- A WWII survivor encounters a Nazi collaborator. Malloy and Reed stumble upon his ambush plan during a routine night check. The pair use their humanity and police training before this vendetta causes another tragedy.
- Reed and Malloy spot an open back door to store on night patrol. When they investigate it, a car suddenly leaves the alley as they enter the shop. Malloy steps on a rug, setting off a buzzer, and the store owner comes out brandishing a rifle. It appears the owner was waiting for someone in ambush. They report it to Mac who passes it on to the detectives. He reports back the store owner has a clean sheet and came to the country 17 years earlier from Eastern Europe. They decide to talk to a local priest who knows the store owner. When the owner hears this, he complains to Mac. Next day the men handle a call from a woman with a drunk man in her car. He had been buying her drinks at the bar there. Later, they receive a report of shots at the store and arrive to find an intruder knocked out on the floor and no one else there. They visit the priest who has the owner in his office. The intruder was a man who worked with the Nazis in Europe and did not want to be turned in.—Anonymous
- Late one night, Malloy and Reed are patrolling a commercial area where many robberies have occurred of late, when they spot the back door of a closed tailor shop ajar. While they are about to investigate, a car is about to drive into the back alley, the vehicle which then promptly turns around when the driver spots the police officers. The incident makes Malloy and Reed believe that a robbery is indeed in progress, that car was a getaway vehicle, and that a robber or robbers are still inside the shop now without a getaway vehicle. What they find inside however is a sole man, the shop owner, Angelo Covelli, hidden behind a curtain carrying a rifle. He seemed ready to shoot whoever entered until he heard Malloy identify themselves as police. When he knew someone was inside the shop with him, he yelled something in a language Malloy and Reed didn't understand. When questioned, Covelli seemed evasive about what he was doing, and despite he having no record, being an upstanding citizen in the community, and being in his own shop, Malloy and Reed believe that he was in the progress of doing something criminal when they entered. Without probable cause, they have to tread lightly to find out more about Covelli and stop his possible criminal activity before he hurts someone else, or himself and his reputation. What Covelli yelled may assist in finding out what he was up to. On another call, Malloy and Reed deal with a drunk in a woman's car. Although she wants the drunk out of her car, she too is less than forthright or cooperative with the officers about the entire story.—Huggo
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