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List of NCIS: Los Angeles characters
List of NCIS: Los Angeles characters
from Wikipedia

This is an overview of regular and recurring characters on the TV series NCIS: Los Angeles.

Overview

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Main characters

[edit]
Character Actor Season
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
G. Callen Chris O'Donnell Main
Nate Getz Peter Cambor Main R G R G
Kensi Blye Daniela Ruah Main
Dominic Vail Adam Jamal Craig Main[a]
Sam Hanna LL Cool J Main
Hetty Lange Linda Hunt Main[b] G
Eric Beale Barrett Foa Main[c]
Marty Deeks Eric Christian Olsen G Main
Nell Jones Renée Felice Smith Main[d] G
Owen Granger Miguel Ferrer R Main[e]
Shay Mosley Nia Long Main[f]
Fatima Namazi Medalion Rahimi R Main[g]
Devin Rountree Caleb Castille R Main
Hollace Kilbride Gerald McRaney G R G R Main
  1. ^ Episodes 1–12 of season 1 only; guest episode 21.
  2. ^ Episodes 2–24 of season 1 only; guest episode 1.
  3. ^ Episodes 13–24 of season 1 only; recurring episode 1–12.
  4. ^ Episodes 13–24 of season 2 only; recurring episodes 1–12.
  5. ^ Episodes 1–15 of season 8 only.
  6. ^ Episodes 1–6 of season 10 only.
  7. ^ Episodes 16 onwards of season 11 only; recurring episodes 4, 6 & 7.

Recurring characters

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Character Actor Season
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Leon Vance Rocky Carroll R G G
Abby Sciuto Pauley Perrette R
Rose Schwartz Kathleen Rose Perkins R G R
Arkady Kolcheck Vyto Ruginis G R G R G R G R
Mowahd Dusa Ronald Auguste R G
Dan Evans Matthew Grant Godbey G R G R
Lauren Hunter Claire Forlani R
Marcel Janvier Christopher Lambert R G
Tahir Khaled Anslem Richardson R R
Vostanik Sabatino Erik Palladino G R G R G R G
Michelle Hanna Indira G. Wilson G
Aunjanue Ellis R G G
Dave Flynn Scott Grimes R G
Jack Simon Matthew Del Negro R G
Joelle Taylor Elizabeth Bogush G R G R G G R
Anna Kolcheck Bar Paly R
Anthony "Tony" DiNozzo Jr. Michael Weatherly G
Jennifer Kim Malese Jow R G
A.J. Chegwidden John M. Jackson R
Harley Hidoko Andrea Bordeaux R
Louis Ochoa Esai Morales R
John Rogers Peter Jacobson R G

Main characters

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G. Callen

[edit]

Grisha Alexandrovich Nikolaev Callen
NCIS: Los Angeles character
Chris O'Donnell as G. Callen
First appearance"Legend (Part 1)"
Portrayed byChris O'Donnell
C.J. Valleroy (aged 15)
Other appearances
In-universe information
Full nameGrisha Aleksandrovich Nikolaev[1]
NicknameG.
GenderMale
TitleSpecial Agent-in-Charge
OccupationNCIS Special Agent
Family
  • Nikita Aleksandr Reznikov (father, deceased)
  • Clara Callen (mother, deceased)
  • Amy Callen (older sister, deceased)
  • George Callen (grandfather, deceased)
  • Alexandra Reynolds (half sister)
  • Jake Reynolds (nephew)
Significant others
  • Anna Kolcheck (wife)
  • Kristen Donnelly (ex-girlfriend)
  • Joelle Taylor (ex-girlfriend)
NationalityRomanian, American, Russian

Agent Grisha "G." Callen (born: Nikolaev) (portrayed by Chris O'Donnell) is the NCIS Special Agent in Charge, and the senior agent assigned to the Office of Special Projects. He first appeared in the NCIS season six episode "Legend (Part I)".

