Season 3
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| # | Title | Orignal Air Date |
| 01. | Family | Sunday September 25th, 2005 |
| When a young girl, Anya, tells Rush she has been contacted by a man who claims to be her father, the team re-investigates the murder of Jimmy, a teenager killed on the night of her birth.Rush and Valens question Anya’s mother, Quinn, who gave birth at the prom and was in love with Jimmy, but didn’t know what to do when he left her that night. Despite the claim that there’s no one else who could be the father, Vera and Jeffries quickly find out that’s not necessarily true. In fact, they learn from Quinn that when Jimmy told the coach they were keeping the baby, the coach cast doubt as to whether Jimmy was the father. Now, Anya has disappeared with the man claiming to be her father and Rush and Valens are on the hunt. Meanwhile, the team has mixed feelings about new detective, Josie Sutton (guest star Sarah Brown), joining them, as she arrives under a cloud of suspicion regarding a sex scandal with her former sergeant. | ||
| 02. | The Promise | Sunday October 2nd, 2005 |
| Lilly discovers a photo of a young girl emailed from her cell phone just before she died in a fraternity house fire, ruled as “accidental,” and decides to re-open the case. | ||
| 03. | Bad Night | Sunday October 9th, 2005 |
| Lilly and Jeffries re-open a 1978 murder of 21-year-old Angus after his mother finds a letter that suggests he was killed by someone he knew and was not a random victim of copycat killings inspired by the movie “Halloween.”The letter, dated the day of his death, was from Angus’ friend Vicki who wrote that he should keep his wedding proposal to her a secret because he could be in danger if anyone found out. Six months prior, Angus and Vicki were involved in a car accident that left Vicki permanently paralyzed and everyone blamed Angus. Craig, Vicki’s boyfriend at the time, denies any wrongdoing but is first on the list of potential suspects. | ||
| 04. | Colors | Sunday October 16th, 2005 |
| Lilly and Jeffries investigate the 1945 case involving baseball great Clyde “The Glide” Taylor, who was beaten to death with his own bat.Clyde was beaten to death with his own bat after a game and the only evidence Lilly and Jeffries have to go on is his bloodstained jersey with tobacco stains on the chest. The suspect list grows to include Clyde’s closest friend, his girlfriend and a racist major league pitcher, none of whom are talking or providing any clues to help detain a killer. With the trail running cold, Lilly and the team are forced to retrace their steps.
Source: CBS |
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| 05. | Committed | Sunday October 23rd, 2005 |
| When it comes to light that an elderly woman who died of natural causes had used the identity of a woman who disappeared from her son’s life, Lilly re-opens the 1954 case.The team searches for clues to find out what happened to the woman whose identity was stolen. The son, Otis Petrowski, last saw his mother when he was 9-years-old on a visit to a local mental institution where she had been committed after being diagnosed as bipolar. When Lilly interviews former patients and staff from the mental institution, she gets a disturbing picture of the way mental patients were treated in the 1950s, as well as how easily women were “diagnosed” as mentally ill, and now must put the pieces together as to why one woman would steal another’s identity.
Source: CBS |
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| 06. | Saving Patrick Buble | Sunday November 6th, 2005 |
| A recent gang shooting reconnects Lilly to her first homicide case, as the latest victim is the brother of Lilly’s first case in the department.It turns out that the mother of the victims has lost four out of five sons to gang violence and Lilly is determined to stop the cycle and save Patrick (Sanders), her youngest. It’s clear that if they can solve the recent crime, they will likely solve all four murders. As the case takes shape, they know that gang leader Miguel Maldonado is responsible for the murders; however, the real problem is figuring out why and getting the charges to stick since no one will testify. Lilly and the team must compromise and dangle the hope of a “regime change” to Jesus Maldonado, in order to get him to testify against his cousin for the murder.
Source: CBS |
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| 07. | Start-Up | Sunday November 13th, 2005 |
| When a diary containing information about the death of a young woman is discovered on a recycled computer, Lilly and the team reopen the 1999 case of a healthy young woman, Amy, who died of a stress-induced heart attack after her dot.com company crashed.Amy was a self described workaholic who devoted her life to her company and was, for a brief moment, a dot.com millionaire. Despite Amy’s ability, she made poor business decisions and her business partner spent all the money. Her main programmer, who was in love with her, had a motive to kill her because she spurned his attentions. But his alibi is air tight. Now Lilly must sort fact from fiction and close the case.
