About: Roland D'Andre   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/8o1p8DBc7tTqR4sOpNWJXA==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Roland D'Andre, or "D'Andre the Giant" as Castle dubs him from a safe distance, is about six and a half feet, in pretty much any direction, of law-breaking and rage. Mr. D'Andre appears in "Punked" because his fingerprints turned up on the dead man's (Daniel Goldstein) wallet, and the computer lit up like it hit the jackpot. This disappoints the writer, who tries to encourage his artistic tendencies, only to encounter his aggressive ones instead. Beckett, however, remains impressively calm, and seated, in the face of 300+ lbs of towering wrath.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Roland D'Andre
rdfs:comment
  • Roland D'Andre, or "D'Andre the Giant" as Castle dubs him from a safe distance, is about six and a half feet, in pretty much any direction, of law-breaking and rage. Mr. D'Andre appears in "Punked" because his fingerprints turned up on the dead man's (Daniel Goldstein) wallet, and the computer lit up like it hit the jackpot. This disappoints the writer, who tries to encourage his artistic tendencies, only to encounter his aggressive ones instead. Beckett, however, remains impressively calm, and seated, in the face of 300+ lbs of towering wrath.
Portrayed By
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dbkwik:castle/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
Appearances
Status
  • Alive
Name
  • Roland D'Andre
imagewidth
  • 280(xsd:integer)
Alias
  • D'Andre the Giant
Gender
  • Male
abstract
  • Roland D'Andre, or "D'Andre the Giant" as Castle dubs him from a safe distance, is about six and a half feet, in pretty much any direction, of law-breaking and rage. Mr. D'Andre appears in "Punked" because his fingerprints turned up on the dead man's (Daniel Goldstein) wallet, and the computer lit up like it hit the jackpot. Mr. D'Andre is apparently only not in court due to a backlog almost entirely of his own making (he's awaiting court dates for three separate counts of aggravated assault in the last month alone), but refuses to embellish his story that he simply found the wallet on the ground next to the body. This disappoints the writer, who tries to encourage his artistic tendencies, only to encounter his aggressive ones instead. Beckett, however, remains impressively calm, and seated, in the face of 300+ lbs of towering wrath. According to Lanie's on-site estimate, the unregistered .45 Ryan and Esposito found in D'Andre's apartment when they picked him up could easily be the murder weapon. Since D'Andre made a valiant attempt to put Esposito through a wall, leaving him in a neck brace, the team hope this one is as open and shut as it seems. Lanie, however, has done more digging, literally and metaphorically, to discover that a .45, or any modern weapon for that matter, isn't what they're looking for. The hole was made by, as weapons expert Abe Sandrich correctly terms it, a "lead ball", designed for firearms of the nineteenth century and earlier. D'Andre may not be a murderer, but Captain Montgomery still promises Esposito that he will press for the maximum sentence for assaulting an officer.
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