In law enforcement, professional ethics require balancing personal relationships with organizational duties, as demonstrated when Marshals team member Andrea faces a conflict between her loyalty to her colleague Kayce and her professional obligation to investigate him, highlighting the complex ethical dilemmas faced by law enforcement personnel when personal connections intersect with official responsibilities.
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ANDREA DISCOVERED GARRETT USED THEM TO FAKE HIS DEATH || MARSHALS SEASON 1 FINAL EPISODE SPOILERSHinzugefügt:
With only one episode left until the season finale of Marshals, we finally know what's been ailing team leader Cal, and it might actually be worse than we feared.
After barely surviving a face-off against the most violent criminal network in this hemisphere, more on that later, Bell's patience with Cal finally ran out.
Bell asked why he keeps talking like he doesn't have any more time, prompting him to reveal that the pain in his neck and shoulder is being caused by a Pancoast tumor on his lung, a rare symptom of cancer.
In a moment of uncharacteristic vulnerability, Cal told Bell, "I just want to feel like I'm not staring this down alone." To which she immediately replied, "You are not." placing her hands on his.
"I love working with Arielle Kebbel, and we've had a few scenes like this." Logan Marshall-Green tells TV Line.
"We approach them with very high stakes, and we really listen to each other.
We allow each other in.
I think all of those scenes between Cal and Bell have played really nicely, and on the day, they're heavy as shit."
Marshall-Green knew it would be very hard for a soldier like Cal to release this information and allow people to be privy to his battles, but he says it's just the beginning of Cal opening up his world to the people in his life.
"Cancer is too important a topic to dance around." he says.
"It affects literally everyone, and I hope we get a chance to really break him down the way cancer breaks down humans.
It doesn't matter whether you fought for the country or not. It doesn't matter what you do. This thing is not biased.
So, I hope Cal is put through the ringer with this, because that's the story that needs to be told.
Don't get me wrong. There have been great advancements in technology, and I think those are also worthy of the story when it comes to cancer, but from what I know, even with those advancements, there's still a lot of pain."
This week's episode found Case pretty defeated as he began to repair the damage caused by the same barn fire that also claimed Garrett's life.
So, can you blame the guy for feeling like East Camp may not be the promised land he thought it would be?
Weaver, still eager to get his hands on East Camp, reminded Kase that his offer remained on the table.
Kase agreed to consider the deal, with Dolly happily greasing the wheels every step of the way.
Land out here isn't a commodity, it's a way of life, Kase said, to which she asked, "A way of life you still want?"
Kase had a plan when he and Monica moved to East Camp, but as Dolly reminded him, a lot has changed since then.
Her suggestion was for Kase to figure out what he wants, then make a deal with her father that gets him that, but he said want isn't a concept he's familiar with.
Naturally, Kase ran the idea by Tate, who surprised Kase by saying that home is wherever his father is.
Sure, East Camp is great, but it's also where Monica got sick and died.
After weighing all of his options, Kase decided to sell their land to the Weavers.
"The only thing I ever was taken away from me," Kase said, acknowledging that his father's devotion to Yellowstone also robbed him of so much, and Kase doesn't want that.
Weaver sealed the deal by reminding Kase that he'll never be free until he sheds everything that's weighing him down, including East Camp.
It wouldn't be an episode of Marshals if someone didn't go rogue, and this week, it was Miles' turn.
He took a personal interest in the team's latest case after his friend Sabrina died of a fentanyl overdose, which the Marshals tracked back to a ring being run by the Jalisco Cartel.
Despite the DA telling the Marshals to back off, Miles tracked down the man responsible for Sabrina's death, someone who married into Broken Rock and operated from the inside.
Fortunately, Kase intervened before Miles took justice into his own hands, uh trigger.
"If you put him down hard every time you think of Sabrina, his face will be the only thing you see," Kase told Miles.
"Don't let him rob her memory from you."
Even though Miles technically caught a dangerous criminal, Kayce still suspended him until further notice.
Gee, this ought to do wonders for Kayce's fragile relationship with Maddie.
And then there's the politics of this whole situation.
