The Border (2008) s01e11 Episode Script
Civil Disobedience
- Previously on The Border
Jesus, Stop interrogating me.
I'm not a terrorist.
You can't spend every minute of
your time working,
and then spring the
daddy-daughter time on me.
I'm as involved as you let me
be.
I've leaned on you pretty
heavily in this case.
-I can take the weight.
- I know.
you've got a daughter for god's
sake.
What would you have done?
Your spying on me?
your such a freak.
Whats next?
an ankle bracelet?
- Drive for 2 hours,
sit for 2 hours,
wave a truck through,
and drive home.
- Didn't they tell you
the job involved travel?
- There.
Convoy's on the bridge.
- Home in time for breakfast.
- Keep coming.
- Hey!
- Whoa. Check this!
- Oh, man, you gotta
be kidding me.
- Get away from the vehicle.
Hands on your head.
- Somebody help!
- Hold it!
- Help him!
He needs help!
Somebody help him!
Let go of me!
Let go of me!
What are you doing here!
- Shut up and lie down
on the floor.
- Get some help with this man.
Call an ambulance,
then lock down the area.
We don't need to take anybody,
we got transport.
- I've got to get out of here.
You take this case?
- What're you talking about?
- It's Zoe. Kessler's kid.
- Get gone.
- This is my call,
I'll take responsibility.
- Go, go.
- They almost ran over him!
- They'll call an
ambulance, okay.
I need you to stay down there
and be quiet.
I need time to think.
- I wanna go with the others.
You're gonna arrest them, right?
Arrest me too.
- You got street clothes on
under that, right?
- Of course.
- Alright, well get
that thing off.
- Where are you taking me?
- I want to turn myself in.
- You're not gonna do anything
until I talk to your father.
- I told you I don't
want him involved.
- Well, like it or not,
he is involved, Zoe.
And he needs a heads up
before this hits the fan
in very large chunks.
Go to your room. Get some
sleep, okay. I'll talk to him
as soon as he hits the office.
- I hate this. My friends are
gonna think I ran out on them.
- I need you to sit tight.
Now, give me your word.
- Three males,
one female in detention,
one male in the hospital.
All late teens, early twenties.
- They aren't talking until
they see a lawyer.
Not even their names.
None of them were carrying
any I.D., no cell phones,
either.
- What about the one
in hospital?
- He's unconscious.
The doctors are assessing him.
- How did a bunch
of kids find out
about a secret shipment
of radioactive material?
Even in this office,
only the three of us and Gray
knew about it. By the way--
- Oh, he's on his way in.
- Did you spot anyone who
could be the ringleader?
- One kid did most of the
talking in the prison van.
- Let's start with him.
- Got it.
I'm Major Mike Kessler,
head of Immigration
and Customs Security.
- Kessler?
- That's right. And you are?
- I'd like to call a lawyer.
- We've got 24h before we have
to let you make that call.
Of course,
if you cooperate,
we can shorten that time.
- Yeah, I'll wait.
- You have a friend in hospital
with serious head trauma.
I think his parents would
like to be there with him.
- I assume you charged
the driver with assault.
- No, you broke the law.
You're on the hook for criminal
negligence causing bodily harm.
- If you're looking
for criminals,
try the people who were
bringing weapons-grade
plutonium into Canada.
- Can I see you in private?
- It'll have to wait,
Agent Mannering's up next.
- It's important.
- Just give me a few minutes.
- This attack at the border.
What was it? A hijacking
attempt?
- College kids. Anti-nuke
demonstrators.
- You sure.
- That's my guess. One of them
said the shipment was weapons-
grade plutonium.
Is that true?
- Typical, misguided,
leftist idiocy.
- Then it is true.
- You know as well as I do that
the U.S. and Russia have
to decommission
thousands of nuclear warheads
in order to comply with the
Non-proliferation Treaty.
The Ajax Research Center's
been looking into ways of
reprocessing plutonium
into reactor fuel.
- That truck was carrying
nuclear warheads?
- Decommissioned plutonium.
These children are actually
impeding our attempts to find
a peaceful use for that stuff.
- You could have told us.
- It's classified.
And if the U.S. Department of
Defense finds out about
our security breach,
there'll be no more
research in Canada.
- We'll stack the charges
against these kids.
Scare them into giving
up their source.
- Drop the hammer.
There are hundreds of millions
of dollars to be made from
reprocessing plutonium.
We don't want to lose out on
our share because of some
stupid college prank.
- What?
- There were 6 protesters,
not 5.
The sixth was Zoe.
As she lifted
her mask for a second,
I recognized her.
I threw her into the back
of my truck, I drove her
back to Toronto.
- Jesus.
Where is she now?
- I checked her into a hotel.
Now look, only Darnell and I
know about this. It doesn't
have to go any further.
- Get your coat.
I need you to make the arrest.
- Major. Detective Jackson.
- Miss Castle.
- Hi.
- Hi.
- You never said I couldn't
make a phone call.
- I've been retained
to represent the young
people you have in custody.
- I'd like a word with
my daughter. Alone.
- Is it official?
- As her father.
- Alright.
- I didn't want to drag
you into this.
- You were
protesting at the border.
How could I not be involved?
- I thought they'd just
take us to Niagara Falls
or Fort Erie and charge us
with causing a disturbance.
- Is that what you thought?
- Yes. I thought we'd pay the
fine and they'd let us go.
- You tried to stop
a secret shipment
of radioactive material.
- It shouldn't be
allowed in Canada.
- How'd you find out about it?
Did you overhear
something I said?
- No.
- See something on my computer?
- Of course not. You never let
anything slip about your work.
- Well that's the first thing
people are going to think.
- No they won't.
No they won't. I never even
told my friends what you do.
- I'm talking about my people.
- This is something
I believe in.
I wanted to take a stand.
- How did you find out
about the shipment?
- I thought you were going
to talk to me as my father.
- You're gonna be
taken to detention.
- Is that where the others are?
- Yes.
- Then, that's
where I want to be.
- Ms. Castle will try and
get you a bail hearing
as soon as she can, you might
be held for a day or two.
- Let's go.
- I'm recusing myself from this
case. You'll take the lead.
- Understood.
- Find the damn leak so we can
get these kids out of here.
- I'll keep you posted.
- That's against the rules.
- I'll keep you posted.
So, how's your ex handling it?
- She thinks Zoe's acting out,
and by arresting her, I'm
playing right into her hands.
- Huh, well, that's a theory.
- She wants me to pull some
strings and get her released.
- Oh, no, that's unrealistic.
- She's her mother.
Not interested
in being realistic.
- Turn left.
Cell here on your right.
- I do not like this.
- What?
- I don't know, creeping through
Zoe's personal data. I mean,
I've known her since
she was cute.
