š“ Script 7:11 Victoria Fenberg (ā 137)
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NBCās series The Blacklist starring James Spader and Megan Boone
Series created by: Jon Bokenkamp
Program air date: 3/20/2020 in the US (7pm Central/Chicago Time)
Permalink: https://wp.me/pDKwi-alQ
Entertainment Weekly Recap: http://bit.ly/2J0Xzds
š¹ Tunefind for Episode: http://bit.ly/2UbgTLk
IMDb (Internet Movie Database): http://imdb.to/2U8hUnK
Source: Raw Script from OurBoard: http://bit.ly/2vBh1ua [ dump of captioning ]
STATUS: ā Pending ā Rough ā Preliminary š“ FINAL
STATUS: š« Pending š Rough š Preliminary ī Final
Last updated: 6/19/2020 at 4:20pm CT [ Central/Chicago time ]
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Directed by: Bill Roe
Written by: T Cooper, Allison Glock-Cooper
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SERIES STARS:
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Raymond āRedā Reddington ā James Spader
Elizabeth Keen ā Megan Boone
Donald Ressler ā Diego Klattenhoff
Harold Cooper ā Harry Lennix
Aram Mojtabai ā Amir Arison
Dembe Zuma ā Hisham Tawfiq
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GUEST STARS:
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Victoria Fenberg ā Gillian Alexy
Antony Eagleton ā Brian Batt
Elodie Radcliffe ā Elizabeth Bogush
Cynthia Mallet ā Kate Bornstein
Art Collector ā Maria Cellario
Brimley ā Teddy Coluca
Mr Fenberg ā Jack Gilpin
Saul Bittman ā John Hickok
Mrs Sue Fenberg ā Anna Holbrook
Vasyl ā Kushtrim Hoxha
Richard Vitaris ā Albert Jones
Sakiya ā Sue Jean Kim
Head Waiter (Joseph) ā Tim McGeever
Officer Sharp ā Denise Pillott
Fudo ā Jimmy Salto
Agent Alina Park ā Laura Sohn
Croft Thornberry ā Don Stephenson
Sadiq Asmal ā Harold Surratt
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This script is not completely formatted yet
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š“ Script 7:11 Victoria Fenberg (ā 137)
Brief ~ (Where weāre at): Before Episode 7:11 ~ Liz has a secret: Katarina is alive. Red witnessed Katarina being gunned down by two thugs, the Kazanjian brothers, and her body dragged away to collect a bounty on her life, the Townsend Directive. But Katarina had hired the brothers to stage the attack as Red watched. Red told Liz about her death, but he doesnāt know that Liz knows that the āwoman from Parisā is her mother. Or that Liz would soonafter be called by Katarina to explain what had happened.
Katarina won Liz over when she told her that the story Dom had told Liz ā that Red was really Ilya Koslov, a friend of Katarinaās and Soviet operative and embassy employee ā was untrue, and she proved it by showing Liz Ilya himself, whom she had captured and was submitting to forced therapy by a memory extractor named Victor Skovic. Katarina also told Liz what she had learned or confirmed from Ilyaās confessions ā that in 1991, her own father had planned to assassinate her in a car bomb. She escaped but the explosion killed her husband Pyotr. Domās purpose for killing Katarina? To protect the one person Dom loved most, his granddaughter Masha (Lizās Russian name). Katarina disappeared after that, ending up living quietly in Paris until Liz and Resslerās search for her raised the antennae of her enemies, resulting in the revival of the long-dormant Townsend Directive.
But if Red isnāt Ilya Koslov, then who is he? Ilya, even under Skovicās therapy and torture, refused to say. Then the Task Force put 2+2 together and closed in on Lizās building, where they figured out the āwoman from Parisā had moved in across the hall from Liz. Liz offered to help Katarina and the others escape which they did through tunnels to get past the police perimeter.
Liz returned to join the Task Force, while Katarina broke into a car and drove past Red and Dembe who followed her to the site of her staged execution by the Kazanjian brothers. Only Cooper knows that Liz found out that the āwoman from Parisā is Lizās mother, which he got her to admit, before she went to Domās bedside, where he remains comatose, after being shot by a sniper in a shootout with Katarinaās goons.
Liz: [ To Dom ] I met my mother. I know you didnāt want me to. But I did. She told me you lied to me about who Reddington really is. I donāt understand why you did that or why youād try to have her killed to protect me. You tried to kill your own child. What kind of person would do something like that?
I canāt figure it out. But maybe she can. Maybe she can find out everything youāre trying to hide from me.Ā
For S7 Episode 7:11 Victoria Fenberg šÆ EW recap ¤ š Photo Gallery ¤ š¹ Music Videos ¤ š Script link: https://wp.me/pDKwi-alQ [ āyou are hereā ]Ā
[ Friends are gathered for Dembeās birthday party. They include Dembeās spiritual advisor Sadiq Asmal, Redās torture guy Mr Brimley, Redās cleaners Fudo and Sakiya, and, of course, Red ]
Brimley: Happy birthday.
Dembe: Thank you. Ah, lift tickets.
Brimley: [ Laughs ] To Whistlerās Blackcomb.
Fudo: Blackcombās supposed to be the sickest snowboarding on Earth.
Brimley: So says the Internet.
Sakiya: And we got him a bath caddy?
Fudo: He said no gifts. You said no gifts, right?
Dembe: I know, Iā
Sadiq: The presence of friends is a gift.
Dembe: Indeed. Thank you, Teddy. I canāt wait.
Brimley: Youāre welcome.
Red: Open this next.
Dembe: You really didnāt need to, Raymond.
Red: Ah, come on, come on.
[ Dembe opens the box and takes out a woven shawl ]
Dembe: No.
Red: [ Laughs ] Yessiree!
Dembe: This is the one we saw in the village outside Lusail.
Red: The same. You knew, right?
Dembe: But you got it?
Red: You didnāt know?
Dembe: I had no idea. I went back to buy it, and she said it was sold.
Red: Because of the guy in the jacket.
Dembe: The one you said was following us?
Red: He wasnāt foā I had to say something to get rid of you. I smuggled the damned thing onto the jet in my hat like some āBā-movie drug runner.
[ All chuckle ]
Dembe: Ahh. Thank you, Raymond. Itās perfect.
Red: Happy birthday, my friend.