Before working at NCIS, Callen previously worked for the CIA (the longest), DEA, and FBI. Several episodes across the seasons reference his stint with the Agency. In seasons one and two, it is revealed that while with the CIA, Callen worked alongside recurring NCIS character Trent Kort (David Dayan Fisher), and was partnered with Tracy Rosetti (Marisol Nichols). Callen once served with his friend Leroy Jethro Gibbs, who now works at the NCIS Headquarters located in the Washington Navy Yard. Callen specializes in deep undercover work. Prior to the series commencing, G. Callen and Sam Hanna had been partnered for two years (as per the season three episode "Partner" where they celebrate their five-year partnership).

In the show's first episode "Identity", it is revealed that he is called "G" not because he dislikes his first name, but because he does not actually know what it stands for, as the system never told him. Further insights into his childhood come in season one's "Pushback", where Hetty Lange and operational psychologist Dr. Nate Getz discuss how Callen lived in thirty-seven foster homes from the age of five to the age of eighteen, sometimes moving every few days. Callen's childhood was fraught with abuse, which is referenced during various episodes. In season one ("Keeping It Real") he recalls that he once watched his foster father beat his foster brother to death. In season four, he shares how moving unexpectedly to a new home that wasn't quite so nice, made him close off his feelings. In "Reznikov, N." (season five), Callen tells Kensi and Deeks that when he was ten, his foster father used to beat him with a broom handle.

Over the course of several seasons, Callen has discovered more about his identity and flashbacks in the season two finale prompted him to suddenly recall that he spent part of his early childhood on the Romanian coast of the Black Sea.[2] He also uncovers repressed memories of witnessing his mother being assassinated in front of him when he was four. Early in season three, Hetty finally tells Callen that she knew his mother, Clara and she was her CIA handler. Callen's maternal line back to his grandfather George Callen is revealed, as well as the Romanian blood feud between the Callens and the Comescus.

In addition to English, Callen is fluent in at least six other languages: Spanish, Polish, Russian, German (which is claimed to be Austrian, and is usually completely butchered), Italian (with a Northern accent), and French.[3] Callen also claims to speak Czech and Romanian;[4] furthermore, his Russian is arguably good enough to be taken for one, but not the other, Chechen dialect.[5] In the Season 1 episode "Search and Destroy" (S1:E4), Callen is shown easily reading Arabic, with enough fluency to translate on the fly into idiomatic English.

Nate "Doc" Getz

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Nate "Doc" Getz
First appearance"Legend (Part 1)" (NCIS episode)
Last appearance"New Beginnings, Part 2"
Portrayed byPeter Cambor
In-universe information
NicknameNate, Doc
GenderMale
TitleOperational Liaison in the Middle East
OccupationOperational Psychologist
NationalityAmerican

Dr. Nate Getz (portrayed by Peter Cambor) is an operational psychologist working with NCIS, stationed in Los Angeles, introduced in the series' backdoor pilot, the NCIS episode "Legend". Nate holds both a master's degree and Ph.D. in psychology.

He observes surveillance tapes and watches/handles interrogations in order to make a psychological profile. He is also responsible for performing periodic psychological evaluations of the NCIS OSP personnel and to provide ongoing monitoring of their mental health. He is afraid of disobeying orders from Hetty Lange and finds her scary. The team often fails to get his humor, for example, in "The Only Easy Day" when he states: "What has the world come to when drug dealers aren't even safe within the comfort of their own fortified homes?" He also knows how to play banjo and harmonica, and enjoys listening to jazz music. In the episode "Callen, G" he claims he was abducted by aliens as a child.

In the episode "Chinatown", Nate expresses his interest in becoming a field agent which is highly discouraged by the team members because of his inept field skills. He asks Hetty if she can think of any operational psychologist who has become a field agent; however, when she shares that the only known such person died on his second week of field work, Nate gets a little iffy about his choice. Despite this, Nate has received training in both fieldcraft and hand-to-hand combat, as demonstrated on several occasions in the episodes "Lockup" and "Harm's Way".

Nate and recurring character Rose Shwartz share an unconsummated mutual attraction. This has not been explored further as Peter Cambor is no longer a member of the main cast. Cambor's departure as a main cast member coincides with Nate's reassignment to the Middle East to investigate an Islamic militant group based in Yemen. With the conclusion of that mission in the episode "Harm's Way", Nate's current assignment is undisclosed, although it is known that he is remaining in the Middle East for the time being.

