Carolyn Wilder is a main character in the seventh season of the FX series Justified.
Biography[]
Carolyn Wilder is the defense attorney of Clement Mansell, known as "the Oklahoma Wildman." She was born in Detroit, and largely self-raised, with Marcus "Sweety" Sweeton as a shirttail uncle following the death of her father. Her father, a worker on a GM line, died after the plant closed, when she was a still a young girl and Sweety promised to look out for her. Mansell has blackmailed her into representing him and she finds herself caught between him and Raylan Givens, whom she finds intriguing. Despite this, she has every intention of representing her client.
Wilder excels at getting dangerous perpetrators off the hook on technicalities.[1]
Wilder comes into conflict with Raylan Givens based on her opinion that she knows how he's been doing things and that he can't do them in her town and not with her. Nevertheless, she is someone who feels that justice is something that isn't necessarily found inside a courthouse or a legislative building and that makes her and Raylan kindred spirits.[2]
Carolyn has an ex-husband named Jamal, whom she once ran her law firm with as Wilder & Wilder. Following a series of bad decisions by Jamal, the two became estranged and eventually divorced. Since then, Jamal has been hounding Carolyn every so often for money.
City Primeval/Season 7[]
In "City Primeval," Carolyn Wilder is present at the hearing of one of her clients, a teenage boy named Tyrone. Tyrone is already wanted in Michigan on a number of charges in Michigan and now has charges of assault, attempted carjacking and felony possession of a firearm from an incident in Florida where he attempted to carjack Raylan Givens. Wilder, however, immediately begins picking holes in Raylan's story, particularly his claim that after the attempted carjacking he immediately took her client and the other individual involved in the carjacking to the courthouse. She gets him to admit that he did, in fact, first try to drop his daughter Willa off at summer camp and then stopped for lunch. She also gets out of him the fact that he threatened at one point to place Tyrone in the trunk of his car. This, combined with the giggling interruptions of Raylan's daughter from watching videos on her phone results in the judge, Alvin Guy, dropping all charges from the Florida incident, though he lets the Michigan charges stand and sets bail at $100,000.
Later, Carolyn visits the bar of Marcus "Sweety" Sweeton. There, she meets with a man named Jamal, who is apparently either her ex-husband or ex-boyfriend. She comments to him that she's been busy cleaning up his mess. He tells her that he's trying to restart his life, but she tells him that he threw it away when he defrauded her and his creditors. He, however, retorts that if he doesn't pay them back, then they might start digging into his financials, which could hurt her. She asks if he's threatening her, telling him to start by selling off his cute shoes if he needs money. After he is gone, Sweety asks her why she still gives him the time of day. He thanks her for helping Tyrone, slipping her an envelope but saying that it's less than what they talked about. She waves this off, saying that she owes him for a lifetime of watching out for her. She then takes a call from Clement Mansell.
Following this, Carolyn sits in a bar, discussing a possible plea deal with another attorney. She tells the woman that there's no way she can take the deal as its structured for her client, that it doesn't reduce nearly enough of the sentence. Meanwhile, Raylan is at another table with his daughter, Willa. Seeing Raylan looking at Carolyn, Willa thinks to hook them up by going up to the bartender and ordering the "dumbest drink on the menu" for Carolyn, one that sparks and fizzes. Raylan, however, declares it to be her bedtime and leaves, taking her with him.
In "The Oklahoma Wildman," a flashback shows that in 2017, Clement Mansell was involved in a scheme with Sweety to rob several drug dealers. Suspecting that they were holding out on them, he shot and killed them, but one of them survived. Just before being arrested, he advised Sweety to get him a lawyer and Carolyn Wilder was the lawyer that he secured for him. As he meets with her in jail, he calls it his lucky day. Later, it is revealed that despite there being a surviving witness, she managed to get Mansell off on a federal detainer charge.
