
Concerning that his son is about to become a victim of credit fraud, Michael hides in the vehicle and confronts Franklin. When he drives on the way to the dealership, he forces him to crash the car against the shop window. Clinton is fired, but he and De Santa become friends. Later, when Michael discovers his wife Amanda in bed with his tennis coach Kyle Chavis, he and Franklin chase him to a mansion, which Michael angrily destroys.

Unfortunately for him, the property belongs to Natalia Zverovna, the lover of Mexican drug lord Martín Madrazo, a woman who happened to be a student of the aforementioned trainer.

Iracundo, Madrazo locates De Santa and demands compensation from him. They agree to pay their debt through the money obtained from a robbery at a branch of the Vangelico jewelry chain. Trevor Philips, the other survivor of the Ludendorff robbery, finds out about the robbery by watching television. At that moment he realizes that the author could not be other than Townley himself, recognizing him from a phrase he said on the day of the initial robbery.

Meanwhile, the personal lives of the protagonists begin to spiral out of control. Trevor’s unexpected reappearance triggers reckless and erratic behavior in Michael Townley, prompting his family to leave home.
