03x08 - Moral Midgetry

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Wire". Aired: June 2002 to March 2008*
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A narcotics detective and homicide officer target drug traffickers.
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03x08 - Moral Midgetry

Post by bunniefuu »

Got that reddies, son. Two for one, two for one.

I got that Rasheed and Beno. Rasheed and Beno.

Put some ice on his nuts.

Tried and true, that sh*t always bring a n*gg*r back.

Where we gonna get ice from down here?

-Walk him to Bon Secours and leave him. -I got that Rasheed and Beno!

Two for one!

-Um, can you give me an eight ball? -Eight ball?

So, how you doing today?

No offense, but can you just get the eight ball?

-All right, all right. Just being social. -MAN: Got it right here, yo!

Thank you.

You hear Mack Man jewelers got took off last night?

Got all this sh*t in the row house. Down yonder.

Like a must-move situation. 15 on the dollar.

Y'all want some slamming ice, go inside and tell my man Rafik sent you.

MAN: Lighters, pipes, matches. Pipes, lighters.

You need 'em, I got 'em. Right here, pipes.

MAN 2: Reddies. Two for one.

MAN: Ask me if it's loaded, bitch!

MAN 2: Reddies, son, two for one.

-Anything up? -Just a good package.

Three OD's. Last one didn't look too good before the ambo came.

f*ck.

sh*t.

Hey, this guy's a cop.

There's more inside, Carv.

g*dd*mn! Can't you ever get a f*cking police around here when you need one?

When you walk through the garden You gotta watch your back Well, I beg your pardon Walk the straight and narrow track Walk the straight and narrow track If you walk with Jesus He's gonna save your soul You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole He got fire and the fury Fire and fury At his command Well, you don't have to worry Hold on to Jesus' hands Oh, we'll be safe from Satan When the thunder rolls Oh You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole

You gotta keep the devil Way down in the hole

Way down Way down in the hole

Okay, on that burner?

I called Trac, gave them the serial number.

Trac told me that they sent it to Northland, a purchasing corporation.

Northland tells me they sent it to their distribution center in Hagerstown.

Hagerstown tells me they sent it to Buddy's Mondo Mart at 1440 Propane Road, Falls Church, Virginia.

That's where it went out into the street.

What?

Did Buddy have them on display to the left or the right of the cash register?

How would I know that?

All right.

As for the numbers in the phone's speed dial, we got one local number.

One that tracks to Bodie's grandmother's house on West Baltimore Street, and six other numbers that are all assigned to Trac disposable cellphones.

And those phones were all purchased outside the city.

One each in Catonsville, Laurel, Bethesda, and stores in Virginia, at Springfield, Dumfries and Lakeside.

Everything's along I-95, from here to almost Richmond.

They're driving 200 miles every couple of weeks out of sheer caution.

It's beautiful.

-[CHUCKLES] Yeah. -What is?

Mm-hm. The discipline of it.

COLVIN: Did you think you would ever again see Mount and Fayette like this?

Those ain't touts you're hearing, brother.

-Those are birds chirping. -How?

I'll show you.

No whistles, no muscle, no flexing. You supposed to be all over that sh*t.

You said it's supposed to be like the Valley of Eden.

To serve and protect, m*therf*ckers.

-Poetic injustice. -I wanna file a report.

-Say what? -You heard me.

You want to complain that you were selling dr*gs and someone took your money?

f*ck, yes.

-Here. -Fredericksburg?

Going all that way to buy cellphones?

One here, two there. No wholesale purchases.

They've been dumping phones every two weeks or so and still they're worried about catching a wiretap.

Just 'cause you're paranoid doesn't mean someone's not out to get you, right?

It'd be nice to know who's buying all those cellphones.

MCNULTY: I'll drive.

[DEALERS CALLING OUT]

Yo, yo, yo, yo - you up, old man?

They do have a point though, right?

We tell them to come here without the g*ns, and then we don't provide protection.

It's like the stickup crews have these hoppers feeling like they live in a lamb pen.

They see one more g*n, Gandhi-world falls apart, this I guarantee.

-So what are you doing about it? -I sent a few of the vics over with Herc.

