teas and soy products.
Yeah, well, you know... I quit drinkin'
and smokin', and I gained weight, and I...
Aw, shit man, why am I tellin' you this?
I don't belong to the collective anymore.
I don't answer to you!
- I need a place to stay the night,
and a couple of questions answered, Donal.
Okay, crash at my place.
Hey, it's this...
This truck
That guy looks a little bit like Rick! Remember him?
The roadie from Monterrey?
That IS Rick, the roadie from Monterrey.
Jesus... I thought he'd died.
- We all died, some of us came back.
Keep in touch with anybody else?
- A few...
Steve and Penny, Carol... they're in New York, and, uh...
now, who else? Let's see...
Oh, I'd go visit Noah, you know?
Oh yeah?
- Yeah, he's in Lompoc, y' know.
I see him couple times a year, and, uh...
Little Sweeney and, uh, Laura Horse...
- Do you know where she is, Donal?
- Nah, man, I don't.
- After the bank, Sharon came to you for help.
- Really? How do you know that?
Because of the name she lived under
before she married her current husband.
It was in the papers
when she was arrested,
Coyle. And that was you
when you went under in '72.
I figured you got married and...
gave her a new identity, and then
she went somewhere else, and then after a couple of
years you gave an uncontested divorce,
and left her with a name.
Right? Am I right?
Did Mimi come to you, too?
- Well now, why would Mimi come to me?
You know, I'm...
Shit, man, this is a real shit-kicker of a questionin'...
and to show up and ask me to trust you with information
that makes me an accessory to murder?
Neither of them had any fuckin' right to
ask me a thing... and neither do you.
I mean, I was a-wind of you guys for the B and M, and
I wasn't even on a damn committee!
I was the fuck out of it, and...
- Did she come to you, or not?
Alright... alright...
- Just tell me, for christ's sake.
You know better than anyone... Mimi was not
going to be some kind of suburban housewife,
drive a min-van
and go to the PTA!
She was gonna live or die a freedom fighter!
...married to the movement. Y' know, the last I heard
about her, she was on her way to Cuba.
Ten houses down, the one with the green windows...
but go around to the side, to the kitchen.
And what about you?
Why didn't you come to me for help, back then?
I didn't wanna go too far.
- Too far? What, you stayed?
Yeah, for a while. I thought she might come back.
- Who? Lurie? Come back?
Ah come on, get real, man! Mimi Lurie
is nothing but a dream you once had.
Afternoon, ma'am.
Are you aware you're inside the shipping lane?
Oh so sorry, Captain, we're practicing for the Catalina Cup.
But we're too fast to get in anyone's way...
Roger that. Just stay east of 122.
- Aye, aye, Captain!
Hi, Teri!
Thank God for government bonds.
My accountant used to laugh at me for being risk averse.
Aw, don't give me that "capitalist dog" look.
Goin' legit has its advantages!
Sure! As long as bankrupting people's
pension funds remains legit,
And running good, honest weed remains... criminal?
You're gonna wanna look at that.
I saved it for ya'.
Sharon Solarz... a housewife in Vermont, do you believe it?
- Shit.
And Billy Cusimano...
Who?
- From the Brotherhood.
Nice to know ol' Billy's
keeping the flame alive.
And Nick Sloan... a lawyer from Albany.
Christ, how'd he manage to pull that one off?
It's what he always wanted.
As I recall, you two were pretty tight.
I don't know, it was a long time ago.
So, why do you think she decided to
turn herself in after all these years?
I don't know, Mac.
Guess she got tired.
- Yeah.
Times change, babe.
Tabs, maybe.
Mr. McGowan, this is Ben Shepard calling
again from the Albany Sun-Times newspaper...
uh, as I said, this is regarding the research that we're
doing on the Bank of Michigan robbery...
and I would appreciate a call back,
uh, my number is 518-555-1218.
Hello?
You're not gonna believe what just happened to me.
FBI was in my apartment.
I don't need this right now.
- Look, a search warrant. No probable cause, that's a story, right?
That's not a story.
- They're pissed because I'm doing their job better than they are.
Well, you know how to make friends, don't you?
- It's not about making friends! It's about making history!
