CSI: Miami

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This article is about the television series. For the computer game, see CSI: Miami (computer game).

Template:Infobox Television CSI: Miami is a spin-off of the popular CBS network series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation. Like the original CSI, CSI: Miami is a police procedural about a team of forensic scientists. It is set in present-day Miami and Miami Beach, Florida. Filmed in the United States, the series has been exported to over a dozen countries worldwide. The show averages 20 million viewers an episode making it Monday's #1 show, and one of the most watched shows in North America. In 2006, Reuters reported that the show is "the most-watched U.S. series around the world". The series is distributed internationally by Alliance Atlantis.

The team investigates mysterious and unusual deaths to determine who killed whom and how, and also solve other serious crimes such as rape. The show frequently focuses on a single case in each episode as opposed to the two-cases-per-episode storytelling of its sister shows, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, and CSI: NY.

Like the other two CSI programs, the theme song is by The Who; this time the song is "Won't Get Fooled Again".

Contents

Characters

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Main characters

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  • Miami Dade CSI Head Investigator Lieutenant Horatio Caine played by David Caruso, is the Head of the Miami-Dade crime lab, a forensic analyst and former bomb squad officer. In season 1 episode 2 Caine revealed that everything he knew had been taught to him by his mentor, Al Humphreys (played by Lou Beatty, Jr.), who is killed by an explosion while trying to defuse a bomb in the episode. Caine was briefly married to Eric Delko's sister Marisol, which ended when she was murdered by a Mala Noche sniper.
  • Miami Dade CSI Level 3 Detective Calleigh Duquesne played by Emily Procter, is a ballistics specialist. Her father is an alcoholic attorney who has tried to rehabilitate himself several times. She has a brief relationship with John Hagen in season 2; in the season 3 finale Hagen shoots himself while she is getting a different gun, after having pulled a gun on her earlier in the episode. At the beginning of Season 5 she is temporarily in charge of the lab while Horatio and Delko are in Brazil, and has been given a promotion to Lieutenant. She appears to be very good friends with fellow CSI Eric Delko.
  • Miami Dade CSI Level 3 Detective Eric Delko played by Adam Rodriguez is a fingerprint and drug identification expert of Cuban and Russian descent. In episode 410, "Shattered", Delko's job is endangered when he is arrested for drug possession, but it turns out he had been buying the drugs for his sister Marisol, to ease the pain of her leukemia treatments. Delko's sister was murdered by a Mala Noche sniper after she married Delko's boss, Horatio Caine. He is also the team's underwater recovery expert. While trying to rescue a woman kidnapped by escapee Clavo Cruz, Delko appeared to be critically wounded by one of Cruz's henchmen.
  • Miami Dade Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Alexx Woods played by Khandi Alexander, is a Miami-Dade coroner. Alexx began her medical career in New York as a physician and became a coroner with the CSI team after moving to Miami for personal reasons. She often talks to the dead bodies as she examines them, usually as a way of giving them comfort in death. She is married with a young son and daughter.
  • Miami Dade CSI Level 1 Detective Ryan Wolfe played by Jonathan Togo, Ryan was working as a police officer at the time he was hired by Horatio, who noted with approval that Ryan kept his firearm immaculately clean (his predecessor, Speedle, died in the line of duty as a direct result of his poor gun maintenance). He first appeared in the episode "Under the Influence", but did not become a regular cast member until "Hell Night". Ryan suffers from OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) and appears to believe in curses ("Curse of the Coffin"). Ryan was impaled in the eye with a nailgun in one episode ("Nailed").
  • MDPD Homicide Detective Francis 'Frank' Tripp played by Rex Linn, is a Texan homicide detective who regularly accompanies the team to the crime scenes. He has a gruff demeanor and while not having much knowledge of forensic procedures, has an appreciation for the capabilities of the CSI's and moreso of their results. He has a good working relationship with all the CSIs, particularly Calleigh. He is divorced, with three kids (episode 118, "Dispo Day"). Made regular in season 5, recurring previously.
  • Miami-Dade CSI Trainee Natalia Boa Vista played by Eva LaRue, a new Latina DNA analyst only allowed to work on cold or unsolved cases due to the restrictions of her federal grant. She and Delko dated briefly. They broke it off after a pregnancy scare. She escaped an abusive marriage before joining the crew, when her association with a society for battered women was key to helping the team solve the murder of a woman (who had been killed by the victim's ex-husband) assuming an alias for protection. It was revealed at the end of the fourth season that she was the mole in the lab, but the negative information soiling the lab's reputation was not leaked by Boa Vista but by State Attorney Monica West, and Boa Vista had only reported information to the Feds that showed the lab in a positive light. As of season 5, she became a CSI field trainee and has joined the main cast (she had previously been a recurring character in season 4) and, much to her distress, she discovered her abusive ex-husband, Nick Townsend, was out of prison and served her a restraining order; as he was working for a private company that cleans up crime scenes, which created a difficult situation with forcing her to make terms with him to get the restraining order dropped. The two shared a tense professional relationship until Nick's murder, a crime for which Boa Vista was briefly considered the prime suspect.