Rainwater was horrified to learn that the cartel was operating from within the reservation, but he encouraged Miles to remain focused on the fight against the mine. If the committee learns that Broken Rock has already been infiltrated by criminals, it will hurt their chances of moving the mine.
Fans have been loving the latest Yellowstone spin-off since its March 1st debut.
Centered entirely on Kayce Dutton, 1883 follows John Dutton's son as he embarks on a new path by joining a specialized team of US Marshals.
A major bombshell was revealed immediately as Kayce's beloved wife, Monica, has tragically died from cancer.
The episode later reveals that the illness may have been related to toxins dumped by a mine on the Broken Rock reservation.
We learn that this loss has deeply affected Kayce in a profound way as he admits to how her death has gravely impacted his life.
He agrees to join the Marshals team, giving him a renewed sense of purpose.
Kayce later visits Monica's memorial, promising his late wife that he will begin to try again.
Actor Luke Grimes returned to the role as Kayce as well as Broken Rock Chairman Thomas Rainwater, played by Gil Birmingham.
The spin-off also welcomed a new cast member, Logan Marshall Green, who will play Pete Calvin, a close friend from Kayce's military past.
Earlier this season, country fans tuned in to watch country singer Riley Green as he made his big acting debut.
Riley plays a troubled cowboy named Garrett.
This is Riley's first acting role, and it's a pretty big one to land without prior experience.
In an interview with Entertainment Tonight on the red carpet of the show's premiere, the singer shared that he was introduced to the opportunity by Luke.
The two are friends in real life and have even worked together before, since Luke is also a country singer.
When Riley mentioned his interest in acting, Luke helped connect him with an audition, and from there everything moved fast.
On Sunday, May 10th, episode 11 of Marshalls aired.
The episode follows Kayce and Cal as they become stranded in the mountains during a dangerous snowstorm while tracking one of the escaped fugitives, Neal.
Tensions rise after Neal hints that he knows damaging secrets about the Dutton family, including details connected to the infamous train station.
As the trio struggles to survive freezing conditions, flashbacks reveal the truth about a failed military mission involving Kayce, Cal, Garrett, and Rona.
The episode confirms that Rona was left behind during combat after Cal ordered the team to retreat, a decision that fractured the Allow us to set the scene. A bus transporting several high-profile criminals was caught in a rockslide, enabling three dangerous prisoners to get away.
When news of the escape went wide, one of the men's names stopped Kayce dead in his tracks. Whoever this guy was, he needed to be taken care of right away.
The prisoner, who took Kayce about 5 minutes to find in the dead of night in the middle of a forest, turned out to be a former Yellowstone ranch hand named Neal Lamb.
Don't bother trying to remember him, Yellowstone fans.
Like the Cleags, Neal is another troublemaker from the Duttons past who was created for the Marshalls.
Apparently, Kayce heard that Neal has been trying to cut a deal with prosecution, making Kayce wonder what information his father's former employee might be offering in exchange.
Neal acknowledged that he remembers all kinds of things from his time at Yellowstone, but he promised to forget everything if Kayce helped him across the border.
Kayce considered Neal's offer, but he never dropped his gun, knowing that Neal would sing like a canary if law enforcement eventually caught up to him.
"Even as a boy, you were a different sort of man than your father," Neil told Kace, pleading for his life.
"You don't have to solve this problem the way he would."
Luckily for Kace, he didn't get the chance to solve it this problem the way John would because Kayce found him mere moments before he could pull the trigger.
Garrett is really making himself quite at home, isn't he?
For starters, we learned that Andrea spent the night at Kace's after the campfire, and she didn't crash in Kace's bed like we thought might happen after their little stargazing moment last week.
Instead, Andrea found herself drawn to Garrett, even giving him a good morning kiss after brewing a pot of fresh coffee.
Unfortunately for Garrett, it was all downhill from there this week.
While Kace and Dolly began quiet preparations for Garrett's party, the birthday boy found himself trapped in a barn fire.
Kace got him out in time, but Garrett still suffered second-degree burns and lung damage, and the doctors feared that his burn we plotted this week was divided among two cases.