I'm talkin' about history...
- I got your request...
I can't send you to Michigan.
You have to send me to Michigan, she's being indicted in Michigan.
- We'll get it from the wires.
No, wires are shit. This is big, I'm putting us on the map.
People know my name, Ray. You have to send me out there!
Hey. Hey! Have some fuckin' awareness.
Okay? This isn't all about you.
I just laid off my sports department.
Well, who gives a shit about Albany High girls soccer?
I mean, what are we talking about here...?
Don't be an asshole.
- I'm not being an asshole.
Why are you acting like we're not killing it right now?
I'm on the fuckin' 10-yard line! I'm on the
10-yard line and you're stopping me right now.
That's a bad article.
- It's a bad arti... it's an exclusive
with the guy's brother! It's a bad article...
You took a shot at him, you made it personal.
He's a shmuck, Ray!
- I don't fucking care what he is!
That's not what we do!
And this is not the first time!
You don't just destroy someone to see
if you can uncover something!
That's a shitty way to go about things!
Got it?
The fact that we are even having
this conversation is ridiculous.
I gave you an exclusive with Sharon Solarz,
I gave you an exclusive with the guy's brother.
Nick Sloan would still be defending spotted owls if it
wasn't for me. Nobody can do what I am doing, Ray.
Alan Springer, returning.
- I gotta call him back.
I'm in this in a big way, I need support now, Ray.
I need you to support me.
And you need to stop provoking people.
Especially the FBI! Okay?
Okay.
I got bosses too, you know.
So, what are you thinkin'?
You know, I'm still wrapping my head around it.
These people are... they're all nuts,
but none of 'em are illogical.
You know, if this man is trying to escape,
if he was trying to disappear,
he'd have taken his daughter with him.
Maybe.
- But he didn't.
Instead, he conducts a very risky and
complicated series of switches,
gets his daughter in safekeeping,
gets to New York. By himself, alone.
Which changes everything, right? I mean, if the guy is
innocent, and he's running because he's innocent,
why doesn't Sharon just clear him?
Because she's in custody and she was his partner,
and that doesn't hold up in court.
Yeah, but why, why, why, why hide for thirty years
if you're innocent, y' know?
Innocence only gets you so far.
Michigan number.
This is where it all started!
'Cause you're not going to Michigan.
- Ben Shepherd.
Mr. McGowan!
Thank you for calling me b...
Yes. I'm sorry for your loss.
Okay. Bye bye.
(Fuck!)
Donal?
Donal!
Hey!
Hey! Hey!
What are you doing, man?
What are YOU doing?
I went to get you a car.
- Aw, shit.
What? You thought I ran out on ya'?
I thought, maybe you realized what a risk you
were taking, for a guy you hardly know.
Hey, do you remember? We used to be best of friends.
You remember that?
Yep.
Here's the key. It's clean.
It'll get you out of town, at least.
Call the cops in the morning. Tell 'em I
came to see you asking for help,
and you refused 'cause you're
an upstanding, law-abiding citizen.
Oh Jeez...
Alright, now listen to me...
Mimi did come to me,
I put her in touch with Jed Lewis.
He made some introductions.
Political friends... in Havana.
Jed Louis!
- Yeah.
I thought Jed was above ground. How can he ge....
- No! No, no, no. He's got the list, so he can find her.
Alright. Fuckin' run, man.
A security guard is dead after a robbery
turned violent in Briarwood Mall.
At five minutes after 8 a.m.
a man and a women, masked and armed,
entered the local branch
of the Bank of Michigan.
An exchange of gunfire occurred between
the suspects and bank security guard Hugh Kroessna,
pronounced dead at the scene.
According to investigating officer Henry Osborne,
the investigation
is considered active and ongoing.
Osborne...
- Hello.
Hi! My name's Ben Shepard. I'm calling
from the Albany Sun Times newspaper.
Albany, New York.
- I should hope so.
I left a couple messages, um...
I'm trying to locate police chief Henry Osborne?
Former police chief.
Yeah... well, I just wanted to ask him a couple of questions
regarding the recent Sharon Solarz arrest?
He is still...?
- Alive?
