Wall Street firm Berman Rose employee Daniel Goldstein was shot to death and stripped down to his boxers in the park at night. Roland D'Andre hurts Esposito's neck during an arrest after his fingerprint is found on Daniel's wallet but the habitual violent robber denies having hurt Goldstein. The fatal flintlock-type round lead bullet was two centuries old and wasn't fired from Roland's modern gun. Hundreds lost fortunes in an investment fund devised by Daniel, including collector Ivan Podofski, who owns several antique guns, yet not the murder weapon. Another investment victim committed suicide and his son, Troy Kenworth, started drinking and getting arrested until Daniel told him about a job at a steampunk club, which straightened him out and supplied much needed money. Goldstein's bloody clothes, found on loony vagrant 'Lord Henry', indicate he shot back, as if there was a duel. But when Beckett and Castle test fire the old weapons on a firing range, they couldn't hit any of the targets. So how did Daniel get killed by a lead ball with such inaccurate weapons?
—KGF Vissers