While this is going on, Boyle has hit a new low as he deals with the fact Vivian broke up with him. Peralta is officially in as the season ends. When Jake tells him he’s been fired, the man introduces himself as Leo Ianucci. Cut back to the beginning where Peralta is at the bar talking to the man who asked him why he’s celebrating. I might have actually shed a tear.Īt least he looks good in purple. Except it’s kind of sad and weirdly mature for Jake since he admits that he knows that nothing is likely to happen. Not certain about his own future, he FINALLY tells Amy that he has feelings for her. It’s really cute.Īs Peralta leaves the office to start the mission, he runs into Santiago on his way out. Peralta then acts out continuing to be fired and you can totally see Stephanie Beatriz break cover as Samberg goes overboard. Holt informs the rest of the detectives (minus Hitchcock and Scully) that Peralta is going undercover and that they will miss him. “Closed eyes, head first, can’t lose!” Oof, don’t let Leslie Knope hear you say that, Jake. They ask Peralta to go undercover on the case for six months to gain the trust of the Ianucci family and he immediately says yes. They have a feeling it goes all the way to the Ianucci crime family and if Peralta exposed the case, it would blow the case they were working. Plus, Peralta getting himself fired is funny as hell.Īfter the hearing, Holt comes to Peralta with FBI agents who are looking into Wint as well. It says a lot to how much they’ve grown that the two of them put their trust in each other so much. This seems strange as hell, but Holt asks Peralta to trust him. However, Holt stops Peralta from presenting the evidence and asks him to get himself fired. With some dancing, clever undercover work, and a little bit of sad cuteness between him and Santiago, Peralta gets the evidence he needs against Wint to present at the hearing. The two times I have watched the episode already, I lost it at those parts every time. This is where the episode REALLY hits quality, because Holt has game with ladies and the freaking thrift store dance competition outfits. This involves going to a judge to get a warrant signed and entering a ballroom dance competition at the community center. Holt decides to help Peralta on the case against Wint to bring up to the hearing, but tells him he’ll be with him every step of the way as the rest of the 99 stalls for them at the meeting. It’s definitely damaging to Wint, but really, this scene is the best for Mande. The day of the hearing, Santiago brings a drug dealer named Lucas (played by Joe Mande) to Holt to share what he knows. However, Santiago believes in Peralta’s hunch about Wint and decides to follow along with the case. Holt immediately berates Peralta for disobeying a direct order and informs him that Podolski is calling him up on Charges and Specs, which could result in Peralta being suspended. …Except not really because he then take Santiago on a stakeout in front of Wint’s community center where he is then promptly caught by Wint. Holt backs the orders and Peralta goes off the case… However, since Podolski hates Peralta and believes Wint’s innocence, he responds to Wint’s complaints about him and orders him to back off. Peralta has been pursuing a case against a community leader named Lucas Wint under the belief that he’s using his organization as a front to launder drug money. This time, he has a much bigger reason to be annoyed at the detective. You might remember him from the episode ‘The Tagger,’ where he gave Peralta Hell for trying to arrest his son. The person sitting next to him asks why and Jake tells him it’s because he had just been fired from the NYPD.Ĭut to a week earlier, where Peralta is brought into Holt’s office to speak with him and Commissioner Podolski. The episode opens with a drunk Jake hanging out at a bar buying drinks for everyone. Oh man, I was a little worried there for the past few episodes, but I don’t think there could have been any better way to end one of the best first seasons in TV in recent memory. Diaz and Jeffords work together to help Boyle over his breakup. Summary: Despite being told to back off by Holt and Commissioner Podolski, Peralta relentlessly pursues a community leader for potential money laundering. Brooklyn Nine-Nine: Charges and Specs (1×22)
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