Let them play with an Ident-A-Kit, but you know how that goes.

Can I be honest? It's not just the wolves circling the corral.

We got 50, 60 kids on the inside been fight or flight since they popped out the chute and right now they're just hanging.

All these ex-runners, ex-lookouts.

That sh*t worries me as much as any carnivores out there.

If you want to neutralize a thr*at, give it a job.

-As? -Auxiliary cops.

Keep an eye out for the predators.

You got the dealers paying them to do nothing no-how anyway.

-k*ll two birds and all that. -Right.

Throw them some bikes, maybe police radios.

-We could do that. -I was being... You're serious?

What in God's name did you do here?

Hey, how you doing?

We're looking for a guy who came in 10, 11 days ago, dropped cash on a couple of disposable phones.

-Ten, 11 days ago? -Yeah.

-Black, most likely. -That really narrows it down.

How about we just check some of your security tapes?

From ten days ago?

Unless there's an incident, we reuse those videotapes every week.

-Every week? -It's Mondo Mart policy.

That went well.

-Yeah? -LANDSMAN: Brianna Barksdale called.

-Who? -D'Angelo Barksdale's mother.

-You get her number? -You got a pen?

410-718-9433.

-You got it? -All right.

-You gonna call her? -I don't know.

-It's all yours. -Thanks, Jay.

Check it out. Mondo Mart, Mondo Mart, Mondo Mart, Mondo Mart. We're f*cked.

Until we get here. BaBa Jani Food Mart, Dumfries, Virginia.

A hundred miles on the off chance this guy has a memory or a camera?

Do you really wanna go home early and disappoint Lester Freamon?

Who was that who rang?

Guess who's calling Homicide looking for me on D'Angelo Barksdale?

-His mama. -Yeah?

sh*t, I forgot I even tried to press that thing.

Now she's calling up asking questions. Waste of her time as it was mine.

Kind of like this road trip.

[ORGAN PLAYING GENTLY IN BACKGROUND]

He do look natural.

That m*therf*cker Mario.

We gonna have to get deep on this n*gg*r.

I mean, it feels like ain't sh*t changed except for a growing lightness in my wallet.

Where's my letter from the Preservation m*therf*ckers?

-My right-of-way agreement? My sign-offs? -Hold on.

Everything's right around the corner.

We got both the plumbing and the electrical inspectors on for tomorrow, Tuesday, the fire department's coming and that should do it.

You'll be on your way.

And by the way, congratulations.

You are now a minority contractor for light bulb supply to the Board of Education, City of Baltimore. [CHUCKLES]

What the f*ck I know about light bulbs?

Do you know how to put the words on a B&B letterhead?

Come on, man, relax, white guy's doing all the work.

You're just his beard for the Empowerment grant.

That's an extra five Gs a month for just laying in the cut.

See how it work?

I'm gonna bring you along, String, but it ain't gonna be an overnight thing.

We spend this year dealing with the city, the next doing business with the state.

However, year three... then we go for the gold, then we go federal.

Then we see the man with his hand on the faucet.

-What faucet? -The HUD faucet, the money faucet.

Look, I don't know why we got to wait three years for that sh*t.

-I'm ready to run now. -No. You're not.

I mean, forgive me but you still showing a little bit of that street corner mentality.

Bugging about every dime you spend, about the permits, about setting up a PAC, about dropping cash into re-election w*r chests, which, by the way, is how I get my gravy.

Look, it takes money to make money, otherwise, hell, every pauper'd be a king.

And I'm saying I'm ready to run now.

Three years.

Crawl, walk, and then run.

-No, man, nappy up there a little bit more. -Yeah, yeah.

And the eyes - he had little beany eyes.

What the f*ck is beany eyes?

-You know, little rat eyes. -Yeah, all right. Put a mole on there.

-He didn't have a mole. -He did, too.

You was too busy sh1tting yourself with that whistle to your dome

-to see the m*therf*cker. -sh*t, the f*ck I did.

-How do you know how to do this? -Man, how you don't know how to do this?

Make his ears stick out.

-Why? -Cos I told you to.

sh*t. Okay.