Discontinued characters

  • Miami Dade CSI Level 3 Detective Megan Donner (Kim Delaney, episodes 1-10), Horatio's predecessor who went on indefinite leave from her job following the death of her husband. She briefly returned to work alongside Horatio, who has since been promoted to head investigator of the CSI unit, but later resigned, finding the pressures of the job to now be more than she could handle. The character was reportedly written out due to the lack of chemistry between Delaney and Caruso.
  • Miami Dade CSI Level 3 Detective Tim "Speed" Speedle (Rory Cochrane, seasons 1-2), trace evidence and impressions expert; originally from Syracuse, New York, with a degree in biology from Columbia University, Speed was killed in the line of duty in the third season premiere, Lost Son; he had not maintained his firearm diligently, and was shot by a suspect when it misfired during a police shoot-out. The character was written out at the request of Cochrane, who wanted to pursue a career in film and reportedly disliked the long, arduous shooting schedule for CSI: Miami.

Recurring characters

  • MDPD Detective Yelina Salas (Sofia Milos, seasons 1,2,3,5), a Colombian homicide detective frequently attached to CSI investigations, and the widow of Horatio's brother Raymond. She later starts a relationship with IAB Sergeant Rick Stetler, Horatio's personal nemesis. After her husband Raymond was revealed to still be alive, she left with him and their son for Brazil, where they planned to keep a low profile for Raymond's safety. She reappears in Season 5, starting with "Rio" (the season opener). Caine and Delko are in Rio to hunt down Antonio Riaz, who murdered Caine's wife (and Delko's sister) Marisol at the end of Season 4. Riaz is killed in a fight with Horatio, but not before killing Raymond Caine and enlisting Ray Jr into drug running in the shantytowns of the area. Yelina and Ray Jr wind up back in Miami, and it appears likely they will figure in future episodes.
  • Laboratory Technician Maxine Valera (Boti Ann Bliss, seasons 2-), DNA analyst. Temporarily suspended from her duties in Season 3 for technical errors. then reinstated by Season 4. Has an unfortunate habit of taking short-cuts with evidence, which caused her suspension and also brought her under suspicion when the lab was investigated by the FBI.
  • Laboratory Technician Joseph Kayle (Leslie Odom Jr., season 2-), a lab tech.
  • Laboratory Technician Cynthia Wells (Brooke Bloom), Questioned Documents lab tech.
  • Laboratory Technician Tyler Jensen (Brian Poth), Audio/Visual and Multimedia lab tech.
  • Laboratory Technician Dan Cooper (Brendan Fehr, season 4), Audio/Visual lab tech. May or may not relate to the case of D.B. Cooper
  • Secret Service Special Agent Peter Elliott (Michael B. Silver, seasons 2-), Working in the Financial Crime Division, Agent Elliott had an obvious infatuation with Calleigh that interested her but she stopped when she found out that he was engaged to the state district attorney after taking him to the hospital for a gunshot wound. At the end of the season, it was revealed that his fiancée State District Attorney Monica West is the one that implicated the CSI lab and stole drug money seized in a raid causing the FBI to investigate, hoping that discrediting the lab would help her out politically.
  • Internal Affairs Bureau Agent Sergeant Rick Stetler (David Lee Smith, season 2-), IAB Sergeant and Horatio's personal nemesis. He later started a relationship with Yelina, but she left with her husband on season 3 finale. His harsh feelings toward Caine stem from a bitter feeling when Horatio was promoted to lieutenant instead of him, believing Caine may have pulled in some "special favors" for the job. Horatio also suspected that during Stetler's relationship with Yelina, Stetler may have been abusive, which was evident when she came to work one day with a black eye. (Season 3, episode Crime Wave)
  • WFOR-TV Newscaster Erica Sykes (Amy Laughlin, Season 3-), an aggressive ambitious young news reporter for the Miami CBS station, WFOR-TV. Her antics are often described as crazy and are very much annoying to the CSI team. She may or may not have dated Ryan at some stage, but the two often flirt. It was Erica who revealed to Ryan that there was a mole in the lab in a special extended scene that was available on www.cbs.com after the episode Urban Hellraisers aired. She also helped Ryan in a case regarding abuse of eminent domain, with the government evicting people from their homes before turning the land over to a private developer (episode 505, "Death Eminent"). In a later episode, however, she puts the life of Natalia's sister at risk by mentioning on the air that she is a victim in a kidnapping.
  • FBI Agent Glen Cole (Mark Rolston), a FBI Agent, headed the investigation into the lab in season 4, returns in season 5 working on a case involving counterfeitting and the Korean Government.