On one side, Harry, the head of the marshal's office, tasks most of the team with an investigation into one of their own, Kace, of course.
It seems that Kleg, the potential season big bad who was introduced last week, has filed a complaint with the Department of Justice saying that his son was actually unarmed when Kace shot him in episode 3.
As such, Kace is benched. This will last approximately 30 seconds while Andrea leads Bell and Miles in their own investigation of the shooting to try and get out in front of the DOJ inquiry. The team feels openly conflicted about this, with Bell and Miles clearly on Kace's side, while Andrea is in the awkward position of having to choose her loyalties.
Harry wants her to dig up some reason to kick Kace off of the team before the DOJ uncovers any Dutton family skeletons, not quite going so far as telling her to manufacture evidence, but implying heavily that her ability to get rid of Kayce could result in her much hoped for transfer back to her old team in DC.
There's, frankly, a lot of runaround in this plot line as the team tries variously to track down any motive Kayce would have to kill Clegg's son. Clegg threatens to go to the press, an old Yellowstone plot line involving Tate's kidnapping is discussed, and Harry attempts to railroad Kayce on some very thin evidence, all of which I'm just going to hand wave away for the moment as it ends up feeling like much ado about nothing.
In the end, when the team manages to turn up some trail cameras that recorded a video proving that Kayce was in the right all along, convenient.
Kayce's badge is saved.
The team all feel bad for investigating him, even though it was literally their jobs.
Harry is pissed off at Andrea, but Andrea feels the same way and warns him never to manipulate her like that again.
On the other side of this week's plot are Kayce and Cal, who, truly 30 seconds after Harry tells Kayce he can't work cases, head out on a search and rescue operation with the rangers.
A rich local landowner and his helicopter pilot have disappeared amidst high winds and dangerous weather.
The guys head out on horseback to search part of the grid, in case you were worried that the helicopter might have crashed in any other sector, don't, and also for some good old manly bonding time amidst discussions about Kayce's issues with rich guys who buy lots of ranch land and acting like king of the valley, daddy issues, whether Kayce killing Clegg's son was justified, and another lecture about Kayce not making friends with the team. They managed to get held at gunpoint by a scruffy man who's living off the grid in the middle of the woods.
Scruffy man is no match for Kayce, naturally, but the guys don't have time to deal with him because they can see the smoke from where the helicopter crashed, so they tell him to go to the ranger station and turn himself in, likely.
At the crash site, they find the rich rancher, Tom Weaver, injured, and his pilot near death.
The weather is getting worse, so they're going to have to attempt to get both parties back to the ranger station by horseback. Only no, actually, they won't because, to quote my notes, "Oh, dip."
A bear.
Despite how dramatic that seems, the bear is scared off in short order, though not before jostling the helicopter enough to exacerbate the pilot's injuries, resulting in the death.
Case blames Weaver for having them out surveying land in the weather, but Weaver clearly feels guilty, and they have a long talk about living in their father's shadows. So, Case forgives him.
Daddy issues again.
Calvin and Miles manage to get Weaver out safely, though not before scruffy man returns, shocking, to steal their supplies and try to shoot them. Case goes to visit Weaver in the hospital afterwards, where he provides him with some handy ranching information. Weaver insists on lending him some ranch hands as repayment for saving his life, and Weaver's beautiful blonde daughter, Dolly, visibly contemplates NSFW way she could also show her gratitude, having apparently taken Cal's nagging about hanging out with the team to heart. Case joins them all at the bar with Dolly.
As Andrea says, "I know what grateful looks like, and that's not how she's eyeing you."
Saddle up, cowboy.
In the final moment of the episode, Dolly corners Case up, gently teasing him about being introverted, and tries to cajole him into showing her what Montana has to offer.
Case says, "Maybe."
For the second week in a row, there's no Tate in the episode. There are a few fun character details in this episode that don't quite come to anything, but might be seeds for the future, including Andrea went to law school, though she didn't graduate. Beth plays golf and gambles on it. Miles ghosted a woman who also goes to their bar.
Okay, not so much for Miles this episode. Easily the most interesting side tidbit of the episode came toward the end when Calvin reveals that Maddie, the bartender he's seemingly been trying to win over all season, is in fact his daughter.
