During the cars inspection in the impound lot, the front left tire of the Toyota Tacoma is inflated despite being punctured with a bullet in Episode 1.
When Agent Susan Duffy enters the police impound garage the lights turn on as she traverses the garage. When Reacher and Angel enter the same garage minutes later the lights are off and they turn on in the same manner. Surely the timers for the lights are set for more than a minute or two.
Jack Reacher was tasked with driving a truck and instructed to not open the back, which had been soldered shut. His DEA friends cut through the solder to inspect the cargo, and it is implied that Reacher solders it shut again.
Upon his arrival, the recipients open the truck without any sign of having to remove solder, which would make them aware that the orders have been disobeyed and the back had been opened.
Upon his arrival, the recipients open the truck without any sign of having to remove solder, which would make them aware that the orders have been disobeyed and the back had been opened.
They meet New Haven officer Grunert in a rest stop on Rt 95 while driving to New London, When they leave, Reacher tells Villanueva to pull off at "the first rest stop after the first highway sign that reads 'New London'". That stop is shown to be 17 miles before New London, which is the New Stonington, CT rest area, just after the the RI / CT state line. That would mean that they met Grunert somewhere in Rhode Island. The only rest stop on 95 South in RI is at mile marker 11. The mile marker 11 rest stop is parking only with no services (unlike the one shown). It is also 75 miles from New Haven, which would have Grunert driving 150 miles or more round trip to another state in a CT municipal police car in order to meet them.
A dog trained to find drugs would not detect a cadaver as Rich claimed it would. There are dogs trained specifically for that task.
Actually, local law enforcement like city police, county sheriff and state police have dogs cross-trained to identify cadavers, drugs and explosives. Plus a dead body gives off a very strong odor, dogs are naturally drawn to the scent of a dead body and can smell it with ease, when it comes to cadavers dogs don't need to be trained to recognize that scent, just to alert when they smell a body.
Actually, local law enforcement like city police, county sheriff and state police have dogs cross-trained to identify cadavers, drugs and explosives. Plus a dead body gives off a very strong odor, dogs are naturally drawn to the scent of a dead body and can smell it with ease, when it comes to cadavers dogs don't need to be trained to recognize that scent, just to alert when they smell a body.
At the gas station Reacher is buying time, but when Angel comes in and asks if he gets a coffee too, Reacher walks out and says no. But as he's buying time, the smart thing would be to get another coffee and take as much time as he can.