:12:01
- You're three hours early.
- It's an amazing opportunity.
:12:05
- Amazing.
- I have a class in here
in 15 minutes, you know.
:12:09
Oh, well, you're gonna
want to hear this, Ben.
:12:15
Tell me.
:12:17
He killed two Rwandan park rangers
and injured three others...
:12:21
with a wooden club.
:12:24
- He was studying the animals
there, right?
- Not any more.
:12:26
The party of foresters and rangers
said he walked among them...
:12:31
part of the animal group.
:12:33
It's just possible, Ben, that he was
living with the mountain gorillas...
:12:37
for nearly two years.
:12:42
With them.
:12:45
"Noted anthropologist
and primatologist Ethan Powell...
:12:48
was reported missing
in October 1994."
:12:53
Lost for nearly two years,
:12:55
then found.
:12:58
But when they tried to contact Ethan,
he turned on them.
:13:01
Like an animal, they said.
:13:03
They put him in an African
prison for a year. He hasn't
spoken a word since his arrest.
:13:07
So, what do we have here?
:13:11
He lives with the animals,
:13:13
takes on their behavior.
:13:17
Becomes one.
:13:21
- How does that happen?
- Exactly.
:13:24
How?
:13:28
They want a 30-day evaluation, followed
immediately by a hearing with a judge.
:13:31
I'll give him a day to rest,
then I'll see him on Thursday.
:13:35
Uh, Ben, there's something
I want to ask you for.
:13:38
- What is it?
- Ethan Powell.
:13:41
The evaluation...
I want it.
:13:44
You don't have nearly enough
experience for a case like this.
:13:47
You know that, don't you?
Why should I give it to you?
:13:52
- Important issues here, Ben.
- Yes.
:13:55
One of them is your career,
right?
:13:58
I mean, a case like this
is all about career, and you've
been thinking about that.