Well, yeah.
Well, he'd better be, or I'm on my way
to the yacht club to see a ghost!
See, I'm here in Detroit
doing some research, and...
from my understanding his department was pretty
involved in the Bank of Michigan investigation,
I just wanted to ask him a couple of questions about that.
But he's not here right now.
- Well, I'm just doin' a little background...
But he's still not here.
Well, how about this? Can I give you my number,
and then maybe you can pass it to him?
I'd really appreciate it, I'm quite harmless.
- Really?
The number is 518-555-1218.
That's my office and I'm calling you from my cell.
Thanks for your time.
The manhunt for Nicholas Sloan continues
at this time in Milwaukee
where former Weather Underground member
Donald Fitzgerald was taken into custody today.
Federal authorities suspect Mr. Fitzgerald
of aiding and abetting Nicholas Sloan
who continues to elude Federal investigators.
Nick went to Donal,
he's trying to find me.
You're safe here, you can lie low.
You know I counted last night,
I've walked out on six lives...
Six sets of friends... six lovers...
six homes, six names...
..not including my own.
So, you moving on again?
- Mm-hmm.
You wanna take the boat?
- Uh-uh... No, I'm going inland.
Well, door's always open.
- Thanks, Mac.
You submit one goddamn receipt from
this trip, and you're fired on the spot.
Yeah, right, like you haven't said that before.
Don't fuck with me, Ben.
I'm not in the mood.
So, are you in Milwaukee?
- No, I'm in Michigan.
Your guy was spotted in Milwaukee.
- I know that, I saw it on the news.
And here I thought we were the news.
- Look, I'm workin' on it, Ray, alright? I'm bustin' my ass.
Good. You got 24 hours to get me something
and you can keep your job.
No shit. My job that doesn't pay?
Yeah, that one! And you're lucky to have it.
- 'Kay.
Mr. Osborne?
Ben Shepard, Albany Sun-Times.
You're a long way from Albany, Mr. Shepard.
- Well, phones don't work so well out there...
You're a hard man to pin down.
- Apparently not.
Do you mind? There are proper channels,
what with my friends and family here.
I'm sorry, I know it's an intrusion,
I just didn't want to disturb you at home.
What?
- Can I speak to you, please sir?
Excuse me...
- Thank you.
Now, what is it you're here for?
Well, sir, I was just hoping I could ask you a couple of questions
regarding the Bank of Michigan investigation.
That was a long time ago.
- But you watch the news,
I'm sure you're aware Sharon Solarz has
been brought back to Michigan to stand trial.
Nick Sloan has been identified and is on the run.
I am aware.
How involved was your department
with the Bank of Michigan investigation?
Well, this is all in the public record.
What about before that?
My understanding is, you covered the campus.
Y' know, pretty active, right?
You ever come in contact with Mimi Lurie
or Nick Sloan before they went underground?
No. I- I'm sorry, what is it you're
trying to get answered?
You know, maybe if I knew
the question I could better help.
Well, I'm... I'm just trying to
understand the evidence of the case.
Sharon Solarz was a teller,
she went through the training program,
it's pretty self-explanatory.
But when you get to the others,
that's where I get lost.
Mimi Lurie, Nick Sloan, Vince Dallesandro,
that's where it starts getting blurry for me.
Does it? Dallesandro's prints were on the gun,
he got caught a couple of days later
on an anonymous tip.
He testified against the others.
He was already on parole.
He ended up dying in prison, or him getting killed,
killing himself, depending on who's report you believe.
Others were all fugitives at the time,
I heard they were wanted by the FBI,
already underground,
they knew how to disappear and they did.
- Yeah, it's just this time I think he's doing something different.
Why should this time be any
different than before?
Well, this time I don't think he's running away.
This time, I think he's trying to clear his name.
Uh, how do you think he's gonna do that?
- I was hoping you could help me there.
Ha, not sure how.
The getaway car was his car,
his prints were all over it.
There was testimony that he was there...
- So...?
What am I missing?
Hi, Dad!
- Hey! Alright, sweetie.
How are ya'?
- How ya' doin'? I'm Ben Shepard, Albany Sun-Times.