Source: CBS |
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| 08. | Honor | Sunday November 20th, 2005 |
| A pair of POW tags found in an abandoned drug house lead Lilly and the team to reopen the 1972 shooting of a Vietnam POW, Carl.Lilly learns from Carl’s wife, Janet, that he was having trouble adjusting to being home, and when they question their son Ned (who was seven when Carl was murdered) they learn that Janet had been having an affair while Carl was away. Ken, Janet’s boyfriend at the time, tells Lilly that he suspects a local teenager, Daniel, might have gunned Carl down. Daniel, the son of a fellow POW, had been pestering Carl about his own father and why he wasn’t home like Carl. As the list of suspect grows, all fingers still point to Ken.
Source: CBS |
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| 09. | A Perfect Day | Sunday November 27th, 2005 |
| When evidence of a 4-year-old girl’s death washes up on the New Jersey shore, Lilly and the team reopen a 1965 case.The 40-year-old case takes shape when Lilly discovers the child was the victim of abuse, due to a unique injury pattern she managed to trace through hospital records. However, the child was treated under a false name and Lilly hits a dead end. Luckily, the doctor who treated the child has a sharp memory and points her in the direction of the child’s mother. The team suspects the mother of abusing her daughter, but they have a hard time locating her and an even harder time proving the abuse, as those records weren’t kept in the 1960s. Now the team is back at square one and still in search of the person responsible for the death of the little girl who had barely started her life.
Source: CBS |
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| 10. | Frank’s Best | Sunday December 18th, 2005 |
| Danny and Lilly reopen the 2001 case revolving around a well liked local deli owner, Frank, who was apparently beaten to death by his employee.Danny is contacted by the brother of a convicted murder and is persuaded to reopen the case that left a local neighborhood shocked. Everyone loved Frank and no one can imagine someone taking his life. All the evidence points to Frank’s top employee, however, the tide turns when someone finally steps forward.
Source: CBS |
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| 11. | 8 Years | Sunday January 8th, 2006 |
| Lilly reopens the 1988 case involving four high school friends who are brought in for questioning when one of them is found dead.In 1980, four high school friends went off to pursue their dreams, but nothing ended up as planned and one was murdered in 1988. Now, Lilly and Danny get a tip about the murder that reveals how these friends’ hopes and dreams unraveled as they faced the harsh realities of life.
Source: CBS |
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| 12. | Detention | Sunday January 15th, 2006 |
| When a small piece of a note is found, Lilly and the team reopen the 1994 death of a teenager previously classified as a suicide.After several interviews with local neighbors and childhood friends, it is believed that the teenager jumped off the roof of his school to his death. The depressed teen was obsessed with Kurt Cobain’s suicide and called into a crisis hotline for help numerous times, all pointing to a clear suicide. However, Lilly has a new angle she is pursuing and not giving up.
Source: CBS |
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| 13. | Debut | Sunday January 29th, 2006 |
| When a frazzled mother bursts into the Philadelphia Police Department claiming to know who might have killed her daughter at the 1968 debutante ball, Lilly re-opens the case.Lillian begs Lilly and the team to search for her daughter’s killer when a newspaper story reports on a man pushing his wife down the stairs. The circumstances of that death seem eerily similar to her daughter’s, and the same man was her escort to the 1968 debutante ball. Remorsefully, Lillian explains that back in 1968, her desire for social status led her to make her daughter a debutante and now she fears she may have started a chain of events that led to her daughter’s murder.
Source: CBS |
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| 14. | Dog Day Afternoons | Sunday February 26th, 2006 |
| After several banks have been robbed, clues surface that might help Lilly and the team close the 2000 case involving a bank teller who was murdered.Lilly finds a link from a recent string of bank robberies where the thieves wore Johnny Cash masks that may provide new information on the murder of a young bank teller who was killed during an almost identical robbery in the year 2000. However, Lilly’s trail runs cold and now the team must retrace each step of the 2000 case in order to find the killer at large.
Source: CBS |
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| 15. | Sanctuary | Sunday March 12th, 2006 |
| Valens’ past haunts him when the 1998 case involving a drug mule is reopened and he is the focal point.In 1998, Valens’ worked undercover on a high-profile drug case that is reopened and now he must face the demons that have been haunting him for the past eight years. Valens’ got too close to a lady friend that was being used as a drug mule and it might have cost her life. The entire squad is shocked to know that Valens went undercover and had never mentioned it to anyone, which casts an even darker cloud upon him.
Source: CBS |
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| 16. | One Night | Sunday March 19th, 2006 |
| Lilly and company use their unique expertise and interrogation skills to solve a killer’s demented puzzle to save a young boy’s life.In the course of one night, the team is pushed to their wit’s end trying to crack the code of a killer and rescue a boy left to die at an undisclosed location. In the end, the answer will lie in one man’s past and the only way to get there is for Lilly and the team to delve deep into their own.