- Then try serving
her mother with a warrant so
you can take her computer.
- And the sooner we
get a lead, the sooner
we'll be done with this.
- All of the protesters
are here.
They're on her 'friends'
list. There's the guy
who took the header.
There's messages about
meetings and articles:
anti-nukes, globalization,
environment
God, it's like the love child
of Al Gore and David Suzuki
and, yes,
a link to Vidviral.
- First Canada votes
for a UN resolution
on total, world-wide
nuclear disarmament.
Then we abstain from
a resolution
to include tactical
nuclear weapons.
Now why do we do that?
NATO believes
that nuclear weapons
are essential for
'credible deterrence'.
And Canada is a member of NATO.
So where do we stand?
For or against?
- Hey, run this guy
and see if you can--
- Calvin Herbert,
nuclear physicist,
professor at U of T,
author of books, and papers,
he's an activist,
Scientists petitioning
for disarmament,
and he's also a founding
member of PAPUA--
- PAPUA?
- Yeah. Physicists Advocating
the Peaceful Use of the Atom.
You know, it's a shame. All the
really good acronyms are--
- You know, the North American
nuclear science community
isn't that large. This guy could
have insider information.
- You got an address?
- Zoe. Zoe, you are
facing serious charges.
Criminal charges. And if
your friend in the hospital
doesn't recover,
it could mean jail time.
- Superintendent Norton,
are you going to lecture
or are you going to interview?
- You've just spent a few hours
in a jail so can you imagine
what 6 months to 2 years?
- Superintendent.
[Knock! knock! Knock!]
- Agent Jackson.
Sergeant Hourani. Immigration
and Customs Security.
- This is not unexpected.
- Why is that?
- I knew that some of
my more active students
had plans for last night.
And when a couple didn't
show up in class, I assumed
that there had been
some fallout.
- So you knew about the protest?
- The cause is very near
and dear to me.
I offered my full support.
- That would be full support
from here in the ivory tower.
Actually having to put
your ass on the line.
- Yes. Unfortunately I am
limited when it comes to
literally kicking
against the pricks.
- How's it going?
- Uh, nothing
on these college brats,
they're clean as babes
in the woods,
or babes in toyland, or
babes in oh, hello!
- What?
- Video clip
Zoe deleted. Well, PC deleted.
Retrieval should take,
like, 10 seconds.
Oh, nope, 5. Pathetic.
Oh geez! Oh geez. Oh geez.
Great. Great. That's great.
I'm never going to get
that image out of my head.
Oh, I'm damned for all
eternity now. Okay,
think kittens, think flowers--
- Play it again.
- What?
Are you insane?
- Put it on your monitor.
I need to see who the guy is.
- Have you no sense
of decency, sir?
- Play it.
- Here.
Not looking, I'm not looking.
Not looking. Not looking.
Not looking. Not looking.
Not looking. I'm not looking
Not looking. Not looking.
Oh God.
- Okay.
- Ah.
Thank you.
Okay.
Oh!
- Just keep it yes or no, Okay?
Try not to--
- So you actually saw it?
- Absolutely.
- And you're sure?
- Absolutely.
- Okay. Thanks.
How well do you know
Daniel Winters?
- I know him from school.
- Would you say he's
a friend, a good friend?
- A friend.
- Not a close friend?
- No.
- Not close.
- No.
- Okay!
Zoe. I know you've had sex
with Daniel Winters.
And yet you say to me that
he is not a close friend. So
just how intimate do people
have to get with you before
they're a close friend, Zoe?
- Is any of this germane?
- And if you're lying about
being with Daniel Winters,
what else are you lying about?
- I never said I didn't
have sex with him.
- Are you lying about how you
found out about the shipment?
Maybe you found out
from your father.
- No. I didn't!
- That question has already
been asked and answered.
- If not your father,
then who, Zoe?
- Nobody, I told you,
I don't know.
- I think we're done here,
Superintendent.
- So you knew about the
shipment, but you won't
tell us how you knew?
- I can neither
confirm nor deny.
Charge me, please.
It would give me
the ideal platform
to publicize Canada's
collaboration in nuclear
weapons research.
- You've got your facts wrong,
here. This is about nuclear
fuel, not nuclear weapons.
- Is that the official lie?
- It's the truth.
- No. The nuclear warhead on
that truck is powerful enough
to destroy the entire city of
Toronto. And it's Canada's job
to make sure that it, and
thousands of warheads like it,
retain their destructive
power for decades to come.
- What are the charges?
- They went with the
laundry list, Mike.
Trespass, criminal negligence,
assault. I'm surprised they
missed possession.
One of the kids had an inhaler.
- Why the closed arraignment?
- The Crown invoked
national security. There's a
gag order on both parties.
- You shouldn't be
talking to me.
- Screw'em. They're using an axe
to treat a hangnail.
I'll fight it, it'll take time.
- What about bail?
- Hearing's next week.
Mannering wants the defendants
to stew in custody.
- Thanks, Yvonne.
Mannering. What's this
star chamber bullshit?
- Excuse me?
- Those kids are no threat
to national security
and you know it.
- I can't possibly discuss
this case with a parent
of one of the accused. I'm
afraid you'll have to take up
your concerns with
your daughter's lawyer.
- I shouldn't be telling
you this--
- That's why we're standing
outside in the cold.
- Gray and Layla got a little
lesson in all things nuclear.
Seems that the oldest American
ICBM's were scheduled
to age out at 30 years.
Which is now. Department
of Defense wants to know
how much the plutonium
has degraded.
- Will they still get
the bang for their buck
if they decide to launch.
- Exactly.
- There's a moratorium
on testing.
- Which is why they sent
a warhead to Ajax.
The scientists there are working
on a way to analyze the
'efficacy' of the plutonium.
- So we're supporting the U.S.
nuclear weapons program.
- The Canadian government
wants the business, they just
don't want anyone
to know about it.
- Did you traced the leak?
- Maybe this Professor Herbert.
- Stay with it.
- Hey, Mike? Check on Zoe.
I was pretty hard on her. She
might need a little T-L-C.
- Thanks.
- They said we'd be
here at least a week.
Why are they doing this?
- They want to find out where
you got your information.
- Maggie went after me
like I was Bin Laden.
I thought she was your friend.
- She's trying to do her job.
- Well, she said I was lying.
- About what?
- They found some stuff
on my computer.
- What stuff?
- Just some stuff.
Can they do that?
Can they just take my stuff?
- Zoe, they're going to poke
into every corner of your life
until they figure
this thing out.
- Yeah, well, it isn't fair.
- This has got nothing
to do with fair.
[Buzzer]
I'll get you out of here
as soon as I can.
- I need to see Zoe's computer.
- Uh, I thought you weren't
on this case.
Because, you know--
- I'm not.
- Well then,
the answer would be:
Sorry, um, no.
