The BAU uses "brain fingerprinting" (EEG monitoring while viewing crime scene images) to see if his brain recognizes details of the murders.
Upon waking, Matloff suffers from focal retrograde amnesia. The team must determine if his amnesia is genuine or a ruse to avoid trial. Menti criminali 3x19
In a notable courtroom scene on IMDb , Agent Hotchner delivers a scathing profile of the defense attorney, Lester Serling, correctly deducing his gambling debts and personal insecurities based on subtle details like his clothing and shoe lifts. The BAU uses "brain fingerprinting" (EEG monitoring while
In the Criminal Minds (Italian title: Menti Criminali ) Season 3 episode titled (3x19), the Behavioral Analysis Unit (BAU) reopens a cold case from 2004 when a suspected serial killer wakes up from a four-year coma with no memory of his past. Plot Overview In a notable courtroom scene on IMDb ,
Brian Matloff , known as the "Blue Ridge Strangler," allegedly killed three women in Roanoke, Virginia. During a 2004 arrest attempt, he fell from a building and entered a coma.