"Ogi Jun" is the seventeenth episode of the American television drama series The Killing, and the fourth of its second season, which aired on April 15, 2012.
In the episode, the detectives learn the identity of the bearer of the Ogi Jun manga tattoo; Jamie Wright (Eric Ladin) and Darren Richmond (Billy Campbell) discuss the future of the campaign; and Stan Larsen (Brent Sexton) learns that he is not free of his mob past.
They speak of the possible mob connection to the Larsen case and show him the Ogi Jun tattoo from Rosie's Super 8 mm film.
Not recognizing the tattoo, he does note that arson is Janek's specialty, alluding to the previous Beau Soleil building fire.
Petersen also tells them that Stan Larsen is suspected of killing a man named Piotr Michaelski in exchange for being allowed to leave the mob.
He walks into a church and finds Janek Kovarsky (Don Thompson) sitting by Belko's closed coffin.
At the school, Stan sees his son (Evan Bird) getting bullied and tells him to fight back rather than walk away.
The detectives question Monica Krol (Maria Marlow), Piotr's wife, who says the police should have arrested Stan 17 years ago.
At the school, Sterling (Kacey Rohl) tells them that the tattoo belongs to a man who used to hang around the Larsen house and creeped Rosie out.
So it winds up settling for shallow melodrama, deeply invested in the inner lives, well, inner griefs of all these characters connected to this single crime without much animating thematic purpose.
"[1] Paste magazine's Adam Vitcavage gave the episode a 7.3 rating, but commented: "The moody drama appears to be grasping at straws trying to find a new angle and acts as if the entire first season was a prologue to something bigger.
"[3] TV Fanatic’s Sean McKenna rated the episode 4 out of 5 stars, commenting "There's still something to be said for this show and, despite certain aspects that can be grating or frustrating, the atmosphere of The Killing is certainly a change from other programs.
The world isn't so cookie cutter perfect and as long as the rest of the season maintains balance and avoids clichés, the bigger mystery will hopefully be a satisfying payoff.