- That would be protocol.
- I can't. No, I can't, okay.
Ask me anything else.
You want, you want your
driveway shoveled? Anything.
- You look like you
could use a coffee.
- Uh, no, thanks.
I'm at maximum apogee right now.
- You need a coffee.
- No.
No coffee. Please.
Oh, God.
Uh! Gray! Gray!
Gray! I'll show you the video.
- This is not a good idea.
- Maybe I should call my lawyer.
- We'd be done by the
time she got here.
- Alright. What do you
want to know?
- What is your relationship to
Professor Calvin Herbert?
- He's my thesis advisor.
- So you respect him. He's a,
he's a mentor.
- In some ways, I suppose. Yes.
- You share his political views?
- Some.
- You both oppose
nuclear weapons.
- True.
- Did he tell you about the
shipment coming across
the border?
- Nope.
- Daniel,
what do you hope to do with
the rest of your life?
- Finish my PhD.
Do research, teach.
- Forget it.
- Excuse me?
- You're going to spend
the next 3 or 4 years
in and out of courtrooms
and lawyer's offices.
You'll be lucky
if don't go to jail.
- I haven't done anything wrong.
- Believe me, prison
is an altogether
different kind
of graduate school.
- I think I should
call my lawyer now.
- She can't help you now.
- You've dug a very,
very large hole for yourself.
And there is only one way out.
- If you want to teach
at any university,
anywhere, ever,
you will tell us exactly how you
knew about that shipment.
- It was Zoe Kessler.
- Zoe?
- She got it from her father.
- That kid is lying.
- You were observing?
Aren't you recused
from this case?
- You know he is lying.
- Come here.
All I know is that the Americans
want some sort of assurance
that this security leak has been
dealt with.
- That shipment should never
have come into Canada.
We are opposed
to nuclear weapons.
- Oh, that's very
high-minded of us.
Preaching peace and love
while at the same time
we shelter under
the American defense umbrella.
Do you agree with your
daughter's stand?
- You know me better than that.
- Now we have two possible
courses of action, here.
We can prosecute her
to the full extent of the law.
Or, you can take responsibility.
- Do the right thing.
Resign.
- Yeah.
Claim that the breach was a,
an accidental slip, whatever.
Just do it quickly and quietly.
- What about Zoe?
- She and her merry band will
be back out on the street
within hours. It's your call.
Just do it quickly.
- C'mon.
- Where am I going?
- Charges have been dropped.
You're being released.
- Oh my God!
- Alright, let's go.
[Telephone]
- Kessler.
- It's minister
Fleisher for you.
- Alright, put her through.
- Mike, what's going on?
- You should have my resignation
in the morning faxes.
- How'd we get here?
- Agent Mannering can
fill you in on that.
- I'd rather hear it from you.
- Sorry.
- What can I do?
What do you need?
- Nothing, thank you.
- I do not accept
your resignation.
- Accepted or not, I'm gone.
Good-bye, Minister.
- Alright. Okay, we all
know what job one is.
Get the boss back.
- There's no way he's the leak.
- I'm still checking
Dr. Herbert's connections.
Nothing so far.
- Zoe?
- No, she denied it,
and I believe her. She was
always a lousy liar.
- Then what about this Winters
kid, why'd he drop
the dime on her?
- The video didn't look all that
passionate.
Maybe she dumped him
after the road test.
- Ah, flowers,
kittens, meadow
- Let's take another look
at Winters. Get closer.
- Uh, no, no.
I don't want to. Fine.
Fine. Give me 2 hours, you'll
know if he, prays, flosses,
or likes to go commando.
I'd say that last one's a yes.
- This is all
my fault, isn't it?
- We could blame geopolitics,
the military/industrial complex.
- I'm sorry, Dad.
- Zoe, you're
acting on principle.
I'm more concerned about
your choice in boyfriends.
- What boyfriends?
- Daniel.
- He's not my boyfriend.
- Really?
- Oh my God,
you didn't see
that stupid video.
- I heard about it.
- It was Daniel's dumb
idea of a joke.
I deleted it right
after he sent it.
- He sold you out.
Said you leaked
information you got from me.
- No. Why would he do that?
- Did you break it off with him?
- Yeah,
I guess. It was only 2 weeks.
And it was mostly just
about the sex.
- Maybe he didn't think so.
Maybe you broke his heart.
- I really can't have this
conversation with you.
- Right, me neither.
Where did you find out about the
date and time of the shipment?
- Daniel. But I don't
know how he knew.
- Alright.
But in the future,
when you are picking
yourself a sexual partner--
- I'm not talking about this.
- Right.
- C'mon, c'mon, have a seat,
class is about to begin.
Now, Daniel Winters
has been swapping
emails with
Doctor Edwin DeSoto,
nuclear physicist,
Illinois Tech.
Now, DeSoto got
a mega-research grant
from the Pellicano Foundation--
- What's the Pellicano
Foundation?
- Excellent question.
Pellicano Foundation funds
scientific research.
- Where do they get their money?
- Mostly
from PLN Technology,
a major contractor
for the U.S. Department of
Defense. Specifically,
nuclear warheads. So,
follow the arrows
back to the money.
Our guys are trying to extend
the life of old warheads.
PLN wants to build new ones.
- And PLN technology
doesn't want to compete
with Canadian scientists.
- So with DeSoto in their
pocket, they get him to
tell Daniel Winters
when the warhead
is coming north.
- Protest, security breach,
and the U.S. Defense Department
figures it's too risky to do
business in Canada.
- PLN gets the contract,
and Bob's your mother's
brother. Very good.
- Okay. So how did DeSoto find
that particular
Canadian activist?
- Ah, well, Ms. Norton,
Professor Herbert,
12 years ago,
co-authored a paper
on radioisotopes with none
other than Dr. Edwin DeSoto.
- Alright, so that
leaves one question
are Herbert and Winters really
anti-nuke guys who got used?
Or did they get paid off?
- Let's go around
again with Herbert.
- Low-tech, but surprisingly
effective.
- Oh. Take a look at this.
- What's up?
- Did he tag the car
with something?
- Tracking device?
- They knew where the
shipment was going.
An explosive?
- No. We would've heard by now.
- Let's find that vehicle.
- What? You figure that's Daniel
Winters inside that suit?
- Bet on it.
- Thanks for coming.
- Yeah, well I'm
glad you called.
How's Ryan doing?
- Better. Doctors think
he might be okay.
- Good.
What about you?
- Why'd you tell them
my dad was the leak?
- Whoa, I didn't. Who said that?
- He had to quit his job.
- Zoe, I never, I swear.
I wouldn't do that.
They lied to him.
- Were you pissed
at me for something?
- No. You know I care about you.
- Well, somebody
screwed him over.
- Don't worry.