Give him light eyes.

-Why? -'Cause I f*cking told you to.

Okay, can you make them crossed?

[LAUGHTER]

This is f*cking cool. Check out these knuckleheads on the Make-A-Face.

Bring that down.

-COLVIN: I'm telling you... -f*ck this sh*t.

...that is not what this is about. I'm just trying to make my district liveable.

I write off a few blocks in a few places, but I save the rest.

You're like the blind man and the elephant.

It's bigger than what you got your hand on, you can't see it.

See what?

A great village of pain and you're the mayor.

Where's your drinking water?

Where's your toilets, your heat, your electricity?

Where's the needle truck, the condom distribution, the drug treatment intake?

Half these people are dying and the other half's gonna catch what's k*lling them.

Look, they ain't no worse off than when they was all over the map.

-Now they're just in one place, is all. -And that place is hell.

Look, I'm a police.

So I can lock a man up or I can move his ass off the corner.

Now, you want anything more than that, you're in the wrong shop.

MAN: Hey, yo, make her hair a little bit more straight.

Make it long. With bangs.

Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.

Now Chinese up them eyes, like Beyoncé.

-Get them cheekbones up a little bit. -No, she's looking like a pie tin with hair.

-Hang on. -Yeah, all right. Pillow those lips a little bit.

Yeah, hook me up with that.

You got one of these does asses?

-What? -Yeah, that's what's up.

Hey, guys.

How you doing? We're looking for a cash purchase in here.

Maybe a couple of Trac phones. Week or so back. Black guy.

Sure, that guy. Every two weeks for him.

Last time, eight phones. Almost $900.

That's a lot of Ring Dings, no?

-Ring Dings? -A joke.

[SPEAKS PUNJABI]

You got some kind of transaction record?

Seek and you shall find.

Hang on. Hang on...

$927.24.

-Can we have the tape for that day? -No tape. I rewind every day.

-Keep this? -Sure.

What the f*ck do we do now? Buy this guy a box of videotape?

Or camp out in this sh*thole for a week, hoping our boy runs the same route?

[COUNTRY MUSIC]

I just know I got to put my mind on something or I'm gonna slide back.

Need to be in control of myself, you know what I'm saying?

-Take command of your life. -Something.

-Cultivate some self-discipline. -Or whatever.

What if I told you that there's a certain liberation, not in command or in self-control, but in surrendering?

Well, that depends on who you surrendering to.

Oh, that.

All due respect, you can stow that patter right here and now.

Look, it ain't about me doing for me, I don't think.

Might need to be about more than that.

So you're bringing in an overall decline of 2% for the month but almost half of that's coming from an 8% drop in the Western District?

Major Colvin is himself willing to acknowledge the possibility of a statistical variation from the mean in his monthly stats.

Variation, huh?

If I look through the Western incident reports am I likely to find less crime or more incidents which have been downgraded or unfounded?

Because this kind of variation screams manipulation to me, and if I'm wrong, if indeed there is no manipulation, what has Major Colvin learned about police work that eludes the rest of your commanders?

Councilman, I assure you, these stats are not massaged. We don't do that.

I don't do that. And I won't allow my people to do that.

Our feeling is that it's genuinely an aberration.

And if it repeats itself next month, then it bears closer examination. Otherwise...

Moving on, then. How are we fixed for witness assistance?

Does the department have sufficient funds to ensure security for any endangered witnesses?

We have the resources that the city can afford, I'm sure.

I understand you can't criticize the mayor.

-Nor would I. -Nor would you.

So allow me to ask the question.

What is this city willing to pay for ordinary people to come down to the courthouse and perform the civic duty of bearing witness against gangsters and criminals?

What resources are commensurate with that kind of commitment?

You can play the good soldier if you want, but I want to go on the record in saying that this administration has passed the buck time and again and failed to protect citizens who demonstrate that kind of commitment and put their lives and livelihood at risk.

I would like to add that I feel as my colleague does.

This administration has failed this community.

Miserably. And we need to do something about this.

Come on.

Hey! Hey, hey, hey!

Take him, man, you got him.

Y'all are friends. You're like brothers.

