List of Matlock Characters - Conrad McMasters

Conrad McMasters

Conrad McMasters is a private investigator for Ben Matlock. Before working for Ben Matlock, he worked as a deputy sheriff in Manteo, where Matlock met him in hopes to figure out whether if Spencer Hamilton killed his brother.

Conrad also told Ben he went Christmas shopping in his hometown of Manteo to purchase gifts for his friends and his boss. He was also partnered and had a few dates with women.

On "The Informer", Conrad worked with Ben's client's partner/investigator, Angela Page, to work on a case on the night one of David's clients got murdered. After Matlock's client abruptly firing Angela, she turned to Conrad, who would then figure out who actually killed Sam Chandler, while traveling in Jacksonville, who happened to be Al Brackman.

When Matlock sent him to Chicago to talk to Sherry Brown in questioning her about the negatives he was supposed to find, he received word that she died from jumping off the apartment building.

In "The Cover Girl", he had a short fling with Carla Royce, a model. She revealed that her boss Jackie Whitman, the head of a modeling agency, was a control freak, and always had to have the last word in everything, which Carla found to be infuriating. However, Conrad broke up with her before she was found guilty of the murder of Jackie.

When watching the credits for "The Game Show", he talked his partner/friend, Michelle Thomas, into calling his other friend, Marjorie Wood, in hopes of being a contestant on the show.

While hanging at a bar, he had a drink with one of the suspects, Anne Johnson, for the afternoon, just one night after the murder. Her ex-boyfriend, Dwayne Meeks, was murdered after she caught him cheating on her. Of course, Anne was found innocent. His other friend, Lorraine Ortega (aka Cissy Lockwood), the bartender, wasn't.

Read more about this topic:  List Of Matlock Characters

Famous quotes containing the word conrad:

    Don’t you forget what’s divine in the Russian soul—and that’s resignation.
    —Joseph Conrad (1857–1924)