Dembe: [ Chuckles ]
[ Cell phone ringing ]
Dembe: [ Sighs ] Hello? Excuse me? Iām sorry. Say that again.
[ Dembe holds out phone to Red ]
Dembe: Mr. Orville.
āā
[ Red takes phone and steps aside ]
Red: Hello?
Orville: The nesting casket. You have it?
Red: I do.
Orville: Good. She has a potential buyer.
Red: No. For all six?
Orville: Yes. The entire set. The team is gathering. She wants everyone to bring their caskets to the island. Spend the weekend. Meet the buyer. 7:00 p.m. Friday. Come alone.
Red: No, thatās nowhere near enough time.
Orville: Friday. 7:00 p.m. There will be no extensions. Donāt let the others down.
āā
[ Red returns to the table ]
Red: Looks like weāll have to eat our cake and ice cream on the jet. You and I are going to Artemivsk.
āā
[ They get their coats ]
Dembe: We canāt. Itās too dangerous.
Red: We have to get that casket.
Dembe: Things are different now. The entire neighborhood is controlled by separatists. They know you supply arms to the Ukrainian army.
Red: Well, they have Russia for their guns. They donāt care.
Dembe: They want your head.
Red: This is bigger than me. I have an obligation to the others. If she has a buyer for the entire set, the profit would not only be obscene but flagrant. We have to go to the vault, get that casket. Time is precious.
Dembe: I can go for you.
Red: Only my print opens the locks.
Dembe: How do you suggest we get you behind enemy lines?
Red: I donāt know. If they want me dead, maybe we should just give them what they want.
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[ Artemivsk, Ukraine ] [ Indistinct conversations in foreign language ]
[ Dembe leads a horse through a crowded street. The horse is drawing a cart with a body covered in a blanket. They arrive at a tall wooden gate ] [ Knock on door ] [ Horse snorts ]
[ The gate opens ]
Vasyl: Bring him around back.
[ Once inside, Red pushes back the blanket and sits up ]
Red: Good Lord, that was rejuvenating. I slept like a vampire.
Vasyl: Raymond.
Red: [ Laughs ] Good to see you, Vasyl. [ Hug ] Oh. You look well. Are these your guys?
Vasyl: Yes. They know only of the job but not who the job is for.
Red: Well, letās be quick about it. Thereās a mobās worth of separatists who want my head on a stick.
[ They go to a vault which Red enters with his fingerprint. Inside, there are crates with artwork. He also opens a safe with his print. Inside is a small velvet bag and inside that, a golden rectangular hinged box ]
Red: Look at that.
Vasyl: What is it?
Red: Itās one of six. They descend in size from largest to smallest, each one fitting inside another.
Vasyl: Like Russian dolls.
Red: Same idea, but the Matryoshkas didnāt appear until the late 1800s. This is Byzantine, 12th century, found in Turkey. Simply put, they werenāt even supposed to exist, not at that time, not in that part of the world. Once joined with its five partners, this little box will be more valuable than all the treasure in this vault and more.
[ Suddenly, Vasyl runs toward the door ]
Dembe: Raymond.
[ Vasyl slams the door shut but Dembe shoves it open ]
[ Dembe points his gun. Vasyl raises his hands ]
Dembe: Not another step.
Red: Anything you care to share?
Vasyl: Oksana. They took her. They threatened to kill her if I didnātā
Red: When were they called?
Vasyl: Soon after you arrived.
Red: So theyāre almost here.
Vasyl: Raymond, Iām sorry. I didnātā
Red: Do they know?
Vasyl: They know nothing. Theyāre here to get you out like we planned. But, Raymond, the rebelsā
Red: Dembe, letās move.
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[ Shouting in Russian ] [ The separatists search for Red, but heās gone, riding on a horse alongside Dembe ]
[ Speaking Russian ]
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[ Cynthia Malletās shop ]
Cynthia: Look what the cat dragged in.
Reddington: Iāve missed you, Cynthia.
Cynthia: [ Double kisses ] Mwah. Mwah. Ah, Dembe.
Dembe: Cynthia.
Red: In anticipation of a sale, I need you to appraise an item. Shouldnāt take more than a moment.
Cynthia: This canāt be what Iā I had heard rumors, and I never dared believe them.
[ She brings a tray and magnifying glass ]
Cynthia: Here, here, here. Oh.
Red: Iām in a bit of a rush, my love. What do you think itās worth?
[ She looks up at Red ]
Cynthia: About as much as a politicianās word. Itās a fake.
Red: No, thatās impossible.
Cynthia: The etchings were made with modern tools. This is no more authentic than the Cardiff Giant.
Red: [ To Dembe ] Were there any signs of a break-in at the vault, anything missing?
Dembe: No, nothing.
Red: Whatever thief is responsible for this mustāve forged and replaced the caskets before we ever got our hands on them. We stole a bunch of counterfeits. [ Laughing ] Oh, my God. This is unbelievable.
[ Chuckling ]
Cynthia: Youāre taking this better than I mightāve expected.
Red: The others are gonna show up at our meeting and have no idea the entire thing is a hoax.
A big, fat bungle. Six marks, six cons. [ Seriously ] Oh, my goodness. Cynthia, thank you for your expertise. I am terribly embarrassed.
Cynthia: Better luck next time.
Red: You said it. Cheerio.
Cynthia: Ta-ta.
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[ Outside the shop ]
Red: You know, it occurs to me, if we can find the counterfeiter who created this, we might be able to recover the entire set of original nesting caskets for ourselves.
Dembe: And make a flagrant profit.
Red: [ Laughs ] Thatās the spirit. Lemons to lemonade, Dembe. Lemons to lemonade.
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[ Aram is in bed with Elodie Radcliffe, his risk-loving girlfriend whose husband is in a coma ]
Elodie: You brought down the President of the United States.
Aram: I wouldnāt say that exactly.
Elodie: You found out he was gonna kill the First Lady, stopped him from doing it, and then he resigned.
Aram: Well, when you put it that wayā
Elodie: So you do that and deal with people who weaponize beetles?
Aram: Okay, um, what we do is full service ā And classified.
Elodie: And the beetles eat their victims from the inside out?
Aram: Why do you wanna know all this?
Elodie: Who comes up with all the nicknames? General Shiro. The Pharmacist. The Apothecary.
[ Laughs ]
Aram: Okay, all right, now youāre actually scaring me.
Elodie: What can I say? I love a bad boy.