You lose that, you lose every damn thing. Go on.

Kids messed up the good hoop.

Now they got one looks like the original peach basket... and they hanging onto it like a tit.

I don't know.

Maybe I should get up some kind of tournament.

You play basketball?

Never was much for balls and sticks. I was always about my hands.

-Boxer? -Yeah.

Boxing?

I know a place where some of the kids go but...

-it ain't near close enough to here. -I wouldn't mind taking a look at it.

Get a mental picture at least.

What the hell's going on here?

Police pushed all the action down here.

The deacon thinks maybe some people should come in here and take over the situation.

-Are you that people? -One of them, maybe.

-Roman, man. -Dennis.

You should lay back on this one. Let me go talk to Buford Pusser in there alone.

Excuse me?

And what it shows people is that I know my business.

That I will hold people accountable based on the facts.

-It's about what's right. -There you go again.

What?

Do you think politics is only about winning the argument?

That whoever has the right fact at the right moment wins?

Clinton had facts. Kennedy had facts. Yeah, but Reagan?

He couldn't summon a fact to save his life.

It's not just facts, it's how you use them.

When you get hold of a fact you go smart-ass and start b*ating on people.

-That's... -Clinton and Reagan... when they got up to speak, they gave everyone in the room comfort and confidence.

You liked those guys. You were happy to think that they even liked you.

You're saying I'm not likable?

Jen?

When you're at home talking with me, not the Council, not the cameras, you're great.

When you tell me what's really important to you, I believe.

You're smart, and you're ambitious, and you've got a sharper tongue than most.

You can hold court, tell a good story, and you can win the argument if you want.

All of that shows, Tommy.

And at a City Council meeting, it shows well.

But if you want to be mayor, or senator, or governor one day...

Show 'em something more.

Baltimore?

Went up there to the Harbor with my wife for our anniversary.

-Charged us $12 for two beers. -sh*t, that's the least of it.

The whole damn town's going to hell in a handbasket.

-And guess who's running the show? -Who?

Who do you think? The department, City Hall, the courts.

sh*t, the courts?

You know what they call it when judge, jury and perp all go to the same family barbecue?

-Catch and release. -No sh*t.

God have mercy on any poor white boy going to trial.

Then everybody's got their ass in the air talking about justice.

Can't wait to throw away the key.

I mean, they're not all so bad.

Actually, there's a lot of good ones.

I'm on the radio if you need me.

My wife, Carol-Ann.

-Some very good ones. -Is there anything specific I can help you with while you're down here?

Or is this just a courtesy call?

You know, you should meet my partner. You'd like her.

Can't go through the front on this boy.

So I'm thinking we're gonna have to creep around the back.

Get Devonne on it.

Oh, I got this for that other problem.

Huh?

-Who this? -Remember Fatface Rick, right?

Been going to meetings with String. That's his cousin, Trina.

-You mean Trina with the big old ass. -Yeah, you on it.

That's her work number. You know where she working at nowadays?

She over at the Department of Social Services.

So you think Omar getting a check?

No, not now. But, I mean, once upon a time before some fool gave little Omar Little a shotgun, cocksucker was somebody's child, right?

So somewhere down in them records is one or two names of Omar's people, you feel me?

You sure you want us on Mario and Omar both?

I mean, Omar ain't come back on us since we got his bitch.

-So maybe... -Look, I'm home, Charles. I'm home.

-What's up? -Taking care of business, String?

Me too, man. Me, too.

-East Side wasn't ready for us? -That's what I'm saying.

Yeah, I know all about BaBa Jani and his 24-hour turnover.

It's a real pain in my ass, too.

He's got a problem with the school kids.

Every afternoon they go in there, crowd him at the counter, boost all the car and g*n magazines.

That surveillance tape's so grainy it's like watching buffalo in a snowstorm.

But my insurance man, Bob, I got him to turn this camera here right on BaBa's parking lot.

Now, any time I have a real problem, I just come to Bob and pull his tape.

I can get a copy of that for you in the morning.

Your partner there.

Bit of an assh*le.

-For real? -Yeah.