In the present, Carolyn puts in a call to Raylan Givens, asking him to come and meet her in her office. When he arrives, Clement Mansell is there as well and the meeting is fraught with tension. Carolyn asks Raylan if he has reason to suspect that her client is involved in the murder of Judge Alvin Guy, who was shot and killed in his car the night before, along with his assistant, Rose Doyle. In response, Raylan asks Clement if he was out driving a Range Rover the night before. Carolyn tells Clement not to answer the question, but Clement taunts Raylan, asking how he's going to lay the judge on him. He further comments that there are two types of lawmen at Raylan's age: ones who were passed over for a higher position and ones who just enjoy it so much, they'll have to be dragged away. Raylan briefly leaves the room to take a call from Will and overhears Clement whispering something to Carolyn and her shouting at him to get out. Telling his daughter he'll call her right back, he passes Clement as he exits, who nods to him. Raylan goes to Carolyn, asking her if she's good. "He's a beauty," replies Carolyn and he tells her that he kills people. She tells him they both know each other's jobs, saying that she knows he means well, but letting him complete the thought that it's none of his business. Later, she finds himself summoned to Sweety's bar, where Raylan and Wendell Robinson of the Detroit Police Department are searching for a gun that may have been deposited there by Sandy Stanton, Clement's female companion. She warns them off for harassing her client and they claim that they were just talking. She tells them they're not to conduct any search unless they have a warrant and wishes them a good night. After they have left, Carolyn asks Sweety if there's something she needs to know and he tells her that Clement Mansell is back in town. She tells him that she already knows and he compares Mansell to the Egyptian legend of Apophis, the snake who wanted to kill the sun god Ra and stop the light.
In "Backstabbers," Carolyn sits outside her home, staring a paper from the IRS. She talks on her cell phone, telling Jamal that she's looking at a lien from the IRS for $106,516.74. She tells Jamal that it's his mess, not hers, and that she needs to fix it. She then heads through her home and out to the other side, where Clement Mansell has pulled up and is pulling loud music. She tells him to turn it off, that her neighbors are sleeping. He presents her with a bloodied face, asking her what she thinks. He tells her that the marshal did it, that she chatted up his girl, so he went and talked to his daughter in response. She tells him that maybe he deserves what he got, but he suggests they take photos to use as evidence. She asks him what he thinks he's doing, messing with a U.S. marshal's daughter, and he replies "Whatever I want," before getting back into his car and taking off. Later, she talks with Raylan, who tells her that she needs to get her client under control. "Excuse me?" she asks and he tells her that there are boundaries, that Clement crossed a line. She points out the fact that Raylan laid hands on Clement. When he tells her that Clement isn't just some misguided boy, but a killer, she tells him to prove it, the right way, that not everybody gets to be angry the way he does.
Following this, Carolyn sits in the courthouse with a laptop, reviewing an application for the position of Application for Appointment to the Office of Associate Judge. She stares at a question which asks if a lien has ever been filed against the applicant for delinquent taxes. She then walks inside the empty courtroom and seats herself at the judge's desk. She bangs the gavel, imagining herself in a position she can likely never have. Back at her office, she receives a visit from Sweety. He tells her that he has a hypothetical for her: that he might have a murder weapon: the gun that was used to kill the judge, his assistant and several others back in the Wrecking Crew killings. He asks her where it would leave him if it were to show itself. She comments that she's speaking to her like she's just his lawyer, despite their long history. She tells him that he ought to turn it in, that they could both get Clement off their backs. He replies that he could go to prison, but she tells him that he wouldn't, that she knows someone who could get him immunity. He tells her to work her magic, that he'll be waiting.
In "Kokomo," Carolyn is in her office with Tyrone, the teen who tried to carjack Raylan. He complains to her about the ankle monitoring bracelet he's been made to wear, telling her that it's too tight, and turning his foot blue. She points out that it's not supposed to be comfortable, that it's supposed to keep him out of the DDC (Detroit Detention Center), asking him if he's there right now. Just then, Raylan shows up. She tells Tyrone not to move, or say anything. She goes to Raylan, saying that she's going to assume he's there because of Clement Mansell. He tells her she isn't wrong, that her client may have crossed a line with the local Albanian mob. She asks if he's there to question Clement and he replies that he isn't, that he's there because the Albanian kid whose leg that Clement busted, Skender Lulgjuraj, isn't talking. He tells her that hordes of Albanians are spreading out across Detroit at the moment, looking to kill Clement, Sandy Stanton, and anyone associated. She says that Raylan is trying to scare her. He tells her that she's in over her head, that he's only been in Detroit less than a week and he's certainly seen things that would give him pause. She, however, tells him that Clement has the constitutional right to representation and she intends to provide it for as long as he pays her, that nothing will scare her away. He says she knows this is different, but she asks what he wants from her. He tells her it's only for Clement Mansell not to do her any harm and she tells him to do his job and she'll do hers and they'll see.