[ Kiss ]
[ ā”ļøMonitor alarm beepingā”ļø ]
[ Elodie jumps up and grabs for her clothes ]
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[ Elodie runs down the stairs. Charles Radcliffeās nurse is doing CPR ]
Nurse: Heās gone into A-Fib. Call 911.
[ Cell phone dialing ]
Elodie: Hello? Yes. My husbandās having a heart attack.
[ Aram slowly comes down the stairs ]
Elodie: My name? Mrs. Elodie Radcliffe.
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[ Liz sits in her office, embroidering. Ressler comes in ]
Ressler: Hey.
Liz: Hey.
Ressler: I owe you an apology.
Liz: Ohh, boy. Whatād you do this time?
Ressler: I killed your mother. I didnāt shoot her, but sheās dead because of me.
Liz: Resslerā
Ressler: I went looking for her after you asked me not to andā
Liz: Ressler. She isnāt dead.
Ressler: But youā I mean, youā You told Cooper that Reddington saw her gunned down on the street.
Liz: She staged that for Reddingtonās benefit.
Ressler: [ Exhales ] So Reddington would tell everyone sheās dead and the dogs would be called off.
Liz: But theyāre gonna come back unless she finds another way to protect herself. And until she does, we canāt tell anyone sheās alive.
Ressler: Did Reddington admit that it was her?
Liz: Not to me, and I donāt want to admit it to him. He must know itās what Iām thinking.
Ressler: So play dumb. I mean, ask if it was her, heāll say no, and then itās done.
Liz: [ Sighing ] I donāt know.
Ressler: Whatās the munchkin dancing in?
Liz: Sleeping Beauty. Sheās a lilac fairy.
Ressler: Impressive. I was in the chorus.
Liz: You danced? In tights?
[ Ressler nods ]
Liz: Well, thatās an image Iāll never be able to forget.
Ressler: Youāre welcome.
[ Lizās cell phone vibrating ]
Ressler: [ Leaving ] Play dumb. Smart move.
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[ Red is in his plane ]
Liz: [ Answers phone ] Hi.
Red: What do you know about antique nesting caskets?
Liz: Can I ask you a question?
Red: Some years ago, five colleagues and I acquired a complete set.
Liz: Was the woman from Paris my mother?
Red: A kindly woman comes into your life and takes an interest in you and your child. Itās only natural for you to make that wish.
Liz: Was it her?
Red: I know you donāt want it to be true, Elizabeth, but your mother is gone.
Liz: Tell me about the caskets.
Red: Mine is a forgery.
Liz: The casket you stole had already been stolen?
Red: The irony is rich. As is the forger. If they fooled me, theyāve fooled others.
Liz: So you want us to find whoeverās responsible so you can get your casket back.
Red: Forged or stolen art and antiquities represent up to 10% of an art market valued at over $50 billion. Thatās $5 billion. And, yes, I have a stake in your finding this forger, but if theyāre as good as I believe them to be, Iām giving you the tip of an enormous iceberg.
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[ The Post Office. Liz brief the task force ]
Liz: Reddington actually underestimated the problem here. It turns out that up to 20% of the art-and-antiquities market is made up of forgeries. Thatās almost $10 billion worth of counterfeits being passed off as real to governments, museums, and individuals.
Agent Alina Park: $10 billionās a lot of fakes. Can it be that easy to do? These are great pieces of art.
Aram: Forgers donāt have to be great artists, just great engineers.
Cooper: What do you mean?
Aram: No matter how good a forger is, heās basically copying, right? And there are technical ways of doing that, like camera obscura.
āā
[ Victoria Fenberg copies a painting using a camera obscura method ]
āā
Aram: By using mirrors, you can project an image onto a canvas, and if you project that image in small sections, you can essentially do a paint-by-numbers masterpiece.
āā
[ Door opens. A young black man, Richard Vitaris, enters ]
Richard Vitaris: Hey, Victoria, you here? Itās time.
āā
Liz: Reddington and his pals lifted the caskets from the Olympian Gallery.
Agent Park: So heās an art thief now.
Liz: He thinks that if the person weāre looking for was able to forge one piece of art there, he forged others.
Ressler: Yeah, but thereās thousands of pieces in the museum. Where would we start?
Liz: With a self-portrait by Judith Leyster. He thinks itās a fake.
Cooper: Contact the museum and see if heās right. But before you do, Agent Ressler told me youāve been hiding something from us.
Liz: He did?
Cooper: Yes, something very important. Agnes is in Sleeping Beauty.
Aram: Wait, Agnes is in Sleeping Beauty?
Liz: Thatās what he, uhā He told you about Agnesā ballet.
Park: And how great he looks in tights.
Ressler: What can I say? Itās a gift.
Cooper: We want tickets.
Liz: All right.
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[ An office in a glass-sided office building ] [ Knock on door ] [ Victoria Fenberg enters ]
Saul Bittman: Ah, Victoria, itās been too long.
Victoria: You screwed me, Saul, and I want to know why.
āā
[ Richard Vitaris pushes a janitorās cart into the boiler room of the building ]
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Ressler: We had the Olympian Gallery test the Leyster. Reddingtonās right. It is a forgery.
Liz: Using a spectrometer, they were able to detect trace amounts of a synthetic pigment that was invented centuries after Leyster died.
Cooper: Did they test the painting when it was donated to the museum?
Liz: Yes, and the painting was everything it should be.
āā
[ Richard releases steam from pipes in the boiler room ]
āā
Cooper: So when they hung the portrait, it was the original, and now itās not. Any idea how they pulled that off?
āā
Victoria: The trust is separate from the company.
Saul: But the company funds it, and now the funds are needed elsewhere.
Victoria: To pay for the lawsuits to defend the indefensible.
Saul: Your father doesnāt see it that way.
Victoria: My father doesnāt see it at all.
[ š Alarm dinging š ]
Automated voice: Smoke level zero.
Saul: I donāt know whatās going on, but protocol is we should evacuate.
Automated voice: š Please exit the building immediately š
Victoria: Iām not going anywhere until I get the answers Iām looking for.
Saul: Uh, itās probably a false alarm. You sit tight. Iāll go check it out.
Automated voice: š Smoke level zero. š Please exit the building immediately š
[ Once Saul leaves, Victoria heads out in the opposite direction ]
āā
Ressler: Curator says that a year after they acquired the painting, they had a gas-line explosion in the parking structure. Took out their security system for the afternoon.