Former recurring characters

  • MDPD Detective Adelle Sevilla (Wanda de Jesus, season 1), a Latina homicide detective who occasionally accompanies the CSIs. She appeared in 10 episodes.
  • MDPD Detective John Hagen (Holt McCallany, seasons 1-3), a homicide detective who had emotional and psychological problems. Raymond Caine's partner prior to his faked death, he told Calleigh once that he couldn't stand being reminded of being the partner of a dirty cop. He also had a brief relationship with Calleigh in Season 2. While pulling a crucial piece of evidence from a crime scene, he panicked when Calleigh came over to photograph the scene; he then crept up behind her and put his gun behind her head. Although he didn't mean to hurt her, it allowed him time to escape (she didn't know it was him at that time). He later shot himself in the Ballistics Lab in front of Calleigh during the Season 3 finale.
  • MDPD Officer Aaron Jessop (Joel West Season 4) A patrol officer, Jessop joined the force at about the same time Ryan Wolfe was moving over to CSI. While he thought like a cop, he also was able to think like a CSI. This was evident in the episode The Oath where he was able to help Calleigh and assess the crime scene and upped the charge and penalty. Jessop was killed when he opened a cabinet rigged with a hand grenade booby-trap at the scene of a Mala Noche shootout. (West had previously appeared as Officer Ramirez in one episode during Season 2)
  • Laboratory Technician Jim Markham (Joshua Leonard, season 3), Ballistic lab tech. Markham became the head of the ballistics section when Calleigh left, but was quickly demoted after Calleigh discovered that Markham took short cuts.
  • State Attorney Rebecca Nevins (Christina Chang), A State Attorney who briefly had a relationship with Horatio, but he broke it off when she made a deal with a criminal suspected of killing a cop and series of robberies as well as having a relationship with a 16-year-old girl who took part in his crimes. Originally expected to be a more regular character but has not appeared on the show since that episode for reasons unknown.
  • State Attorney Monica West (Bellamy Young, season 4). The State Attorney who replaced Nevins. She was the one who planted Boa Vista to spy on the CSI Lab, hoping she will come up with evidence of corruption within the lab. However, when Natalia only brought back positive results on the lab, she got frustrated enough that she stole some money that the team seized in a raid on the Mala Noches when her fiancee, Agent Peter Elliot, was looking over the money, and tipped off the FBI causing the lab to be investigated. When Wolfe pointed out that the money wasn't taken from their lab, Calleigh figured it out and had Elliott confess. Calleigh made him get Monica to admit that she was the one who took the money. She was then arrested.
  • Marisol Delko Caine (née Delektorsky) (Alana de la Garza, season 4) Eric's older sister, who had leukemia. Because of the painful treatments, Eric occasionally purchased drugs, such as marijuana, to alleviate her pain. This got him in trouble until Horatio Caine intervened in the investigation, letting him off. Marisol and Horatio were married between the episodes that aired on May 8 and May 15, 2006. She was shot by a Mala Noche sniper during the May 15 episode and later died from her injury. It was later discovered that the hit was ordered by a Mala Noche boss named Antonio Riaz, who found out about Marisol's family connections through his relationship as her marijuana dealer. Not long after, Horatio and Delko follow Riaz to Brazil, and Horatio kills Riaz. Her last words were with Horatio--
    • Horatio: I had...I had dinner plans tonight.
    • Marisol: Casa Tua?
    • Horatio: Casa Tua.
    • Marisol: 8:30?
    • Horatio: 8:30.
    • Marisol: You got the good table?
    • Horatio: I got the good table.
    • Horatio: You're not planning... You're not planning to stand me up, are you?
    • Marisol: Never.
At this point, Marisol is silent and holds Horatio's hand, closes her eyes, and the sound recorder behind her goes to a long electronic beep, dead.
  • Nick Townsend (Rob Estes, season 5). Ex-husband to Natalia Boa Vista. Upon his release from prison, Nick re-entered Natalia's as an employee of a crime-scene cleaning company who often worked crime scenes his ex-wife was assigned to process. Nick's treatment of Natalia following his parole consisted primarily of unwanted flirtation, which pushed Natalia into shoving him at a crime scene, an action Nick used as basis for a restraining order against her. Under the order, Natalia was forced to leave any crime scene Nick was sent to clean, threatening her job. Nick subsequently agreed to drop the restraining order, provided Natalia treated him civilly from then on. Nick became a less-than-desirable presence on the job for both Natalia and Eric Delko, for whom Nick also took delight in causing discomfort due to Eric's prior romantic relationship with Natalia. Nick was murdered following a date with Maxine Valera, who'd shoved him to the floor in response to his unwanted advances and fled, thinking him dead. Though both Maxine and Natalia were suspected for the crime, Nick was in fact killed by a man whose wife had committed a murder Nick had worked that day. Nick had stolen an earring left at the scene by the man's wife and was bludgeoned to death when he refused to return it.