Nate returned to Los Angeles in "Patriot Acts" where he helped the team locate a domestic terrorist responsible for planting a bomb somewhere in the city. In "The 3rd Choir" he helps Nell to cope with her first kill.

Peter Cambor was credited as a main cast member during season one, but his character was downgraded to recurring at the start of season two. In his future appearances, Cambor was credited as a Special Guest Star.

Kensi Blye

[edit]
Kensi Blye
First appearance"Legend (Part I)" (NCIS episode)
Last appearance"New Beginnings, Part 2" (NCIS: Los Angeles episode)
Portrayed byDaniela Ruah
Other appearancesHawaii Five-0
NCIS
In-universe information
Full nameKensi Marie Blye
NicknameKens
Sugarbear (by Deeks)
Fern (by Deeks)
Kensilina (by Deeks)
Wikipedia (by Ray)
Kay-Kay (by Deeks and the Cupcake Girls)
Special K
Princess (by Deeks)
GenderFemale
TitleSpecial Agent
OccupationJunior Field Special Agent (NCIS)/Special Agent (NCIS)
Bar owner
FamilyDonald Blye (father; deceased)
Julia Feldman (mother)
Gordon John Brandel (father-in-law; deceased)
Roberta Deeks (mother-in-law)
Rosa (adoptive daughter)
SpouseMarty Deeks (husband)
Significant othersJack Simon (ex-fiancé)
Kevin Miller (ex-boyfriend)
NationalityAmerican

Kensi Blye (portrayed by Daniela Ruah) is a Junior Field Agent in the NCIS Office of Special Projects Team stationed in Los Angeles.

Kensi was originally named "Kensi Lo" and described as "a twenty-something Asian-American whose academic record in forensics and criminology got her recruited young by the Feds";[6] a change was needed when Portuguese actress Daniela Ruah was cast.

Kensi Marie Blye was born in San Diego, California on July 29, 1982. She came from a U.S. Marine Corps family and still drives to Camp Pendleton every weekend. At some point her father was stationed at Camp Lejeune during her childhood. She is fluent in Portuguese, French, and Spanish, can lip-read and knows Morse code. In the episode "Borderline" she also stated that her father taught her how to "track, shoot, fix an engine, play poker, wire a house; basically anything you teach a son",[7] and that her father was her best friend. In that same scene she reveals that her "father didn't have any sons, just me" implying that she is an only child. She has admitted to having Chaetophobia (fear of hair), specifically fear of men's back hair.[8] She collects gel bracelets and is known to have at least seventy-two. She is also known to be a slob; her desk is frequently covered in clutter and her home is shown to be quite messy. Her untidy habits are a recurring joke throughout the series.

When she was fifteen years old and out seeing the movie Titanic with friends, a movie Kensi considers to be her favorite, her father was murdered. His body was so unrecognizable that he had to be identified through the use of dental records. It had been a cold case for many years, but in the episode "Blye, K., Part 2" it was finally solved and Kensi was able to move on with her life at last. It was subsequently revealed that after her father's murder, she spent almost a year living on the streets.

Kensi joined the Naval Criminal Investigative Service in August 2006, according to her NCIS agent biography form from "Black Market" after having graduated from Cornell University with a BA in Politics and International Studies. According to the form, her first posting was the Washington DC Office, December 2006 to September 2007, then Tokyo 7th Fleet HQ from October 2007 to March 2008. After that she was stationed at Norfolk Naval Base, Virginia from March 2008 to June 2009. She started at OSP in Los Angeles in June 2009.

In "The Only Easy Day", Kensi says that when she was the new girl, she had to climb through air ducts because she was the smallest, and also had to wear bikinis on assignment when needed. She is very talented with undercover work, and Callen and Sam have called her a "natural operator". She is fluent in Spanish, Portuguese, English, and French. Her husband is Martin Deeks.

On-screen, her first partner was Agent Dom Vail. She was particularly upset when Dom went missing and she was seen afterwards washing dishes at his apartment. Kensi has been officially partnered with Marty Deeks since season two, although their first experience working together was in the season one episode "Fame".