I'm going to finish
what we started. Then
everything will be cool.
- What are you
talking about?
- I'm going to make sure
this story gets out.
- If you tell anybody they
can send you back to jail.
- No, I've got a way.
And when I'm done, I bet
your dad gets his job back.
- I'm coming with you.
- No, you can't.
This is serious.
- I'm coming with you.
Whether you like it or not.
- What's your relationship
with Dr. Edwin DeSoto?
- We're former colleagues.
We don't communicate now
as much as we used to.
My politics are somewhat
to the west of his.
But he is a leading
researcher in the field
of nuclear physics.
- His money comes from a major
missile defense contractor.
- Poor Edwin. He always assumed
that he could just keep his head
down, focus on pure research.
Not pay any attention
to what the, uh,
practical applications might be.
- Well, it looks like
someone came along and
called in a marker.
- We think he told Winters
about the nuclear shipment.
Maybe he told you, too.
- No, if I'd known he was
the source, I would have
questioned his motives.
- So you think
Winters was conned?
- Not necessarily.
Daniel is perfectly capable of
furthering his own interests
while championing
a worthy cause.
- And what would
those interests be?
- DeSoto offered him a position
on his research team
after he graduates.
- The little bastard.
- You should also be aware
that the little bastard
is very tenacious. Since
the protest didn't succeed,
it is very, very likely that he
will attempt something else.
- There it is.
[Cell phone]
Who was that?
- Nobody.
- Radio transmitter?
- And receiver.
It was on the grill of the lead
car escorting the plutonium.
- We need you to tell
us what it does.
- Listening device?
- On the front grill of a car?
What are you gonna listen to,
traffic?
- Hey, that convoy went
from the border to the Atomic
Research Centre in Ajax.
- Correct.
- The ARC has a security
system that's second to none.
Their pass keys are special
transmitters
that generate random alpha-
numeric electronic codes.
The lead car on that
convoy would've had one.
- That's not what this is.
No, we saw a skeleton
put it on the car.
- No, this device could've
picked up the code
as the car passed through the
gates and relayed the code
to Daniel Winters' computer. See
Winters sent this huge program
to the university's mainframe.
I was thinking it was part
of his thesis,
but now I'm thinking
that it's a formula
for generating
alpha-numeric codes.
Well I'll be a Boba Fett.
He's created a clone.
- Of ARC's security system.
- Yeah. If it works,
he'll be able to open
every door in the place.
- Get me security at the Atomic
Research Centre in Ajax.
- Security.
- Major Mike Kessler from ICS.
- Boy, you sure got here quick.
- Excuse me?
- I was just talking
to you folks.
- You have unauthorized
personnel on your grounds.
- The system indicates
no unauthorized entry.
- I just saw them drive in.
Could you open
your gates, please?
- Would you hold your I.D.
up to the camera.
- I don't have it with me.
- Well, I'm sorry, I need I.D.
or I can't let you in.
- Call ICS Headquarters in
Toronto, they'll vouch for me.
- Like I said, I was
just talking to them.
They're sending somebody out.
Sit tight, they should
be along in a few minutes.
- Guys. You've got somebody
inside. They've cracked
your security.
- Down.
- I'm telling you!
- Stay down.
- You've got a security breach!
- Get in the car.
[Horn]
- Immigration
and customs security.
- He's with us.
- Let's go guys.
Turn him loose. Turn him loose.
- Let him go.
- This is good here.
- I thought we were going to
the roof to hang the banner.
What is that?
Is that a bomb?
Are you crazy?!
- I'm only going to blow
a pipeline, part of
the cooling system.
- You can't! There's
radioactive material here.
- Right.
If there's an explosion, the
press will have to report it.
And then everything
will come out.
- This is way, way too much.
- Zoe, your dad will be
like a whistleblower.
And after this,
Canada won't dare import
U.S. nuclear weapons.
- Just put that thing
back in the bag
and let's get out of here.
- No.
- I'm getting security.
- Hey!
- What are you doing?
Daniel! Let me go!
- C'mon!
- Ow!
Ow! Daniel!
This is crazy.
- Again, I'm sorry, it's just
with no I.D. we can't be
too sure around--
- No problem. You've got
men on all exits?
- Yeah.
- Start a grid search.
[Electronic sound]
- Crap!
C'mon. C'mon!
C'mon! Oh, c'mon!
[Cell phone]
- Zoe?
- Dad
- Zoe?!
- Dad!
Daniel locked me in detain.
- Zoe?
- Dad?
- Zoe?
- Alright! Go!
- Argh! HELP!
- Something about being locked
in. I've lost the signal.
- There!
- Alright, alright, UH!
Hey that banner says
U.S. Nukes Made Here.
- Where's Zoe?
- Take ea--
- I can't breathe
- I won't ask you again.
- Where's Zoe.
- Second floor, electrical room.
- Sergeant, get him out of here.
Show me the way.
- Can somebody hear me?!
Help!
- Zoe. Zoe.
Are you all right? Hang tight,
we'll be with you in a minute.
You alright?
You okay?
- What about the bomb?
- Oh, fantastic.
- What bomb?
- Daniel had a bomb. He was
going to blow up some pipes.
- Where?
- In there, by the
catwalk, under the stairs.
- Get Zoe out of here,
go to emergency status,
you know the drill.
- Hey, where are you going?
- I'll be right behind you.
- You're a civilian now. I'm
ordering you to come with me.
- Get Zoe out of here.
- Let's go!
- Minister Fleischer
is in the board room.
So, I understand you've
taken up bomb disposal.
Is that your new career?
- It's amazing how military
training comes back.
- Mike.
- Minister.
- The U.S. are going to
develop replacement warheads
rather than refurbish
the old ones.
- They're giving the business
to PLN Technology?
- Yes.
- What about Doctor DeSoto
and the security breach?
- We didn't mention that in
our report to the Americans.
No concrete proof, really.
- You turned this
to your advantage.
You've been anti-nuke
since I met you.
- Somehow, being
able to blow up
the entire planet doesn't
make me feel all that safe.
- Well, I'm glad somebody
got something out of this
little exercise.
- We appreciate the way
you kept the lid on.
- Now we pretend
it never happened.
- That would be an
excellent strategy.
- Hey Slade.
- Oh, um
- Anyways, I thought
if I played along,
I'd get the leak, and then
I could tell my Dad.
- Trust me, it never
goes according to plan.
[Knock! Knock! Knock!]
- Hey. Found this person
hanging around the lobby,
she says she knows you.
- Hey there. I thought you
said you were going to
your mom's tonight.
- I told her you were
going to buy me dinner.
- Sure.
- Have a good night.
- How old's Gray?
- I don't know, 30, 32.
- Hmm.
- Where would you
like to eat dinner?
- Well, I don't know.