COACH: Good, good, good! That's it! Work!

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Go to your right.

One, two, three!

Yeah, right hand up.

You know what this is? It's moral midgetry.

Turn the f*cking world upside down and treat these braindead corner yos like princelings.

You see how clean the corners are?

Street traffic is half what it was.

f*ck that. It's wrong, and it's wrong.

Because the other way we were doing so well.

Colvin's answer is what? Ride shotgun for hoppers? Drown them in cash money?

Colvin? He's always been good police.

Then he's got to know what a heartbreaker it is to suit up for this sh*t.

He's got to suit up too, man.

Somebody should dime the brass about this sh*t.

-Or the Sun papers. -Let me ask you something.

Anybody here get jammed up and not have Colvin go to the wall for you?

The man is trying something. It may be hard to stomach, but it's working.

After 30 years, he's earned the right to some elbow room.

What the f*ck. This thing is on borrowed time, anyhow.

And when we do decide to jump on Hamsterdams they're just gonna go back to their regular corners, right?

If we ever jump out on it. I don't know that we're gonna.

All I'm saying is let's give the guy the same backup he's always given us.

That's all I'm saying.

I swear, as soon as the sun comes up, we grab that damn tape and go.

This place makes me want to cry.

I spent half my marriage in rooms like this.

How could you do it?

What?

-Go nonstop hound on your ex like that. -It's easy.

Just tell her I was on the road working an extradition.

Lots of extraditions.

Brought back something like 500 fugitives in a three-year period, I think.

-That's not what I meant. -Right.

So, you're back in the house?

Ate some sh*t and she took me back, yeah.

I ain't sure I even want to be back, though.

Extraditions, huh?

-Cheryl would see right through that sh*t. -No, it's easy.

You keep your cell off, make sure she can reach your partner.

Partner tells her, "Kima's in court" or whatever.

Partner calls you, gives you the heads up, you call her back later like, "Hey, what's up?"

Ain't even got a quarter box for the Magic Fingers.

Maybe you don't need a quarter box for that.

For what?

Magic fingers.

You know me.

TV: ...with a singer-songwriter who's burnin' up the charts with a hit that he'll perform for us tonight...

[JAMES BROWN SONG]

-You hustling? -Educating.

Are you charging for it or tuition-free?

Tuition will come back to him tenfold in acquired wisdom.

Besides, nothing in the world's more expensive than "free."

That's all she wrote.

Let's double it.

I don't like taking money from a churchgoing man.

-Triple it. -Your break, Deacon.

We need to talk some more about Hamsterdam.

Look, I never said it was pretty.

Pretty doesn't even come close to the problem.

We need to talk.

I've got a COMSTAT meeting.

I'll drop by later on.

-So we good with the permits? -Yeah, this week, so far, so good.

-All right. -Look at you.

-Who? -Chunky Coates.

-Who's that? -You don't know Chunky?

He's got the properties down the block and over on Paca Street.

He used to have an office so small you had to leave the room to change your mind.

Then two years ago he started running with your man, Clay Davis.

Look at you now, you big sassy bitch.

-That better? -Mm-hm.

Hey, Special Agent Fitzhugh, if that is in fact your real name.

FBI in on this?

I am only loved for my toys. Lester called and I delivered.

You got the tape?

Date of 10/10/04.15:04 hours, 30 seconds... by the register tape.

Mama Barksdale?

D'Angelo's mother.

She cold-called McNulty about her son on the jailhouse hanging.

She's calling us on that weak sh*t?

MCNULTY: Is this, er, Brianna? Right.

You called about your son. I'm returning that message.

PREZ: Uh-oh.

Nothing there.

It's so tiny. No mere mortal can...

Ohh...

You see what he just did?

What? He did it again.

Who is this man? Where does he come from?

Can anybody stop him?

Please don't hurt us, please. My eyes! My eyes!

It's so big and clear and bright.

I'll be at Homicide.

Sometimes you still scare me, you know that?

In my world, do you have any idea what I had to do to get where I am today?

Now, when I say I'm ready, you best believe it.

COLVIN: Through the effective use of resources, and increased police presence and an intensive reach-out into the community, we've had a significant impact on these areas to the effect of a 12% decrease overall.

