"the Killing" I'll Let You Know When I Get Ther... Access

: Sarah’s personal life continues to fray. Her move out of Reggie’s boat and into a cheap motel with her son Jack highlights the increasing cost of her obsession with the case. Critical Reception Reviews for this episode were generally mixed to positive :

" I'll Let You Know When I Get There " is the tenth episode of the first season of The Killing , and it serves as a pivotal, if somber, turning point that forces both the detectives and the audience to reset their expectations. After weeks of pursuing a singular lead, this installment deals with the heavy fallout of a catastrophic mistake. "The Killing" I'll Let You Know When I Get Ther...

gave it a 4 out of 5 stars, noting that while the case is stuck at the beginning, it finds a new direction by the end. : Sarah’s personal life continues to fray

: A necessary but punishing episode that wipes the slate clean. It’s a "pork rinds" installment—fatty and indulgent with character side-plots—but it successfully re-establishes the tension needed for the final stretch of the season. After weeks of pursuing a singular lead, this

The episode's primary strength lies in its exploration of the consequences of "vigilante justice". Having nearly beaten Bennet Ahmed to death, Stan Larsen turns himself in. The realization that Rosie's pink T-shirt was at home—meaning Bennet wasn't the killer—effectively clears him and renders the violence against him a tragic, pointless error. Reviewers noted that this "long path to a dead end" can be frustrating for viewers, but it effectively underscores the show's dark, methodical realism.