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Episode list

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U.S. Television Ratings

Seasonal rankings (based on average total viewers per episode) of CSI: Miami on CBS.

Note: Each U.S. network television season starts in late September and ends in late May, which coincides with the completion of May sweeps.

Season Timeslot Season Premiere Season Finale TV Season Ranking Viewers
(in millions)
1st Monday 10:00PM September 23, 2002 May 19, 2003 2002-2003 #14 16.57
2nd Monday 10:00PM September 22, 2003 May 24, 2004 2003-2004 #9 18.06
3rd Monday 10:00PM September 20, 2004 May 23, 2005 2004-2005 #7 19.00
4th Monday 10:00PM September 19, 2005 May 22, 2006 2005-2006 #9 18.13
5th Monday 10:00PM September 18, 2006 - 2006-2007 - -

DVD releases

DVD box art for CSI: Miami region 1, season 4
DVD box art for CSI: Miami region 2, season three, part 1
DVD Name Region 1 Region 2 R2, part 1 R2, part 2
CSI: Miami season 1 June 29, 2004 February 21, 2005 September 6, 2004 February 21, 2005
CSI: Miami season 2 January 4, 2005 February 20, 2006 September 12, 2005 February 20, 2006
CSI: Miami season 3 November 22, 2005 October 23, 2006 August 22, 2006 October 23, 2006
CSI: Miami season 4 October 31, 2006 March 13, 2007
CSI: Miami season 5
The CSI: Miami Region 2 DVD releases have followed a particular pattern whereby each season is progressively released in two parts (each of 11 or 12 episodes, with special features split up) before ultimately being sold as a single boxed set.

