01x03 - Breaking Brig

Episode transcripts for the TV show "NCIS: New Orleans". Aired: September 2014 to present.*
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A spin-off of "NCIS" that is set in the Crescent City.
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01x03 - Breaking Brig

Post by bunniefuu »

♪ Well, there ain't pleasing you ♪
♪ Whoo-hoo-hoo ♪
♪ Whoa-oa-oa ♪
♪ Angel flirting with the dark side ♪
♪ The devil's floating in the glass ♪

(talking, squealing)

Guys, chill.

I can't concentrate.

Totes buzz k*ll...

Selfie time!

Hash-tag NOLA-bound!

Holy crap!

(tires squealing)

(screaming)

Oh, my God...

(grunting)

(grunts)

Um... guys... Uh...

♪ NCIS:New Orleans 1x03 ♪
Breaking Brig Original Air Date on October 7, 2014

♪ Boom, boom, boom, boom ♪
♪ Bang, bang, bang, bang ♪
♪ Boom, boom, boom, boom ♪
♪ How, how, how, how ♪
♪ Hey, hey ♪
♪ You gotta come on. ♪

Punch buggy!

Hey!

No punch backs.

No what?

Come on, everybody knows Punch Buggy.

Right, King?

We called it Slug Bug.

Me and my brother, we used to play for hours in the car.

By the time we got to the lake, our skin were all kind of black and blue.

What about you, Brody?

What'd your family do on car trips?

In our family, road trips meant getting dumped off at boarding school every September.

(whistles)

That's kind of...

...depressing, I know.

Moving on.

(phone ringing)

Brody: Linda.

Mm-hmm.

(phone continues ringing)

Are... are you gonna... answer?

Just gonna let it go to voicemail.

She wants me to... go see another couples therapist with her.

Well, that's great y'all keep working on things.

Guessing you're not here to settle up your poker tab, Agent Pride.

Considering you robbed me blind last time?

Not a chance, Lieutenant.

You were in over your head.

Just like, uh, Agent Lasalle was the last time we went drinking.

I had a cold.

Hi, I'm Addie Watkins.

SECO out of Naval Air Station, New Orleans.

Special Agent Meredith Brody.

Catch us up, Addie.

Armored transport bus carrying four Naval Brig detainees from New Orleans to Charleston crossed over the double yellow until point of impact.

Rolled once... landed here.

Marshals are still sifting through the wreckage, but, so far, we have three dead, three unaccounted for.

We're waiting for the prison manifest to confirm names.

Any witnesses?

The girls were making a pilgrimage to New Orleans when the bus nearly hit them head-on.

Bourbon Street or bust.

Bust, clearly.

Addie: They pull over to see if they could help, that's when the prisoners jacked their car and took off.

Because of the time-sensitive nature of this case, Lieutenant Watkins is here to expedite anything we may need from the Navy.

Y'all just let me know what you need, I'll get it done.

Excuse me.

Okay, one of you go over there and take statements from the young ladies, please.

All you, Lasalle.

Guess I'll take for the team.

Sweet Loretta... what is the story, morning glory?

Story is three dead.

Guards were sh*t at close range.

Prisoners COD is unclear.

Holster empty.

Yeah, it's likely they were k*lled with one of their own weapons.

So that means, likely, that our escapees are armed.

All right.

Do a thorough sweep, top to bottom, before it gets hauled off site.

Prison manifest, hot off the press.

According to this, our three escapees are Lieutenant Ted Nash, Seaman Recruit Lavon Dalton... and Matt S. O'Feeney.

Brody: Why are you so focused on that last name? Who's Matt S. O'Feeney?

He's an anagram, is who he is. Matt S. O'Feeney Rearrange the letters... "enemy of state."

Glad to see you're still doing the morning crosswords.

Every day, Gibbs. Keeps me spry.

Vance: So SECNAV just confirmed: Matt S. O'Feeney is none other than Dmitry Babakov.

The arms dealer?

That's one of his many talents.

Smuggling, extortion, human trafficking, espionage.

Gibbs and his been tracking Babakov in conjunction with the CIA and Homeland Security for a year.

Three weeks ago, Babakov was captured in a top-secret raid off the west coast of Africa.