-12%? -Cumulatively.

-Over four weeks. -Major, I know I gave you sh*t when your stats took a jump a few weeks back, but now you're gonna shove the numbers right up my ass?

It's kind of pouty of you, isn't it?

12%. I didn't cook them then, I ain't cooking them now.

I already got the City Council asking questions about the 8% drop you posted last week.

We just want to please the mayor, not go to jail behind this sh*t.

Sometimes the gods do listen, sir.

Not in the Western, they don't. Lieutenant Daniels?

-Sir? -You want to take credit for any of this?

Your unit's been working in that district a couple of weeks.

We're barely up on anything.

In fact, the crews we're looking at are still beefing, still dropping bodies.

Amazing. Crime is down and no one wants to take any credit.

What is wrong with this picture?

You don't mind if I have Planning and Research pull all your CC numbers?

Make sure there's not a decimal point missing.

Pull everything, Deputy. That number will stand.

I called because I heard you went and visited Donette.

Told her my son's death couldn't have been no su1c1de. Is that right?

I did do that.

D'Angelo hung himself.

Not with the belt they found around his neck.

Not at that distance between the doorknob and the floor.

So what are you saying?

-What am I saying? -No.

Nobody would've dared.

-My brother, his uncle, would have... -I agree with you.

Nobody would've dared. Unless...

-Avon and Dee was family. -Family, right.

This is just you talking, right?

-I mean, anyone else saying it? -No, just me.

-No one else cares. -Right.

It's just, I don't know, on the inside... if somebody's going after you, has got a beef, sees red, they use a shank.

It's quick and it's over.

D'Angelo was strangled, which is planned.

You need the time, you need the isolation.

I'm sorry I brought this whole mess up, 'cause frankly, no one's gonna do sh*t about it anyhow.

Whoever k*lled him wanted to pass it off as a su1c1de and the cops are happy to have one less m*rder to investigate.


The Anne Arundel State's Attorney doesn't give a f*ck.

I'm not supposed to give a f*ck, so...

I guess your son just got squeezed between the sides.

Squeezed between what sides?

Look, two years ago, we hung more wire on your brother's crew than AT&T... and D'Angelo was this close to flipping, giving up everybody, everything.

But you know all that, right?

You went down that detention center and talked your son out of a deal.

I kind of liked your son, you know?

All things considered, he was a pretty decent kid.

And it grinds me that no one ever spoke up for him.

Seems to me that nobody ever will.

But, mostly at this point, I'm sorry I bothered his girl and I'm sorry she bothered you.

Why go to her?

-Why not come to me first? -Honestly?

I was looking for somebody who cared about the kid.

I mean, like I said, you were the one who made him take the years, right?

MAN: Red leader to red boys. Red two come in.

Cheese Steak has a problem, bitch.

Save me some fries, yo.

You want fries? I suggest you bring some cash up here.

Can you believe this?

No muscle, it's all out in the open.

No, no, no, man. This right here, boy.

This too good.

This some kind of full-tilt setup, man, to catch a master scoundrel.

Capone and whatnot.

They probably got police behind every window. Hit this? You must be tripping.

Home, James.

Boy, you better keep your head back in the game or you gonna land us both in the pokey.

[RAP POUNDING]

-What you looking at? -You.

Yeah?

I like your eyes. They're like cat eyes.

-Who you here with? -Them.

That's it?

What kind of cat?

-What? -What kind of cat are my eyes like?

A big cat.

-You here with them and no one else? -I said that.

-You wanna dance? -Hell, no.

-You want a drink? -No, I don't do that neither.

What do you do?

DEACON: Gene, this spot I'm telling you about?

We're talking TB, HIV, syphilis... herpes, lice.

It's like a five-acre Petri dish.

You get in there now, you can run every health program or social program you want.

Hell, every kind of liberal-ass project never got off the page it was written on.

Jurassic Park.

So this is a sanctioned open-air drug market.

No, it's not officially sanctioned. It's more like it's tolerated.

That's why we came to you and the Public Health School not the City Health Department.

