01x08 - Man on Fire

Episode transcripts for the TV show "61st Street". Aired: April 10, 2022 - present.*
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Moses gets swept up in the Chicago criminal justice system when he is arrested as a supposed g*ng member after an officer dies during a drug bust gone wrong.
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01x08 - Man on Fire

Post by bunniefuu »

Previously on " st Street"...

Her boy was a snitch,
but she keeps making

a big noise about this, you
understand what I'm sayin'?

Hey, what y'all takin' me down
here for, I didn't do nothing...

[GRUNT, SCREAM]

Is this your service w*apon?

- It's my g*n.
- I watched you

decide to lie!

You want the truth? I love you.

What's that? That ain't mine!
Y'all plantin' stuff now?!

- How's that goin'?
- I'm a pro, boss.

- What is this?
- Rufus. He was a problem.

If you use this, I can't live with you.

Mom? Dad? Wake up.

There's somebody on fire.

There's a man on fire outside our house.

- FRANKLIN: Where?
- We got to put him out.

Get up. We need to put him out.

Okay, baby. Okay, okay.

♪♪

Oh, my God.

Mom! I-I need to put him out.

Stay up here! Stay up here!
Stay up here! David! Get in here! No!

Mom, I... No!

- No, no, no, no.
- I want to put him out.

- Stay up there.
- Got to put him out.

- No.
- I-I want to help Dad.

Stay up there. Got to put him out.

Stop. Stop. Mom! I want to put him out!

No, no.

Mom!

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

[FLIES BUZZING]

♪♪

MARTHA: David, come on.

- I don't want to go to school.
- Just take it.

- Take your headphones.
- I'm taking it.

It's fine. Mrs. Evans is gonna be there.

I don't care.

It's not the right time to go to school.

Baby, just come on, please.

It's the wrong time.

I'm not going.

You know what? Stay with your father.

♪♪

Can I help you, Dad?

♪♪

[SIGHS]

♪♪

Franklin, be careful.

♪♪

♪♪

True colors.

Reminds everybody
what we're fighting against.

And it shows that they're agitated.

So we should leak it to the press?

Leak it to the press?

- What do you think this is? ?
- You know...

Can I trouble you for a comment?

On what?

The end of your career.

I'm sorry?

We're running the Joshua drug
money story in tomorrow's paper.

[CAMERA SHUTTERS CLICKING]

- You can't do that.
- Why not?

Halfway through a trial,

no way you run something
as prejudicial as that

if it hasn't been heard in evidence.

You mean it would have to come
from the witness stand first?

What prompted you to start
surveillance of Joshua Johnson?

We'd found dr*gs in the Johnson home

and it matched
what we seized on the streets.

We wanted to find out
how much the family

is involved in the business.

Do you know where the money
from Joshua's

Drug-dealing earnings has been going?

There's no evidence of any
obvious increased spending...

No new car, new clothes or shoes.

From which you conclude what?

Joshua's out selling dr*gs
for The Nation street g*ng,

and the money he earns
all goes to one thing.

Which is?

The Moses Johnson defense fund.

Created by?

His mother.

To pay for?

Him.

♪♪

♪♪

♪ Chicago ♪

♪ Where the dollar and blue
collar go hand in hand ♪

♪ City of Dreams so big ♪

♪ Nightmares don't stand a chance ♪

♪ A concrete paradise where roses grow ♪

♪ See the smile from a child ♪

♪ Light up the magnificent mile ♪

♪ And melt the coldest snow ♪

♪ This is home ♪

♪ Find the brightest minds
on these dark streets ♪

♪ See the heart and soul
on these old blocks ♪

♪ Where we grow, we call it the go ♪

♪ 'Cause we don't stop ♪

NICOLE: Okay. I didn't know.

You didn't know.
We're finished, aren't we?

- A part of going big is coming clean.
- What?

We call Joshua,
and he tells it like it is.

Call our witness to confirm
we're funded by a street g*ng?

- Okay.
- That cop is lying.

I'd have seen them.

In our neighborhood?
That kind of surveillance?

Ain't no way we wouldn't have seen them.