My wife, Marianne,
and my daughter, Rebecca.
Albany Sun-Times in Albany, New York?
- Are you just passing through, Mr. Shepard?
Ah... he's just leaving.
I'll be right there.
So, I'm gonna be headed to... uh...
um... Ann Arbor for a couple of days
and I was just wondering if maybe we
could sit down for another 5 minutes?
Alright, I'll be headed back to town
in a couple of days myself,
guess you got my number.
- Perfect. Thank you, sir.
Yeah, hello.
- How is she?
She's safe, she's right here.
Listen, Eva is afraid the apartment's under surveillance.
- I'm sure it is.
We snuck out the service entrance
and came to the park,
and I can't guarantee we weren't followed.
Can I speak to her?
- Hold on, hold on... Izzy!
Where are you?
- Honey, you don't need to know that right now.
But why can't you just tell me?
Izzy, all I wanna know is...
are you okay?
Everyone is so mad at you.
How 'bout you? You mad at me?
- Where are you?
I'm trying to get back to you as soon as I can.
Got 'im! Just off I-94 near Gurnee, Illinois.
- Send the coordinates to the field.
I know, and it won't be long.
- Done!
You have a full green light.
Still tracking?
- Yep.
He's cooked.
- Okay, send Bravo team down...
Did you kill that man?
Did I...?
- Kill him? That man at the bank.
Of course not.
- Then why'd you have to leave?
Honey, one day soon you're gonna
understand everything, I promise.
I don't want you to grow up and look back
on what I did and feel bad, ever! Okay?
But now you're gonna have to help me.
You gotta be strong.
And then next time, you and I will go
somewhere together
Alright? Anywhere you like.
- Home would be fine.
Gotta go...
I love you.
You do know that, right?
Hi. Ben Shepard, we met on the stairs?
- Oh right, yeah, I remember.
You don't look much like your parents.
- I was adopted... so, no.
If that was your pick-up line, it needs work.
- Mind if I sit?
I am on a date.
- Oh, you're on a date?
Yeah.
- Yeah?
Kinda like that thing real people do.
- Yes, that.
Given your manners, I am really surprised my dad
doesn't want to spend more time with you.
What? What are you talking about? Me and your dad are good!
We're playing poker night, takin' in the Pistons game tomorrow.
Fun.
Can I take you to dinner?
Excuse me?
- Right! No...
you're right, coffee then?
What d'ya think?
I think that my date is on his way back,
and you should leave.
Not until we figure this out, coffee or dinner?
Persistent.
- Professional hazard.
Coffee or...?
- Coffee, if you leave right now.
Okay, fine... deal.
Time? Place?
Caf at the Union, 2:30.
- Okay. You know this guy's not right for you.
Says you...
Who was that?
- A friend of my dad's.
Chance, someone once said... don't remember who...
Chance is a nickname for providence.
Well, it's another way of saying...
that all history is inevitable.
Because it goes to the trouble of happening.
Another point of view says that history
is independent of individual will,
determined by social conditions and relations of production,
relations of production? We remember that...
there he is, Karl Marx.
Now, these theories propose
a history immune to effort,
removed from the choices of everyday life.
But history...
is made by human beings!
And action... and passion...
no less than fate, or economics,
are it's essential ingredients.
Go! Go, go go...
But come back tomorrow!
Because we'll be discussing Fanon.
Enjoyed your lecture.
- Thank you.
"Action and passion"
sounds like something a friend of mine used to say.
No... No, no, no, no...
Need to talk to you, Big Jake.
- Go to hell.
How dare you show up here!
- Where else could I go?
You're takin' a hell of a chance.
- Not by choice.
They're probably watching me.
Unlike you, they know who I am.
How's that workin' out, by the way?
- Fuck you...
I have a life.
I was hoping for a little bit more,
"Hey, Nick, old friend! How are ya'?"
"How ya' been these past thirty-odd years?"
- For christ's sake, Nick...
I'm a public figure, do you know
the position you're putting me in here?
Nancy would forgive me banging a
Freshman sooner than talking to you.
You're still with Nan?
- Yeah, some of us made it work.
Yeah, some of you got lucky.
It wasn't luck.