Later, Carolyn receives a visit from Sweety. She tells him that she got someone in the county prosecutor's office to talk to her. She tells him that she can get him a deal: that if he hands over the murder weapon and testifies to what he knows about the Wrecking Crew murders and that of Judge Alvin Guy, she can get him immunity on the Wrecking Crew murders and hiding the weapon. "So, in other words, I snitch," he replies and she tells him that Clement has been hanging this over his head for years and this is how he stops being collateral damage. He tells her that he's never had the system solve his problems for him before and she points out that he had asked her for this. He tells her that last time he saw Clement Mansell, he didn't him, but now he does. He tells her that he has an opportunity to both get what's coming to him and take down Clement in the process. She asks what he means and he asks her if she really wants to hear it. She tells him she really does and he says that the gun isn't the only thing in play from the night that the judge died. "Do you mean his little black book?" she asks, wondering if it's really real. He tells her that it is, that it's like a key to the city, there being enough dirt there make real moves, even put her in the judge's seat. She asks if he really wants to wade around in murky waters like this and he tells her that he's tired of waiting around for the right thing to happen.
That evening, Carolyn leaves her office, only to realize that someone is following her. She makes a call, and then pulls over to the side of the road. A man comes up to the window of the vehicle that has pulled up behind her and taps a badge on it. It turns out to be Raylan Givens, who warns the two Albanian men inside that the judge in the car ahead of them is off-limits. He tells them that there's been a personnel change and that they need to go and check in with their boss, Toma Kostia. He then goes to Carolyn, who tells him that she's never been happier to see a cop in her life. He tells her that he just came from Sandy Stanton's apartment where two Albanians were pulling the teeth out of the mouth of Sandy's roommate Hina and that one is now dead and the other in custody. She thanks him for sending the ones that came after her on their way, but he warns her that eventually they'll find her house. She tells him she can handle it, but he tells her that she won't have to, that they're sending someone there. She tells him that she's not asking him to do that, but he tells her it's not his decision, that she's of value with the case. When she continues to complain, he tells her "take it up with the judge." That evening, she spots a car outside her home and inside it is Raylan Givens. Grinning slightly, she goes outside and greets him, asking what he personally is doing there with the whole Detroit PD looking out for her. He comments that he must have drawn the short straw. She presents a bottle of liquor and then goes over to the other side of the car, getting in with some glasses to drink it. She tells him this doesn't change where they stand in regard to Clement Mansell and he says he didn't come talk about him. She asks where his daughter is and he tells her he sent her back to Miami. She asks if he's going to spend the whole night out there and he says that he hadn't planned it that far ahead. "Shooting from the hip?" she asks and he agrees that it's something like that.
In "You Good?," Carolyn wakes up with Raylan in her bed, the two having slept together the night before. He comments that it looks like he kept the Albanians out and she tells him that it never happened, that she wants to lay some ground rules. She says that nothing changes between them, that her client is still her client. "Yep," agrees Raylan, asking how it was for her. She tells him it was about what she expected. Raylan heads out, but later returns to her, telling her she had a visitor while she was in the shower. She curses, but he says it wasn't an Albanian unless there are black Albanians. He tells her that the man had said that they have money matters discuss. He asks her if he's a client, but she refuss to tell him anything, saying that just because he got into her pants doesn't mean that he can get into her business. He points out that she had said this never happened and they kiss. She tells him not to follow her to the courthouse, that she has plenty of protection there, but he nevertheless does tail her for a while before heading off to the Detroit Police Department.
That afternoon at the courthouse, Carolyn stops a woman named Diane, asking her if she's heard anything about Judge Guy's replacement. She claims that she's unable to talk about it. Carolyn asks why, then seeming to realize something, asks if she put herself up for the judgeship. She complains about her greasing palms and she replies that she does what she has to. Carolyn tells her that she's a politician and that politicians should not be on the bench. Diane, however, tells her that if she wants it to go make friends with the governor. Later that day, Carolyn finds Raylan waiting outside the courtrooms with a bouquet of flowers. "You didn't!" she says and he tells her that he didn't, that the flowers were, in fact, sent by her client, Clement Mansell. She replies that with the day she's had, she doesn't even care that he's doing this in public. She says that if the devil gave her chocolates, she'd eat them, and he asks if this is her way of saying that she's hungry. The two of them hed off to their cars to meet at a restaurant, not realizing that they are being watched by the man that Raylan met earlier, who is Carolyn's ex-husband, Jamal.
