After deciphering one of the tattoos on the Tattooed Lady's body, the team gets the address of Chao, a Chinese immigrant. Chao speaks the Wenzhou dialect of the Wu language, nicknamed "the Devil Language" for both its complexity and its divergence from the main language. While breaking into Chao's apartment, FBI Agent Kurt Weller takes along the Tattooed Lady with him because she apparently speaks the Wenzhou dialect fluently and would be useful in interrogating Chao.
Instead of Chao, the team find his startled roommate Wai. When Kurt asks Tattooed Lady to ask Wai about Chao's room, he calls her Jane, although they had not designated her Jane Doe at that time.
Instead of Chao, the team find his startled roommate Wai. When Kurt asks Tattooed Lady to ask Wai about Chao's room, he calls her Jane, although they had not designated her Jane Doe at that time.
(at around 26 mins) The tattoo that was covered up is identified as a Navy SEAL tattoo and it was pointed out that special operations service members would not have fingerprints in the federal database.
The government training that someone goes through is not classified. Their missions might be, but their training is not. Therefore, if someone joined the Navy, or any other branch of the armed forces, there would be a publicly accessible file on them, regardless of what military occupational specialty or duty assignments they may have had and their fingerprints would be in a database accessible by the FBI. Furthermore, to date, there have never been any female Navy SEALs.
Also although Navy personnel (and sailors in general) are notorious for getting tattoos, actual Navy SEALs would not tattoo SEAL imagery on their bodies. Doing so would violate operational security and prohibit them from serving in plainclothes. It would also endanger SEALs made prisoners or hostages and make them subject to abuse or severe interrogation.
The government training that someone goes through is not classified. Their missions might be, but their training is not. Therefore, if someone joined the Navy, or any other branch of the armed forces, there would be a publicly accessible file on them, regardless of what military occupational specialty or duty assignments they may have had and their fingerprints would be in a database accessible by the FBI. Furthermore, to date, there have never been any female Navy SEALs.
Also although Navy personnel (and sailors in general) are notorious for getting tattoos, actual Navy SEALs would not tattoo SEAL imagery on their bodies. Doing so would violate operational security and prohibit them from serving in plainclothes. It would also endanger SEALs made prisoners or hostages and make them subject to abuse or severe interrogation.