Okay, I'm... I'm gonna be
straight with you.

Right now, Moses is going don.

He needs his brother.

To do what?

Are you a member of
The Nation street g*ng?

Yes.

Since when?

I just joined.

Why did you do that?

For money.

For my brother.

Pay for this.

Can you earn the same kind of money

outside the criminal economy?

No.

Are there jobs out there for you?

- On the South Side?
- Uh-huh.

You got to be kidding, Mr. Franklin.

Yesterday, Officer Frater
swore on his mother's life

that when he and his partner

took you out of the station that day,

it was to revisit the crime scene.

♪♪

Is that true?

♪♪

Joshua?

♪♪

Is that true?

♪♪

On his mom's life, he said that?

Mm-hmm. He did.

♪♪

[CLEARS THROAT]

Uh, that's not true.

But he did take you out of
the police station that day?

Yes.

Where did he take you?

To the river.

Why?

♪♪

They... They needed a name.

Did you give him a name?

♪♪

Yeah.

What name did you give him?

♪♪

Moses.

♪♪

[SNIFFLES, SIGHS]

♪♪

Did you give him
your brother's name voluntarily?

♪♪

Uh, no, I didn't. They...
They woulda k*lled me.

They?

Uh, Officer Frater and Officer Young.

♪♪

What did they do?

JOSHUA: I didn't do nothing! Please!

What are y'all doing?!

I-I can't.

I'm sorry.

It's okay.

It's alright.

♪♪

[BREATHES DEEPLY]

♪♪

You've been selling dr*gs
to support your brother.

♪♪

No. Yes.

Not for personal gain?

No.

And you know of course that
dr*gs destroy people's lives?

- Yes.
- But you put your brother first,

above other people's pain?

Yes.

What wouldn't you do
to help your brother?

- I don't know.
- How about lying?

Would you do that?
Would you lie under oath?

Look, they needed a name, alright?

I had to give it to them.

You feel bad about that?

Yes.

Guilt was eating you up?

Is that why you invented that story

about being taken down to the river?

What? No.

You snitched on your own brother,

you feel terrible about it,

and now you're playing the victim

in order to allay the guilt.

No.

Did you tell your mom what happened?

- No.
- Did you tell anybody?

- No!
- Until now.

That's kind of convenient.

Oh, did you go see a doctor?

There wasn't nothing to show.
I don't know. No.

Because it never happened.

What?

♪♪

Ask them about the river.

They know about it.
Tell everybody the truth.

Yeah, tell them what you did.

What you looking like that for, huh?

JUDGE FITZPATRICK:
Mr. Johnson, control yourself.

- Control myself?
- Yep.

Where was the control when...

When these savages
tried to violate me, huh?

- Jo.
- I'm warning you, Mr. Johnson.

Where was the control
when these crooked-ass police

tried to destroy my family, huh?

- That's enough.
- Cowards, both of you.

Deputies, remove this witness
from court.

Y'all cowards! Y'all cowards!

Y'all hurt my family!

Mom! Mom!

My brother!

- My f*cking brother!
- Jojo!

[SHOUTING INDISTINCTLY]

- FRATER: Give us a name.
- Then tell me something

I want to hear then.

- I don't know anything!
- Tell me something.

- Give me a name.
- No, no!

- I don't know anything!
- Tell me something.

Just tell me something then.

Talk. All you gotta do is talk.

Give us a name.

Get me a name!

[SCREAMING]

That's my son.

That's my son.

- Stop! Stop!
- [SPEAKS INDISTINCTLY]

Please! No!

- Please stop!
- It's me, it's me.

Please, please.

[CRYING]

Because Joshua didn't finish
his cross-examination,

I'm afraid everything he just told us

will be erased from the record.

What they did to Jojo, man...

is foul.

- He a kid.
- I know.

I know.

But it's down to you now.

You smell like smoke.

Everybody saying in trials
like these, the accused

don't normally take the stand.

How can a jury know your state of mind

if you don't tell them?

They can't read the mind
of a man who won't talk to them.

You don't get up on the stand?

I look like a fool for promising it.

Is this about you, or is it about me?

Do you know why I smell like smoke?