- Well, what was then?
Jed...
what was it?
We didn't kill anybody.
Jed, I need to find Mimi.
- Looking for a girl? They got websites for that sort of thing.
What makes you think I know where she is?
Donal told you... fuck!
Fuck!
Does it matter?
Jed, does it matter?
Look, the truth? I haven't talked to Mimi
since bell-bottoms went out of style, okay?
I mean, how do you know she's even still alive?
- I don't.
Why would I help you after all these years?
We didn't even agree back then.
Because Mimi's the only person
who can help me get my daughter back.
You got a daughter?
- Yes.
No shit?
Mimi Lurie...
and Henry Osborne.
It doesn't make sense.
Where are you going?
Let's go. You can
walk me to class.
Yeah?
- Mm-hmm.
So, tell me about yourself.
- Peace Corp for a bit,
thought I was gonna change the world,
decided it was actually people
who needed changing,
went back to school to study psychology,
turns out psychology has nothing to do with that,
ended up in New York, for a bit...
I guess I thought I was gonna change myself,
turns out I'm too stubborn.
You must be older than I thought.
So, what happens now?
If in doubt, you go back to law school?
I'm not in doubt.
It's my mom, she's a judge.
Really? So was mine!
Just not professionally.
You like Michigan?
I love it.
Okay, you...
I read one of your articles online last night.
I read a couple of them, actually.
You're kidding me? Really?
And what'd you think?
I think you broke a big story.
- I did!
I think you're clinging to it like a life-raft.
- Oh, ho, ho.... wow.
and now it defines you.
- Wow!
Yeah, I do.
- Maybe psych's not a bad fit after all.
I kinda call 'em like I see 'em.
Fair enough, call this one.
Your father's ignoring me, why?
I'm guessing because... he doesn't want to talk to you?
Hmm...
- He's retired.
I mean, and this was decades ago.
He wants to fish, and watch boats on the water...
He's also not one for reminiscing.
You know he was close to the Lurie family?
Yeah. Her dad and my granddad
were fishing buddies, I think.
Yeah, so I heard.
- Yeah, they used to go up to the Linder Woods in the U.P.
It's absolutely gorgeous
up there, you would hate it.
The "U.P."?
- The upper peninsula.
He told me he never met her.
Huh!
Had to be hard, live with the Lurie name
after everything went down.
Yeah. I'm sure it was.
You ever talk about her
when you were younger?
This was all way before my time.
What are you thinking?
Can I speak honestly with you for a second?
- Yeah.
People lie for two reasons.
They speak unknowingly, a simple mistake, y' know.
Or they do it intentionally,
and having met a known fugitive who's also
a family friend isn't something you would forget.
Mm... what are you getting at?
In my business, when someone lies
intentionally, that's significant.
It seems your father lied to me,
I'm guessing it's some way to cover himself.
Look, Ben, I get that you're good
at your job, but so is my dad,
and I would put the quality of his character
up against anyone in the world.
So, if you're insinuating that he was
or is somehow involved in something
that ends up in your paper? I would be damn sure
you know what you're talking about.
I may be a student of the law, but that's libel,
and in my business, that's significant.
I'd like to see you again!
Bye.
Every sixth and seventh number.
How do I know who I'm calling?
- You don't.
Okay.
- Good luck.
Hi, this is, uh, John Smith,
I'm looking for a plumber.
Are you now?
- Yes, I am.
Wow, been a long time since I've heard that.
- Is this line clean?
Babe, they didn't listen to me back then,
and they sure ain't listenin' to me now.
Who's calling?
- Nick Sloan.
Nick Sloan? God, I just saw you on TV.
- Unless you wanna see yourself there too, we'd better hurry.
I need to get to Mimi Lurie.
Where are you?
- 845-555-8249.
Okay, I'll see if we still got the juice.
Hang tight, brother.
You wanna hear somethin' funny?
I've been Jim Grant longer than I've been me.
That's nice.
Come on, Jed, we're just talking here.
We don't need to talk.
I think we do, you're angry.
- You're damn right I am.
Jesus. Thirty years on, still holding a grudge, huh?
No...
it was the lack of respect.