You're the boss. Where
would you like to eat dinner?
Jesus, Stop interrogating me.
I'm not a terrorist.
You can't spend every minute of
your time working,
and then spring the
daddy-daughter time on me.
I'm as involved as you let me
be.
I've leaned on you pretty
heavily in this case.
-I can take the weight.
- I know.
you've got a daughter for god's
sake.
What would you have done?
Your spying on me?
your such a freak.
Whats next?
an ankle bracelet?
- Drive for 2 hours,
sit for 2 hours,
wave a truck through,
and drive home.
- Didn't they tell you
the job involved travel?
- There.
Convoy's on the bridge.
- Home in time for breakfast.
- Keep coming.
- Hey!
- Whoa. Check this!
- Oh, man, you gotta
be kidding me.
- Get away from the vehicle.
Hands on your head.
- Somebody help!
- Hold it!
- Help him!
He needs help!
Somebody help him!
Let go of me!
Let go of me!
What are you doing here!
- Shut up and lie down
on the floor.
- Get some help with this man.
Call an ambulance,
then lock down the area.
We don't need to take anybody,
we got transport.
- I've got to get out of here.
You take this case?
- What're you talking about?
- It's Zoe. Kessler's kid.
- Get gone.
- This is my call,
I'll take responsibility.
- Go, go.
- They almost ran over him!
- They'll call an
ambulance, okay.
I need you to stay down there
and be quiet.
I need time to think.
- I wanna go with the others.
You're gonna arrest them, right?
Arrest me too.
- You got street clothes on
under that, right?
- Of course.
- Alright, well get
that thing off.
- Where are you taking me?
- I want to turn myself in.
- You're not gonna do anything
until I talk to your father.
- I told you I don't
want him involved.
- Well, like it or not,
he is involved, Zoe.
And he needs a heads up
before this hits the fan
in very large chunks.
Go to your room. Get some
sleep, okay. I'll talk to him
as soon as he hits the office.
- I hate this. My friends are
gonna think I ran out on them.
- I need you to sit tight.
Now, give me your word.
- Three males,
one female in detention,
one male in the hospital.
All late teens, early twenties.
- They aren't talking until
they see a lawyer.
Not even their names.
None of them were carrying
any I.D., no cell phones,
either.
- What about the one
in hospital?
- He's unconscious.
The doctors are assessing him.
- How did a bunch
of kids find out
about a secret shipment
of radioactive material?
Even in this office,
only the three of us and Gray
knew about it. By the way--
- Oh, he's on his way in.
- Did you spot anyone who
could be the ringleader?
- One kid did most of the
talking in the prison van.
- Let's start with him.
- Got it.
I'm Major Mike Kessler,
head of Immigration
and Customs Security.
- Kessler?
- That's right. And you are?
- I'd like to call a lawyer.
- We've got 24h before we have
to let you make that call.
Of course,
if you cooperate,
we can shorten that time.
- Yeah, I'll wait.
- You have a friend in hospital
with serious head trauma.
I think his parents would
like to be there with him.
- I assume you charged
the driver with assault.
- No, you broke the law.
You're on the hook for criminal
negligence causing bodily harm.
- If you're looking
for criminals,
try the people who were
bringing weapons-grade
plutonium into Canada.
- Can I see you in private?
- It'll have to wait,
Agent Mannering's up next.
- It's important.
- Just give me a few minutes.
- This attack at the border.
What was it? A hijacking
attempt?
- College kids. Anti-nuke
demonstrators.
- You sure.
- That's my guess. One of them
said the shipment was weapons-
grade plutonium.
Is that true?
- Typical, misguided,
leftist idiocy.
- Then it is true.
- You know as well as I do that
the U.S. and Russia have
to decommission
thousands of nuclear warheads
in order to comply with the
Non-proliferation Treaty.
The Ajax Research Center's
been looking into ways of
reprocessing plutonium
into reactor fuel.
- That truck was carrying
nuclear warheads?
- Decommissioned plutonium.
These children are actually
impeding our attempts to find
a peaceful use for that stuff.
- You could have told us.
- It's classified.
And if the U.S. Department of
Defense finds out about
our security breach,
there'll be no more
research in Canada.
- We'll stack the charges
against these kids.
Scare them into giving
up their source.
- Drop the hammer.
There are hundreds of millions
of dollars to be made from
reprocessing plutonium.
We don't want to lose out on
our share because of some
stupid college prank.
- What?
- There were 6 protesters,
not 5.
The sixth was Zoe.
As she lifted
her mask for a second,
I recognized her.
I threw her into the back
of my truck, I drove her
back to Toronto.
- Jesus.
Where is she now?
- I checked her into a hotel.
Now look, only Darnell and I
know about this. It doesn't
have to go any further.
- Get your coat.
I need you to make the arrest.
- Major. Detective Jackson.
- Miss Castle.
- Hi.
- Hi.
- You never said I couldn't
make a phone call.
- I've been retained
to represent the young
people you have in custody.
- I'd like a word with
my daughter. Alone.
- Is it official?
- As her father.
- Alright.
- I didn't want to drag
you into this.
- You were
protesting at the border.
How could I not be involved?
- I thought they'd just
take us to Niagara Falls
or Fort Erie and charge us
with causing a disturbance.
- Is that what you thought?
- Yes. I thought we'd pay the
fine and they'd let us go.
- You tried to stop
a secret shipment
of radioactive material.
- It shouldn't be
allowed in Canada.
- How'd you find out about it?
Did you overhear
something I said?
- No.
- See something on my computer?
- Of course not. You never let
anything slip about your work.
- Well that's the first thing
people are going to think.
- No they won't.
No they won't. I never even
told my friends what you do.
- I'm talking about my people.
- This is something
I believe in.
I wanted to take a stand.
- How did you find out
about the shipment?
- I thought you were going
to talk to me as my father.
- You're gonna be
taken to detention.
- Is that where the others are?
- Yes.
- Then, that's
where I want to be.
- Ms. Castle will try and
get you a bail hearing
as soon as she can, you might
be held for a day or two.
- Let's go.
- I'm recusing myself from this
case. You'll take the lead.
- Understood.
- Find the damn leak so we can
get these kids out of here.
- I'll keep you posted.
- That's against the rules.
- I'll keep you posted.
So, how's your ex handling it?
- She thinks Zoe's acting out,
and by arresting her, I'm
playing right into her hands.
- Huh, well, that's a theory.
- She wants me to pull some
strings and get her released.
- Oh, no, that's unrealistic.
- She's her mother.
Not interested
in being realistic.
- Turn left.
Cell here on your right.
- I do not like this.
- What?
- I don't know, creeping through
Zoe's personal data. I mean,
I've known her since
she was cute.
- Then try serving
her mother with a warrant so
you can take her computer.