Vance: We placed Babakov aboard the U.S.S. Birmingham for transport to New Orleans.

We then put him on an armored bus headed to Navconbrig Charleston, to await sentencing.

Unfortunately, that trip got cut a little short.

We'll make it right for you, brother.

Vance: Pride...

Babakov's capture of offered a rare opportunity for the DOD to gain insight into a vast Bring him in alive.

Alright.

We got three escaped convicts, on the loose.

All certified Navy-issue.

Agent Gibbs is coordinating with interagency to get us the most up to date information on our fugitives.

Addie, here, is gonna tell us what we know.

OK.

Top priority is Dimitry Babakov, international concierge to the scum of the earth.

Highly educated and well-connected, Babakov brokers black market goods to the highest bidder.

We're talking weapons, narcotics, information... even people.

Real Renaissance man, huh?

One whose clientele includes some of this country's biggest national security threats.

Hard to believe someone could pull off that escape on their own.

Guessing he got help from one of his fellow jumpsuits.

Which brings us to...

Seaman Recruit Lavon Dalton.

Dalton enlisted J-O-M after a handful of brushes with the law.

It seems the Navy didn't straighten Lavon out much.

After several earlier infractions, Dalton was most recently thrown into the Birmingham brig for striking a commanding officer.

Addie: Last, but not least...

Lieutenant Ted Nash.

Two weeks ago, Nash was a hard-working naval architect in the shipyards at Pascagoula.

Then he took liberty here in New Orleans, got into an ugly bar fight, landed himself in jail.

Nash's service record is pristine.

The fight was his first offense.

He was looking at a fraction of the time the others were.

And yet he ran. Why?

We got a BOLO out on our stolen convertible, checkpoints at every county and parish line, eyes and ears on all our fugitives' contacts.

Chris and Brody... head over to Navy Landing, canvass the Birmingham, find out everything you can on Babakov and Dalton.

Meantime, Addie... speak to your contacts at the shipyard.

Get a run-down on Nash.

Go. Learn.

But most of all, be smart.

Death toll is three.

Let's not make it climb any higher.

Garland: Prisoner A was brought aboard the vessel six days ago, after capture in a classified land raid.

Prisoner A is Babakov?

It's common protocol not to address prisoners by name for security clearance reasons.

Each morning, the prisoner was escorted to interrogation by two Masters-at-Arms.

Afterwards, he was escorted back to this cell where he was served his meal before retiring to bed for the night.

Just got a single bed here, so... no pillow talk? Chit-chat?

Brody: We just want to make sure Babakov didn't have any contact with any of his neighbors.

I assure you, he did not.

The prisoner was kept in isolation from all other detainees.

Lasalle: Houston, we have a problem.

Lasalle?

Where did you go?

So much for full isolation.

Who was held in this cell?

Prisoner B--

Seaman Recruit Lavon Dalton.

It's a cozy joint to plot an escape.

Afternoon Loretta.

Hey.

Sebastian.

Tell me something interesting.

Sebastian: Well, the human body produces 25 million new cells each second.

Okay.

That was interesting.

Now, how about somethin?

Oh, well, you didn't say that.

It's important to be linguistically specific.

Wade: The driver and the guard were sh*t point blank.

Ballistics confirms that the b*ll*ts came from the guard's M11.

The prisoner, on the other hand, was strangled.

Not an easy feat, given his size.

Babakov doesn't weigh more than 140 soaking wet.

Nash isn't much bigger.

Which means the only escapee with the physical capacity to strangle the victim would be Lavon "The Levee" Dalton.

I gave Dalton a pro wrestling moniker.

On account of his size, which is ample.

So you think Dalton k*lled the prisoner?

Hmm, it's possible, but I'll know more when I complete my virtual crash reconstruction, using evidence culled from the bus wreckage.

Why they pay you the big bu Well, not exactly Daddy w*r-bucks.

Then again, better than a barista at Star... bucks.

Just take the compliment, kid.

Yeah, sure.

Brody: You understand Lieutenant Nash is on the loose.

I can't believe Ted escaped.

So, your fiancé hasn't contacted you?

Ex... fiancé.

Ted and I broke it off last month.

I'm sorry to hear that.

Me, too.

He was everything I was looking for.

Like, you know how people say the best way to test a relationship is to travel together?