They b*rned an effigy
outside my home this morning.

Swinging from a tree.

Swinging from a tree again.

♪♪

I-I'm sorry. I...

That's horrible.
You just doing your job.

It wasn't my effigy they were burning.

♪♪

[WOMAN SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY ON P.A.]

♪♪

- Where is he?
- Last stall.

♪♪

Immunity and protection for the truth,

the whole truth
and nothing but the truth.

♪♪

So help you if you f*ck this up.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

Thank you.

♪♪

I'll do it.

♪♪

Call your witness, Counselor.

Something's come up, Your Honor.

Are you gonna tell us what it is?

Who, not what.

Moses been working for The Nation.

When?

Now.

In County.

Objection. Hearsay.

Let's hear what the evidence says first.

Doing what?

Picking up packages
that come over the wall.

- Containing what?
- Heroin.

FRANKLIN: L-Like I said, Your
Honor, that... that's hearsay.

This witness hasn't witnessed anything.

- Sure I have.
- H-How?

You ain't currently
incarcerated in Cook County.

- I know what I know.
- You don't know.

How you know what you know?

That package...

♪♪

...that was me.

♪♪

I threw it over the wall.

I saw Moses collect it.

You okay, Counselor?

Yeah, I-I-I just need
a moment with my client.

Yes, you do.

Counselor? Okay, Counselor?

Yeah.

I just... Yeah, I'm...

Deputy, call the medic.

♪♪

♪♪

What are we doin' here?

Come on.

- Hey, buddy.
- Hey, Brannigan.

Good to see ya.

How's retirement?

Ah, good, yeah.

♪♪

Gentlemen, what's your pleasure?

We'll have whatever
the Deputy Chief's having.

Two Bunnahabhain s, straight up.

♪♪

♪♪

Hey.

Hey.

Hey.

Hello.

Hey, there.

[MUFFLED] Bring it down.

What?

What? You want me to bring it
down a little bit?

- Yeah.
- Okay.

- Alright.
- [BREATHES DEEPLY]

Hey, that's better.

How you doing? How you...

Oh, um, I'm sorry.

I-I can come back.

[NORMAL VOICE] Who's there?

Oh, it's fine. Come on. Come on.

That sounds like Nicole.

It is Nicole.

What'd the judge say?

NICOLE: He talked to Moses.

What'd he say?

If he wants a new trial...

and new lawyers,

he can have that.

What did Moses say?

He has until morning to decide.

He has till morning.

Here, put this back on.

♪♪

♪♪

[BREATHING SHAKILY]

♪♪

Martha?

Would you stay with him?

You're... You're leaving?

I know my husband,
and there's only one thing

that's gonna get him back on his feet.

♪♪

♪♪

Appreciate what you did
on the witness stand...

Thinking on your feet,

seeing the play
without being told what it was.

♪♪

You had the g*n switched?

♪♪

There's this thing that, uh,
all top sportsmen know.

♪♪

When you're Roger Federer...
Don't ask why. Mm?

Don't try to understand
why you can do what you can do

because talking about a thing
can f*ck with a thing.

♪♪

Why am I here?

Chief's telling you
how much he loves you.

♪♪

♪♪

The swelling in your prostate
caused a backup in your bladder.

Mm. The fever, nausea?

That was your body screaming at you.

You're septic, Franklin.

That's not good, is it?

We need to get this infection
under control,

then a urostomy.

The Foley catheter's
only good for so long,

so I'd like to do it
as soon as possible.

But not now.

♪♪

♪♪

[ENGINE STARTS]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

We want to talk to Dante.

That ain't how it work.

You know who this is?

Yeah, I know who you are.

NORMA: So show some respect.

That still ain't how it work.

Well, it ain't
for a skinny-ass corner boy

like you to decide.

So you tell Dante

Martha Roberts needs a face to face.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

RICK: Appreciate what you did
on the witness stand...

Thinking on your feet,

seeing the play
without being told what it was.

[SIGHS]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

I, uh...

I sh... I should've told you.

I'm sorry.

The judge say the defense
you're running is reckless.

He doesn't see it... the bigger picture.

