There is concern in the government over possible violence surrounding the Lucasville memorial. President Keane makes pleas to the wives of the FBI agents who were killed in Lucasville, asking them to also attend the memorial. The wives are received with hostility by the attendees until Mary Elkins greets them and invites them to sit with her. The evening proceeds without major incident. After O'Keefe insists he had nothing to do with planting the story, Saul comes up with a working theory — the fake news story about J.J. Elkins was disseminated by Russia. He visits Ivan Krupin, a former SVR operative now in witness protection. They discuss Yevgeny Gromov, a Russian who sparked conflict in Ukraine with a similarly fabricated story. Krupin says he doubts that the Russians are behind this latest incident. Saul is unsure if he is trustworthy and requests surveillance to be placed on Krupin. With the objective of connecting the McClendon assassination to David Wellington, Carrie assembles a team of friends from her CIA days. Along with Dante and Max, the team stakes out Simone Martin's workplace, along with disabling Simone's car so she stays after her co-workers. When only Simone remains inside, three team members go inside to nab Simone and rough her up. Anson gets Simone to confess that she withdrew $50,000 as a payment for the murder of McClendon, and then demands an additional $100,000 and releases her. Fully expecting Simone to immediately report to her handler, the team is gratified when her first phone call is to their prime suspect, Wellington. Simone's subsequent visit to Wellington's house is caught by Carrie's cameras. Carrie watches the footage and is crestfallen when Simone merely has sex with Wellington, not saying a word about the shakedown.
The episode received an approval rating of 80% on the review aggregatorRotten Tomatoes based on 10 reviews. The website's critical consensus is, "'Active Measures' wrings some juicy suspense from an impromptu sting chock full of twists and eerily relevant subtext." Shirley Li of Entertainment Weekly' rated the episode a "B+", concluding that it "activated several new mysteries to pursue, and this latest twist leaves me intrigued to see more". Brian Tallerico of New York Magazine rated the episode 3 out of 5 stars, and highlighted the conversation between Keane and Goodman as the best scene of the episode.
Ratings
The original broadcast was watched by 1.32 million viewers.