First year we were together, we took this crazy trip to Europe.

Six countries in three weeks.

Sounds amazing.

Best time of my life.

Until we got back.

Guess it was the being at home part we weren't great at.

How so?

Ted had major trust issues.

I think it came from being an army brat-- his family moved around a ton until his dad got permanently stationed in Hong Kong, when he was 13.

If Ted tries to reach out, we need to know, okay?

I hope he does 'cause... I'd really like to tell him I'm still here for him.

No matter what.

Focus, kids. 24 hours in, we still got close to nothing.

Sebastian: Welcome, cinephiles. Please take your seats.

Show's about to begin.

No popcorn?

No thank you.

So, I've simulated the accident down to pre-impact speeds, post-impact movement, as well as taking into account the velocity-impact time model of the driver's crash avoidance maneuver.

Make sense?

Good. So... here is our armored bus driving northbound on the road.

Drifts into the next lane, narrowly missing a convertible full of buxom beauties.

Brody: Bikinis?

An interesting touch.

Well, an artist must allow for indulgences.

I can appreciate that.

So... adding into the equation the notion that Babakov and Dalton had the ability to communicate in the brig as well as the physical evidence that Dalton had the power necessary to strangle the prisoner, we recreate the moments before the crash.

Dalton begins strangling the prisoner, intentionally drawing the attention of the guard, who is lured from his secure environ, oh, only to be ambushed Babakov, who is stealthily lying in wait.

And spoiler alert: we know how that story ends.

Babakov and Dalton (cell phone rings) were partners in crime.

Pride.

Got it. Thanks.

BOLO on the convertible we put out-- got a hit in Pearl River.

Let's go.

Good work, Sebastian. Thanks, Sebastian.

Local farmhand heard sh*ts fired.

They k*lled the trooper.

We set up a perimeter, but so far, there's no movement inside.

Pride: NCIS!

Federal agents!

(thud nearby)

(boy crying quietly)

Hey, kiddo.

It's all right, kiddo.

Okay, stand down, everyone.

You're safe.

It's okay.

How you doing, Remy?

Got a hold of your mom at the diner.

She's on her way.

She's gonna be mad.

She told me not to come here.

She said it was dangerous.

Probably right.

I was setting up my platoons when I heard shouting.

Then sh*ts.

Pride: I imagine that was scary.

I hid in the cupboard.

But the voices, they got closer.

How many were there?

Two.

One of them sounded a little funny.

Funny... funny how?

Pride: Like a, like an accent?

Like, someone from a different country?

Can you remember anything you heard?

Look, I... I get it, kiddo.

I hate talking about scary stuff, too.

Yeah, no. It's true.

Even big guys like me get spooked.

But the thing is, once I do talk about it, I always end up feeling better.

They kept talking about a grave.

A grave?

Pride: Are-are you sure?

They were arguing about how long it would take to make it.

Remy... those men... they're never gonna hurt you.

And-and what you just told me... is gonna help me make sure that they never hurt anyone again.

You're one of us now, kiddo.

Woman: Oh, Remy!

I was worried sick about you.

Are you okay?

Mm-hmm.

You sure?

Oh.

Come on, baby, let's go, let's go.

Let's go, baby.

We looked, we haven't found anything resembling a grave.

Didn't show much respect for the dead when it came to that trooper.

It could've been a code.

Maybe a misinterpreted foreign language?

Let's run a forensic language test, cross-referenced with any languages Babakov speaks.

All right.

What's the latest?

Kid places two men in the cabin.

One with an accent.

That puts Babakov there.

Yeah, and based on what we know, it's likely Dalton was with him.

That leaves Nash in the wind.

Trooper man got a sh*t off.

Which means one of them might be injured.

We should sweep the cabin for blood.

And put every hospital within three parishes on alert.

Trooper's time of death puts our fugitives less than four miles away, if traveling on foot.

And if one of them's injured, that's not helping with their ground speed.

Well, the nearest paved road's five miles north.

We cut that off, we can tighten the net.

Any other way out?

(train horn blows in distance)

Canal, lake?

Train?

Get me schedules of every train that comes through here-- origin, destination... surveillance footage from every station.

You got it.

Lavon Dalton's sister in Mobile just got a text saying "On my way."

