For All Debts Public and Private


"For All Debts Public and Private" is the 40th episode of the HBO television series The Sopranos and the first episode of the show's fourth season. Written by David Chase and directed by Allen Coulter, it originally aired on September 15, 2002.

Starring

Synopsis

is worried about money. Meeting Tony at his doctor's office, he asks for more help for his medical and legal expenses, but Tony has his own expenses and angrily tells Junior to manage his affairs better. Junior later promotes Bobby Baccalieri.
Assemblyman Ron Zellman tells Tony about a special Newark Development District where Junior has a property which is going to rise in value; Tony buys it, pretending that he is doing his uncle a favour. He also calls a meeting with the family's capos in which he harangues them about the zero growth in business.
Carmela is worried about money, having seen the widowed Angie Bonpensiero working at a supermarket. Tony insists that, if anything happens to him, she and the children will be provided for, but will not give details. He also says money is no longer hidden in the house, but later retrieves packets of banknotes from a shed and from his car and hides them in a tub of duck feed; Carmela happens to pass by just after he closes the tub.
Paulie Walnuts has been arrested in Youngstown, Ohio, on a gun charge, and resents Tony's apparent indifference. From a jailhouse payphone, he calls Johnny Sack, who is cultivating his dissatisfaction.
Ralphie Cifaretto and Janice Soprano are growing closer. At a Sunday dinner at Tony and Carmela's home, Janice follows Ralphie to the bathroom and joins him for cocaine and sex— though Ralphie came with Rosalie Aprile.
Christopher believes that Tony is treating him harshly because he questioned his action against Jackie Aprile, Jr.. He is injecting heroin every day. Adriana is now close friends with Danielle, who is actually FBI Agent Deborah Ciccerone. Chris complains that she is always in their home. Adriana takes her to Tony's home and introduces her to him. Junior hears that there was an FBI agent in his doctor's office. He realizes it must have been the nurse he was flirting with and is mortified that he failed to suspect her.
Speaking to Dr. Melfi about business with unusual frankness, Tony says that usually, "There's two endings for a guy like me... Dead or in the can." But there is a third option, to rely "on blood relations": he will use his nephew Chris as a buffer between others and himself. As part of what he calls the bonding process, he gives Chris the name and home address of the man, a just-retired policeman, who, Tony says, killed Chris's father. Chris goes to the man's home and kills him.

First appearances