Liz: As far as we can tell, thatās the only time they were blind.
Cooper: Did you pull the feeds?
Liz: From before and after. Park is reviewing them now.
āā
[ The buildingās control room ]
Man: Yeah, shut down the elevators just in case.
[ š Alarm continues dinging š ]
[ Victoria hurries to a room with an art collection, including a FabergƩ egg. The display has a key pad lock. She enters the numbers ] [ Beeping ] [ She replaces the egg with one in her purse ]
Automated voice: š Please exit the building immediately š
Biltman: Victoria? What are you doing?
Victoria: I was looking for the bathroom. I mustāve got turned around.
Bittman: Well, the boiler overheated. Looks worse than it is, but we need to evacuate.
Automated voice: š Please exit the building immediately š
Biltman: I hope this doesnāt damage any of the collection.
Victoria: Yes, that would be a real shame.
Bittman: [ Coughs ]
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[ A restaurant ] [ Indistinct conversations ]
Head Waiter (Joseph): Mr. Thornberry, your guest is waiting at your usual table.
Croft Thornberry: My guest? I donāt have a guest.
[ Red waves ]
Head Waiter: Your wifeās ex-husband.
Thornberry: My wife doesnāt have an ex.
Head Waiter: He said youād say that. He said youād want to be discreet.
[ Thornberry walks to the table ]
Red: Croft, I canāt tell you how happy I am to see you.
Thornberry: Who the hell are you? And why are you telling the wait staff my wife has an ex-husband?
Red: No, no, no. No, Iā You understand. I had to tell them something. The truth wouldāve been so uncomfortable for everyone involved. Ex-husband just popped into my head. I donāt even know if you have a wife. Do you?
Thornberry: ā
Red: Donāt answer that. Doesnāt matter. Please, have a seat. I took the liberty of ordering us a few martinis and the seafood tower. Youāre not allergic, are you?
Thornberry: Iām calling security. [ To the Head Waited ] Joseph.
Red: I thought we could crack some claws, get to know each other, see what hobbies we have in common, like, I donāt know, say, art theft.
[ Red takes a drink from his martini ]
Red: Mm. Donāt fret.
[ Thornberry sits ]
Red: Iām not the police, and Iām certainly not here to arrest you for buying a painting you [ whispers ] knew was stolen.
Thornberry: Then why are you here?
Red: To tell you that I happen to know that the FBI are aware of the painting, aware of the theft [ Looks around ] of the painting, aware of the sale of the stolen painting. But not yet your whole part in it.
Thornberry: Thatās it? Thatās why youāre here?
Red: Yes. Well, and for a name ā [ Whispers ] Of the person who sold you the painting.
Thornberry: And if I refuse?
Red: Well, that would just leave you and the FBI ā and the painting. Very awkward. [ Chuckles ] Very awkward.
[ The Head Waiter rolls over the seafood tower ]
Head Waiter: Gentlemen, your seafood tower.
Red: Ah, magnificent. Perhaps a couple of bibs for the gentleman and me.
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[ The Post Office ] [ Aram is chewing on the end of a pencil when Liz enters ]
Liz: You know, there are easier ways to get more fiber in your diet.
Aram: Sorry? Oh, uh, sorry. Um, Elodieās husband had a heart attack this morning and was rushed to the hospital. Iām waiting to hear how heās doing.
Liz: Iām so sorry. Thatās terrible.
Aram: Can I ask you something? Um, do you think itās natural when someone is suffering as much as he is to want them to find some peace?
Liz: Yes, of course.
Aram: Do you think itās natural to want that when youāre in the next room sleeping with his wife?
Liz: Aram, weāve talked about this. Itās a very complicated situation.
Aram: Not for Elodie. If youād seen her this morning, youād know that all she wants is whatās best for him.
[ Ressler enters ]
Ressler: We got the footage from the museum.
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Agent Park: This is from the day the gas line erupted. Check it out.
[ They look at the surveillance video ]
Park: Once the explosion occurs, all the surveillance goes black.
Cooper: Giving the forger time to swap out the painting.
Liz: Yeah, we already knew that.
Park: Yes, but what we didnāt know was that there was a car parked right next to the gas line, and we hadnāt seen this. The gas-line rupture didnāt cause the car to explode. It was the car exploding that ruptured the gas line.
Cooper: Can we see it again?
Park: Mm-hmm.
Cooper: The license plateās blocked out by the column.
Aram: Thereās no video after the explosion, but, uh, what about before? How far back can you go?
Cooper: There. Run the plate.
[ A man appears on the video ]
Ressler: Hello. Now, who might you be?
Aram: Okay, the carās registered to a Richard Vitaris. Iāve got a Maryland address.
Cooper: Park, Ressler, roll out. Keen, Aram, see what you can dig up on Vitaris. I wanna know if heās the trigger man, the forger, or both.
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[ Baltimore MD ] [ Victoria works on her painting, using the camera obscura ]
[ Knock on door, door opens ] [ Richard Vitaris enters ] [ A man is in the next room ]
Richard: Sorry to interrupt. Eagletonās appraisal is done.
[ Victoria and Richard go to greet the man, Anthony Eagleton. Heās holding the stolen FabergĆ© egg ]
Anthony Eagleton: Itās exquisite. Wouldnāt be surprised if Anastasia herself looked upon it in wonder.
Victoria: So we have a deal, then.
Eagleton: If we can agree upon a price. Iāll give you 900.
Richard: 900? Its market price is 3.2.
Eagleton: On the open market. But on the black market, Faberge eggs sell at a discount.
Victoria: Iāll take 1.2.
Richard: Victoria.
Eagleton: I shouldnāt. But for you, my dear, Iāll happily overpay.
[ He picks up his cell ] [ Cell phone chimes ] [ The money comes across ]
Richard: The moneyās been wired.
Eagleton: Until next time.
[ Eagleton leaves ]
āā
Richard: Itās not enough.
Victoria: I know.
Richard: I talked to Kathryn. Sheās buried in discovery. Sheās had to hire three more lawyers, and thatās before sheās taken a single deposition. The other sideās pouring millions into its defense.
Victoria: And when my next piece is finished, weāll be able to pour millions into ours, too. I promise.
Richard: Iām sorry. Youāre the last person I should be complaining to.
