Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
I was thinking that it was in the sense that he was seeing the victims as people, not just cases.
I never noticed him not seeing the victims as people, but okay, yeah, it could be. That's good. And thus I wonder if taking the time to go to the sister's house was a reflection of his renewed victim-is-a-real-person sensibility. Garcia didn't seem to think that taking special interest in the victim's lives after the case was done was how Morgan usually rolls, though. He's in danger of losing objectivity, right at a point in his career when he needs to be ultra-professional.
But then he called Tamara for drinks, so he's still singling her out.
oh, definitely. He may now be aware that he's crossing the line, but when Garcia talked to him about it, he wasn't there yet.
when Garcia talked to him about it, he wasn't there yet
Not the first time, but she was, and it was blind of him not to see it. The second time, when he wasn't with the rest of the team because he was with her at the police station, things were starting to be off.
Doing coffee, with the implication of more time having been spent together? Accepting JEWELRY? Morgan, honey, you're so over the line that Garcia doesn't know what to say to you right now. Please get out of this gracefully. I don't want Hotch damaged and Morgan shamed all in the one season. I think he was dinged enough when Hotch told him he wouldn't recommend him for field office leadership. I want him to come out of team leadership with his rep intact.
Hotch told him he wouldn't recommend him for field office leadership
Okay, Hotch is (was, will be) team leader, but is he the field office leader? Or is that Strauss? I'm confused about everyone's rank. What's Reid's place in the hierarchy? And they often introduce each other as "Supervisory Special Agent" - if they're all Supervisors, who are they supervising? "This is SSA Somebody" sounds awkward, anyway, and who outside of the FBI would actually know what that meant?
Okay, Hotch is (was, will be) team leader, but is he the field office leader?
No, because they are based in DC, which is the main office. A field office would be an office anywhere else.
What's Reid's place in the hierarchy?
Reid's a apecial agent, but I think that they introduce him as Dr. Spencer Reid because he looks twelve.
And they often introduce each other as "Supervisory Special Agent" -
Only Hotch and Rossi are SSAs. Everybody else is just an special agent. I know that special agents are criminal investigators, but I don't know if "agent" is a specified rank (i.e. Garcia might be an agent, since she is technically not a criminal investigator, or she might just be a civilian employee)
I don't watch the show, so I don't know whether it matters, but "SSA" is also shorthand for "Senior Special Agent."
I don't know if the Virginia office counts as a field office. Strauss is a Section Chief, I think. Everybody but Garcia is a Supervisory Special Agent, but no, I don't think they supervise anyone unless they're chief of something. Reid's an SSA too, but they introduce him as Doctor. Gideon explained why--to help him seem older, I think.
Garcia is a technical analyst, not an agent, but they did have her flash an agent badge in whatever episode it is that some guy pretends to be an FBI agent to pick up on the women in a bar at the beginning--probably an error to serve the joke.
According to this FBI FAQ, Question 17 here:
[link]
all "profilers" are supervisory special agents.
17. I want to be an FBI "Profiler" - where do I begin the application process?
You first need to realize the FBI does not have a job called "Profiler." The tasks commonly associated with "profiling" are performed by Supervisory Special Agents assigned to the National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime (NCAVC) at Quantico, Virginia. Despite popular depictions, these FBI Special Agents don't get "vibes" or experience "psychic flashes" while walking around fresh crime scenes. It is an exciting world of investigation and research — a world of inductive and deductive reasoning; crime-solving experience; and knowledge of criminal behavior, facts, and statistical probabilities.
Special Agents are not eligible for positions at the NCAVC until they have three years of experience. Because the positions are so competitive, however, individuals selected usually possess eight to ten years of experience as a Special Agent. The NCAVC employs Special Agents with a variety of backgrounds. The most important qualifications include overall experience as an investigator specializing in violent crimes, particularly homicides, rapes, child abductions, and threats. Please see our list of NCAVC Frequently Asked Questions for more information about the NCAVC.
Thanks, everyone, that clears up my confusion. And it will make my Dexter/Criminal Minds crossover fic even better, with the little hint of realism there.
In re Criminal Minds - it occurred to me that with Morgan now the leader (at least temporarily), perhaps the killer who targeted Hotch and his family (can't remember the name) will target Tamara, as Morgan's "loved one" and she'll be killed off in a bit. So we'll get to see that Morgan isn't emotionally unavailable, and he'll get to suffer for several episodes. (And, yes - wildly inappropriate relationship.)