Kicker is the phone number belongs to the dead prison guard.

Unless she was talking to a ghost, our boy Lavon's headed back to 'Bama.

I bid you good night, Loretta.

Ah, good, you're still here.

Uh, actually, I'm not here.

I'm just on my way out for a date.

Oh.

Well, not a date, per Se.

More like a casual drink.

But I've run the numbers and found that one libation does have a strong statistical possibility of evolving into a full-fledged meal.

Which then, of course, would constitute an actual date.

Well, I'm glad to see you're not over-thinking it, dear.

So how can I help?

Great.

Our prisoner was strangled to death.

Mm-hmm.

He also has significant large intestine damage... yet has no history of prior stomach issues.

Then... there's our poor state trooper here.

b*llet to the heart, and yet he, too, has significant large intestine damage.

How do two men with no prior history of stomach issues, k*lled in completely different manners, end up with the same symptoms?

I'm gathering that this is not a rhetorical question?

One that could wait until after my drink that could possibly turn into a date?

Sebastian... have you ever considered the statistical possibilities of playing hard to get?

Ah... you smell that?

Burnt rubber and... a little skunk?

Fresh-cut Bermuda and long-leaf pine.

Now, that's home.

Don't you think you're romanticizing this "sweet home Alabama" thing, just a little?

No, not romanticizing.

Appreciating.

Which is something you're clearly not good at doing.

What's that supposed to mean?

Well, it means you gotta stay somewhere long enough to get hooked.

I mean, the past seven years you've moved, what, four times?

Well, Cedar Rapids was too small.

And St. Paul was freezing.

And Chicago was completely congested.

Did you ever consider you got your criteria wrong, Brody?

Home isn't the place, it's the people.

(phone chimes)

Got another hit.

The eyes we put on Lavon's sister report she's on the move and headed toward Mobile Memorial Hospital.

If Babakov or Dalton are injured, they might be heading for help.

Let's go give them a real special welcome.

(engine revving)
NCIS, hands in the air.

Hey! Hands up.

Welcome home, Lavon.

Where is he?

Where's Babakov?

Who the hell is Babakov?

You and Babakov were in adjoining cells.

You had a direct line of communication through the vent.

He was a voice with an accent.

Far as I knew, just another thug on the block.

Who you planned an escape with.

Like I told you, I wasn't planning anything.

I was sleeping when it went down.

Woke up when I felt the bus go over the side of the road.

When it stopped, I looked around, I clocked the guard's cuff keys laying there.

I saw an opportunity, and I took it-- simple as that.

Nothing's as simple as that.

I ain't stupid.

No matter how you slice it, I'm going away for a long time.

Even if I did know something about ol' Baba Ganoush, I got no incentive to tell you about it.

Look at you working the system.

This the... the translation thingamajig?

Yep. In addition to English, Babakov's fluent in French, Russian, and Farsi.

Running translation software on all three to see if any phrases with "grave" have a phonetic equivalent.

So far-- zip.

What about the other one?

Lasalle: Security footage from regional train stations.

Facial recognition program will alert us if it gets a match on one of our fugitives.

Hmm!

You don't worry much about, uh, cholesterol, do you?

Try not to worry about anything, Lasalle.

You only live once, you might as well enjoy it while you got it.

Don't mind if I do.

Pride: How's it going over there?

Your boy, here, is a multi-tasking machine.

Followed up on that hunch about Lavon being at the hospital without any significant injuries.

Mother's sick.

Cancer, stage four.

(computer beeping)

Facial recognition in the surveillance got a hit.

Pride: That's Babakov.

And look who his traveling companion is.

Nash looked up at the camera.

Now, why would he do that?

'Cause he's sending a message.

Look at what he drew on his right arm.

Can you magnify the sh*t?

Pride: What is that?

Marryat symbol, used by the merchant navies in the 1800s to signal danger or distress.

Babakov's bringing Nash along as a human shield.

Care if I join you?

Be my guest.

You and I got a lot in common.

Is that so?

Both 'Bama boys, born and raised.

And if you're anything like me, you got a lot of love for your hometown.

It's pretty ballsy of you to go back there.

Must've had a real good reason.

Granny's red velvet cake.

Your mama's real sick, isn't she?

How long she have?