You guys put everybody in danger.
We didn't kill anybody, we didn't hurt anyone.
We were a peace movement,
for christ's sake!
People make mistakes, Jed.
Then you turn yourself in and
atone for what you've done,
and then you keep up the struggle
in any small way you can.
You like what you're doing now?
Yeah.
Yeah! I like what I try to do...
I like my students.
Seems like it's mutual.
Yeah... I can still pack the hall when I...
..talk about SDS.
March on Washington,
trying to change the world,
they're drawn to it, I can tell.
They just don't know
what to do with it.
I don't know why they would,
it's ancient history to them.
So they listen and clap,
and then they update their Facebook
statuses and they forget all about it.
We've turned into our parents, Jed.
- Yeah,
now we're just a story told to children.
Well, I'm glad someone's still telling it.
- Yeah.
- You the guy that needs a plumber?
I am. Line clean?
- Thirty seconds to be safe.
Mimi?
- Was here, yeah.
Here?
- Big Sur.
Was?
- Left yesterday.
Say where going?
- North.
By boat?
- Woulda' made more sense, but she was headin' inland.
Got it.
- Good luck!
She gone?
Yeah...
but I know where she's headed.
Hey? Thanks for everything.
You really want to thank me, Nick,
you'll never contact me again.
Everything we have on the reporter,
he's been in Michigan for two days.
Background on people he's contacted
and places he's visited.
Stay on him.
- Of course, sir. Travel safe.
Can I see some ID, please?
Alright, thank you Mr. Haywood.
Have a good day.
I'm looking for real estate records and plat maps?
Lurie family, Linder-Lurie Lumber,
and Linder Holdings... going back 50 years.
Those three.
Agent Cornelius, welcome back...
Right this way.
So, where are the Linder Woods?
- I have no idea.
What about Drummond Island?
- It's up here, right across the water from Canada.
And this white part, this is private property, right?
- Beats me.
I mean, it's not part of that... that conservancy,
or that preserve, or whatever that is?
No... it doesn't look like it.
I don't see any sales, or state seizure reports.
But if this is privatly owned, somebody's
still paying taxes on this, right?
I don't know.
Can I have copies of all this?
- Sure.
I'm standing outside the Ann Arbor courthouse
where Sharon Solarz entered a plea of "not guilty."
Judge Panomino remanded her without bail...
Mr. Osbourne, can I speak to you?
- Not now.
Not talking to me is a very
dangerous decision for you right now.
Not here, I'll call you.
- Look, if I don't hear from you soon, this is...
You will.
Don't bother cleaning up,
we won't be here that long.
You came.
You look older.
You look the same.
- Yeah, right.
Mi, we gotta talk.
- So, talk.
Come on, Mimi, is this the way
you're gonna play it?
Like we don't know each other?
Like I'm just some adversary?
Aren't you?
- Don't...
Okay, so why am I here?
Why did you smoke me out?
"Smoke you out"?
- You went to Donal.
I had to.
- Well, I got the message, I'm here.
Nick, I can't help you,
that's why I'm here.
I came to tell you.
I figured I owed you that.
Hmm.
I have a daughter.
- I know.
She's almost twelve.
That's her.
What's her name?
- Isabel.
Your middle name, yeah.
Didn't you love your wife?
More than you can imagine.
- Oh, I can imagine...
Look, I know this child. She's probably never gonna
get over what's happened to her already,
and she's got a whole life ahead of her.
So, I'm asking you just to...
- You're asking me
to give myself up, so I can
clear you, for the sake of the child.
I see... everything to protect
the new little family.
Fuck your principles, fuck anything
else you used to stand for?
Well, the struggle doesn't end
just because you got tired of it.
I didn't get tired of it,
I grew up.
We promised each other we weren't going to do that.
- Yeah, but it happened.
I left the movement for the same
reason I joined it
because I didn't want to see good people's
lives thrown away for nothing.
You've waited a long time
to tell me that, haven't you?
And you've been a long time
coming home from the bank.
You were close to Mimi Lurie's family.
I wouldn't say close,
my dad knew her dad.
You went to the same school, same church,
you went on fishing trips together.
