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List of Dexter characters

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List of characters, with biographical details, from the Showtime series Dexter and the Jeff Lindsay novel series it was based on, including Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Dearly Devoted Dexter, and Dexter in the Dark.

Dexter Morgan, adopted son of respected Miami police officer Harry Morgan, has a secret. He may appear a likable, if slightly strange, young man with a genius for blood spatter analysis and problems with women, but his knowledge of the world of serial murder goes deeper than just a C.S.I.: Dexter spends his nights tracking down those who have escaped justice (rapists, child molesters, other serial killers and etc.) and ritually murdering them (which he refers to as "taking out the trash").[1] It is hinted that his troubles originate from a suppressed memory in which he witnessed his mother being cut to pieces by a chain saw and trapped in a cargo container two inches deep with blood.[2][3]

Police associates

Debra Morgan

Debra, Dexter's adoptive sister, is a vice cop desperate to be transferred to Homicide,[4] a goal she accomplishes in the second episode.[5] Deb is smart, but unsure of herself, and so relies on Dexter's "expertise" to solve difficult cases. When one of Dexter's victims is found, Debra formulates a theory that could expose him. Dexter steers the investigation in a different direction, pointing to her lack of experience and knowing all along that her theory is correct.[6]

Sergeant James Doakes

Sgt. Doakes apparently worked as a Special Forces operative in Haiti about 15-20 years before becoming a Homicide detective.[7] He is the only one on the force who doesn't like Dexter. The cheery, innocent-seeming young man gets on his nerves, and his passion for blood spatter gives him the creeps. What irritates him even more is that Dexter is usually right about cases, being in the right place at the right time. He hates Dexter to the point of where he physically assaults him, but Dexter fights back and could've broken Doakes' arm, had they not been interrupted[8]. Later on, Doakes discovers that Dexter practiced martial arts[9], which probably explains Dexter's skill in hand to hand combat. LaGuarta refers to him by his first name and he listens to her, since they used to be partners until she found drugs and got promoted, but this does not bother Doakes. When he is angrily questioning a seemingly innocent Dexter, Maria, due to her affection for him, tells Doakes to back off, and he does. In the end of the first series, Doakes begins to follow Dexter around based on his suspicions[8]. After finding Dexter attending a Narcotics Anonymous meeting, Doakes comes to erroneously believe that Dexter is a drug addict. However, Doakes' false conclusion works in Dexter's favor, as he believes Dexter's (non-existent) drug addiction is caused by work related stress which, as Doakes recounts, led many policemen down the same path. Feeling sympathetic to Dexter, he apparently ends his stalking, but not before telling him to "stay clean".[9] Eventually he realizes Dexter was lying, and stalks him once again, and stumbled upon Dexter's secret: that he was the Bay Harbour Butcher, but not before Lundy made Doakes his prime suspect as the Butcher after finding Dexters blood slides in Doakes' car.

Lieutenant Maria LaGuerta

Lieutenant LaGuerta is a no-nonsense woman who is not above making her subordinates feel intimidated. She has a sincere dislike for Debra.[4] She does, however, make no secret of her attraction to Dexter, who she flirts with constantly, to his discomfort. At the end of the first season, she was demoted to the rank of detective[2], but returned to her old job once the new Lieutenant proved to be unstable. [10]

Angelo "Angel" Batista

Batista, a homicide detective, works closely with Dexter during the day.[4] While he does not share Dexter's fascination with blood, he can appreciate the art of murder. He is undergoing a painful separation from his wife that has lasted three months when the show begins. Apparently, their relationship fully ended by the time the second season began.[11] In the show he is the closest thing Dexter has to a best friend.

Vincent "Vince" Masuka

Vince works alongside Dexter in the lab and in crime scenes.[4] He often cracks innuendo to the rest of the team, and is knowledgeable about amputee devotees and other unusual sexual topics.

