

Rattled, Kate leaves Sebastian's with the kids but when she goes back to retrieve some personal items, he drunkenly confronts her and accidentally knocks her out against a bathtub. Sebastian hears that Chris plans to dump the cocaine and tells Briggs to threaten Kate in order to stop Chris from doing so. Meanwhile, it's revealed that Sebastian is in debt to gangster Jim Church and was secretly working with Briggs. Gonzalo and his men are killed during the heist, but Chris and Danny escape with the van, the fake bills, and the Jackson Pollock painting Gonzalo was trying to steal, loading it all onto the cargo ship. With Andy and the money gone, Chris agrees to help Gonzalo rob an armored car in exchange for the fake bills. Briggs calls Andy, threatening to kill one of Chris's sons if Andy doesn't go to another address to buy cocaine with the money. Chris and Danny eventually go to meet an unstable crime lord named Gonzalo for the fakes, leaving Andy in the van with their money. In Panama, Chris creates a diversion on the ship so he, Andy, and Danny can leave and retrieve the fake bills. After Briggs breaks into Chris's house and intimidates Kate and their children, they move into Sebastian's house for safety. He asks former partner Sebastian Abney, who owns a construction business, to fund the scheme before joining the crew of a cargo ship with Andy and partners Danny and Davis. Chris plans to smuggle $10 million in fake bills from Panama into the U.S. Customs and Border Protection.Īndy's boss, Tim Briggs threatens to kill Chris's family if Andy does not reimburse him for the drugs. They learn that Kate's brother Andy was smuggling drugs, but disposed of them in the Mississippi River during a surprise inspection by U.S. ( January 2021) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message)įormer smuggler Chris Farraday lives a peaceful life with his wife, Kate, and their two sons in New Orleans. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed.