U.S. Broadcast History

Broadcast details

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Trivia

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  • Introduced as an episode of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation's second season (CSI Episode 222: Cross Jurisdictions) when investigators Catherine Willows and Warrick Brown, played by Marg Helgenberger and Gary Dourdan respectively, went to Miami because a murder victim's daughter was found there after the killer took her and her mother while fleeing Las Vegas.
  • Sofia Milos is the only cast member whose name appeared in the opening titles without mathematical equations (although she was only credited for season three she had guested in seasons one and two). Jonathan Togo's name didn't get an equation until the first episode of season 4. In season 5, Rex Linn and Eva LaRue are also credited in the opening titles without equations.
  • The series is primarily shot in a former warehouse in El Segundo, California (just south of LAX); location shooting in Miami is limited to a few days each season.
  • Often "Starke" is mentioned. Starke is the city in Florida that is home of Florida State Prison and, next door, Union Correctional Institution, Florida's two major prisons.
  • Aisha Tyler played the role of District Attorney Janet Medrano on CSI: Miami in 2003, where her character is killed off in the episode "Body Count". She went on to play the role of Mia Dickerson on CSI: Crime Scene Investigation in 2004-2005. Since the two tv shows exist in the same reality (The pilot episode for CSI: Miami was a CSI: Crime Scene Investigation episode titled "Cross Jurisdictions"), this implies the two characters were doppelgangers or twins.
  • The second season crossover episode "MIA/NYC Nonstop" is a bonus episode on the Season 1 DVD set of CSI: NY.
  • Another crossover (between NY and Miami) was featured again on November 7, 2005 (CSI: Miami) and November 9, 2005 (CSI: NY), which involves a crashed plane and an escaped serial killer, and includes members of both casts. A new track by Madonna ("Hung Up") was heard once in each episode at the start of both CSI: Miami and CSI: NY.
  • The fourth season crossover episode "Felony Flight" was solved on the CSI: NY episode "Manhattan Manhunt." This was the first time that a case was introduced on one "CSI" series and solved on another. This is also the first time that a CSI show has had crossover episodes that were not intended to introduce a spin-off. It was also the first television appearance of James Badge Dale since 2003, when he played Chase Edmunds on 24.
  • The (probable) origin of the 'Horatio' character name is explained by the character 'Belle King' in Dead Woman Walking (season 1) as being tied to Horatio (from Shakespeare's Hamlet), whom she calls 'the first CSI'. The actual origin of Horatio's name is given by Horatio himself in the pilot episode Cross Jurisdictions. His mother named him after American author Horatio Alger. (Interestingly, "Horatio Caine" was also the name of a criminal department store owner who had plans to blackmail London with nuclear destruction in "Death at Bargain Prices," an episode of The Avengers TV series).
  • In "Rap Sheet" (Season 2), the rapper Xzibit (Alvin Nathaniel Joyner) guest stars as a character called '10-Large', a rapper whose bodyguard is shot and killed.
  • Episode 318 features skateboarding star Tony Hawk as the murder victim.
  • In episode 406, Wolfe runs a fiber through a manufacturer's database which is accessed through http://hotdig.info/ which in reality re-directs to CBS's broken link page
  • An outdoor filming scene became a real life police investigation scene when a body was found floating in Bicentennial Park. See the Wikinews article for more information. WFOR-TV Video
  • Episode 422 (Open Water) features Irish magician Keith Barry as a magician who robs people aboard a cruise ship. In this episode his name is "Barry Keith".
  • The episode "Darkroom" is based on the William Richard Bradford case, in which a photo of Eva LaRue's sister Nika was included among the evidence. Nika appears in the episode as a reporter who asks, "Where are these girls?" at a press conference. She had been offered the role of Natalia's sister Anya, but turned it down because it would have been "too surreal."
  • The show uses Nikon cameras exclusively. This includes the CSI teams, reporters and others. Same applies to other CSI shows.