There's something you're not telling me.
What are you driving at, Shepard?
We know that Nick Sloan is looking
for something or someone to clear him.
I know that's your assumption.
- Could that be Mimi Lurie?
I'm off the record.
Think it out. First he'd have to find
her, and convince her to testify.
Second, she'd have to surrender.
But it's a participants testimony.
- That's the point.
If Mimi comes out of hiding, and surrenders herself
to testify that Nick Sloan wasn't at the bank,
it's what lawyers call a declaration against interest.
Destroys her own possibility of a defense.
It would clear him.
Why? Why would she do that? Why would she
give herself up to a jail sentence to save him?
I mean, what is her motivation?
You really she's gonna do that?
Don't matter what we think.
He obviously believes he can convince her.
- Why now?
Why not do this back then?
How long have you known about this?
I'm obviously not the only person in this conversation
who knows about her ties to a piece of
property just on the other side of Canada.
Mr. Osborne, what's the actual charge
against a law enforcement officer who
fails to follow credible evidence about
the whereabouts of a known fugitive?
I think there'd be a variety, actually.
You have information,
why aren't you coming forward?
Well, you have information too.
So what are you gonna do?
I'm a journalist.
I'm gonna do what I always do.
And this information's gonna be on
every computer screen in the next 20 minutes,
and I'm gonna find out everything
you're hiding from me,
and I'm gonna expose it in a very big and very real way.
You're about to do a lot of damage
to a lot of people.
You've no idea how much.
I think they have it coming.
- On that, you could not be more wrong.
Innocent people are about to get
swept up in this storm you're unleashing.
Trust me.
- Trust you...?
Tell me something, Mr Osborne.
Are you one of those innocent people?
- No, I am not.
But my daughter is.
How so?
I got somethin' I need to do,
but on my own terms.
Upper peninsula.
'Becc, it's Dad.
I'm trying you again.
Um... sorry about the messages.
uh...
Listen, if you... when you get a chance,
I need to talk to you, to tell you...
this... Shepard guy, um...
uh, it's important, 'Becc.
I love you, sweetie.
Call me back, please.
I don't know why that's so hard to figure out.
- What makes you think I was ever gonna be...
For one thing, I didn't do it.
I wasn't there, Mimi.
But you should have been,
then everything would have been different.
Vince lost his cool, completely.
You wouldn't have, nobody would've gotten hurt.
Somebody didn't get hurt, somebody got killed.
A father, a husband, with a family.
You think I didn't think about that when
so many fathers with families were being killed?
And still are!
You shouldn't have gone, Mimi.
You should've said no.
We were done.
- No. You were done.
I never was, but you couldn't accept that.
- Mimi...
You fooled yourself into thinking
I was someone else.
And you're still doing it.
I am not the one fooling myself, it was over!
- It wasn't... over.
It's still not over.
Every single thing we said
then, is true today.
And every single day, it's getting worse.
- That's not the point.
Oh, it's exactly the point, Nick!
I won't give myself up
to a system I despise.
I won't give up my freedom and accept
their version of what life is supposed to be.
Mimi, how free are you? Really?
- Well, I'm not in jail.
I don't expect you to understand.
They have you.
Oh, like hell.
A system that protects the super-rich,
and the super, super, super-rich,
And fucks over everyone else, and the planet to boot.
- Mimi... Mimi, would you just stop?
Everyone who's given up and given in,
they're living at the expense of what they once believed.
It's so sad!
You understood this,
I'm sorry you've forgotten.
- I wish I had forgotten!
Because my problem is
I can't stop remembering.
So if you've built a wall so high, more power
to you, you're stronger than I am.
I'm will turn myself in...
the day the politicians and corporations
turn themselves in for all they've done.
That's the day I'll hand myself in.
Scout's fuckin' honor.
Stop hiding behind your fucking revolutionary rant.
- Oh, don't turn it on me.
You know what I see?
I see the same person.
I see it, kid.
I see it in your eyes.
You can hide from everyone else in the world,
and be somebody else, but not with me.
What are your memories, Mi?
The ones you can't run away from.
Hey!
We had a responsibility beyond the cause.
We had a baby.