Victoria: You have nothing to apologize for, not after what youāve lost.
Richard: You know how much I appreciate what youāre doing.
Victoria: I havenāt done enough. Not yet. But thatās about to change.
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[ A raid takes place at Richardās apartment ]
[ Men shouting indistinctly ]
Ressler: Richard Vitaris. FBI.
[ No one is home ] [ Ressler and Agent Park check out the apartment ]
Park: Mechanical drawings for gas and electrical at the Olympian Gallery.
Ressler: I got a ferry schedule for an island off the coast of Maine here. Architectural drawings for an estate there.
Park: So he hits museums and private residences.
Ressler: And law firms, apparently.
[ Cell phone rings ]
Ressler: We have proof itās Vitaris.
Liz: And we have motive.
Aram: Vitaris is the lead plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against a pharmaceutical company owned by the Fenbergs. Now, if the lawsuit is to be believed, then they are as bad as the Sacklers š [See Note] ā Misleading the public and the FDA on how addictive their drugs are.
Park: Did Vitaris get addicted?
Ressler: No, his son did.
Aram: Thatās right. After a football injury, he was prescribed painkillers, got hooked, overdosed a year later.
Cooper: What does any of this have to do with the forgeries?
Liz: The counterfeit Leyster? The real one belonged to the Fenbergs. So did Redās nesting casket.
Cooper: We need to warn the Fenberg family they and their art are being targeted. Keen, Aram, get to the Fenberg estate. Ressler, Park, bring in the evidence so that we can start digging into Vitarisā plans, past and future.
Ā
[ The Fenberg estate ]
Mr Fenberg: First, Vitaris slanders me in court, and now youāre telling me heās stealing from me, as well?
Aram: It appears so, yes.
Mr Fenberg: All right, Iāve asked my family to be here for this, because they are every bit the victims that I am. This is my wife, Sue, and our daughter, Victoria.
Mrs Sue Fenberg: Have you identified the thief?
Aram: Weāve identified a suspect, but weāre not sure what role he played or if he was acting alone. We believe that he may have an accomplice.
Victoria: Have you identified him?
Liz: Not yet, but we will.
Victoria: You sound awfully confident.
Liz: Yes, we are.
Mrs Fenberg: Well, please, come in. Tell us what you know.
Ā
[ A living room ]
Victoria: Counterfeits? Thatās impossible.
Mr Fenberg: Victoria manages our family collection. She knows her work.
Victoria: Every piece in our collection has been authenticated.
Liz: The work you acquired was real. The forgeries came later.
Aram: The Leyster was taken three months after you loaned it to the Olympian Gallery.
Mrs Fenberg: But you can get it back. The suspect must know where it is.
Liz: He may, but we donāt know where he is.
Mrs Fenberg: Well, how hard can he be to find? Heās the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit against us.
Mr Fenberg: Youād think trying to destroy us in court would be enough.
Victoria: He lost his son. I donāt think he thinks anything would be enough.
Mr Fenberg: So youāre saying weāre responsible for his loss? Youāre taking his side?
Mrs Fenberg: No, of course sheās not taking his side. Are you, sweetheart?
Victoria: Iām just saying itās a stressful time, for all of us. Tell us how we can help.
Aram: One thing you can do is to go through your entire collection. Now, I know that is a logistical nightmare, but if you have pieces on loan, get them back, and authenticate everything.
Mr Fenberg: All right, youāve told us what we can do. Now Iām gonna tell you what youāre gonna do ā Find Vitaris. And if he has an accomplice, find him. And when you do, despite my daughterās misplaced sympathies, Iām gonna use my considerable power to make sure they pay for what theyāve done.
Ā
[ Richard is looking at a painting in Victoriaās studio when she walks in ]
Victoria: You got my text?
Richard: Thisā Itās brilliant. Itāll be our biggest take yet.
Victoria: The FBI came to our home. To warn us about you. They searched your property. Itāsā Itās over.
Richard: Okay, hang on. We need that money to keep the suit going.
Victoria: Theyāre looking for you. Youāre going to be arrested. Forget about the case. At this moment, art handlers are starting the process of re-authenticating my familyās entire collection. Theyāre crating it up. Theyāre putting it in secure storage. Thereās no way we can make the swap now.
Richard: Hear me out. What if there was a distraction at the house? Could you substitute the painting then?
Ā
[ The Post Office ] [ Aramās cell phone vibrating ]
Aram: Elodie, hey. Uh, whatād the doctor say?
Elodie: [ On phone ] Looks like another blood clot was blocking one of the arteries in his lungs. Heā He went without oxygen for a while, but, umā But heāll live, soā
Aram: So thatās good, right?
Elodie: I donāt know. What do you think?
Aram: What do you mean, what do I think?
Elodie: Itās okay. If it makes you feel any better, I was thinking it, too.
Aram: Thinking what exactly?
Elodie: That it would be better if, you know, the outcome were different, if Charles had just passed.
Aram: No, that is not what I was thinking at all. Why wouldā Why would you say that?
Elodie: Aram, if weāre gonna be togetherā
[ Cooper beckons to Aram ]
Aram: Um, look, Iām so sorry. Iām gonna have to call you back. I have, uh, work.
[ Cell phone beeps ]
Ā
[ In the main room (war room) of the Post Office ]
Cooper: Anything specific?
Agent Park: I just canāt tell whatās been completed and whatās planned. There are no dates on any of this.
Liz: Bank statements show Vitaris is deep in debt. Heās gonna need to make another score soon.
Ressler: But whatās the next target?
Aram: Wait. I have a lead on that. Okay, so, looking at the previous forgeries from the Fenberg collection, it seems that the counterfeiter specializes in replicating pieces from the 19th century or before. Now, according to the Fenbergsā portfolio, the only painting left in their collection that matches that description is a Hoogstraten worth $24 million.
Liz: That painting is hanging in their house. We just saw it.
Park: So, based on everything we know, itās safe to assume that Vitaris is going after the Hoogstraten.
Cooper: If Vitaris knows weāre after him, he may get desperate and change his MO, skip the paintings and go after Mr. Fenberg himself.
Ā
[ Mr Anthony Eagleton, a middle-aged man, is taking a bath when Red and Dembe enter. Dembe is carrying an electric waffle-maker ]
Red: Mr. Eagleton. Iām sorry to interrupt your ablutions. Looks delightful. But Iām in a bit of a rush and have some pressing questions that canāt wait for your contemplative soak.
