In every law enforcement procedural, the good guys spend whole episode after episode searching for the whereabouts of their current suspect. And even with the technology and equipment at their disposal, even with a crack team on the case tasked with this very endeavor, it still takes pain-staking time.
Yet when the perp switches the tables, and looks for the good guys, it's as if they are able to do it by osmosis. They find their target in their personal home, at their workplace, at other places they are visiting, or even when they are off running during their off-hours. And the suspects do it on their own without benefit of a team, and without equipment.
From one phone call, here, the suspect knew the heroine's full name and somehow her address to her newly bought house (and happened to be there when the target by "coincident" had to go out on an errand.)
Think back, not only to this show but all other cop shows, when the bad guy is looking for the good guy, they just turn up where the good guy is. How?
Why is it always so hard for the good guys, yet nearly always so easy for the bad guys?
Yet when the perp switches the tables, and looks for the good guys, it's as if they are able to do it by osmosis. They find their target in their personal home, at their workplace, at other places they are visiting, or even when they are off running during their off-hours. And the suspects do it on their own without benefit of a team, and without equipment.
From one phone call, here, the suspect knew the heroine's full name and somehow her address to her newly bought house (and happened to be there when the target by "coincident" had to go out on an errand.)
Think back, not only to this show but all other cop shows, when the bad guy is looking for the good guy, they just turn up where the good guy is. How?
Why is it always so hard for the good guys, yet nearly always so easy for the bad guys?