Source: CBS |
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| 17. | Superstar | Sunday March 26th, 2006 |
| Lilly receives new evidence in the 1973 murder of a young female college tennis phenom, Andi, who beat the college’s best male player, Fritz, in a high-profile match that might have cost her her life.Fritz had always been the main murder suspect since he had no solid alibi and had an axe to grind since his loss not only embarrassed him but also cost him major endorsement deals. Fritz was also known to lend Andi towels similar to the one found soaked in poison. However, Andi’s huge success rubbed several people the wrong way and the suspect list grows.
Source: CBS |
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| 18. | Willkommen | Sunday April 2nd, 2006 |
| When a theater owner discovers a .38 slug in a piece of set furniture that is not being used as a prop, Lilly and Jeffries reinvestigate the 2002 case labeled the “Cabaret Murder,” which involved the shooting of a local cabaret singer.In 2002, Dennis Hirschfelder (guest star Adam Pascal) joined a community theater as a cabaret singer, but on opening night he never made it to the stage to “break a leg.” Instead, he was shot to death directly outside the backstage door. His murder was considered one of several shootings and muggings committed by local robbers who were never caught, however, all evidence pointed to someone inside the theater. Most of Dennis’ theater friends called it the greed-eyed monster that killed him and now Lilly and Jeffries begin their quest to catch a killer.
Source: CBS |
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| 19. | Beautiful Little Fool | Sunday April 9th, 2006 |
| When a pregnant woman researching her family history comes across disturbing news that her great grandmother, Violet Holley, was murdered and the case was never solved, Lilly tackles the 1929 case, her oldest to date.While the team teases Lilly about her “500-year-old case,” she rolls up her sleeves and dusts off the few notes from the crime which only reveal that Violet Holley was from the wrong side of the tracks and became pregnant by a man, Nick Bartleby, who was considered royalty. Most, if not all, of the suspects from 1929 are either dead or their memories aren’t reliable, however, Lilly comes upon Nick’s great grandson and discovers recorded tapes that might lead her in the direction of the murderer. Meanwhile, Lilly’s mother, Ellen (guest star Meredith Baxter), announces her engagement and wants nothing more than her daughter to stand beside her during the ceremony.
Source: CBS |
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| 20. | Death Penalty: Final Appeal | Sunday April 16th, 2006 |
| A man Jeffries arrested in 1994 begs him to reexamine his case just days before his scheduled execution.Jeffries is convinced of the man’s guilt, however, one of the original investigating detectives has been accused of hiding evidence, which gives Jeffries reason to take a second look. Lilly and Jeffries pursue a number of leads that all lead to dead ends, especially since no one will talk, and they begin to lose faith that they will be able to solve the case before the execution takes place.
Source: CBS |
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| 21. | The Hen House | Sunday April 30th, 2006 |
| Lilly and the team tackle a 1945 case involving an ambitious reporter recently demoded to writing trivial advice columns after a heady period covering Eleanor Roosevelt.The case takes shape when Lilly discovers that the journalist was pushed off a ramp at a busy train station and her broken purse strap suggest her death might have been a purse snatching gone bad. However, as the investigation continues, Lilly learns that the journalist had several enemies, including a competitive co-worker and plenty of angry readers who thought a woman’s place was in the home and not gallivanting around the world with Eleanor Roosevelt. Now, Lilly and company must narrow down their search for a murderer.
Source: CBS |
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| 22. | The River | Sunday May 7th, 2006 |
| When a new witness to the 1984 shooting of a well known ER physician Lilly and company reopen the case.The original suspect was a mentally ill homeless man who was convicted of the crime based on circumstantial evidence and eventually died in prison, however, a new witness comes forward with information that the well respected doctor was beloved by his family, friends and patients but secretly had a gambling addiction that he could not shake. Now, Lilly is digging deeper into the world of gambling to possibly find a killer.
Source: CBS |
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| 23. | Joseph | Sunday May 21st, 2006 |
| When a drug counselor’s debit card is used one year after his death, Lilly and the team reopen the 2005 case.During the investigation, Lilly is strangely drawn to the victim, Joseph Shaw, a popular drug counselor who was killed two days before he was set to testify against one of his students. Lilly becomes so fixated on Joseph that she takes home a photo of him from the evidence and places it on her nightstand at home. Normally a “by the book” investigator, Lilly becomes so enthralled with the victim that she breaks some procedural rules, putting herself and the other investigators in danger.
Source: CBS # CLICK ON TITLE TO DOWNLOAD FULL EPISODE |
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