In the previous episode 10 of The Equalizer, They celebrated Cassoulet day. Aunt Vi made it for the family. To prepare it, Vi often spent the entire day in a heated kitchen. But this year, Delilah stepped in. They were all set to make the dish until the youngster got a better offer. Her pal invited her shopping. Delilah chose that above creating a family dish, therefore Vi chose not to make it. Read the recap of episode 11 below. Do you want to know when The Equalizer season 2 episode 12 will be back on CBS? We’ll have to move on in order to see this. www.tvacute.com provides some news for The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 12.
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 14 Exact Release Date
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 13 Recap
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 12 Spoilers
The episode title is “Somewhere Over the Hudson.” In this episode, Robyn McCall (Queen Latifah) assists Bert Singer (Josh Cooke), a mob accountant, in searching the city for a lost ledger of evidence that he must submit to the FBI in exchange for admission into the Federal Witness Protection Program.
Meanwhile, Mel (Liza Lapira) is unsure how to break the news to her best friend, who has consoled her for years about Harry’s death, that Harry (Adam Goldberg) never died.
The Equalizer Episode 2.12 Synopsis: – McCall helps a mob accountant scour the city for a lost ledger of evidence he must provide to the FBI in exchange for entrance into the witness protection program; Mel frets over how to tell her best friend that Harry never died.
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 12 Promo
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 12 Release Date
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 12 will release on Sunday, March 13, 2022, at 8:30/7:30c, 8/PT on the CBS Television Network. The Equalizer can also be watched on the CBS streaming service Paramount+. You can watch The Equalizer for free for seven days before you pay $5.99 a month for the service. YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, and fuboTV are some of the streaming services that let you watch The Equalizer on the go. The last few episodes of the show will keep airing on Sunday.
The Equalizer Season 2 Episode 10 Recap
Cassoulet day! Every year, Aunt Vi made it for the family. To prepare it, Vi often spent the entire day in a heated kitchen. But this year, Delilah stepped in. They were all set to make the dish until the youngster got a better offer. Her pal invited her shopping. Delilah chose that above creating a family dish, therefore Vi chose not to make it. She didn’t want to keep Delilah. She knew she would be confined inside with a grumpy teen all day, and Delilah’s mother wouldn’t be much help either. McCall’s initial thought was to make Delilah visit her great aunt. But Delilah would’ve hated them both. Also, McCall’s job didn’t have regular hours, and her team had a fresh case. Chloe, a young Asian woman, came to her because she thought a member of her group had died. The authorities ignored Chloe’s warnings because the victim died in an unintentional electric fire. Racists had been targeting Ms. Li’s new bakery for months before her death. It got so severe that Chloe accompanied her out of the bakery.
Ms. Li died while Chloe didn’t. It was too coincidental. The more McCall and her colleagues learned the more certain they were of the murder angle. Then there were the racists. Ms. Li’s bakery was so successful that she opened a second one. But someone wrote scathing Yelp reviews about the new bakery. Harry traced the notes to Castelli’s Bakery. It wasn’t the owner. It was his nephew. He felt awful that his uncle was failing while Ms. Li’s business grew, so he went racist. The nephew had a cover storey. He wasn’t behind Ms. Li’s death because he was in upstate New York for a family wedding, but he may have caused it with his statements. The fact that some of it were seen by a witness was the second strongest clue. A neighbor had stopped by for late-night pork buns. A group of men broke the window to get entry, and he fled rather than ask for help or assist the woman who has always watched out for him. So Robyn used security footage to find him. Frank’s name. A break in the windows was captured on camera. But Frank was unable to explain what happened next. McCall saved him from being beaten up by another detective investigating the crime. Ray’s name. He was a former cop who roughed up Frank for being present when Ms. Li died and doing nothing. Frank was a bore. Ray, however, was not. Ms. Li matched Ray. He knew something Chloe didn’t, so he told McCall. Ms. Li’s store was robbed. Someone splattered paint on her walls. Ms. Li pursued them. She smacked one of them in the eye with her keys.
Ray tried to track down everyone who had similar eye injuries, but he couldn’t find anyone, so the team got lucky when they discovered Ms. Li wasn’t the only victim. It happened again. They experienced the same problem and sought to inform the cops, but they were ignored since they did not seek an interpreter for the witness. the males running inside a van. Harry found it. Their racists worked at an electrical supply company. They could set up an electrical fire. McCall couldn’t go shopping. She had a date with Kisha. Mel went instead to aid the young lady. Mel neared the van. She got close to a man with an eye injury and took DNA before fleeing. The men’s DNA didn’t match the cigarette bud they found at the scene. It was linked to someone. It was Frank’s. Frank knew the men who attacked Ms. Li. Frank was there that night because they grew up on the same street. He was the detour. So Frank wanted a late-night snack. Frank was in on them killing a woman who was only ever friendly to them. Ray reacted when Detective Dante tried to get Frank to admit it. Ray mourned Ms. Li’s loss. He was enraged to learn that police might have arrested the perpetrators two weeks ago, before Ms. Li’s murder, if they had merely investigated the earlier allegation. Ray went shopping. He fought the racists. And he was wired the entire time. Ray was willing to risk his life to get a recording of them confessing to Ms. Li’s murder. Mel saved him before he died. In Chinatown, the racists were sentenced to death for murder. And Ray, who knew his father, told Dante that the police often let down people of colour, but it was up to good individuals like Dante to keep doing the work.