I need you to stay with me, Moses.

Sounds like the wrong way
'round to me...

Lawyer needing the client.

I think we're a long way
past lawyer/client.

It's much, much more than that.

Hm.

The thing about dying, son...

...it's kind of a freedom.

I'm not scared of nobody.

Nothing can hurt me anymore.

And that's what you need
in your corner right now.

♪♪

[KEYBOARD CLACKING]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

[SIGHS]

[SIGHS]

♪♪

[KEYBOARD CLACKS]

The whole time.

[KEYBOARD CLACKING]

♪♪

♪♪

[MAN SPEAKING INDISTINCTLY ON TV]

Got a minute?

Pretty sure it's against
the rules, you talking to me.

Pretty sure you don't follow the rules.

GSR report... Michael Rossi's
clothing the day he d*ed.

g*nsh*t residue on the shirt.

Where'd that come from?

I said my piece on the stand.

Then I'll answer my own question.

The residue came from you.

You transferred it to him
while you were giving him CPR

right after you sh*t at Moses.

What do you want?

That's when you saw the wire,

Took it, didn't tell Brannigan

or anyone else in your department,

and you've been wrestling
with your conscience ever since.

And right now, your conscience
has gotten the upper hand...

Which is why you left the tape
on my doorstep last night.

See, I think we got this
the wrong way 'round.

I should be asking you what you want.

It wasn't me.

I didn't leave anything at your house.

You know there's something

foul about your Lieutenant.

Even your partner knew.

♪♪

What do you want me to do?

First thing tomorrow morning,
go back up on the stand,

And tell the jury
you lied about your g*n.

[SIGHS]

Michael Rossi was prepared
to follow his conscience.

♪♪

Are you?

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

[VEHICLE DOOR CLOSES]

Hello, Mr. Dante.

So...?

So you discover a snitch
in your organization,

and they die.

Has to be.

And if the snitch isn't around,
someone else has to go,

so everybody knows
how you feel about snitching.

That's how it works.

- So?
- MARTHA: I think that's old.

I think that's an old way
of doing things.

- Hm.
- Yeah.

And you strike me as a modern man.

Ah.

A leader who leads

with the cool side of his brain

and not the hot.

What you want?

A life.

I want to save a life.

- Who is he?
- She.

It's a she.

I think you can win this election.

♪♪

♪♪

[CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]

♪♪

[CAMERA SHUTTER CLICKING]

♪♪

[INDISTINCT CONVERSATIONS]

♪♪

[SIGHS]

♪♪

♪♪

[ENGINE STARTS]

♪♪

JUDGE FITZGERALD: Knowing
everything you know about him,

you're sure you want
to keep your attorney?

♪♪

With everything I know about him, yes.

♪♪

I was looking right at Rufus
when he got sh*t down.

- Who sh*t him?
- The cops.

How did that make you feel?

Scared for my life.

What did you do?

I ran.

What did you think would happen
if you didn't run?

I thought it would be me next.

How did you feel about Michael Rossi?

You know, I'm deeply sorry
for his family, honestly,

from the bottom of my heart,
but I just...

I don't know how we got here.

When you were down that dead-end street

and he came to arrest you...
We all want to know,

and the jury needs to hear...

What was in your mind?

Wasn't in my mind.

Deeper than that.

In that moment, in my bones,

it's just that thing
that everybody know...

If a cop come for you
and a cop get ahold of you?

You could die.

So what did you do?

[BREATHES DEEPLY]

There was, like, cages with these, uh,

containers at the end,

and, uh, the only way out

I could see was over the containers.

And he was between me and that.

And then, uh...

And then I... I tried to get over there.

Stop! And, uh...

♪♪

...he stepped across to...
To block my path.

- It's over.
- And...

It's over.

There was, uh, some sh-shoulder-to-sh...

There was some shoulder contact.

Shoulder-to-shoulder contact?

♪♪

[THUD]

- He fell back.
- [ROSSI WAILING]

Hit his... Hit his head.

His back of his head hit...
Hit the iron bar in...

In the ground, and there was...

MOSES: Breathe! Come on, breathe!