Camilla Figg

Camilla is the records supervisor at the Miami police station. She is Dexter's main source of information for criminals who have escaped the traditional justice system. However, she is unaware that Dexter hunts down and kills the people whose records she gives him. He tells her that he looks over old records as a hobby in hopes that he can "help out."

Captain Tom Matthews

Tom Matthews is the Captain of the Miama Police Department's homicide division and immediate superior of Lieutenant Maria LaGuerta, who while he originally promoted to her position, he also demoted her after several embarrasing mistakes during the Ice Truck Killer case. Tom harbours a racist attitude and a strong desire to use political leverage to increase his power in the law-enforcement agencies, the latest of which involved Tom planning to use the fame of successfully ending the Bay Harbour Butcher case to propell himself to the position of Deputy Chief.

Esmee Pascal

A Haitian-American police officer who replaces LaGuerta as Lieutenant at the end of the first season, described by Captain Matthews as "a real up-and-comer."[3] In the second season, she is revealed to be having personal problems with her fiancé Bertrand. She suspects him of adultery on little real evidence,[11] casting doubt on her rationality. Her obsession becomes so strong that she uses department resources to investigate him. She tracks his phone calls and has the forensics department do tests on his shirt. Because of this Captain Matthews returns control of the Homicide Division to LaGuerta, who is revealed to be the one having an affair with Pascal's fiancé.[10]

Frank Lundy

Frank Lundy is a high-ranking and infamous FBI Special Agent recruited by Captain Matthews to lead the task force dedicated to identifying and arresting the Bay Harbour Butcher. Frank is an extremely intelligent and competant agent, to the point he openly relaxes and takes breaks on duty without fear of missing anything on cases. Frank is most famous with his work with high-profile criminal cases including the Green River Killer and the DC Sniper, which has made many, including Sgt. Doakes, to consider him a "rock star". Recently, Frank has started up a relationship with Deborah Morgan.

Differences Between Books & TV

  • Deborah Morgan: When LaGuerta is slain by Brian in Darkly Dreaming Dexter Deborah finds out her brother is a killer.
  • Sergeant James Doakes: In the novels, Doakes plays a lesser role than in the series and his first name is "Albert" and served in El Salvador with the US Marine Corps alongside Kyle Chutsky and the butcherer "Dr. Danco", however, his role is stepped up in Dearly Devoted Dexter, after LaGuerta's murder (which Doakes believes Dexter committed), Doakes tails Dexter, intending to "catch him in the act".

In Dexter in the Dark, Doakes returns briefly, but cannot communicate due to the loss of his tongue, hands and feet in the previous book at the hands of "Dr. Danco".

  • Lieutenant Maria LaGuerta: In the novels, LaGuerta's first name is "Migdia", but bears great resemblance to her TV character. She is skilled at political maneuvering and self-advancement but incompetent when it comes to actual police work. Also, she flirts with Dexter, though this is more prominent in the book series. LaGuerta is stabbed by Brian at the end of the first book.
  • Vince "Vince" Masuka: In the television series, Vince apparently has great people skills and a healthy social life. In the novels, Vince is as socially and emotionally awkward as Dexter. His displays of emotion are fake and because of this, Dexter feels a certain kinship with him. In Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Dexter says that Vince is another person "pretending to be human." He seems to be Dexter's pseudo best friend (half of the reason for this being because he brings donuts to the office, which Dexter does but usually doesn't get any because everyone else eats them).
  • Camilla Figg: Camilla Figg in the novels is an entirely different character from the Camilla in the television show. While the show's Camilla was old enough to have worked with Dexter's father, the book's Camilla is a young woman who is infatuated with Dexter and works with him in forensics.