We were so consumed by our principles,
that we abandoned our most
fundamental duty.
We were doing our duty, Nick.
We made a plan, that if anything ever went wrong,
- Never should have carried out that plan.
we would know exactly
what we had to do.
We both agreed.
- We were wrong.
We had no choice.
- We should have known that we were wrong.
We both accepted it,
and we both had to live with it.
It wasn't a dream...
it was a possibility,
we could have made a reality.
We could make them stop.
Yeah, we could change things,
if we could make a difference.
I still believe in that possibility.
Is that all you believe?
Can you put me through to
Ben Shepard please?
(Aw, shit!)
Rebecca!
What did you say to my dad?
He sounds really upset.
What do you mean?
- He left me a dozen voice messages last night,
he said it had to do with you.
What is going on?
- You're gonna have to talk to your father.
You're up.
I remember when these trees were so small,
you could see clear across the water.
I saw her.
What?
I've went to do Ann Arbor on my way...
I didn't want to.
I just...
couldn't help myself.
I sat in my car like
some kind of stalker.
Mim.
She's really something, Nicky.
Truly.
We always intended to
tell you the truth.
You always intended...?
At the time we felt...
- We hoped that nobody needed to know.
I never asked about my birth parents,
I really never needed to know.
We know. There's no way
to make this easier.
We redid your identity,
papered a legal adoption.
None of that matters to me.
Did you think I
couldn't handle it?
Sweetie, we gotta talk through this.
No one's perfect, 'Becc.
I love you
I love you too.
I can't do what you
want me to do, Nicky.
I know.
I guess I was hoping you would
become the person who could.
So it goes.
Sir, the local K-9 units are on the way.
- Roger that.
Hello?
I'm here alone!
Hello?
You?!
You expecting to see somebody else?
She here?
- Who're we talking about?
Who're we talkin' about. Mimi Lurie!
That's who you came to see, right?
Huh?
- Mimi Lurie. That's who you came to see, correct?
Why would I do that?
- She could testify that you weren't at the bank.
Almost sounds like a news story, doesn't it?
Unfortunately, I need a source.
- Really? Must be a new policy.
Is she here, Nick?
She never was.
You call 'em?
- No.
Well you got yourself a story, kid. Congratulations.
I hope you're satisfied.
I don't wanna see a guy go to jail for the
rest of his life for something he didn't do.
Is that what passes for idealism these days?
- Is Mimi gonna surrender?
No.
- No. So, where are you going?
Well, before she can not surrender,
she has to first not get caught.
I don't understand, there
was an easier way.
Usually is.
You'll learn that lesson.
You know, I met your daughter.
Your older daughter.
Then you really do have yourself a story, don't ya'?
I'm guessing you didn't just stumble into this information...
by my count, there are exactly
four people on the planet that...
knew about this...
You get let in on something like this, Ben...
you get answers, but not the ones you think.
Secrets are a dangerous thing, Ben.
We all think we want to know them,
but if you've kept one to yourself...
You come to understand that doing so means that
you may learn something about somebody else,
but you also discover something about yourself.
I hope you're ready for that.
At this point,
I have no more secrets.
You're a smart guy...
Hold on, I'm not gonna hurt you.
You know exactly what motivates me,
and has for the last thirty years.
What you're gonna have to
figure out, is what motivates you.
I hope you like the answer.
- Hold on. Nick. Nick!
When the FBI comes, they'll follow me.
They'll never know she was here.
There he is.
What's that? That's it.
Come on! Come on.
Alright... we'll take up, you guys flank around from there.
There he is!
Nicholas Sloan!
You're under arrest for the
murder of Hugh Kroessna.
Can't say I'm happy to see you.
Mimi Lurie, last remaining fugitive
from the 1980 Bank of Michigan robbery,
surrendered herself to authorities today
near Drummond Island, Michigan,
just across the water from Canada.
She confessed to her role in the robbery, which
resulted in the death of a guard.
Charges have been dropped against Nicholas Sloan,
long thought to be a co-conspirator
in the robbery.
No comment yet from Sloan, who is expected
to be released from custody as early as tomorrow.
In other news today...
I have nothing to say.
by chalket.