...there was all this blood
all of a sudden, and...

Yo! Breathe! Hey, stay with me, man!

Stay with me!

What happened when
the second police officer

arrived on the scene?

He took a sh*t at me.

Had you shown any aggressive
intent toward him?

No, I-I was running away,
and I had my back turned to him.

♪♪

He sh*t at your back?

What did that tell you?

That he was trying to k*ll me

and that I was right to run away

and I-I was right to protect myself.

Thank you.

♪♪

This won't take long.

When the police arrived on the corner,

Did you know they were cops?

Yeah.

Mm-hmm. And when you ran
from the corner,

it was to escape police officers?

- Yes.
- And down that dead-end street,

nothing had changed?

How do you mean?

You knew Michael Rossi
was a police officer.

You knew he wanted to arrest you.

Yes.

Did he draw his w*apon?

No.

Did he make
any aggressive move toward you?

He was a cop.

What else did you know about
Michael Rossi in that moment?

Nothing.

You didn't know he had
an exemplary service record?

You didn't know he had a wife
and five small children,

or where he was born,
or how much he loved baseball?

No.

What does this have to do with anything?

You made an assumption based
on the one thing you knew about him.

That he was a cop.

- What?
- What does that make you?

You... You just don't get it, lady.

- I mean, how could you?
- JUDGE FITZPATRICK: Mr. Johnson.

No, no, no. She just
gonna ask me a question

and just get to sit down?

No. The way I was raised...
That's called rude.

- Mr. Johnson.
- No, man, that's not right.

Your Honor, I'm entitled to redirect.


Would you like to continue
with what you were saying?

- Yes.
- Please continue.

She's talking about assumptions.

She don't know nothing about me.

You making assumptions
that I'm one of these

little hood rats on the corner.

That's not me. Every day, I train.

Every day, I train my butt off
to get where I'm trying to go.

And you talking about that
I'm making assumptions.

I have never been in trouble
a day in my life.

You can ask everybody.
Everybody know me.

Everybody know I stay out the way.

And you can ask everybody
where I'm from...

Everybody know we talk
about the same thing about cops.

The world has given cops
the permission to...

To... to... to hurt us, to k*ll us,

and there's no repercussions at all.

And if you... And if you manage
to get out of there alive,

they will always be believed,
they will always be the truth.

We will always be the liars.

Dead or in jail...
Those are our only options.

Unless there's minutes
and seconds of footage

showing a m*rder in broad daylight,

there is no good outcome for us.

And... And what does that make me?

How does that make me feel?
I'll tell you.

Sad.

Angry.

Tired.

But you... But you think
you can just stand there and...

And call me a bigot or...

Or whatever nonsense and sit down

and not even have the decency
to look at me

when I'm talking to you.

I'm not gonna take that
from her or anybody.

Not no more.

NINA: Your Honor...

No, I don't need to hear
from you, Counselor.

Deputy, remove the jury, please.

♪♪

♪♪

[WHISPERED] No.

What we just heard from
the defendant is a confession.

- What?
- "I knew he was a cop.

- What did he...
- I ran anyway.

He identified himself as a cop.

- I resisted arrest."
- What? No.

For self-defense to even be an option

- for the jury to consider...
- Frank, man.

...the thr*at the accused
is facing must be unlawful.

We've heard nothing to suggest
that anything...

What?

...these police officers
have done was unlawful.

So I'm telling you what Moses Johnson

just said on the stand...

- Oh, no, no...
- is an admission of guilt.

- Your Honor, no.
- Mr. Johnson...

That's not what just happened.

- ...I have no choice.
- No, Your Honor.

I'm going to direct the jury
to find you guilty.

- No, Your Honor, you're wrong.
- No, you can't do that.

- You can't do that.
- I've heard everything I need to hear.

- You can't do that, Your Honor.
- Franklin, you told I can b*at this.

The whole trial, I'm just giving
you a word nobody was saying.

- Come on, man.
- Hold on. Hold on. One second.

No, no, no, no, no. Hold on.

[WHISPERING INDISTINCTLY]

JUDGE FITZGERALD:
Counselor, what's going on?