Other friends and relatives

Rita Bennett

Rita is a mother of two who is slowly recovering from being abused by her ex-husband, Paul. Debra saved her on the domestic violence call and introduced her to Dexter.[4] He is glad to meet a woman who doesn't want to have sex, since he describes "every time I have sex with a woman she sees me for what I really am, empty". She is tentatively starting a relationship with Dexter, but is unaware of how he spends his free time. Dexter states that he 'chose Rita because she's broken' and fears that if she gets better he'll lose her. They don't actually have sex until the episode 'Shrink Wrap'[12] but she came on to him twice before that. Rita stands up to Paul by demanding he sign the divorce papers he refused in prison and she offers supervised weekly visits, he at first tries to intimidate her, but she doesn't back down and he signs them. Paul comes into the house drunk one night. Rita doesn't want her children to see him this way and reluctantly lets him in. He wrestles her on her bed and she successfully knocks him out by smacking him with a baseball bat[7], he then sues her for custody of the kids. Dexter takes it into his own hands by knocking him out and making it appear Paul had taken illegal drugs again and he is sent off to jail, much to Rita's joy.[2] Paul pleads with her in prison not to let Dexter near their children, but she brushes him off. He describes a shoe of his lost when Dexter dragged him to his car, and, to her horror, she finds the shoe.[8]

Cody and Astor Bennet

The children of Paul and Rita Bennet.[4] In the book, they have developed sociopathic personalities, which Dexter hopes to mold using Harry's code. On the TV series, however, they appear to be normal.

Harry Morgan

A respected member of the Miami-Dade Police Department, Harry was Dexter's adoptive father and the first to discover the young boy's blood-lust. He taught Dexter how to channel his violent urges into vigilante justice, and how to cover his tracks. Dexter operates under what he calls "the code of Harry", named after his father.[4] Harry appears only in flashbacks, having passed away before the series begins.

Doris Morgan

Debra and Dexter's mother, who died of cancer when Debra was 16. She is seen briefly in episode 4 of season 2, suggesting that Dexter be tested by a psychologist.

Enemies and villains (Season 1)

Paul Bennett

Rita's abusive and manipulative husband and father of Astor and Cody[4], who has been in prison for various crimes. Paul (correctly) suspects Dexter for framing him for the drug charge that sent him to his latest stint in jail.[8] After a short while in a federal prison, he is killed in a fight with another inmate.

Book Series

In the book series, Rita's ex-husband is mentioned but never makes an appearance.

Jorge and Valerie Castillo

A husband-and-wife team of human traffickers who transport illegal immigrants from Cuba. If an immigrant cannot pay them, he is locked up in Jorge's junkyard, taken out on Jorge's boat and drowned. Dexter kills them both, but not before getting relationship advice out of them[13]. Shortly after Dexter dumped their bodies, the Ice Truck Killer dived into the ocean and placed Valerie's corpse back in the junkyard, where it was discovered by the police and almost led to Dexter's capture[6].

Norberto Cervantes

One of Carlos Guerrero's hit men. He is implicated in the deaths of both Ricky and Kara Simmons. A piece of his flesh is found in Ricky's mouth and a drop of his blood in the Simmons' house, where Kara was murdered. LaGuerta intends to offer him a more lenient sentence if he can give them evidence to convict Guerrero. Because of this, he is stabbed to death in prison by an assassin disguised as a guard.[5]

Matt Chambers

Also known as Matt Brewster and Matt Rasmussen. Dexter first learns of him in court by noticing the crying family of his latest victim. Matt is a repeated drunk driver who has killed and crippled several people. Whenever this happens, he changes his name and moves to a new city. Dexter kills him in an abandoned liquor store.[5]

Rudy Cooper

Rudy Cooper (born Brian Moser) is a prosthetist who first appeared in the series when he treated Tony Tucci, a victim of the Ice Truck Killer[13]. He begins dating Debra after she visits Tucci in the hospital once more[14]. It is revealed that he is the Ice Truck Killer[12] and Dexter's biological brother[8] Brian Moser. When Rudy threatens to kill Debra, Dexter has no choice but to kill Rudy himself in the season finale. Rudy wanted to reunite with Dexter and continue killing alongside him. However, Dexter only wanted to kill the killers themselves, not the innocent. This conflict in ideology led to Dexter killing Rudy by slitting his throat and allowing his blood to pour, his body upside down. Dexter then unbound Rudy's wrists and put his fingerprints on the knife, making it appear that Rudy killed himself.[8]

Book Series

In Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Brian does not use the name Rudy Cooper and does not get romantically involved with Deborah. He first meets Dexter face-to-face in the shipping container where their mother was murdered, with Deborah tied up and ready for Dexter to kill. Brian kills LaGuerta and is not killed by Dexter.