- And the sooner we
get a lead, the sooner
we'll be done with this.
- All of the protesters
are here.
They're on her 'friends'
list. There's the guy
who took the header.
There's messages about
meetings and articles:
anti-nukes, globalization,
environment
God, it's like the love child
of Al Gore and David Suzuki
and, yes,
a link to Vidviral.
- First Canada votes
for a UN resolution
on total, world-wide
nuclear disarmament.
Then we abstain from
a resolution
to include tactical
nuclear weapons.
Now why do we do that?
NATO believes
that nuclear weapons
are essential for
'credible deterrence'.
And Canada is a member of NATO.
So where do we stand?
For or against?
- Hey, run this guy
and see if you can--
- Calvin Herbert,
nuclear physicist,
professor at U of T,
author of books, and papers,
he's an activist,
Scientists petitioning
for disarmament,
and he's also a founding
member of PAPUA--
- PAPUA?
- Yeah. Physicists Advocating
the Peaceful Use of the Atom.
You know, it's a shame. All the
really good acronyms are--
- You know, the North American
nuclear science community
isn't that large. This guy could
have insider information.
- You got an address?
- Zoe. Zoe, you are
facing serious charges.
Criminal charges. And if
your friend in the hospital
doesn't recover,
it could mean jail time.
- Superintendent Norton,
are you going to lecture
or are you going to interview?
- You've just spent a few hours
in a jail so can you imagine
what 6 months to 2 years?
- Superintendent.
[Knock! knock! Knock!]
- Agent Jackson.
Sergeant Hourani. Immigration
and Customs Security.
- This is not unexpected.
- Why is that?
- I knew that some of
my more active students
had plans for last night.
And when a couple didn't
show up in class, I assumed
that there had been
some fallout.
- So you knew about the protest?
- The cause is very near
and dear to me.
I offered my full support.
- That would be full support
from here in the ivory tower.
Actually having to put
your ass on the line.
- Yes. Unfortunately I am
limited when it comes to
literally kicking
against the pricks.
- How's it going?
- Uh, nothing
on these college brats,
they're clean as babes
in the woods,
or babes in toyland, or
babes in oh, hello!
- What?
- Video clip
Zoe deleted. Well, PC deleted.
Retrieval should take,
like, 10 seconds.
Oh, nope, 5. Pathetic.
Oh geez! Oh geez. Oh geez.
Great. Great. That's great.
I'm never going to get
that image out of my head.
Oh, I'm damned for all
eternity now. Okay,
think kittens, think flowers--
- Play it again.
- What?
Are you insane?
- Put it on your monitor.
I need to see who the guy is.
- Have you no sense
of decency, sir?
- Play it.
- Here.
Not looking, I'm not looking.
Not looking. Not looking.
Not looking. Not looking.
Not looking. I'm not looking
Not looking. Not looking.
Oh God.
- Okay.
- Ah.
Thank you.
Okay.
Oh!
- Just keep it yes or no, Okay?
Try not to--
- So you actually saw it?
- Absolutely.
- And you're sure?
- Absolutely.
- Okay. Thanks.
How well do you know
Daniel Winters?
- I know him from school.
- Would you say he's
a friend, a good friend?
- A friend.
- Not a close friend?
- No.
- Not close.
- No.
- Okay!
Zoe. I know you've had sex
with Daniel Winters.
And yet you say to me that
he is not a close friend. So
just how intimate do people
have to get with you before
they're a close friend, Zoe?
- Is any of this germane?
- And if you're lying about
being with Daniel Winters,
what else are you lying about?
- I never said I didn't
have sex with him.
- Are you lying about how you
found out about the shipment?
Maybe you found out
from your father.
- No. I didn't!
- That question has already
been asked and answered.
- If not your father,
then who, Zoe?
- Nobody, I told you,
I don't know.
- I think we're done here,
Superintendent.
- So you knew about the
shipment, but you won't
tell us how you knew?
- I can neither
confirm nor deny.
Charge me, please.
It would give me
the ideal platform
to publicize Canada's
collaboration in nuclear
weapons research.
- You've got your facts wrong,
here. This is about nuclear
fuel, not nuclear weapons.
- Is that the official lie?
- It's the truth.
- No. The nuclear warhead on
that truck is powerful enough
to destroy the entire city of
Toronto. And it's Canada's job
to make sure that it, and
thousands of warheads like it,
retain their destructive
power for decades to come.
- What are the charges?
- They went with the
laundry list, Mike.
Trespass, criminal negligence,
assault. I'm surprised they
missed possession.
One of the kids had an inhaler.
- Why the closed arraignment?
- The Crown invoked
national security. There's a
gag order on both parties.
- You shouldn't be
talking to me.
- Screw'em. They're using an axe
to treat a hangnail.
I'll fight it, it'll take time.
- What about bail?
- Hearing's next week.
Mannering wants the defendants
to stew in custody.
- Thanks, Yvonne.
Mannering. What's this
star chamber bullshit?
- Excuse me?
- Those kids are no threat
to national security
and you know it.
- I can't possibly discuss
this case with a parent
of one of the accused. I'm
afraid you'll have to take up
your concerns with
your daughter's lawyer.
- I shouldn't be telling
you this--
- That's why we're standing
outside in the cold.
- Gray and Layla got a little
lesson in all things nuclear.
Seems that the oldest American
ICBM's were scheduled
to age out at 30 years.
Which is now. Department
of Defense wants to know
how much the plutonium
has degraded.
- Will they still get
the bang for their buck
if they decide to launch.
- Exactly.
- There's a moratorium
on testing.
- Which is why they sent
a warhead to Ajax.
The scientists there are working
on a way to analyze the
'efficacy' of the plutonium.
- So we're supporting the U.S.
nuclear weapons program.
- The Canadian government
wants the business, they just
don't want anyone
to know about it.
- Did you traced the leak?
- Maybe this Professor Herbert.
- Stay with it.
- Hey, Mike? Check on Zoe.
I was pretty hard on her. She
might need a little T-L-C.
- Thanks.
- They said we'd be
here at least a week.
Why are they doing this?
- They want to find out where
you got your information.
- Maggie went after me
like I was Bin Laden.
I thought she was your friend.
- She's trying to do her job.
- Well, she said I was lying.
- About what?
- They found some stuff
on my computer.
- What stuff?
- Just some stuff.
Can they do that?
Can they just take my stuff?
- Zoe, they're going to poke
into every corner of your life
until they figure
this thing out.
- Yeah, well, it isn't fair.
- This has got nothing
to do with fair.
[Buzzer]
I'll get you out of here
as soon as I can.
- I need to see Zoe's computer.
- Uh, I thought you weren't
on this case.
Because, you know--
- I'm not.
- Well then,
the answer would be:
Sorry, um, no.
- That would be protocol.