Needle exchange, drug outreach, condoms, HIV testing.

You're never gonna reach more people in the same spot.

-If the city doesn't know, that makes it... -Complicated.

That means temporary. You move it or you lose it, boss.

That was nice.

It worked for me.

-You free tomorrow? -Tomorrow?

You could come back to my crib. Nobody's there but my grandma.

Get us a real bed. Take some time with it.

Give me your number.

The reason I'm saying tomorrow, not to push, but day after that I gotta go visit my aunt in Florida.

We hook up tomorrow, I got something real nice to think about on that long-ass bus ride.

After you.

-What was it again? -Devonne.

This guy's running his route every five days.

-That's a shitload of burners. -I don't get it.

They were so careful spreading out purchases up and down the three states, you'd think they'd also switch up rental agencies.

Maybe the guy felt bad for us. You got a copier, right?

Damn, girl, what, you lose some weight?

-Excuse me? -It's just a compliment.

[CLICKS TONGUE]

[CLICKS TONGUE]

Yo, that's Mrs. Omar?

Yeah, his grandmoms.

So what, we jack her and make her talk?

Fool, she probably got no clue where he lay his head.

No, man, we sit and we wait, right?

Man, wait on what?

[MUTTERS] Stupid m*therf*cker.

Now, see, if we go upstairs, we'll spook him. So he's coming down. All right?

Uh-uh.

Russell Bell.

I know B&B like I know a thousand other outfits, but I don't know him.

Why should I talk to him?

Because Russell's a good man. And he's ready to run.

-Then let him run for you. -Hang on.

Wait a minute, partner.

I don't think you know who you're dealing with here. You know who that is?

Have a nice day.

-Got your running shoes on? You're in. -That's the faucet?

As far as the federal money's concerned, he's everything.

The faucet, the goose.

-What goose? -The one that lays them golden eggs.

[CHUCKLES]

Madison Square Garden it ain't.

But it could work.

You're gonna need a little help with the cleanup.

I'll piece that together.

This my trip, man.

Need to go from A to B all by myself.

...am I likely to find less crime, or more incidents that have been downgraded or unfounded?

Because this kind of variation screams...

Slow your words.

Try to lock your eyes on whoever you talk to.

Make them think they matter.

Use open, warm phrases. Nothing sharp, nothing that bites.

-Where's the fun in that? -Do you want this?

Does the department have sufficient funds to ensure security for any endangered witnesses?

What is this city willing to pay to make it possible for ordinary...

-It's me. -DEVONNE: Hey. How you, Cat Eyes?

-When you leaving? -Tomorrow.

-Wanna get together tonight? -Yeah, we could hook up tonight.

-How about coming over to my crib? -No, not your crib.

-Where then? -Go to a motel.

You want me to meet you? Which one?

I don't know which one. I'll tell you when I see you.

-I'd like to see you soon. -All right, you know Lake Trout?

-Carry-Out? Where? -On Woodland.

-Off Reisterstown Road? -That one.

Later this afternoon?

-I'll be there. What time you want to meet? -Like five.

And five mean five. I don't truck CP Time. Five and change, I'm gone.

-I ain't gonna be late. -All right, then.

See you then.

What you think about that?

I don't know.

Might be walking into something a little later.

So I'm gonna need for you to go up there and get me a read upfront.

-Where's my brother? -Shut the door, man.

-Yo, we at w*r right now, sis. So he on that. -I need to get with him.

He ain't on the cellphone.

Soon as I speak to him, I'll get him to you, all right?

I can't believe this sh*t.

Heard from this cop. He's saying Dee was m*rder*d.

Oh... That'd be McNulty.

How you know?

Well, Levy figured he couldn't talk you out of the meet but I sure wish he tried.

-I need to get with my brother. -Come on.

This f*cking cop.

He trying to drive a wedge up in here, man. You can't see it?

I can imagine how hard it is for a mother to have to deal with some sh*t like that, but the fact is these places, they press on n*gg*r*s.

Dee just figured a way to get out of there early.

Ain't nothing nobody can do about that.

I mean, how do you protect a man from himself?

Where Avon at? I'll go to him.