It is revealed in the season two episode "Disorder" that she was once engaged to a Marine named Jack, but that their relationship ended after his return from Iraq suffering from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and his subsequent disappearance. Kensi tried to be there for him (stating that she helped with his medication, and even went to his psychiatric appointments), but all of her efforts weren't enough since Jack was too affected. It is said that he eventually left her without even telling her. She is even shown crying in the interrogation room to the suspect (proving that she obviously had a deep connection to him, and is still greatly affected by the loss). Although Deeks and Kensi have a somewhat antagonistic relationship at first, they have warmed up considerably over time, and she was visibly concerned when Deeks was shot in the episode "Personal". Kensi asks Hetty if she can stay with Deeks in the hospital rather than assist in the investigation of his shooting, as she didn't want to risk not seeing him alive again, as had happened with Vail. Deeks is also a flirter and he has demonstrated some interest in Kensi on a personal level. In the episode "The Job", while undercover, she had to flirt with a good-looking thief. Deeks showed jealousy, as noted by Callen and Sam.

Kensi is visibly annoyed sometimes when Deeks flirts with other women or when he attempts to use her as a wingman. During some episodes, though, Kensi appears slightly jealous when Deeks flirts with other women or when they come across someone he once had feelings for while undercover. Over time it becomes obvious that Kensi is developing feelings for Deeks, though she often hides them. Like Deeks, Kensi also has a comic book collection. In the season two episode "Plan B" Kensi earns the nickname Wikipedia for her encyclopedic knowledge. In the season two finale, Kensi resigns from NCIS along with Callen and Sam in order to follow Hetty's trail to Prague without Director Vance's authorization.[9]

In the season three episode "Blye, K.", Kensi falls under investigation when Marines from her dead father's sniper unit end up dead in various car accidents. Kensi's father Donald Blye was part of a special operations unit named "Oscar-Sierra". She is taken into custody by Assistant Director Granger when it is revealed that she was the last person a few Marines contacted before their deaths, although her name is eventually cleared when it becomes apparent that the true killer is a former member of her father's sniper unit who faked his own death. In season four, Hetty tells Deeks that Kensi lived on the streets for about a year after her father's death. This event appears to have scarred her emotionally, although she has never gone into details as to the events that took place while on the streets. In "Blye, K., Part 2", it is revealed that her mother (remarried as Julia Feldman) lives in Encino and they haven't spoken in 15 years. In the same episode, it is revealed that Kensi joined NCIS in 2006, nine years after the death of her father. She was 24 years old at the time. Granger accuses Kensi of joining NCIS to fulfill her own agenda, i.e. to investigate her father's death. Donald Blye died trying to protect an American journalist named Brad Stevens who was about to expose Peter Clairemont (chief of the Oscar-Sierra unit) who had killed a civilian while intoxicated. At the end of the episode, much to Kensi's surprise, it was revealed that her father and Granger were close associates.

Kensi also has an affinity for Dubstep and techno music. Deeks mentions it early on in season three and she is found listening to it while undercover in episode 22 of season three, "Neighborhood Watch". Kensi also made a guest appearance in the Hawaii Five-0 episode "Ka Hakaka Maikaʻi" where she announced that she has Level 5 security clearance.

In the episode "Parley", while Deeks is undercover with a woman named Monica, Kensi appears jealous of how close Monica is to him. While Kensi is preparing Monica for a meeting with an arms dealer, Monica asks whether being Deeks' partner is enough for her. Kensi seems uptight and tries to avoid answering the question. Monica then goes on to tell her that he can't be trusted; Kensi defends Deeks by saying "I trust him with everything". Later Kensi goes to talk to Deeks and he asks her if she is good. She replies by saying she is good and asks Deeks the same question. He replies by saying "I'm good if you're good". Though they both say everything is fine between them, they both seem to be lying and are obviously not fine. By the end of the season, Deeks and Kensi finally begin to confront their true feelings for each other and share their first real kiss.