Doctor thought she'd be gone a month ago.

Still hanging on.

Raised five kids on her own.

Be real nice to give her peace of mind before she goes.

Let her know you're okay.

You'd... you'd let me do that?

What can you tell us about Babakov and Nash?

What you got?

Lasalle: Lavon's got nothing on Babakov using Nash as a human shield.

But he did say, when Babakov was in the Brig, he bragged about having a "get out of jail free card" Babakov was gonna cut a deal.

Question is, what information was he going to give up?

Pull the notes from Babakov's interrogation.

Redacted.

Text me if we get any hits on Babakov or Nash.

Lasalle: Where you going, King?

Find out why we're being kept in the dark.

Pride: Thank you.

Hell of a place to meet for coffee.

But... secure.

Help me out, Gibbs.

Need to know what was in Babakov's interrogation file.

Heavily redacted.

That's why I'm on a ship in the middle of the Atlantic.

Anything that's there, I need to know.

You got to read me in on it.

Contact of mine at Langley went to the director.

Got it declassified.

Read it, burn it.

Couldn't have just led with that?

(laughs)

(grunting, yelling on video)

Brody: Let me guess: Beach Babes Five?

Sorry, wrong genre entirely.

Go.

(yells)

Other than a slight over-arching of the wrist, this Sonu Strike is a perfect example of classic Dim Mak warfare.

Dim-huh?

Dim Mak.

It's an ancient Chinese combat technique in which pressure points are used to disable or disorient the opponent.

The Sonu Strike, in particular, causes changes in blood flow that can damage the large intestine.

Like the injuries the Prisoner and State Trooper suffered.

Yeah. Historically, Dim Mak was taught to warriors of smaller stature, so that they could take down larger opponents before going in for the k*ll.

Which proves, by the way, size doesn't always matter.

Speak for yourself, buddy.

He's talking about Babakov.

The fact that he'd be able to pull it off on his own.

Well, if he'd been trained in Dim Mak, he would.

But I doubt that's the case.

Why's that?

Because Dim Mak is only taught by trained Chinese masters.

Takes years to perfect.

According to his profile, Babakov didn't spend significant time in Asia.

But, we know someone else who did--

Nash's ex-fiancée said that he lived in Hong Kong as a kid.

Which means Nash could've helped orchestrate the bus crash.

Which would rule out his being held under duress.

Then what was Nash's connection to Babakov?

Pride: I think I can help out with that.

According to the UN-redacted transcripts I just read, Babakov's "get out of jail" card was the identity of a U.S. intelligence leak.

A mole.

Someone who was passing classified m*llitary secrets to Babakov, so he could sell them on the black market.

Sebastian: Nash's job as a naval architect would've given him access to ship schematics, weapons systems, radar technology, the works.

Kind of intelligence that could seriously compromise national security.

No wonder Nash and his ex-fiancée had trust issues.

He's been playing everyone for years.

Right down to the human shield act.

So, Babakov gets captured by U.S. forces.

Nash gets wind of it, knows that he's Babakov's most valuable bargaining chip, decides that he, Nash, will get to Babakov before his cover's blown.

(phone beeping)

Hotline got a tip placing Babakov and Nash exiting a train station near Moss Point, Mississippi.

Are we almost there?

Close.

(coughing)

I'm going to ask you one more time: Did you tell them my name?

How many more times must we go through this?

As many as it takes for me to believe you.

I dangled the carrot by telling them there was a mole.

I never told them who.

Eh? You satisfied?

Yes.

All right.

(chuckles)

Friends?

Always.

(g*nsh*t)

And then there was one.

The bus crash was days ago.

Why would Nash wait until now to k*ll Babakov?

Needed time to make his hometown hero act.

Or he needed to get some information from him.

Either way, song remains the same.

We got a fugitive on the loose.

And he's a low-down dirty rat.

Nash grew up in Hong Kong.

Which means he knows Cantonese.

So, if the kid did hear the word "grave"...

Cross-reference Cantonese with word match.

How long will that take?

Considering there's over a 100,000 characters?

I wouldn't hold your breath.

Hang on a sec...

Babakov's body was found in Moss Point, Mississippi, right?

Let me check something.

Here we go.

Brody, see if you can triangulate his position.