Mike Donovan

A pastor and choir conductor who killed and buried several young boys. He is Dexter's first victim in the series. Dexter kills him out in the woods, where he had buried several of his victims (who are dug up by Dexter and presented to Donovan shortly before his death).[4]

Book Series

In Darkly Dreaming Dexter, this character is referred to as "Father Donovan," suggesting that he is a Catholic priest. There is no mention of him having a family. Unlike the television show, Father Donovan's victims include both boys and girls.

Jeremy Downs

A nineteen year old boy living in a halfway house after he is released from prison. At the age of fifteen, he was convicted for killing another boy. Dexter attempts to kill him but lets him go after finding out that his victim raped him.[15] After Jeremy killed a second, innocent, boy, Dexter tracks him down to kill him, but Doakes arrests Jeremy before he can ambush him. Jeremy revealed to Dexter that the trauma from his attack has left him just like Dexter; "empty". Dexter realizes Jeremy couldn't help himself, and urges him to kill only those that deserve to die before leaving. Dexter later visits Jeremy in prison for the purpose of training him, only to find Jeremy had taken his words to heart after all and killed someone who deserved to die...himself.[14]

Carlos Guerrero

A drug lord responsible for the death of Officer Ricky Simmons and his wife Kara. Sergeant Doakes becomes his main target after accusing him of murder in front of his church and his daughter Rose. Several officers use Doakes as bait, luring Guerrero into attacking him and giving them the evidence they need to convict him.

Jamie Jaworski

A valet with a taste for sexual sadism. He recorded his rape and murder of Jane Saunders and posted it on the Internet. He escaped justice due to a faulty search warrant. Dexter kills him at a deserted construction site where Jaworski had been stealing copper pipes. He is Dexter's second victim on the show.[4]

Book Series

In Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Jaworski works as a janitor who abducts young girls. Frustrated by the Tamiami Slasher case, Dexter kills him very sloppily, even forgetting to take a blood sample from him. The Slasher kills his next victim in a similarly messy way as a form of satire.

Cindy Landon

A black widow who appears in a flashback. Her only line is "I'll fuck you if you let me go."[6]

Gene Marshal

An arsonist who appears in a flashback. Dexter places candles around him before cutting him up. His only line is "Have you ever watched someone burn alive?"[6]

Emmett Meridian

A psychiatrist who, as Dexter figures out, has encouraged at least three of his female clients to commit suicide. Dexter kills him, but not before having a few sessions to work out some intimacy issues.[12]

The "First Nurse"

A nurse who kills her patients by morphine overdose. She believes that she is helping her victims by ending their pain and keeps an album containing their obituaries. Harry Morgan almost becomes one of her victims when he gets sick and is placed in her care. She is Dexter's first human victim. The nurse is never explicitly named in either the books or the television series.[15] "First Nurse" is the nickname Dexter gives her in the novels.

Book Series

In the novels, the First Nurse is basically the same. However, her motivation for killing her patients is never given.