In this season, Kensi and Deeks finally begin to truly confront their romantic feelings for each other, but face various obstacles that continue to keep them apart or discuss their true feelings. In the opening episode of season five, Kensi is both comforted and deeply affected by the fact that Deeks used her as a tether to withstand the torture he had endured. While Deeks is recovering, Kensi states that she attempted to bring him his favorite doughnut/croissant (a.k.a. "Cronut"). She is clearly distraught by his lack of response, even to this gesture. After Nate is called to assess Deeks' mental status, it is Kensi who is finally able to give him the sleep he has thus far been unable to attain, when she goes to visit him at his house. In the episode "Recovery", it is implied that Kensi and Deeks have become intimate after he told her he wanted to be with her at his apartment and she stared at him before walking off, with him following right behind her. However, following their night together in the episode "Frozen Lake", things become awkward and full of tension when their entangled emotions begin to have an effect on their performance during field work. When Deeks does not take a most-needed shot, Kensi becomes agitated and tells Deeks she is standing on a "frozen lake" and that while she wants what they have more than anything else, it just won't work. Despite this, at the end of the episode, Kensi tells Deeks they'll find a way to work things out between them, admitting they have a "thing", before asking him to be patient with her as they talk things through. He agrees to that and they make plans to meet again that night. As Kensi waits for Deeks later on, though, Hetty tells her she has been reassigned to a new and classified mission and will have to leave until the job is finished, much to her disappointment. As she prepares to leave, she receives a text message from Deeks saying he is almost there. She appears genuinely upset and walks off.

In Afghanistan, she receives her mission: to kill an American man who uses the alias "White Ghost". She discovers that the "White Ghost" is apparently Jack Simon, her ex-fiancé. Simon had PTSD returning from the war and left her on Christmas morning (season two "Disorder"). Because of her personal connection, she is unable to kill him and eventually gets captured. It is revealed that this was a plan crafted by Hetty to protect Jack, who is innocent, from the CIA. When the team hears news of Kensi's capture they rush to her aid, only to find her pale, weak and having been very severely beaten. This is a direct parallel to what Deeks went through at the beginning of season five. Kensi prefers not to talk about it, although she does confide in Deeks and he embraces her when she says "It was really bad." (The Afghanistan storyline was actually not originally part of the plan for season 5, but added to keep Blye on the show despite actress Ruah's pregnancy.)[10]

In season six episode 11 "Humbug", she and Deeks agree to make their relationship official and finally become a couple. They attempt to keep their relationship secret until the events of episode 18 "Fighting Shadows" when the team reveal their awareness of their newfound romantic relationship. In the same episode, Kensi and Deeks are also briefly separated and must work with Callen and Sam respectively, but later discover the reason being that Deeks is under investigation by the LAPD who will try and use their relationship against them.

In season seven, Kensi decides to move in with Deeks.

Towards the end of the season, Callen, Sam, Kensi and Deeks go to the desert to capture a terrorist and their plane gets shot down and in the wreckage Kensi gets stuck under the nose of the plane and goes into a coma. The aftermath of the injury results in a spinal cord injury with a very slim chance of recovery.

In the first episode, Kensi gets injured because the team was involved in a helicopter crash. For the first half of the season, Kensi is out of action in hospital, recovering and doing therapy following her accident. After months of physical therapy she does eventually return to work, once Hetty and Nate both agree she is ready. In episode 14, Kensi is kidnapped by a man she met in physical therapy (who is later revealed to have been one of the people she shot in Season 5 during her trek into Afghanistan, making her directly responsible for his amputation). In episode 15, she is taken to a house where the man threatens to cut off her leg as "payback" but Deeks saves her. At the end of the season finale, Kensi asks Deeks to marry her and he says yes.

In season nine, Kensi and Deeks are officially engaged and begin planning for the wedding while at the same time meet executive assistant director, Shay Mosley who replaces Owen Granger. Mosley is shown to disapprove of Kensi and Deeks' relationship when she sends Deeks back to work at the LAPD, temporarily breaking their partnership until Callen convinces Mosley to keep Deeks on the team. Throughout the season, Kensi and Deeks continue making plans and preparations for their wedding and at the same time, start discussing their future together beyond NCIS with Deeks expressing his hopes of someday leaving with Kensi to start a family together. During the season, Kensi is faced in a deadly and highly dangerous situation involving a nuclear launch and almost risking her life. Kensi is successful in stopping the threat.