They weren't speaking Chinese or talking about burying dead bodies.

Where do ships go to die?

Grave dock.

Just so happens there's an abandoned one a stone's throaway from Moss Point.

Nash must be meeting a boat there to make his escape.

With Babakov dead, Nash is our only link to the intelligence breech.

The country's national security depends on finding out what information he passed along.

Nash is headed to the Gulf.

We've alerted the Coast Guard.

Plan is to cut him off before he gets to the grave dock.

Don't want to risk losing him in international waters.

The target has changed, but the mandate remains the same: capture Nash and bring him in... alive.

(siren wails, then stops)

Pride: What do we know?

Officer: We've cut off all other paths.

He's gotta come this way.

County's been called, helo's inbound.

Parker, grab a couple guys--

There he is.

Officer: Murray, down! Mike, get down!

Pride: Cover the perimeter. We're going in.

NCIS! Stop right there!

Oh, it's on like "Donkey Kong."

(very quietly): Come on... where are you, you dirty little rat?

Show yourself...

Pride! Brody! Heads up!

Nash!

I apply pressure, she's dead before she hits the floor.

You turn around, let me walk out of here, and she's all yours.

I can't do that.

But if you let her go, I promise you you'll get out of here in bracelets instead of a body bag.

What's it going to be?

Let her go, Nash.

Wrong answer.

You all right?

Yep.

Yes, you are.

Vance: You disobeyed a direct order, Agent Pride, which puts us in the dark.

We've no clue what Intel Nash compromised or who Babakov was selling it to.

Needless to say, there's fallout.

Both the CIA and SECNAV want an internal investigation.

With all due respect, Director, you want me to make a choice between a traitor and one of my own, I'll take the sh*t every time.

You want my badge, you know where to find me.

That a wrap, Lieutenant?

Yeah, I'm done with all my paperwork, so it's back to base.

There's no security without the SECO officer.

You're not even out the door yet, and I'm feeling less secure.

(laughs)

Can I ask you a question?

sh**t.

Why haven't we...

Dated?

You know, that's funny, 'cause I was just asking myself the same thing.

Come up with anything?

'Cause in about two seconds, we'd be broken up, crossing paths at work, and that would just be...

Uncomfortable.

Bingo.

Guess we got something to look forward to.

Yes, we do.

See you around.

Not if I see you first.

Good night, Lieutenant.

Good night, Agent Brody.

You ready?

Always.

Good. 'Cause we have a promise to keep.

(monitors beeping quietly, steadily)

I'm here, Mama.

Right by your side.

Gonna be okay.

What do you say we take a detour on the way back?

Get some Royal Reds and play pool at Stillwaters?

Actually, I had something else in mind.

Pride: Linda, it's me.

Uh... (splutters)

Remember that pillbox we lived in right after we got married?

The one with the leaky fridge, and we used to go up on the rooftop and... well... (laughs) well, you-you know.

Uh...

I just... I-I'm willing to go see that therapist.

Just name the time and place and... and, uh, you know, whatever it takes to... work this out.

So no more time slips by.

So... call me.

(Brody and Lasalle conversing indistinctly)

Brody: I mean, how often do you actually cook?

Lasalle: I'm not a... I'm not a boil expert, but...

Brody: You're not an anything expert.

Lasalle: How many of these shrimp boils do you think I've done?

Brody: I know what I'm talking about.

Ohfamous last words.

St. Aug Marching 100 coming over for dinner?

What on earth are you two doing?

Don't look at me. It's Brody's idea.

She made me drive straight back here-- didn't even let me stop in Gulf Shores to take a look at the view.

After the couple days that we had, can't blame a girl for wanting to get home.

What's in the pot?

Shrimp boil.

Thought I'd cook you something.

You know, for, uh... for saving my butt today.

Just part of the job.

Maybe so.

Still felt good to know you had my back.

So, anyway, like I was saying, the cayenne goes in before the shrimp.

No, no, no, no, no!

Here...

It says online to add the seasonings last.

Online? Oh, hell, no...

It's a foodie blog.

Oh, for... No, n...

Both of you are wrong.

Foodie blog...

It all goes in at once.

All right?

How 'bout the two of you call a truce... enjoy each other's company for the evening?

Hey, now I'll drink to that.
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