Neil Perry

A brilliant yet socially inadequate computer analyst who mutilated the dead body of his abusive mother (and buried it next to the location of his trailer).[14] While photographs of the Ice Truck Killer's victims that only the police or the killer could have taken were found in his home, and while his confession included information regarding the killings which was not previously known to general public[14], he was merely a pretender. Dexter saw him as the fraud he was already from the beginning, and was proven correct in thinking so after the two met while Perry was in custody, as Perry failed to identify Dexter[14] (already in the first episode it was established that the Ice Truck killer was familiar with Dexter.[4]). After being left out by Captain Matthews from the press conference announcing the Ice Truck Killer's capture[14], and after being told by Dexter about his disbelief in Perry's guilt, LaGuerta decides to investigate Perry again in the hope of having him recant his confession[12] (which she ironically also extracted[14]). She eventually manages to do so, and realizes that incriminating photos found in Perry's trailer and his vast and intimate knowledge of the case was the result of him breaking into the police department's computers.[12] Despite this, the captain and district attorney refuse to release Perry. [12] Later on, the Ice Truck Killer pours blood he drained from several of his victims in a hotel room. When the blood is matched by DNA to the victims, Perry's innocence in the killings is proven to police.[2]

Alex Timmons

A sniper who appears in a flashback. His only line is "Yes, I did it. Is that what you want to hear?"[6]

Enemies and Villains (Season 2)

Little Chino

A very big member of a gang called the Twenty-Ninth Street Kings who uses a machete to kill any witness of his gang's crimes. For every kill he makes, he has a teardrop of blood tattooed on his arm.[11] Still reeling from the death of his brother, Dexter makes several failed attempts to kill him before finally succeeding.[11][16] He is Dexter's first victim in Season 2.

Roger Hicks

A used car salesman who targets brunette women. He uses credit checks to obtain information on his victims, ensuring that they are single, have no pets, and live in a place that keeps neighbors at a distance. When Dexter tells him about his relationship problems with Rita, he seems to empathize and rants on his hatred of women. Enraged, Dexter quicly took a meat cleaver to his chest. Dexter also compliments Hicks on his talent for lying.[9]

Santos Jimenez

One of the three men present at the murder of Dexter's mother, Laura Moser. Having made a deal with the police, he is the only one of them who is free at the time of the show. In his old age he runs a tavern in Naples, Florida. When Dexter first tracks him down, he beats him up and attempts to kill him. However, Lila convinces him to stop. This lets Jimenez assault Dexter with a knife outside a bowling alley. After Lila's influence nearly gets him exposed as a killer, Dexter abandons what she taught him and kills Jimenez with a chainsaw, the same weapon used to kill his mother. He later finds out that Lila helped Jimenez find him in order to rekindle the closeness in their relationship.

Lila

Dexter's former Narcotics Anonymous sponsor.[9] She works as an artist, often using stolen items in her work. Dexter has an affair with her, leading to his breakup with Rita. She later sets her own loft on fire and helps Santos Jimenez attack Dexter, believing that she and Dexter are closest in times of crisis. She also breaks into Rita's house, afraid that Dexter might have rekindled his relationship with her. These events lead Dexter to break up with her.

Ken Olson

A wannabe vigilante inspired by the Bay Harbor Butcher. He has successfully killed two criminals. One was a drug dealer he ran down with his car (Olson stole his drugs afterwards). The other was an abusive husband, whose wife Olson slept with, provoking his anger. His third attempted victim, a robber who hurt Olson's mother, escaped by stretching out the rope Olson used. Olson may also be the first of Dexter's victims (except for Brian) from whom Dexter did not obtain a blood sample. Dexter said he "had" to kill him (out of necessity) but did not "need" (feel the urge) to kill him.[17]

Jimmy Sensio

A blind Voodoo high priest nicknamed "the man with God in his mouth." He can be hired to perform "death curses" by selling his targets drinks poisoned with ricin. He appears to be truly insane, claiming to be possessed by a spirit and cursing Dexter. After weeks of being stalked by Doakes, Dexter's murderous urges have become unbearable. However, he is unable to kill Jimmy and lets him go. Jimmy quickly leaves town[11].

Enemies and Villains (Book Series Only)

Dr. Danco

A surgeon who mutilates people while keeping them alive. He removes everything in a body that is not essential for life, leaving his victims unable to move or communicate, driving them insane. In medical school, he learned that he could cut people open without feeling any empathy. A patriot, he offered his services to the United States military as a torturer. His comrades, who included Sergeant Albert Doakes, nicknamed him "Danco" after a vegetable slicing machine. During a covert operation in El Salvador, he was turned in to the enemy in exchange for several prisoners. In Dearly Devoted Dexter, Dr. Danco is released and goes to Miami, looking for revenge on his former comrades.