The two arrive at a Chinese restaurant. There, they they have conversation about the phrase "You good," Carolyn asking why people think it's okay to tell others how they feel. She says that in Detroit, they keep it as a question. She says that everyone in her life has her foot on her neck to get what they want. She describes this as being small of them to try to use their power over people. She explains that she want power too, but to set things right. He notes that she's confident in her judgment and she agrees she has to be if she wants to sit on the bench. He notes that she's sitting there with him and she tells him she never said that her judgment wasn't occasionally impaired. He asks if they're at emotions already and she says they should just keep at aspirations. He tells her that he aspires to find out how the judge's notebook ties things together and she asks if it's an official question. She says that she doesn't know if anyone told him, but that she's not obligated to give up that kind of information. He jokingly asks if it was official if she would be needing a good lawyer.
Before things can continue, Jamal shows up. "Damn, you brought the white boy here," he comments. He asks Carolyn if this is really her new flavor and she asks why he's showboating. Raylan says that he's a little lost, asking just who Jamal is, to which he replies "I'm her heart." "Was," emphasizes Carolyn. She tells him that he should go, but Jamal misunderstands, thinking she's talking to Raylan. She clarifies that she meant him and Raylan tells him that he should oblige. Jamal then tells Carolyn to tell Raylan that he has a black belt and Raylan says he has one too. "He a pig?" Jamal asks Carolyn and Raylan tells him that the term applies more to police, that he's a Deputy U.S. Marshal. Carolyn then gets up, clapping her hands, and declaring that she'll be leaving instead.
That evening, Carolyn pays a visit to Jamal at his home. He asks how she found him and she tells him that she called his sister. He tells her that he didn't expect it when he found her with Raylan at the restaurant, asking her if she recalls that U.S. Marshals used to catch run away slaves and put them into bondage. He then tries to rekindle their relationship, saying that he's a changed man. He kisses her, telling her that he loves her, but she says he can't be serious. "Where is she?" she asks, banging on doors and shouting adn eventually discovering a pair of bras in the shower. She tells him that he's living there with someone and this means he is no longer eligible to receive alimony from his ex-wife. She tells him that she paid the lien, saying that if he ever comes back to her asking for money again she will snitch on him, then come over and burn his closet. Tears in her eyes, she tells him that she needs honesty and that she thought it was him, but it's not. She says that she would pay to make sure that he is nothing more than a memory. As she leaves, he shouts after her, calling her "Carrie," but she just gets in her car and drives away.
In "Adios," Carolyn comes to Raylan at his hotel room late at night. "You good?" he asks her and she says that she has something he wants. "That's fair to say," he quips, but she just asks if he still wants to see how Judge Guy's notebook puts the pieces of the Clement Mansell case together. At this, he tells her he wants her to be careful. She says the question is if she trusts him with what she knows. To this, he says that in his experience if you have to ask, then you probably already don't trust the person. "Yet here I am," she comments. She tells him that it cuts both ways. She tells him the sztory of the Montgomery bus boycott, how it started with people who sat down at a lunch counter and were arrested, beaten and held without trial for weeks for doing something that was not legal, but just. She says that there are things she wants to do with the notebook that don't have anything to do with what's legal, but everything to do with what's just. She asks if he understands what it means for her to trust him and he says that he does, but then suggests that she come inside to make sure he gets it.
Later, Carolyn puts in a call to Sweety. She comments that he's a hard man to find and he asks her if she forgot how text messaages work. She tells him it's not a conversation she wants memorialized, asking if he's alone. To this, he says that he's "alone enough." She tells him that some things are happening that day, ones that could put an end to the whole drama. He says that he's been working on some plays of his own. She advises him to put as much distance between himself and her client as possible, that things are about to go down. He says that he wasn't planning on being there, but that it sounds like whatever she's doing could get in the way of his stuff. She tells him that she's sorry to hear this, but that whatever it is, he needs to rein it in. He tells her he needs to make a phone call and she warns him to be careful.
That evening, Raylan visits Carolyn at her house. Seeing his expression, she asks him what happened. "We had him, and then we didn't," he tells her. "Jesus," she curses, asking what now. He tells her that now they're going to revisit the part of the conversation where he said that he wants more. He tells her that he doesn't know what she got out of the whole thing because all he got was a bruised ego and a monster who now thinks he's untouchable. She tells him that she can't imagine a time when he hasn't thought that. "Bad as it's been, it's gonna get worse," he tells her and she asks if he's saying he wants the book. He says that he wants to know what she doesn't want to tell him and that if he can't get it from her then he has no business being there. She tells him to come inside and they'll talk about it. He says that he doesn't want a conversation, but answers, but she insists that he come inside.
