"Elementary" Through The Fog(2018) ((BETTER))
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"Elementary" Through the Fog(2018)
Blue Water Baltimore and and the Youth Resiliency Institute have partnered to educate through the power of art for years. Together in 2018, we hosted a photography project to help Cherry Hill residents share their stories through art.
Wilson was first introduced to the art world through her work assisting Richard Avedon on his monumental Western project. She has since gone on to have a major photography career of her own. This exhibition showcases more than 60 large scale images representing the highlights of her career, including such Western subjects as rodeo, small town football, and Western movie making with her sons Luke and Owen Wilson.
Olsen grew up in Plymouth, Wisconsin, where she attended a high school about the same size as Kickapoo, which enrolls around 270 students in sixth through 12th grades. She was set to begin work in research and development at the worldwide packaging supplier Bemis in Neenah after graduation.
A bomb explodes in the office of a website design company, killing two and injuring 11. The first suspect is the person who called the number of a pager that triggered the bomb, but he just misdialed the number. Sherlock learns that the bomb is four years old, leading to investigation of the company that occupied the premises at that time. That turns out to be a high-powered public relations company headed by Heather Vanowen (Lisa Edelstein). Vanowen reveals that they received threatening letters from the ELM, an eco-terrorist group which bombed other companies, in 2008. However, Sherlock determines this bomb did not use eco-friendly chemical compounds, unlike the explosives the ELM used. He finds the bomb was planted in a wall of the office of Pradeep Singh, an executive on a meteoric rise who went missing that year. Sherlock finds Singh's corpse hidden behind a wall of his (now his widow's) house. Singh, it turns out, taped his encounters with prostitutes, one of them being Heather Vanowen. Vanowen had financed her education and the startup of her company through prostitution. Singh was blackmailing her. When the bomb failed to go off, she shot him.
An intruder invades Captain Gregson's home, terrorizing his wife and asking where he can find her husband. She manages to shoot him, and he runs away. Sherlock and Joan comb through Gregson's old cases for suspects. Then two murder victims surface, including Gregson's neighbor Lieutenant James Monroe. Sherlock realizes the killer went to the wrong house (due to a Google Maps error) and is not after Gregson at all. Tying the victims to their joint service in Afghanistan, they investigate an ex-soldier who attacked one of them before being discharged from the Army, but he has no bullet wound. They discover the men were assigned to guard an archaeological site. Sherlock questions Beth Roney, the archaeologist in charge, quickly deducing that she stole artifacts from the dig and is now killing her accomplices. They remember seeing a valuable bowl, one of a set found at the site, in Roney's home, but when they search her place the next day, it is gone. Sherlock realizes her ex-husband must have taken it; Roney's dog barks at unfamiliar men, but the neighbors heard nothing during the night. After being told of evidence incriminating him, the ex-husband confesses and implicates his wife.
A schizophrenic young man, dressed as a knight, wanders into the police station with a gun and states repeatedly that he had to kill the queen. Sherlock manages to defuse the situation by playing along with his delusions. The story is being told by Sherlock in a hearing. After the man is identified as Silas Cole, Sherlock and Joan find his ex-girlfriend dead, shot through the heart, but Sherlock is convinced that Cole did not kill her; his "knight's code" would have prohibited destroying her heart, thought in medieval times to house the soul. In the course of their investigation, Sherlock unintentionally gets a man fired by revealing he is out on parole. Bell is shot in the stomach, jumping in front of Sherlock when the man comes gunning for him. Sherlock and Joan eventually discover that the victim's heart was enlarged; she was participating in a trial drug program, and her doctor killed her to cover up the drug's failure.
[Warning: this episode contains instances of rapidly changing bright images mimicking an epilepsy trigger.] Software developer Edwin Borstein has created an artificial intelligence (AI) program called Bella, and he hires Sherlock because someone has broken into his company and stolen a copy of the program. Sherlock takes the case, not because he finds it interesting, but because he does not believe AI is achievable. He solves the theft case, but then Borstein dies from a fatal epileptic seizure, seemingly caused by Bella through rapidly cycling images displayed on Borstein's monitor. Sherlock finds a program hidden on a music CD death metal fan Bortein was given. Eventually he traces the criminal to a think tank that believes that AI is the greatest threat to human existence. He is confident that its leading light, computer science professor Isaac Pike, is responsible, but a devotee confesses, despite having no programming skills.
