Ansys Libraries
Reviewers from TV Fanatic noted that while the case itself follows a familiar procedural beat, it excels in highlighting and the "human cost of beat work" introduced by the new partnership of Burgess and Tay.
The investigation takes the team into "The Gardens," one of the most dangerous and neglected neighborhoods in District 21. Intelligence faces immediate friction from local residents who are skeptical of the police's motives, believing the department is only prioritizing the case because the victim is a Caucasian woman.
: The team discovers that Nathan wasn't just a random victim; he had "made a wrong turn" by attempting to buy drugs with counterfeit money from a local dealer. [S4E2] Made a Wrong Turn
: Between the chaos, Lindsay and Halstead take a big step in their relationship when Lindsay asks Halstead to move in with her. Thematic Analysis: Perception vs. Reality
This blog post summarizes the events and themes of , titled "Made a Wrong Turn." Episode Recap: A Race Against Time in "The Gardens" Reviewers from TV Fanatic noted that while the
In this intense installment, the Intelligence Unit is pushed to its limits when a routine call about a car being stripped leads to a much darker discovery. Patrol officers and Tay find a young man, Nathan, brutally beaten in the trunk of his car, but his fiancée, Sarah Murphy, is missing.
: Through gritty police work and a tense dual interrogation, the team identifies Kenneth Waddell as the captor. In a final showdown, Voight and his team reach a fragile peace with the neighborhood to locate and save Sarah. : The team discovers that Nathan wasn't just
The episode's title, "Made a Wrong Turn," serves as a double entendre. It refers to the physical mistake Nathan made entering a dangerous area, but also to the moral "wrong turns" characters make—from Nathan’s desperate drug deal to the systemic tensions between the police and the communities they serve.