We beefing for corners right now.

As soon as I speak to him, I'll get him to you, I promise.

A cop shouldn't mess with a mother's pain.

No one should.

Mm-mm.

Yeah, let me get four trout on white, extra mayo on one, hot sauce on two and the other with ketchup.

And four orange sodas.

[RADIO: BOB MARLEY AND THE WAILERS: BUFFALO SOLDIER]

This clown-ass n*gg*r went and got four sandwiches and four sodas, man.

-You heard me? -Cool.

n*gg*r*s don't roll out in a few minutes, we on to something.

WOMAN: Drop one, get one!

-No, baby, this one's sentimental. -Here, it's bleach.

-Soak your works and you're good to go. -Thank you.

WOMAN: Drop one, get one!

MAN: Have you ever been tested before?

WOMAN: Drop one, get one!

Get the other girls to come by.

WOMAN 2: You have a cough that hangs on...?

Oh, wait.

Just pass these out for me, okay?

-WOMAN 2: How's your appetite? -MAN: Two for one here!

I just rolled for peanut butter. You got anything else?

-The f*ck I look like to you, Chef Boyardee? -Who?

When all this bullshit falls apart, I'm gonna kick your butt...!

Go by them slow.

[ENGINE STARTS]

Oh, sh*t!

WOMAN: Oh, my God!

-You hit? -No.

Drive, m*therf*cker, get out of here!

Get down!

WOMAN: God damn!

Now your man better be as good as his word. Or your word.

If you are still in possession of that kind of mentality then you are definitely not ready.

-String... -Not now.

-It's Avon. -Shut the door.

Let's do it.

I'll be in touch, partner.

-What is it? -Avon's been hit.

-Where? -In the shoulder.

Tater got k*lled. Avon still breathing, man.

But Brianna all over me, calling me, man. I need to tell her.

-f*ck Brianna. -What?

Just keep the bitch away from me, you hear me?

If you put them pit bull-style stitches in me, the next patient gonna be you.

-For real. -What, you don't like rawhide?

Mario!

We finna get back to old times, baby.

Hey, Anthony. Where you at?

First floor, 1034 North Mount, sir.

Good.

They're expecting us to hit back wild.

That's what they're waiting for, but we gonna sit back on it for a while.

-Let them sweat. -Yo, we got to talk.

Hold on.

He got to come out on his corners, that's how he make money, right?

-We gonna see who got the bigger w*r chest. -Avon?

-Straight to the mattresses. -Whatever. What you want, man?

"w*r," man, we past this bullshit. -Yeah, I forgot.

You know, I knew I forgot something. We the Tr*mp brothers.

Man, you don't give this sh*t up, you're gonna turn everything we built to sh*t.

The Chump brothers.

You know the difference between me and you?

I bleed red, you bleed green.

What you been building for us?

You know what, I look at you, you know what I see?

I see a man without a country.

Not hard enough for this right here. And maybe, just maybe, -not smart enough for them out there. -Not hard enough?

No offense, but I don't think you ever really were.

-You got skills, yeah, no doubt, but... -What?

What, 'cause I don't sh**t up a block, indiscriminate, I ain't hard enough?

Because I think before I snatch a life, I ain't into this bullshit?

Snatch a life?

What life you snatch?

You know, Brianna went downtown, man, saw that detective.

Man stoking her head saying that D'Angelo's death was no su1c1de.

Yeah, so?

The man ain't wrong about that.

What?

Yeah.

I knew you couldn't do it and Brianna wouldn't do that sh*t.

But there go a life that had to be snatched, Avon.

I took that sh*t off you, and put it on me because that m*therf*cker was out of pocket.

20 years above his f*cking head.

He flip, they got you and me and f*cking Brianna!

No f*cking way, man. Hell no!

Now, I know you're family. You loved that n*gg*r.

But that "blood is thicker than water" bullshit, take that sh*t somewhere else!

That m*therf*cker would have taken down the whole f*cking show starting with you, k*ller!

He was f*cking everything and everybody!

Let me up.

Let me up.

[GROANS] sh*t.

[BREATHING HEAVILY]
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