Uh, hold on one second, Your Honor.

Uh, Your Honor, I would like to, uh...

A prosecution witness recalled.

- What?
- Yes, Your Honor.

Who?

You told us you had no knowledge

of the man you sh*t dead
on the corner that day.

Correct.

That you didn't know his name then.

Correct.

And you certainly wouldn't
have known his street name.

No.

Or his relationship with the CPD.

I don't know what you mean.

I need you to think carefully
about your answers now.

I have.

And I have no idea
what you're talking about.

MICHAEL: Look...

I don't care who we take down.

These people are all the same to me.

But they havegot to be
paying for that pass...

The Faction.

BRANNIGAN: Paying who?

It's just where the heat is now.

♪♪

His theory...

or yours?

Oh, his.

He got a name?

Your man in The Nation.

Yeah.

♪♪

Tutu.

♪♪

FRANKLIN: Which is it, Lieutenant?

Are you suffering from memory loss

or are you a shameless liar?

♪♪

I forgive you.

♪♪

Excuse me?

You have to do your job... I understand.

But what you're saying?

Total fiction.

♪♪

[CROWD MURMURING]

Let me be clear about something.

Right now, there's no difference

between me the lawyer
and me the human being.

I'm not a storyteller,
I'm not doing a job, this is me.

I'm calling you out.

What you did to Rufus Porter
was an execution.

When Moses ran, he was running
from a k*ller

with the letters P-O-L-I-C-E
on his chest.

That's you.

♪♪

NORMA: Lieutenant Brannigan.

He told me.

Told me Rufus was a snitch.

♪♪

Why would he do that?

Told me that, too.

It was to get me
to keep Rufus' mom quiet.

Janet.

Yep, Janet.

♪♪

One more thing.

Hmm?

On behalf of my son and my community,

I'd like to answer the question
that he just dodged.

Okay.

Lieutenant Brannigan?

He is a shameless liar.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

I used to think the system was broken.

♪♪

I don't think that anymore.

The system's not broken.

It works the way it was supposed to work

by the people who designed it.

♪♪

♪♪

The prosecution says this is

all about the rule of law.

♪♪

The judge will tell you
when I'm done that what Moses

did was outside the law
and that you have no choice

but to find him guilty of m*rder.

But sl*very was the law.

Interracial marriage
was against the law.

Apartheid South Africa
was upheld by the law.

And the m*rder of Black men,
women, and children

by the lynch law was ignored
by the so-called real law.

So the law is not always right.

In fact, it took people like
yourselves to change those laws

and to remind us that the law
is supposed to be about

what is for the people,

not to serve the powerful
at the expense of the people.

So, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,

the moment is with you.

Moses is in your hands.

Today you are the law.

sl*very was lawful, and it was wrong.

Segregation was wrong.

Apartheid was the law,
and it was straight-up evil.

Somebody had to say it then.

You are going to have
to say it again today.

Moses was right to run,
he was right to defend himself

and the law is wrong.

♪♪

Deep down in each of you,

I know there's a sacred part
of being human.

♪♪

Socrates d*ed for it.

♪♪

You don't need God or a judge
to tell you what is right

and what is wrong...

Your conscience does that for you.

Look to your conscience,

look everything else right in the eye,

and with the strength
your conscience gives you,

bring home a verdict
that sends from this courtroom

a message of hope
for a brighter future...

♪♪

...and a deep consolation
for the corrupted past

built and protected...

♪♪

...by the law.

♪♪

Thank you.

♪♪

♪♪

MAN: Martha Roberts!

- Alright, now.
- [APPLAUSE]

MAN # : Martha!

WOMAN: Martha.

- WOMAN # : Hey, Martha.
- [VEHICLE DOOR CLOSES]

WOMAN # : Girl.

Black people, how y'all feeling?

How you feeling?

Thank y'all for bringing the family out.

- Thank you for coming out to vote.
- WOMAN: Thank you.

You know this important, right?

WOMAN # : Yeah. Thank you.

♪♪

My condolences.

♪♪

I scratched your back twice.

♪♪

♪♪

[URINATING]

May the best man win.

Really?

