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Deleted line(s) 25 (click to see context) :
* OutDamnedSpot: Shades is so shaken by the Rum Punch Massacre that he's trying to wash non-existent blood off his hands.
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* ScrubbingOffTheTrauma: Shades is so shaken by the Rum Punch Massacre that Mariah orchestrates that he's trying to wash non-existent blood off his hands and eventually turns himself over to Misty.
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First example is Plot Happens
Deleted line(s) 28,30 (click to see context) :
* RealityEnsues:
** There's a reason why professional criminals never use the same gun twice for murders: so that the police can't link them together. Misty is able to piece together Mariah's connection to the murders of Anansi, Candace, and Pete by the fact that they were all killed with the same revolver. Too bad for Misty, Scarfe being the investigating detective on Pete's death means that the link to that murder is tainted by his corrupt activities.
** Yes, a handwritten business contract on a cocktail napkin (with both men's signatures) ''can'' be leveraged as legally binding after they're both dead... especially when a witness to the signing of said contract is still alive. The only thing missing for such a document is that it was not formally notarized (and many 'handshake' business arrangements never are).
** There's a reason why professional criminals never use the same gun twice for murders: so that the police can't link them together. Misty is able to piece together Mariah's connection to the murders of Anansi, Candace, and Pete by the fact that they were all killed with the same revolver. Too bad for Misty, Scarfe being the investigating detective on Pete's death means that the link to that murder is tainted by his corrupt activities.
** Yes, a handwritten business contract on a cocktail napkin (with both men's signatures) ''can'' be leveraged as legally binding after they're both dead... especially when a witness to the signing of said contract is still alive. The only thing missing for such a document is that it was not formally notarized (and many 'handshake' business arrangements never are).
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* TruthInTelevision: Yes, a handwritten business contract on a cocktail napkin (with both men's signatures) ''can'' be leveraged as legally binding after they're both dead... especially when a witness to the signing of said contract is still alive. The only thing missing for such a document is that it was not formally notarized (and many 'handshake' business arrangements never are).