This public link is valid for 7 days and shares a thread, including any personal information you added. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted. If you share with third parties, their policies apply. Can’t copy the link right now. Try again later. Chicago P.D.: Season 3, Episode 22 | Cast and Crew
This is not action-heat. It’s survival-heat. As hours pass, both men begin to hallucinate, their judgment fraying. Voight, the unshakable patriarch, starts to slur his words. Ruzek, the impulsive young cop, begins to panic. The chains grow tighter as their wrists swell. The heat doesn't just make them uncomfortable—it begins to unmake them. chicago pd 3x22 hot
For Kim Burgess, "She’s Got the Devil’s Luck" is a defining character moment. Throughout the series, Burgess had often been portrayed as the good-hearted, rule-following counterpoint to the more rogue elements of Intelligence. This episode tests that moral compass in the fires of necessity. Taken hostage by the erratic and violent Rick Newhouse, Burgess is forced to rely on her wits rather than her backup. The script challenges her physically and psychologically. In a harrowing sequence of events, she is forced to participate in the criminals' plans to move their illicit goods, walking a tightrope between staying alive and maintaining her identity as a police officer. Her eventual liberation comes not through a heroic rescue by Voight, but through her own grit—specifically, her decisive action in stabbing her captor. It is a moment of transformation for Burgess, marking her evolution from a patrol officer often relegated to the sidelines to a survivor capable of lethal force. This public link is valid for 7 days
, has been brutally attacked—the same manner as a victim found in a trunk—setting Voight on a path of lethal revenge. Thematic Impact Can’t copy the link right now
Chicago P.D. Season 3, Episode 22 "She's Got Us," the Intelligence Unit handles one of the season's most harrowing cases involving a mass family shooting and the survival of a single, deeply traumatised child. Core Case: The Lake House Tragedy
Roman is still recovering after being shot in the previous episode. He is told that his nerve damage is likely permanent, meaning he can no longer serve as a patrol officer.