Goofs

  • As in other CSI series, Crime scene investigators in the show (especially Horatio) are shown accomplishing tasks that are not related to their functions such as resolving crimes, arresting suspects & interrogating them. Many of these tasks are accomplished by police officers & detectives. This is not strictly a 'goof'; instead, it's most likely a scripting decision intended to prevent the 'boredom factor' of depicting often-tedious laboratory work on television
  • Wet Foot/Dry Foot (Season 1, Episode 3): When a disembodied arm and half of a torso are pulled from a gutted tiger shark, Delko comments that the tiger shark "will eat anything as long as it's alive". However, tiger sharks are also known to feed on slaughterhouse offal and other carrion.[1]. The shark featured in this episode was a Grey Nurse shark (Odontaspis taurus), but the footage aired of the shark attacking prey in open water was actually of a Mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus).
  • Breathless (Season 1, Episode 7): Horatio states that mosquitoes are attracted to humans by the carbon monoxide they exhale. This should have been carbon dioxide; carbon monoxide is a lethal poison to both humans and mosquitoes.
  • A Horrible Mind (Season 1, Episode 10): In the case about the professor, an erroneous parallel was made to the 'Stanford Experiment' (correct name: 'Stanford Prison Experiment'); they should have referred to the Milgram experiment instead. The parallel concerned the professor using his students in a manner similar to the Milgram experiment, 'teachers' and 'learners', as taught to him by the Colombian torturer (although the Colombian called them students, not learners).
  • Dead Woman Walking (Season 1, Episode 15): When the lawyer was poisoned, the CSI team checked her house, and later the orange juice, with sulfur to detect traces of iodine. Horatio claimed that the presence of iodine would indicate decayed iodine-131. However, “iodine-131 has a half-life of eight days. At the end of eight days, half of the Iodine-131 becomes stable xenon-131.” (emphasis added)[2] Therefore, the team was looking for the wrong chemical. Also, the use of sulfur as a detector appears to come from scriptwriters picking up information from the completely unrelated sulfur-iodine cycle.
  • The cast have had several dealings with federal authorities and government employees in various episodes during their investigations, but there are some inaccuracies regarding government security clearances. In one episode, for instance, a suspect is brought in after a fingerprint match, and has a GS-14 level security clearance with the government. According to the website for the Office of Personnel Management, which oversees federal employment, GS refers to General Schedule, one of the civilian salary brackets, and has nothing to do with security clearances, with a person's job description and what department they work for determining their security clearance. For example, a GS-7 computer technician in the FBI would have a higher security clearance than a GS-13 supervisor in the Department of Agriculture. One item that was at least somewhat accurate was the suspect had stated he was a manager for a Census Bureau field office, and higher pay grades are usually held by supervisors and department managers. [3] [4]
  • The writers generally have little knowledge of South Florida. They refer to the courts as Superior Courts but trial courts in Florida are Circuit Courts (Los Angeles has Superior Courts, not Florida); writers had a suspect identified from a photo of the license plate on the front of a car, but Florida only uses rear license plates; writers often have the CSIs check the "state registry" of handguns but Florida does not register handguns.
  • In the episode Nothing to Lose (Season 3, Episode 16), after Dr. Alexx Woods has stitched Todd Kendrick's wound and is driving away from where they had stopped, the shadow of production equipment is briefly visible on the hood of the van.
  • In the episode Money Plane (Season 3, Episode 17), during the analysis of the crash, Delko states that the aircraft took off from Runway 9 Right, yet the animation of the flight, as well as the trajectory Southeast over Coral Gables shows the aircraft taking off from Runway 12.
  • In the episode Come as You Are (Season 5, Episode 10), the team investigates the murder of a Marine recruiter. Therefore, NCIS, a federal law enforcement agency with jurisdiction on crimes involving persons and property associated with the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Marine Corps, would have been ordered to investigate, and local CSIs would not be authorized to conduct the investigation. On another note, it is incorrectly thought of as a mistake in writing that two brothers can not be placed in the same military unit. This is a misconception as there are instances to prove this does occur. [5][6]
  • Also in the episode Come as You Are, when Calleigh is reading off the service record of Kevin Kirby she obvious says "was stationed on the ground in Fallujah", but the audio says "Fallah".
  • Another Goof in the episode Come as You Are is found with the plot point that JAG was looking to charge the living brother with the murder of his dead brother. It is mentioned the military corpsmen had removed the bullet that killed the dead brother but left a tiny metal fragment from the truck door behind. However any corpsmen would have been able to recognize the difference between a 9mm slug (from the M-9 handgun) and the 5.56 round (from the M-16), noting this in his report and thus clearing the brother of any wrong-doing.
  • In the episode Throwing Heat, it is said that AMV Theatre has a cell phone jammer in place. However, the use of cell phone jammer is illegal in the USA.
  • Sometimes with occasional recurring characters in the series, the characters come in with different but similar names, even though technically they are same characters.
  • In the Episode No Man's Land A revolver that was being shipped to be melted down was loaded, firearms in storage are typically unloaded for various reasons.

See also

External links

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