- I can't. No, I can't, okay.
Ask me anything else.
You want, you want your
driveway shoveled? Anything.
- You look like you
could use a coffee.
- Uh, no, thanks.
I'm at maximum apogee right now.
- You need a coffee.
- No.
No coffee. Please.
Oh, God.
Uh! Gray! Gray!
Gray! I'll show you the video.
- This is not a good idea.
- Maybe I should call my lawyer.
- We'd be done by the
time she got here.
- Alright. What do you
want to know?
- What is your relationship to
Professor Calvin Herbert?
- He's my thesis advisor.
- So you respect him. He's a,
he's a mentor.
- In some ways, I suppose. Yes.
- You share his political views?
- Some.
- You both oppose
nuclear weapons.
- True.
- Did he tell you about the
shipment coming across
the border?
- Nope.
- Daniel,
what do you hope to do with
the rest of your life?
- Finish my PhD.
Do research, teach.
- Forget it.
- Excuse me?
- You're going to spend
the next 3 or 4 years
in and out of courtrooms
and lawyer's offices.
You'll be lucky
if don't go to jail.
- I haven't done anything wrong.
- Believe me, prison
is an altogether
different kind
of graduate school.
- I think I should
call my lawyer now.
- She can't help you now.
- You've dug a very,
very large hole for yourself.
And there is only one way out.
- If you want to teach
at any university,
anywhere, ever,
you will tell us exactly how you
knew about that shipment.
- It was Zoe Kessler.
- Zoe?
- She got it from her father.
- That kid is lying.
- You were observing?
Aren't you recused
from this case?
- You know he is lying.
- Come here.
All I know is that the Americans
want some sort of assurance
that this security leak has been
dealt with.
- That shipment should never
have come into Canada.
We are opposed
to nuclear weapons.
- Oh, that's very
high-minded of us.
Preaching peace and love
while at the same time
we shelter under
the American defense umbrella.
Do you agree with your
daughter's stand?
- You know me better than that.
- Now we have two possible
courses of action, here.
We can prosecute her
to the full extent of the law.
Or, you can take responsibility.
- Do the right thing.
Resign.
- Yeah.
Claim that the breach was a,
an accidental slip, whatever.
Just do it quickly and quietly.
- What about Zoe?
- She and her merry band will
be back out on the street
within hours. It's your call.
Just do it quickly.
- C'mon.
- Where am I going?
- Charges have been dropped.
You're being released.
- Oh my God!
- Alright, let's go.
[Telephone]
- Kessler.
- It's minister
Fleisher for you.
- Alright, put her through.
- Mike, what's going on?
- You should have my resignation
in the morning faxes.
- How'd we get here?
- Agent Mannering can
fill you in on that.
- I'd rather hear it from you.
- Sorry.
- What can I do?
What do you need?
- Nothing, thank you.
- I do not accept
your resignation.
- Accepted or not, I'm gone.
Good-bye, Minister.
- Alright. Okay, we all
know what job one is.
Get the boss back.
- There's no way he's the leak.
- I'm still checking
Dr. Herbert's connections.
Nothing so far.
- Zoe?
- No, she denied it,
and I believe her. She was
always a lousy liar.
- Then what about this Winters
kid, why'd he drop
the dime on her?
- The video didn't look all that
passionate.
Maybe she dumped him
after the road test.
- Ah, flowers,
kittens, meadow
- Let's take another look
at Winters. Get closer.
- Uh, no, no.
I don't want to. Fine.
Fine. Give me 2 hours, you'll
know if he, prays, flosses,
or likes to go commando.
I'd say that last one's a yes.
- This is all
my fault, isn't it?
- We could blame geopolitics,
the military/industrial complex.
- I'm sorry, Dad.
- Zoe, you're
acting on principle.
I'm more concerned about
your choice in boyfriends.
- What boyfriends?
- Daniel.
- He's not my boyfriend.
- Really?
- Oh my God,
you didn't see
that stupid video.
- I heard about it.
- It was Daniel's dumb
idea of a joke.
I deleted it right
after he sent it.
- He sold you out.
Said you leaked
information you got from me.
- No. Why would he do that?
- Did you break it off with him?
- Yeah,
I guess. It was only 2 weeks.
And it was mostly just
about the sex.
- Maybe he didn't think so.
Maybe you broke his heart.
- I really can't have this
conversation with you.
- Right, me neither.
Where did you find out about the
date and time of the shipment?
- Daniel. But I don't
know how he knew.
- Alright.
But in the future,
when you are picking
yourself a sexual partner--
- I'm not talking about this.
- Right.
- C'mon, c'mon, have a seat,
class is about to begin.
Now, Daniel Winters
has been swapping
emails with
Doctor Edwin DeSoto,
nuclear physicist,
Illinois Tech.
Now, DeSoto got
a mega-research grant
from the Pellicano Foundation--
- What's the Pellicano
Foundation?
- Excellent question.
Pellicano Foundation funds
scientific research.
- Where do they get their money?
- Mostly
from PLN Technology,
a major contractor
for the U.S. Department of
Defense. Specifically,
nuclear warheads. So,
follow the arrows
back to the money.
Our guys are trying to extend
the life of old warheads.
PLN wants to build new ones.
- And PLN technology
doesn't want to compete
with Canadian scientists.
- So with DeSoto in their
pocket, they get him to
tell Daniel Winters
when the warhead
is coming north.
- Protest, security breach,
and the U.S. Defense Department
figures it's too risky to do
business in Canada.
- PLN gets the contract,
and Bob's your mother's
brother. Very good.
- Okay. So how did DeSoto find
that particular
Canadian activist?
- Ah, well, Ms. Norton,
Professor Herbert,
12 years ago,
co-authored a paper
on radioisotopes with none
other than Dr. Edwin DeSoto.
- Alright, so that
leaves one question
are Herbert and Winters really
anti-nuke guys who got used?
Or did they get paid off?
- Let's go around
again with Herbert.
- Low-tech, but surprisingly
effective.
- Oh. Take a look at this.
- What's up?
- Did he tag the car
with something?
- Tracking device?
- They knew where the
shipment was going.
An explosive?
- No. We would've heard by now.
- Let's find that vehicle.
- What? You figure that's Daniel
Winters inside that suit?
- Bet on it.
- Thanks for coming.
- Yeah, well I'm
glad you called.
How's Ryan doing?
- Better. Doctors think
he might be okay.
- Good.
What about you?
- Why'd you tell them
my dad was the leak?
- Whoa, I didn't. Who said that?
- He had to quit his job.
- Zoe, I never, I swear.
I wouldn't do that.
They lied to him.
- Were you pissed
at me for something?
- No. You know I care about you.
- Well, somebody
screwed him over.
- Don't worry.
I'm going to finish
what we started. Then
everything will be cool.
