@JL_Baseball Since they have the day off Monday is it possible they don't want to call anyone but Arias up tomorrow because the day off gives them another day to assess how injured DeLauter and Martinez actually are?
One of the most underrated deleted scenes in The Godfather Part II is when Al Neri shows Michael photographs of Fabrizio, whom they finally tracked down.
Michael barely reacts. He studies the pictures for a moment and confirms the identity.
What makes the scene hit so hard is that Apollonia had been gone for years by then. Michael had built an empire, started a new family, and become one of the most powerful men in America. Yet the second Fabrizio’s face appears, you realise he never truly left Michael’s mind.
There’s something deeply tragic about it. Michael rarely talks about Apollonia after Sicily. He never shares his grief. But that brief look at the photographs tells you everything. Some wounds don’t heal; they just get buried under years of responsibility, power and revenge.
Fabrizio probably spent years convincing himself he’d gotten away with it.
The photographs tell a different story. Michael Corleone never forgot. His men didn’t need him to say anything.
The Justice Dept’s theory of the case— that the group that single-handedly disassembled the Ku Klux Klan defrauded its donors by concealing that it was using paid informant to do that work and more— have about as much merit as the now-dismissed charges against Jim Comey, the charges against the members of Congress who never got indicted for telling service members they shouldn’t follow illegal orders, & the sandwich thrower a DC grand jury declined to indict.