- When Garcia experiences anxiety over a case that's personal to her from her past, Morgan visits to lend emotional support.
- The BAU heads to Bridgewater, Florida where a prostitute, Rebecca Strong, was found murdered, her dead body discovered in a rest stop ladies room. The killing has all the hallmarks of a case that the team worked on ten years ago, that of Floyd Feylinn Ferell. Ferell's alleged murders contained elements of Satanism and cannibalism, Rebecca whose legs and fingers were cut off, fingers which were found in her stomach. However, the fingers she ingested were not her own, meaning that there is another victim not yet discovered. The problem for the team is that Ferell has been in a psychiatric institution since that case, he who was never deemed mentally fit to stand trial. That problem in tying Ferell to these two recent murders changes when the team learns that Ferell had recently been granted day privileges, something that the institution did not feel the need to tell the FBI since his case was never deemed a criminal one as he did not go to trial. Certain aspects of Rebecca's death that matched those attributed to Ferell's alleged murders ten years ago were never made public, meaning that they are certain he had something to do with Rebecca's death. What complicates matters is that Ferell's lawyer informs them that she is petitioning for his unconditional release as he has been the model patient for the ten years and the hospital board may deem him to be fit for such a release. In their investigation, the team begins to wonder whether they missed that he may have been manipulated by a true unknown mastermind as Ferell's lawyer suggests. They may get some clearer answers to their questions if they discover the body of the first victim. Once the team is certain who was the mastermind in the murders ten years ago as well as the unsub in the current case, they may face a larger issue of having to choose between doing what is legal and what will provide justice for the victims. One of the profilers that has stayed behind in Quantico is J.J., whose role is to look after Garcia. The issue is that Ferell's case ten years ago occurred at the time Garcia was shot, that shooting which is now playing heavily on her mind, whether or not she wants to admit it. Beyond being there for Garcia, J.J. may know the antidote to get Garcia out of her funk.—Huggo
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