Ernst Duffer expresses his contempt for Dr. Elizabeth Grey.
Transcript:
Duffer: FAO: The Director. Progress report. 11/08/1990
Duffer: Contrary to what some may believe, I do not necessarily take pride in my work.
Duffer: But I am exceptionally good at it.
Duffer: It is common for interrogation subjects to show resistance before ultimately breaking, and succumbing to my... “demands.”
Duffer: Normally, I would offer them some small chance of hope - A semblance of light at the end of the proverbial tunnel.
Duffer: Likewise, fear is usually a great motivator. But its apparent absence in this case makes it difficult - impossible - to achieve any kind of breakthrough.
Duffer: Even psychological torture - and the administration of physical pain - has proven utterly fruitless.
Duffer: So...Having reviewed psychiatric evaluations from her early years of incarceration, I am at a loss to explain just where such remarkable resilience has come from.
Duffer: However good I may be at my work, I am forced to conclude that this individual may be of no further use to our program.
Duffer: Were it up to me, I would recommend that Ms. Grey be terminated, or at the very least marked for biological experimentation.
Duffer: Regrettably... it is not up to me.