Eagleton: Who the hell are you? What are you doing in my bathroom?
[ Red holds out the crafted casket ]
Red: Who did you buy this from?
Eagleton: Iāve never seen that thing before in my life.
Red: Maybe the bubbles have addled your brain.
Eagleton: What are you doing here? Getā You canāt be here. Get out of my bathroom.
Red: I love a good bath as much as the next man, but does it ever get into your head the idea that youāre simply soaking in your own juices like a brining turkey?
Eagleton: What?
Red: I digress. Doesnāt matter. Please, take a closer look at the piece. I know youāve been fencing items on behalf of a counterfeiter who steals art from the Fenberg family. Well, that same counterfeiter is responsible for this breathtaking forgery. And while I admire the accomplishment, I prefer the original. So the counterfeiterās name ā I need it now.
Eagleton: That would be suicide.
Red: How apt.
[ Dembe puts the waffle-maker on the floor and goes to plug it in ]
Red: Just give us a second. Itās the damn GFCIs.
[ Red picks up the waffle-maker ]
Red: This might tickle a little.
Eagleton: Okay, okay. Wait, wait, wait, wait.
Red: Might even make your toes curl. Or not. What the hell do I know? Letās find out.
[ Red holds the waffle-maker over the bath water ]
Eagleton: No, no, no. No, please. Stop.
Red: The name.
Eagleton: Fenberg. Victoria Fenberg.
Red: You see? There it is. That wasnāt so hard, was it? Antony, let me ask you a question. Are you hungry? Iām hungry. Dembe, you hungry?
[ Red hands Dembe the waffle-maker and picks up a towel, holding it out to Eagleton ]
Red: Okay. Hop out. Letās get cooking.
Ā
[ Men speaking indistinctly ] [ Mr Fenberg looks out the window as the family art collection is being crated and loaded to be inspected for forgeries. Victoria enters carrying a briefcase ]
Mr Fenberg: This is a violation.
Victoria: Itās only a precaution.
Mr Fenberg: A precaution? Do you see whatās happening? This Vitaris character is dismantling our lives.
Victoria: You sound surprised.
Mr Fenberg: Donāt start, Victoria.
Victoria: His son died. Heās angry.
Mr Fenberg: Then he can settle it legally in a courtroom, but this isā
Victoria: He canāt afford that.
Mr Fenberg: How is it that you think any of this is our fault? We did not kill that boy.
[ Cell phone rings ]
Mr Fenberg: And attacking us isnāt going to bring him back.
Victoria: Hello?
[ Liz is in a vehicle with Ressler ]
Liz: Ms. Fenberg, this is Agent Keen. Iām calling to let you know weāre sending units to your house.
Victoria: Why? Whatās wrong?
Liz: Itās Vitaris. Heās still at large, but items in his home indicate that he might be targeting you and your family directly.
Victoria: Targeting us? Do you mean physically?
Liz: Weāre not sure. Thatās why weāre sending units. All we know is Vitaris is angry and has a vendetta, and we donāt want him to act on it. Weāll be there soon. Weāll talk more when weāre on-site.
Mr Fenberg: So I assume theyāre here to protect us.
Victoria: Iāll get Mother.
Ā
[ Victoria calls Richard Vitaris from the kitchen ]
Victoria: We have to call it off. They know.
Richard: Who knows?
Victoria: The FBI. Theyāre on their way here. They think youāre targeting the family.
Richard: We have a plan.
Victoria: Did you hear me? The police are here. Thereās no way we can get near theā
[ Victoriaās mother enters the kitchen ]
Mrs Sue Fenberg: The police? Whatās going on?
Victoria: Itās okay. Theyāre here for our protection.
Mrs Fenberg: Whereās your father? Uh, downstairs.
Victoria: Go, go. Iām right behind you.
[ Mrs Fenberg leaves ]
Victoria: [ To Richard on the phone ] You have to get out while you can.
Richard: We can do this.
Victoria: No.
Richard: Victoria, listen, that painting, itās our future.
Victoria: You have to go.
Richard: The plan remains the same ā Get the painting, sell the painting, fund the lawsuit.
Victoria: We canāt.
Richard: We can. You have the forgery?
Victoria: Yes. If they see you, theyāll arrest you.
Richard: Exactly.
Victoria: Richard, youāll go to jail.
Richard: How else do you think this ends? With me going home to my son? Heās gone. The only way to make sure others donāt die like him is to see this through, and to do that, youāre gonna make the swap.
Victoria: Okay.
Richard: And, Victoria, thank you.
[ Cell phone beeps ]
Ā
[ Police radio chatter ] [ Ressler and Liz arrive at the Fenberg estate ] [ Richard is among the workers moving boxes ]
Ressler: Agents Ressler, Keen, FBI.
Officer Sharp: Trooper Sharp. Mr. Fenberg says his wife and daughter are on the property along with four house staff members.
Ressler: Show me.
[ Ressler leaves with Mr Fenberg ]
Liz: Help me gather these movers. The Art Crimes Unit is en route. I donāt want any of this leaving here without them cataloguing it.
[ Victoria enters a room where one painting remains uncrated. Workmen are looking out the window ]
Victoria: Hey, whatās going on? Why isnāt this crated?
Mover: Uh, you got police everywhere. Is everything okay?
Victoria: No, everything is not okay. The police want everyone downstairs. Right now. Go.
[ They leave. Victoria looks out of the window at the workers and agents below ]
[ Battle Tapesā ā« āStarts Right Hereā (feat. Valerie Broussard) plays ]
[ ⬠Go to Full Lyrics ] or [ ⪠Tap square below to play ⪠]
āŖ You heard what they say āŖ
āŖ That I got lightning in my fingers āŖ
āŖ I got gold inside my veins āŖ
āŖ Believe what you see āŖ
[ Richard, dressed as a worker, jumps out of a truck and bumps into Liz ]
Richard: Sorry, maāam. Sorry. Sorry.
[ Richard tries time walk away, but Liz recognizes him and follows ]
Liz: Hey. You. Vitaris.
[ Richard runs ]
Liz: Ressler!
[ Richard grabs a gun from an officerās holster ]
Officer: Gun, gun!
Liz: Hey! Stop!
āŖ Get ready for the revolution āŖ
[ Inside Victoria takes down the painting from the wall ]
āā
Liz: Stop! Stop.
