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The main antagonist of the third season, [6] Tritter is a "stubborn", "vengeful", and extremely determined police detective. [14] [15] According to David Morse, the offensive thermometer incident in "Fools for Love" made it easy for Tritter to stand up to House; [3] as House's equal, Tritter "gets who House is on all levels and can really shake his foundation". [16]
Alexei Nikolaevich and his sister Tatiana Nikolaevna surrounded by guards during their house arrest in Tsarskoye Selo, April 1917. House arrest (also called home confinement, or electronic monitoring) is a legal measure where a person is required to remain at their residence under supervision, typically as an alternative to imprisonment.
The third season of House (also called House, M.D.) aired on FOX from September 5, 2006 [1] to May 29, 2007. [1] Early in the season, House temporarily regains the use of his leg due to ketamine treatment after he was shot in the season two finale. [2] Later in the season, he leaves a stubborn patient in an exam room with a thermometer in his ...
Authorities eventually find tickets with House's name and fingerprints on them in an outdoor drainpipe, meaning House will likely be charged with vandalism and have to go back to jail.
David Shore stated that it was a challenge for him to appropriately punish House for the deed in the season 7 finale without turning the series into a prison show or changing House's characteristics (while changing the environment around him, i.e. removing Cuddy and "chilling" his relationship with Wilson), and that is why he decided to pick up ...
The confrontation and the arrest, posted to the television network's YouTube channel, quickly went viral, amassing over 238,000 views and more than 1,400 comments on the platform since Monday.
Thirteen returns in the show's 150th episode, "The Dig", [7] where House meets her upon release from a prison where she has been incarcerated for the last six months for over-prescribing drugs. She has House drive her to a seemingly random house where she rings the bell, then assaults the man who answers the door.
Georgia homeowner Loletha Hale was arrested and charged with criminal trespass after she attempted to move back into her own house, which was reportedly inhabited by a squatter.