Aside from Dina, there were 4 other teens who took part in the Leadership Program. After Dina, there was Mick's son, Mason Miller.
A young criminology major who would be able to gather forensic evidence, Lana Thomas, the team's diversion creator,
Carson Bare, the team's tech genius, & Chloe Collingwood, the girl who would do background checks on the culprits and design the team's disguises.
A vision board on the wall reveals that they have been sneaking cold cases from Laura's employers for the past year and with this final rejection of legitimately starting up The Crossroads Program, they would work independently of the law and use a nearby redundant building they were in the process of renovating as a building for the program's meetings.
As if on cue, Detective Bennett's pager goes off, alerting her to an arrest,
A young boy named Charly Jeffries was booked for assaulting a classmate, landing him in the hospital, a boy named Teddy Walsh.
Secretly agreeing to allow Laura and her crew to look into it, Ellen drove Charly to the newly finished Silver Willow reform center.
In it the four kids in Laura's FBI Youth Leadership team were permitted to use their skills (Lana's diversion skills were to be used to see if she could narrow down Charly's behavioral patterns.) they find that Charly has Ani-social personality disorder.
He hit Teddy because he didn't know how to properly interact with him, but that's not justifiable in the eyes of the law.
Ellen arranges for the team to stand trial with Charly being tried as a minor. If they can make their case in court, the law will consider putting him in The Crossroads program, and the law will give them the legal green light.
With only a week to prepare, Laura and her team hit the law books, ready to make up the intel for Charly's defense.