Ressler: Put the gun down!
āŖ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh āŖ
āŖ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh āŖ
[ Victoria exchanges the painting in the frame for the forged on in her briefcase ]
āā
Richard: Iām not here to hurt anyone.
Liz: Then put the gun down, Richard.
āŖ āCause it starts right here, starts right here āŖ
āŖ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh āŖ
Liz: Itās over. Youāre under arrest.
Richard: Why donāt you go arrest the real criminals, the white-collar monsters inside that mansion who profited from the death of my son?
Ressler: Weāll talk about it after you put the gun down.
āŖ Aināt scared to fight alone āŖ
Richard: My sonās gone. They murdered him.
Liz: We know, Richard. Weāre sorry. But hurting someone else isnāt gonna bring him back. Put the gun down.
āŖ Get behind me āŖ
āŖ No more lying in the shadows āŖ
āŖ No more hiding underneath āŖ
āŖ Tell the world get ready for the revolution
[ Victoria looks out of the window at Richard. He sees her. An officer behind Richard takes the gun from him ]
[ Victoria joins her father on the front steps ]
Mr Fenberg: You okay?
Victoria: No.
[ Ressler comes over to them ]
Mr Fenberg: Do you know what he was after?
āŖ Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh āŖ
[ They run upstairs where a framed painting still hangs on the wall ]
Mr Fenberg: Thank God itās still here.
Ressler: [ On comms ] Keen, send the Art Theft Unit to the living room. We got it.
Mr Fenberg: [ To Ressler ] Donāt you dare let that painting out of your sight.
āŖ Starts right here āŖ
[ Victoria watches as Richard gets into a police car. Her father comes up behind her ]
[ Car doors shut ]
Mr Fenberg: I know you donāt understand, darling, but itās better this way. It had to end this way.
Victoria: I know, Daddy.
[ Loudly: ]
āŖ Get ready for the revolution āŖ
āŖ Revolution āŖ
[ Victoria grabs her briefcase and walks away ]
Ā
[ The Post Office ]
Cooper: He stole the paintings to finance his lawsuit against the Fenbergs.
Park: Says he did the forgeries, too. Insists he worked alone.
Ressler: He gave himself up as a distraction so someone else could swap out the Hoogstraten.
Cooper: If someone else did. Do we have confirmation yet?
Ressler: The paintingās being authenticated now, but if he has a partner, we have no idea who it is. We searched everyone at the house ā Wait staff, security, every box, bag, briefcase, or purse. Nothing.
Park: We offered him a deal. He wouldnāt budge. Guyās a true believer.
Cooper: Send him to lockup. When he sees what his future holds if he doesnāt cooperate, maybe heāll talk, tell us who heās protecting.
Ā
[ Victoria Fenberg walks down a stairs with Antony Eagleton ]
Victoria: Prepare to be amazed. I am bringing you a masterpiece. But this time, no discounts.
[ They enter the kitchen. Red and Dembe are there ]
Red: Ms. Fenberg, please join us. A waffle? Theyāre buckwheat.
Victoria: What is this?
Eagleton: Justā Just hear him out.
Red: Please, sit.
[ They sit across a table from Red ]
Red: Have a waffle. I love a juicy family drama. Greed, resentment, betrayal, secrets. [ Chuckling ] And your secret? Oh, my. Using the spoils of your fatherās avarice to bankroll his destruction. The tragedy is positively Grecian.
Victoria: Who are you?
Red: A man on a quest.
[ Red places the small metal casket on the table ]
Red: Does this look familiar?
Eagleton: He knows, Vicky. Justā Just tell him.
Victoria: Itās from my familyās collection.
Red: Yes, but itās part of a larger set. I came to acquire this one some years ago. Imagine my surprise when I learned it was a counterfeit. But tell me, did you make forgeries of all six boxes?
Victoria: No, just the one. It was my first test. I wanted to see if I could fool people.
Red: Well, you certainly fooled me.
Dembe: Would you like syrup, berries, or both?
Victoria: Iām sorry. Iām totally confused.
Red: Both, then.
Victoria: Noā No, not aboutā What is it that you want?
Red: The original casket. I want the name of the person who has it. Mr. Eagleton says thatās the one item of yours he didnāt fence.
Victoria: Thatās all you want? A name?
Red: Your father is a drug dealer. The fact that he deals a legal drug is no consolation to the addicts heās created. Heās the villain in this story. Your efforts to bring him to justice, however convoluted, are, as Iāve said, admirably Oedipal. Not only do I have no intention of stopping you, I believe we may find occasion to work together in the future. I am nothing if not an avid patron of the arts. So, please, a name.
Ā
[ An elegant home ] [ A stylishly dressed older woman leads Red into a living room with a large glass cabinet ]
Art Collector: Vicky tells me that youāre a collector.
Red: Oh, just a dabbler. I told Victoria I didnāt want to impose.
Art Collector: Oh, nonsense. I love showing people my collection.
[ Inside the cabinet, Red sees the original casket ]
Red: Oh. Iām sorry, but before we start, might I trouble you for a glass of water?
Art Collector: Of course. No trouble at all.
Red: Thank you so much.
[ She leaves to get the water ] [ Red peers inside the glass cabinet ]
āā
[ Several minutes later, the Art Collector returns with the water. Red is looking at the casket inside the case ]
Art Collector: You have a good eye. Thatās my prized possession.
Red: Is it? Who wouldāve guessed?
[ Red lifts the glass of water ]
Red: Cheers.
Ā
[ The Post Office ] [ Victoria talks with Richard Vitaris in an interrogation room ]
Victoria: You confessed?
Richard: They donāt know about you.
Victoria: Then Iāll tell them.
Richard: You canāt do that.
Victoria: I canāt let you take responsibility for what Iāve done.
Richard: What youāve done is give me hope, and you need to keep doing that. My only purpose in life is avenging Justinās death. The only chance of that happening is if you continue what we started.
Ā
[ Buzzer, door opens ] [ Victoria leaves the interrogation room ]
Ressler: Visiting the enemy?
Victoria: Yes. I want to know where the art is that he stole.
Ressler: And you thought heād tell you?
Victoria: I donāt know what I thought. I just know I wanted to look the person who did this to my family in the eye.
Ressler: The authentication came back on the Hoogstraten. Itās a forgery.