In "The Smoking Gun," a flashback shows a young Carolyn with Sweety at one of his gigs. After it is over, he drives her and a couple of his friends somewhere else. He asks if they want to see something and one of them asks him to take Carolyn home so that they can go hit a club. Sweety, however, says that they'll let Carolyn decide, asking her "You want to see what I've been working on?" He takes them all inside a dark, dusty room, asking what they think. He tells them that it's his bar, or that it will be, that he put a down payment on them. He lays down a vision: a bar along the wall, a pool table, booths and a "big-ass jukebox." He tells them that he's only going to play the music he wants to play and serves those he wants to serve. He says he's getting too old for the life he's living now. "I think it's gonna be fucking cool," comments Carolyn. Sweety seems a bit stunned by her use of this language, but agrees that it will, indeed, be cool.
In the present day, a distraught Carolyn watches as Sweety's body is loaded into a coroner's van following him having been shot in the heart by Clement Mansell and his tavern burnt to the ground. Detective Wendell Robinson asks her if there's anyone he should call, but she gives no answer. Raylan arrives and tells her that he's sorry. "He was a chump," she tells him, staring at Sweety's boyfriend Trennell, who is looking at her from the window in the apartment opposite. She and Raylan then meet with Trennell there, where he tells them that he has a brother who lives in New Mexico and that it's seeming like a pretty good place to be at the moment, with its lack of people. "Before you go getting your luggage..." comments Raylan. Carolyn nods to Trennell, who gets up and opens a drawer, presenting Raylan with a cloth bundle. Inside is the gun that Clement used to kill Judge Guy, Rose Doyle and now Sweety. He asks Raylan if he's sure he can use it and he tells him that he is.
Carolyn returns home, only to discover Clement waiting for her inside, having milk and cookies. He asks her if he ever told her about Oklahoma. He tells her that it was a day like any other until the sky turned dark and that his mother indisposed, that this is what people do, they let you down. He tells her that he waited for the man from Glenn Pool to leave, that he wasn't the first from Glenn Pool to be in his mother's bed, but he was the last. Once his car disappeared, he grabbed his .22 and shot his mother. He tells Carolyn that the very last thing he wanted to see before he closed her eyes tight and pulled the trigger was her son's face. He then drove a county over and buried her where no one could ever find her. He finishes by saying that maybe actually a tornado just carried her away, referring to another version of this story he's fond of telling. Carolyn, however, tells him that he took the only father she's ever known, cursing him and his mother. "I don't represent you..." she starts, but he grabs her and shoves her against the wall. Half-choking her, he says that he came by because he thought she might understand, but that he can come back any time he wants. He leaves.
Later, Raylan visits Carolyn at her home. She tells Raylan that Clement put his hands on her. She tells him that when she was around ten years old, a boy named Dwayne tried to choke her at school. Someone from the school called her mother, Ms. Thomas, trying to claim it was only an accident. Sweety, however, found out and was terribly mad. He then took her to the gym and taught her boxing, how to hold her own. "You take care of poor Dwayne?" asks Raylan, but she just asks how he's going to put Clement's prints on the murder weapon. That morning, she wakes up, finding him gone. Later that day, she watches a news report stating that a man named Darrold Woods, a homeless Afghan vet, is in custody for the murders of Judge Alvin Guy and Rose Doyle. As she finishes watching the report, she picks up her phone. Still later that day, she receives a call from Carolyn, telling her that he's going to meet with Clement at the hotel bar of the Radisson. She tells him to hold up, to come take her for a drink, but he tells her he'll see her when it's done and ends the call. She then turns to the Albanian mob leader, Toma Kostia, who is sitting there with her. "Okay," she tells him.
In "The Question," Carolyn is waiting at a warehouse on the edge of town when Raylan and Clement are brought there by Toma and other members of the Albanian mob. Upon seeing her, Clement says that it's a good thing that his lawyer's there. He asks if she believes Raylan's nerve. He tells her that Raylan tried to bait him despite not having anything. He tells her that there's no way he can lay the judge or anyone else on him and asks if they have him by the gonads or what. Carolyn, however, states to Toma that they had a deal, stepping forward. He agrees with her, nodding, commenting "You want this one taken care of, and you want this one taken care of," he says, telling her to watch. Clement calls the whole thing a "dog and Albanian pony show," telling Raylan he should surrender, that his lawyer is standing right there. Besnik Drake, however, destroys a fusebox and Raylan pushes a button, trapping Clement inside a room. He curses, shouting at them to let him out. After the door is fully closed, Raylan asks "Carolyn?" and she tells him she'll be in the car.