As Joan mourns Andrew's death, Sherlock enlists Detective Bell, who is on his day off, to help him find two missing pregnant zebras stolen from a zoo. A trademarked color provides the first clue; the color is only used on delivery vans for one company. They eventually find the zebras, who have given birth. They also find a veterinarian, shot dead; Sherlock believes he was forced to help with the induced premature births. They later find one foal, which Sherlock identifies as a quagga, which went extinct over a century before. Sherlock realizes the killer must be an employee of the zoo. The staff are gathered at the police station. A false accusation enables Sherlock to identify the real murderer, a PhD student, by his relaxation. The killer escapes police surveillance through an old speakeasy tunnel, but Sherlock, realizing the student needs to raise funds for his getaway, wins the online auction for the second quagga and sets a trap.
Sherlock is visited by a member of Everyone, the activist hacker group. The visitor, username "Sucking Chest Wound", explains there is civil war in the group: his anarchist faction versus that of the more politically motivated "Species". Then Species, real name Errol White, is found killed by a now-missing samurai short sword. Chest Wound's hair is found under the body, and Species' blood is found in his car trunk. He is arrested - real name Petros Franken. Rachel, his alibi, denies she was with Franken but later admits she lied. Sherlock reckons Franken is being framed and asks who benefits from White's death. Franken says White boasted to Everyone's 'inner sanctum' about a stash of data worth millions. Cabel Hill admits he stole the stash, but weeks before White's murder. He says the stash also contains every hack by White. From the stash, Sherlock identifies Species by message style ("fist"). But Sherlock detects two fists: Species was two people, a secret arrangement that allowed Species to be online 24 hours a day. Sherlock identifies the other half of Species as Tessee, another Everyone member. Tessee killed White when he rejected Tessee's Operation Right Nut, the hack of a right-wing think tank called the Atherton Foundation, because he felt it was too dangerous. Tessee is capitalising on Everyone's sympathy for Species/White's death to triumph in the Everyone rift, and the hack is imminent. The NSA says Atherton is providing services to US Intelligence. Tessee is identified as Bradley Dietz. When Sherlock and Joan confront Dietz, he is rescued by FBI Agent Branch, who provides an alibi. Sherlock reckons that, oddly, Branch wants Everyone to hack Atherton and, through a forensic accountant, finds that Atherton coordinates FBI and Homeland Security investigations with the internal security departments of major U.S. corporations. If Everyone hacks Atherton, the group's members would be arrested for treason and Branch would gain rapid promotion. Sherlock tells Branch he knows her secret (knowingly exploiting an illegal immigrant) and will report her unless she gives the police an anonymous tip on where to find the murder weapon. Everyone has been warned about Atherton, so Dietz is now useless to her. Branch caves in. Dietz is arrested and confesses.
Virgil Gwinn, the manager of a high-end storage facility, is murdered. The facility is a foreign-trade zone, which means that goods brought there from abroad are not considered to have entered the United States yet and, therefore, are not subject to customs inspection or duties, which makes it attractive to criminals. Sherlock and Joan discover that Gwinn was secretly searching his clients' units for valuable information to sell. Sherlock eliminates all clients but one from his list of suspects: heiress Aura Swenson. Swenson's now-deceased father had amassed a collection of religious artifacts through questionable means as head of an international construction company. Sebastian Florenti, an appraiser Swenson had hired, tells Sherlock and Joan that he quit after Swenson asked him to create forged provenance for the artifacts. However, Swenson proves she has no motive; she had negotiated with the Ethiopian government to secure her ownership of the objects in exchange for helping rebuild the country's infrastructure following an announced peace deal with neighboring Eritrea. Sherlock finds an archaeologist's journal entry suggesting there is oil on disputed land Ethiopia was ceding to Eritrea as part of the agreement. Ethiopia then cancels the deal after this is brought to light. Sherlock realizes that Florenti sold the information to the Eritreans and hired a hitman to kill Gwinn. 041b061a72