Victoria: Ah, I canāt say Iām surprised. But you were there. You must have some idea who took it, who his accomplice is.
Ressler: I didnāt at first. I mean, we inspected everybody, bags and boxes, cars, trucks. No one we checked couldāve possibly taken it. And then it hit me. See, there were three people we didnāt check ā Your father, your mother, and you.
Victoria: You think we stole from ourselves?
Ressler: No, no. I think you did. The distraction he caused, I think it was for you.
Victoria: Donāt be ridiculous.
Ressler: To give you a moment alone in the living room to put the real painting inside your briefcase, the only one we didnāt check.
Victoria: I think weāre through, Detective.
Ressler: Itās Special Agent. And, yeah, weāre through. For now. But you wanna look the person who did this to your family in the eye, you and I both know all you gotta do is look in the mirror. Iāll be in touch.
Ā
[ Liz is riding with Red in the back of his Mercedes. Red admires the small casket ]
Red: It really is exquisite in its way.
Liz: Itās exquisite because of what you know about it, where it came from, who made it. Itās intellectual. I like art thatās more emotional.
Red: The forger certainly played on our emotions.
Liz: The forger ā The one you found and wonāt turn over to us.
Red: The counterfeits are nearly flawless, which is enough, because our desire for them to be real obscures any imperfection, much like your desire for the woman in Paris to be your mother blinded you to the fact that she wasnāt.
Liz: It wasnāt just my desire.
Red: So she told you she was Katarina?
Liz: She did. And itās difficult for me to believe she wasnāt.
Red: I was convinced my casket was authentic. It was nearly impossible for me to believe it wasnāt. But it was a fake. And she was, too.
Liz: Is that why you gave us this case? To show me how easy it is to mistake something thatās fake for something thatās real?
Red: No, I gave you the case so I could get my hands on the casket and sell it for an obscene amount of money.
Liz: You got it just so you could sell it?
Red: Yes. And the buyer is apparently very impatient. Is there somewhere we can drop you? Weāre wheels-up in one hour.
Liz: Uh, you can just let me out here at the end of the block. Uh, wherever youāre going, Iād like you to be back in timeā
Red: Weāll be back for the ballet.
Liz: Harold told you?
Red: Harold thought Iād like to know. He was right.
Ā
[ Elodie Radcliffe opens her front door. Aram is there ]
Aram: Youāre amazing.
Elodie: O-kay. [ Chuckles ] So are you.
Aram: Well, not really. But ā you think so. We think so about each other, which is, wellā Amazing.
Elodie: Great. Now that thatās settled, do you want to come in?
Aram: No. I want to break up.
[ Elodie looks stunned ]
Aram: I donāt want to. I mean, itās the last thing I want. Itās just, we should. That is, we have to.
Elodie: I donāt understand.
Aram: What do we do when weāre together? We trespass. Weā We crash weddings. We break the law.
Elodie: We made love in the Gemini capsule John Glenn took into space.
Aram: Exactly, yes, which I still canāt believe how small it was, right? Scratch that. Thatās off-topic. Okay. My point, such that I have one, is this. Making love in a rocket ship is one thing, oneā One amazing thing, but, Elodie, hoping your husband dies, there is nothing amazing about that. How is he?
Elodie: Heās on a ventilator.
Aram: I am so sorry.
Elodie: So am I.
[ They exchange heartfelt looks ]
Aram: This is a really bad idea.
āā
[ Aram and Elodie are in bed. Elodie has fallen asleep, her arms around Aram ]
[ Aram stares into space ]
[ Monitor beeping, ventilator hissing ]
Ā
āāā 7:11 End Victoria Fenberg
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For S7 Episode 7:11 Victoria Fenberg šÆ EW recap ¤ š
Photo Gallery ¤ š¹ Music Videos ¤ š Script link: https://wp.me/pDKwi-alQ [ āyou are hereā ]
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Trivia: ABCNews: Who are the Sacklers, the family behind maker of OxyContin? http://abcn.ws/36Oj50f
// 9/19/2019; A closer look at the Sackler family, the clan behind the maker of OxyContin
For a family with its name on a wing of one of the worldās most famous museums and a school at a prestigious university, members of the Sackler clan have done a remarkable job of vanishing from public life.
The family owns OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma, which filed for bankruptcy this week as part of an effort to settle some 2,600 lawsuits accusing it of helping spark the national opioid crisis that has killed more than 400,000 people in the U.S. in the last two decades.
Any settlement deal is likely to take a cut of their future income, and some states have sought to go after the Sacklersā wealth, much of which has moved through a complex chain of companies and trusts in offshore tax havens. In a filing Wednesday, Purdue asked a bankruptcy court to halt all litigation against family members as well as the company.
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š“ Episode Songs
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š¹ ā Check Tunefind for any additional music for this episode
ā« Starts Right Here
By Battle Tapes (feat. Valerie Broussard)āŖ You heard what they say
that I got lightning in my fingers
I got gold in my veins
believe what you say
I got fire in my eyes
the desire in my sights
tell the world ā
get ready for the revolution ā
ācause it
starts right here!Chorus:
āŖ ooh, ooh
ācause it starts right here
starts right here
[x2]āŖ Itās getting violent
head first into the battle
Iām an army of my own
get behind me ā
no more lying in the shadows,
no more hidinā underneath
tell the world ā
get ready for the revolution ā
ācause it starts right here,
starts right here!Chorus:
āŖ ooh, ooh
ācause it starts right here
starts right here!
[x2][bridge]
āŖ Get ready for the revolution, revolution [x4]
[bridge]Chorus:
āŖ ooh, ooh
ācause it starts right here
starts right here!
[x4]āŖ yeah, Iām ready for the revolution
š¹ Return to where this song occurs in script above
Lyrics: c/o Angie Allen (via comment at ā YouTube link)
YouTube: https://youtu.be/2RY9JSiPnAo
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š“ General
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ā Script 7:11 Victoria Fenberg https://wp.me/pDKwi-alQ Status: īFINALī[at last!] @NBCBlacklist #TheBlacklist My site: BlacklistDCd.com https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1274094556506738688?s=20/photo/1
ā Easy-Search Scripts updated thru Episode 7:11 Victoria Fenberg https://wp.me/pDKwi-9MZ#fenberg #TheBlacklist @NBCBlacklist https://twitter.com/BlacklistDCd/status/1274095442691796995?s=20/photo/1
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