[URINAL FLUSHES]

[DOOR OPENS, CLOSES]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

JUDGE FITZPATRICK:
Has the jury reached a verdict?

Yes, we have, Your Honor.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

Will the defendant please rise?

♪♪

In the case of The State
of Illinois vs. Moses Johnson,

on the single count of m*rder
in the first degree...

♪♪

...the jury hereby finds the accused...

♪♪

...not guilty.

[CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

♪♪

Thank you, man.

♪♪

Mom! Mom! Mom! Mom!

♪♪

Man.

I love you so much.

I love you so much.

♪♪

♪♪

- Oh!
- Moses!

♪♪

[HORNS HONKING, CROWD CHEERING]

♪♪

- Who's coming home?!
- CROWD: Moses!

- Who's coming home?!
- Moses!

- Who's coming home?!
- Moses!

- Who's coming home?!
- Moses!

- Who's coming home?!
- Moses!

- Who's coming home?!
- Moses!

[INDISTINCT CHANTING]

♪♪

♪ He saves the day ♪

- MARTHA: Hey! Hey!
- FRANKLIN: That's right. That's right.

[LAUGHS]

That's you. You did that.

Thank you.

- ♪ No greater love ♪
- [GROUP CHEERING]

♪ A love like this ♪

♪ Makes my heart b*at ♪

♪ And I promise you ♪

♪ All I wanna do
is make you proud of me ♪

- [TELEPHONE RINGS]
- ♪ That's why ♪

♪ I don't wanna love nobody but you ♪

Hey, hey, hey, hey. Everybody.

Martha Roberts' office.

Martha.

♪♪

WOMAN: You'll get this one.

Yeah.

No matter what... No matter what, right?

No matter what...
No matter what, I thank y'all.

♪♪

Yes, this is Martha Roberts.

Right.

Well, I appreciate your call.

Thank you. You have a good night.

♪♪

[SIGHS]

♪♪

We won.

- ♪ He saves the day ♪
- [CHEERS AND APPLAUSE]

- ♪ He will come through ♪
- Mama! You did it!

I knew you would! I love you!

♪ He won't bow,
that's not what superheroes do ♪

- ♪ See, I will never find ♪
- DAVID: You did it!

- ♪ No greater love ♪
- You did it!

♪ A love like this ♪

♪ Makes my heart b*at ♪

♪ Forever an a day ♪

♪ All I wanna do
is make you proud of me ♪

♪ Let me say it again ♪

♪ He saves the day ♪

♪ He will come through ♪

Where's Dad?

♪ It feels so good ♪

I don't know, baby.

- Good job, Mom.
- We did it.

♪ No greater love ♪

♪ Hallelujah ♪

♪ Makes my heart b*at ♪

♪ For the rest of my life ♪

♪ All I wanna do
is make you proud of me ♪

- ♪ Everybody sing ♪
- [ALL CHEER]

- [BREATHES DEEPLY]
- [CELLPHONE BUZZES]

_

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

[VEHICLE LOCKS ENGAGE]

♪♪

♪♪

[GASPING]

Oh! You're home!

- Yeah.
- I missed you.

- I missed you. Oh, God.
- I missed you.

Daddy! Daddy!

- You good? Yeah.
- Daddy!

- Hey, that's for you.
- Thank you.

Hey, hey, hey, hey!

[LAUGHS]

♪♪

♪♪

- Jessica, I-I...
- Don't worry.

I told him.

♪♪

What?

After the verdict,
I told Brannigan it was me

who gave them the recording,

that you could never
do a thing like that...

Betray the brotherhood
just for the truth.

So you're good.

You can go back to your life.

♪♪

Just don't look in the mirror.

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

[WHISTLE BLOWS]

♪♪

Your form's a little ragged.

You'll get it back.

Let's go again.

[LAUGHS]

Yeah.

Coach, you said you wanted him back.

Here he is.

Take good care of him.

Will do.

- Alright, now.
- Alright.

Looking good.

Thanks, Mr. Franklin. I appreciate you.

♪♪

Alright, here we go. One more time.

[WHISTLE BLOWS]

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪

♪♪
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