- What are you
talking about?
- I'm going to make sure
this story gets out.
- If you tell anybody they
can send you back to jail.
- No, I've got a way.
And when I'm done, I bet
your dad gets his job back.
- I'm coming with you.
- No, you can't.
This is serious.
- I'm coming with you.
Whether you like it or not.
- What's your relationship
with Dr. Edwin DeSoto?
- We're former colleagues.
We don't communicate now
as much as we used to.
My politics are somewhat
to the west of his.
But he is a leading
researcher in the field
of nuclear physics.
- His money comes from a major
missile defense contractor.
- Poor Edwin. He always assumed
that he could just keep his head
down, focus on pure research.
Not pay any attention
to what the, uh,
practical applications might be.
- Well, it looks like
someone came along and
called in a marker.
- We think he told Winters
about the nuclear shipment.
Maybe he told you, too.
- No, if I'd known he was
the source, I would have
questioned his motives.
- So you think
Winters was conned?
- Not necessarily.
Daniel is perfectly capable of
furthering his own interests
while championing
a worthy cause.
- And what would
those interests be?
- DeSoto offered him a position
on his research team
after he graduates.
- The little bastard.
- You should also be aware
that the little bastard
is very tenacious. Since
the protest didn't succeed,
it is very, very likely that he
will attempt something else.
- There it is.
[Cell phone]
Who was that?
- Nobody.
- Radio transmitter?
- And receiver.
It was on the grill of the lead
car escorting the plutonium.
- We need you to tell
us what it does.
- Listening device?
- On the front grill of a car?
What are you gonna listen to,
traffic?
- Hey, that convoy went
from the border to the Atomic
Research Centre in Ajax.
- Correct.
- The ARC has a security
system that's second to none.
Their pass keys are special
transmitters
that generate random alpha-
numeric electronic codes.
The lead car on that
convoy would've had one.
- That's not what this is.
No, we saw a skeleton
put it on the car.
- No, this device could've
picked up the code
as the car passed through the
gates and relayed the code
to Daniel Winters' computer. See
Winters sent this huge program
to the university's mainframe.
I was thinking it was part
of his thesis,
but now I'm thinking
that it's a formula
for generating
alpha-numeric codes.
Well I'll be a Boba Fett.
He's created a clone.
- Of ARC's security system.
- Yeah. If it works,
he'll be able to open
every door in the place.
- Get me security at the Atomic
Research Centre in Ajax.
- Security.
- Major Mike Kessler from ICS.
- Boy, you sure got here quick.
- Excuse me?
- I was just talking
to you folks.
- You have unauthorized
personnel on your grounds.
- The system indicates
no unauthorized entry.
- I just saw them drive in.
Could you open
your gates, please?
- Would you hold your I.D.
up to the camera.
- I don't have it with me.
- Well, I'm sorry, I need I.D.
or I can't let you in.
- Call ICS Headquarters in
Toronto, they'll vouch for me.
- Like I said, I was
just talking to them.
They're sending somebody out.
Sit tight, they should
be along in a few minutes.
- Guys. You've got somebody
inside. They've cracked
your security.
- Down.
- I'm telling you!
- Stay down.
- You've got a security breach!
- Get in the car.
[Horn]
- Immigration
and customs security.
- He's with us.
- Let's go guys.
Turn him loose. Turn him loose.
- Let him go.
- This is good here.
- I thought we were going to
the roof to hang the banner.
What is that?
Is that a bomb?
Are you crazy?!
- I'm only going to blow
a pipeline, part of
the cooling system.
- You can't! There's
radioactive material here.
- Right.
If there's an explosion, the
press will have to report it.
And then everything
will come out.
- This is way, way too much.
- Zoe, your dad will be
like a whistleblower.
And after this,
Canada won't dare import
U.S. nuclear weapons.
- Just put that thing
back in the bag
and let's get out of here.
- No.
- I'm getting security.
- Hey!
- What are you doing?
Daniel! Let me go!
- C'mon!
- Ow!
Ow! Daniel!
This is crazy.
- Again, I'm sorry, it's just
with no I.D. we can't be
too sure around--
- No problem. You've got
men on all exits?
- Yeah.
- Start a grid search.
[Electronic sound]
- Crap!
C'mon. C'mon!
C'mon! Oh, c'mon!
[Cell phone]
- Zoe?
- Dad
- Zoe?!
- Dad!
Daniel locked me in detain.
- Zoe?
- Dad?
- Zoe?
- Alright! Go!
- Argh! HELP!
- Something about being locked
in. I've lost the signal.
- There!
- Alright, alright, UH!
Hey that banner says
U.S. Nukes Made Here.
- Where's Zoe?
- Take ea--
- I can't breathe
- I won't ask you again.
- Where's Zoe.
- Second floor, electrical room.
- Sergeant, get him out of here.
Show me the way.
- Can somebody hear me?!
Help!
- Zoe. Zoe.
Are you all right? Hang tight,
we'll be with you in a minute.
You alright?
You okay?
- What about the bomb?
- Oh, fantastic.
- What bomb?
- Daniel had a bomb. He was
going to blow up some pipes.
- Where?
- In there, by the
catwalk, under the stairs.
- Get Zoe out of here,
go to emergency status,
you know the drill.
- Hey, where are you going?
- I'll be right behind you.
- You're a civilian now. I'm
ordering you to come with me.
- Get Zoe out of here.
- Let's go!
- Minister Fleischer
is in the board room.
So, I understand you've
taken up bomb disposal.
Is that your new career?
- It's amazing how military
training comes back.
- Mike.
- Minister.
- The U.S. are going to
develop replacement warheads
rather than refurbish
the old ones.
- They're giving the business
to PLN Technology?
- Yes.
- What about Doctor DeSoto
and the security breach?
- We didn't mention that in
our report to the Americans.
No concrete proof, really.
- You turned this
to your advantage.
You've been anti-nuke
since I met you.
- Somehow, being
able to blow up
the entire planet doesn't
make me feel all that safe.
- Well, I'm glad somebody
got something out of this
little exercise.
- We appreciate the way
you kept the lid on.
- Now we pretend
it never happened.
- That would be an
excellent strategy.
- Hey Slade.
- Oh, um
- Anyways, I thought
if I played along,
I'd get the leak, and then
I could tell my Dad.
- Trust me, it never
goes according to plan.
[Knock! Knock! Knock!]
- Hey. Found this person
hanging around the lobby,
she says she knows you.
- Hey there. I thought you
said you were going to
your mom's tonight.
- I told her you were
going to buy me dinner.
- Sure.
- Have a good night.
- How old's Gray?
- I don't know, 30, 32.
- Hmm.
- Where would you
like to eat dinner?
- Well, I don't know.
You're the boss. Where
would you like to eat dinner?