IT

The other is a mythical, godlike entity which existed since the beginning of time and has several similarities to the Dark Passenger. IT's story is explained with a somewhat Biblical tone. IT takes great pleasure in entering creatures as a "passenger" and making them kill other creatures. IT works to create other murderous entities similar to ITself but soon turns against many of them, causing them to flee. IT and IT's offspring go to war, with IT being victorious. Some of IT's remaining children stay in hiding, fearing IT's power.

Randy MacGregor

A real estate agent who rapes and murders young boys. He takes the boys out on his boat, equipped with toys and children's movies, and, when he is finished with them, ties their bodies to anchors and drops them overboard. He keeps several photos of his victims. A red cowboy boot worn by the photographer in one picture shows Dexter that MacGregor has an accomplice. He appears in Dearly Devoted Dexter.

The Old Man

The unnamed leader of a cult that worships the ancient god Moloch. His cult is responsible for several murders in which the bodies were burned and decapitated, the heads replaced by ceramic bull heads. He wields an ornate bronze dagger with the Aramaic letters "MLK" (Moloch) etched into it. He is killed by this dagger, wielded by Cody Bennett, at the end of Dexter in the Dark.

Steve Reiker

A pedophile and murderer who photographs kidnapped young boys. Dexter wishes to kill him, but cannot because Sgt. Doakes keeps following him. Dexter is finally able to kill him at the end of Dearly Devoted Dexter. He is Randy MacGregor's accomplice.

Dr. Darius Starzak

A former professor of religious philosophy at the University of Krakow. He was fired for membership in an illegal society, a cult worshiping Moloch. He is shot to death by Dexter at the end of Dexter in the Dark.

The Watcher

Members of a cult that worships the ancient god Moloch. The Watcher is not a single person but a group of cultists who believe that the spirit of Moloch jumps from one person to another. The Watcher tails Dexter, who he refers to as "The Other", in Dexter in the Dark, believing that Dexter's Dark Passenger is a child and enemy of their god.

Dr. Wilkins

A professor at the University of Miami. He attempts to frame a colleague for the murders of the Moloch cult. He is shot by Dexter during an attempted sacrifice to Moloch, which would have ended in Astor and Cody's deaths.

References

  1. ^ "Character profile". New York Times. 2006-10-1. Retrieved 2007-10-21. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d "Seeing Red". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 10. 2006-12-03. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ a b "Truth Be Told". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 11. 2006-12-17. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Dexter". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 01. 2006-10-01. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  5. ^ a b c "Crocodile". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 02. 2006-10-08. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help) Cite error: The named reference "Crocodile" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ a b c d e "Return to Sender". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 06. 2006-11-05. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  7. ^ a b "Father Knows Best". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 9. 2006-11-26. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Born Free". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 12. 2006-12-17. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  9. ^ a b c d "An Inconvenient Lie". Dexter. Season 2. Episode 03. 2007-10-14. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  10. ^ a b "See-Through". Dexter. Season 2. Episode 04. 2007-10-21. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ a b c d e "It's Alive!". Dexter. Season 2. Episode 01. 2007-09-30. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ a b c d e f "Shrink Wrap". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 08. 2006-11-19. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ a b "Love American Style". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 05. 2006-10-29. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  14. ^ a b c d e f g "Circle of Friends". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 07. 2006-11-12. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  15. ^ a b "Popping Cherry". Dexter. Season 1. Episode 03. 2006-10-15. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  16. ^ "Waiting to Exhale". Dexter. Season 2. Episode 02. 2007-10-07. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  17. ^ "Dex, Lies, and Videotape". Dexter. Season 2. Episode 06. 2007-11-04. Showtime. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)