He took the placement on the team to be closer to her, but now she doesn't want anything to do with him because, well, he was a crappy father for 20 years.
Fair enough. I realize this is entirely beside the point of the series, but the show keeps bringing it up and forcing me to think about it.
Kay says he has 300 pairs. That's 300 cows with calves for those who weren't raised in cattle country.
Weaver says he's going to lend Kay some ranch hands to deal with said cattle.
Kay says previously said that Rip also got his some ranch hands.
So, where the heck are these ranch hands?
Why are they never around?
Why is this show forcing me to think about animal husbandry when it clearly just wants to run around the woods and shoot guns?
In front of the DOJ inquiry, the team feels openly conflicted about this with Bell and Miles clearly on Kay's side, while Andrea is in the awkward position of having to choose her loyalties.
Harry wants her to dig up some reason to kick Kay off of the team before the DOJ uncovers any Dutton family skeletons, not quite going so far as telling her to manufacture evidence, but implying heavily that her ability to get rid of Kay could result in her much hoped for transfer back to her old team in DC.
There's, frankly, a lot of run around in this plot line as the team tries variously to track down any motive Kay would have to kill Kleg's son. Kleg threatens to go to the press. An old Yellowstone plot line involving Tate's kidnapping is discussed, and Harry attempts to railroad Kay on some very thin evidence, all of which I'm just going to hand wave away for the moment as it ends up feeling like much ado about nothing.
In the end, when the team manages to turn up some trail cameras that recorded a video proving that Kay was in the right all along, convenient.
Kay's badge is saved.
The team all feel bad for investigating him, even though it was literally their jobs.
Harry is pissed off at Andrea, but Andrea feels the same way and warns him never to manipulate her like that again.
On the other side of this week's plot are Case and Cal, who, truly 30 seconds after Harry tells Case he can't work cases, head out on a search and rescue operation with the Rangers.
A rich local landowner and his helicopter pilot have disappeared amidst high winds and dangerous weather.
The guys head out on horseback to search part of the grid, in case you were worried that the helicopter might have crashed in any other sector, don't, and also for some good old manly bonding time, amidst discussions about Case's issues with rich guys who buy lots of ranch land and acting like king of the valley, daddy issues, whether Case killing Kleg's son was justified, and another lecture about Case not making friends with the team. They managed to get held at gunpoint by a scruffy man who's living off the grid in the middle of the woods.
Scruffy man is no match for Case, naturally, but the guys don't have time to deal with him because they can see the smoke from where the helicopter crashed, so they tell him to go to the ranger station and turn himself in, likely.
At the crash site, they find the rich rancher, Tom Weaver, injured and his pilot near death.
The weather is getting worse, so they're going to have to attempt to get both parties back to the ranger station by horseback. Only no, actually, they won't because, to quote my notes, "Oh, dip."
A bear.
Despite how dramatic that seems, the bear is scared off in short order, though not before jostling the helicopter enough to exacerbate the pilot's injuries, resulting in the death.
Case blames Weaver for having them out surveying land in the weather, but Weaver clearly feels guilty and they have a long talk about living in their fathers' shadows, so Case forgives him, daddy issues again.
Calvin and Miles manage to get Weaver out safely, though not before Scruffy man returns, shocking, to steal their supplies and try to shoot them. Kayce goes to visit Weaver in the hospital afterwards, where he provides him with some handy ranching information. Weaver insists on lending him some ranch hands as repayment for saving his life, and Weaver's beautiful blonde daughter, Dolly, visibly contemplates NSFW.
Marshalls is the first procedural in Yellowstone's universe.
And for three episodes, it has evaded every procedural trap that makes many of them feel underwhelming when the formula is the same.
The conflict here is less about the Kayce and more about Kayce's position on the team.
Marshall Guilford has made it clear that Kayce is a ticking time bomb, and when he explodes, he'll take down everyone with him.
His return reinforces this thesis as he goes after Kayce hard, so much so that it feels like he is being irrational.
On the one hand, one can see where he's coming from because the
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