Carolyn and Raylan later sit across from each other in a cafe booth, Toma having given Raylan Judge Guy's notebook. She asks him what he's going to tell the Detroit Police Department and he says that he'll tell them that God sent down a lightning bolt, the book coming with it. "The world's better off and I'm tired," Carolyn tells him, suggesting that they go back to her place. He, however, tells her that there's some stuff he has to deal with first. He takes the notebook to the DPD, where they use of one of the pages to confront Detective Maureen Downey, who was taking payouts in exchange for testimony. While he is doing this, Carolyn pays a visit to the Statehouse in Lansing. There, she meets with the Lieutenant Governor, who opens the conversation by telling her that she's sorry about Judge Guy. She asks Carolyn if she knew him well and Carolyn replies that she knew him well enough to know that he should have been better. The Lieutenant Governor asks if this was as a man or a judge and she tells her it was both. She then moves to the point of the conversation, saying that she's read her application and knows that she understands Detroit. She continues that she's worked both sides of the line and that everyone is entitled to a good defense but that some need to sit in a room and think about what they've done. She finishes by saying that the Lieutenant Governor is going to be told that Carolyn is not good at playing the game, but that this is what makes her ideally suited for the bench. The Lieutenant Governor tells her that it's complicated, but Carolyn cuts through, saying that this means that in the eyes of the governor, nothing she just said matters a whole lot. She, however, tells her that she can be an ally to her, advising her to tell her boss not to nominate any of his country club friends, or someone he thought he knew well, like Diane Rogers.
Back at home, Carolyn sits in a bathtub and Raylan rubs her shoulder. She tells him that she actually hates her house. He calls hate a strong sentiment, but she explains that the house was actually her ex-husband's Jamal's dream. She says that he even insisted on having a heated pool in the dead of winter, despite the cost of this in a place like Detroit. She continues that the only part of the house that's really hers is his the tub, that she always wanting a freestanding tub. She asks him not to stop as he breaks from rubbing her. She comments that he'll probably be heading home some and he agrees this is likely. She says that she's sure Willa will be happy to have him back. The two of them lay together in bed that evening, Raylan restless. He sits up and she tells him to come back to bed, but he gets up and starts getting dressed. "God damn it, Raylan," she comments and he tells her he gets that a lot. He leaves and sometime later, she gets a call from him, telling her that she needs to leave, to get out of the house. He has just returned to the warehouse, where he has discovered Skender Lulgjuraj, brutally murdered by Clement.
Carolyn follows Raylan's advice. However, while at a gas station, she stares at her phone and sees that it is 12:13 A.M. Cursing Raylan's name again, she returns home, where she discovers that Raylan has just shot Clement three times in the chest after he broke into her home, believing him to have been reaching for a gun. She pulls out her phone and makes a call, telling the person on the other end that she needs assistance at 66 Motor Hill Road. Clement asks if she called EMS, but she tells him she called the Wayne County Morgue. She and Raylan watch as he dies, him asking Raylan why he killed him.
Six weeks later, Raylan is back in Miami, Florida, having retired from the U.S. Marshals. While applying a fresh coat of paint, he receives a package delivery. After signing for it, he takes it inside and opens it. Inside it is a potted plant and a letter from Carolyn. In the letter, she tells him that she ran into Lou Whitman and he told her some good news: that Raylan put in for early retirement. She says that he can imagine her surprise. A flashback shows her moving out of her home and then presiding over the bench as the judge for the Wayne County Third Circuit. The letter continues that it made sense the more she thought it about. She says it occurred to her that there might not be too many people in his life who understand why. She finishes by saying that maybe that winter when she can't take the cold anymore, she could come down to Miami and they could talk about it.
Appearances[]
Season seven appearances | ||||
City Primeval | The Oklahoma Wildman | Backstabbers | Kokomo | |
You Good? | Adios | The Smoking Gun | The Question |
References[]
- ↑ Timothy Olyphant Returns... by Ryan Berenz, July 14, 2023.
- ↑ Timothy Olyphant, FX's 'Justified' return with 'City Primeval' sequel by Jay Bobbin, July 16, 2023.