Alcatraz: “Paxton Petty” (Episode 1.06)

With last week’s episode of Alcatraz, “Guy Hastings,” the show took a turn from the formulaic nature the show has taken of adding a new villain, catching him, then having a few minutes at the end of the show’s basic mythology. With this week, “Paxton Petty,” the show returns to that formula, and is lacking because of it.
Petty’s way of terrorizing the modern day is by using bombs, specifically landmines, to blow up random citizens. We learn that Hauser worked on the original case that put Petty in Alcatraz and that they were able to find three bombs he hid, but a fourth one he planted was never found. Petty set traps in Korea in the past that blew up many innocent citizens and is bitter that he is not considered an American hero. Petty also isn’t that hard to find, as he has left clues to his bombs locations in song lyrics. Hauser quickly finds Petty, but in the process of coming after him, steps on a landmine, making him stuck in place so he doesn’t blow up. Madsen and Soto capture Petty at another bomb location and are lead to Hauser. Hauser is able to remove himself from the bomb, but not without blowing up one of Madsen’s friends, a bomb diffuser named Matt Tanner.
A quick aside, I wonder how much time has passed from the pilot to now. I only wonder this because if we are to believe that a new criminal arrives every week, which means in the period of about a month a sniper has shot innocent people in several locations, a child has been kidnapped, a bank robbery/standoff has occurred and a crazed man has laid landmines across the city. Even in a large city like San Francisco, that seems like way too much crime popping up in a short period to be a coincidence.
But anyway, in the past not much history is given about Petty. We learn that Warden James has a more torturous way of getting results from criminals, while Dr. Banerjee is more elaborate and clinical in her approach. Tommy Madsen tries to get Dr. Banerjee to get him answers as to why Dr. Beauregard has been taking so much blood from him, to which Beauregard basically tells Banerjee to mind her own business. The last few episodes have hinted at the blood connection to strongly that at this point, it’ll be surprising if it doesn’t in some way explain how the people from Alcatraz are making it to modern day.