- [first lines]
- Narrator: With millions of cars on the nation's highways, it is inevitable that even the best drivers occasionally are guilty of a minor traffic violation. In most cases, a citation has the desired effect. The motorist drives on with increased alertness and caution. In rare instances, the issuing of a traffic ticket has results that are unexpected, even by veteran officers of the Highway Patrol. On May 25th, Patrolman Blackwell issued a citation to a motorist. The offense was minor, and the driver cooperated - a routine incident. Yet it was to provide a clue in a brutal murder. Two days later, boys hunting for frogs discovered the body of a man lying in the weeds at the edge of a pond. The victim had been shot through the back of the head. There was no identification on the body. Later that day, the Records Section reported to Dan Mathews.
- [last lines]
- Dan Mathews: Dahlquist? I'm Mathews, Highway Patrol.
- Sam Dahlquist: I'm sure glad to see you, Mathews.
- Dan Mathews: You coulda had that pleasure if you'd let me know as soon as you found out that Garrow was murdered. You woulda saved everybody a lot of trouble. Did you finish your article?
- Sam Dahlquist: Yes. That's why I...
- [Mathews interrupts Dahlquist]
- Dan Mathews: You write on dangerous subjects. Next time let's collaborate, huh.