In the season nine finale, Kensi along with the rest of the team, learn the truth about Mosley's kidnapped son and Callen's promise to help her when they come into contact with a suspect on a current case who is connected to Mosley's former lover, Spencer Williams. Upon learning of this information, Mosley sees this as her best chance of finding and getting her son back. Mosley and the team learn they are located in Mexico, but the mission to rescue her son is unsanctioned and highly dangerous, putting the team's lives at risk. Kensi wishes to go to Mexico, but Deeks has concerns and does not believe it is a good idea. When Deeks is fired by Mosley after confronting her about her unfair, reckless and disrespectful behaviour, he believes that now is the time for him and Kensi to finally leave NCIS. However, despite their previous discussions on the matter, Kensi reveals that she is not ready to leave NCIS or start a family yet. A fight ensues between them, resulting in the wedding being called off. Despite being fired as well as the current state of their relationship, Deeks still joins the team on the Mexico mission to save Mosley's son. However, while the mission is ultimately successful, reuniting Mosley with her son and returning them to L.A. together, the rest of the team are struck by a rocket while escaping in their SUV, leaving uncertain who is dead or alive.

Shortly after the events from the season nine finale, Kensi and the team are revealed to have survived the impact from the rocket that hit their SUV. Kensi is the least injured member of the team, but becomes extremely worried when Deeks has since remained unconscious following the SUV explosion. The team are forced to separate and Kensi drags an unconscious Deeks through the desert to find safety and shelter, but Kensi continues to remain worried about Deeks. Eventually, Deeks awakens and Kensi manages to get to a hospital. Kensi reunites with Turk and together they stand guard and get ready for a fight from Spencer Williams men who are still hunting the team. Thankfully, help arrives and Kensi remains by Deeks' side as he is being treated from his injuries. By the end of the premiere, Kensi and Deeks finally reconcile from their previous fight from the season nine finale, getting back together and resuming their engagement.

Kensi and Deeks continue to plan their wedding throughout the tenth season and later open up their bar. Towards the end of the season, Kensi and Deeks' wedding day has arrived. However, Kensi remains unaware of the events regarding Anatoli Kirkin and while the rest of the team deals with the situation, Kensi is busy getting ready along with her friends and mother until Anatoli reveals himself to her. Kensi later finds herself having to fight against Anatoli's former bodyguards. Finally, Kensi and Deeks get married and become husband and wife with Hetty officiating the ceremony.

Early in the beginning of the eleventh season, Kensi briefly believes she may be pregnant, until she later learns it was a false alarm, but the experience causes Kensi and Deeks to finally have a real discussion about having children. Throughout the season, Kensi and Deeks happily adjust to married life and continue to hold a strong and healthy relationship as well as managing the bar, finally naming it, "The Squid and Dagger". Later, after Deeks walks into a trap and almost dies in bomb explosion, the event causes Kensi to finally admit and realize she truly wants to have children with him.

In the thirteenth season finale, Kensi and Deeks adopt Rosa, a teenage girl seeking a new life in the United States.

In the series finale, "New Beginnings, Part Two", Kensi learns from her doctor that she is pregnant, which leaves her, Deeks and Rosa delighted with joy.

Dominic Vail

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Dominic Vail
First appearance"Identity"
Last appearance"Found"
Portrayed byAdam Jamal Craig
In-universe information
NicknameDom
GenderMale
TitleSpecial Agent
OccupationJunior Field Special Agent (NCIS)
NationalityAmerican

Dominic "Dom" Vail (portrayed by Adam Jamal Craig) was introduced in the episode "Identity" as the team's rookie agent. He was originally partnered with Kensi Blye. Dom is not a native of Los Angeles. An MIT alumnus, Dom moved straight to LA after he was recruited by NCIS following graduation.

Dom's field of study has not been disclosed, although he has demonstrated on several occasions advanced skills with computers and electronics, and it has been stated that he "makes a pretty good geek for a field agent". As of season one, both of Dom's parents are still alive. Dom is an uncle, as evidenced by crayon drawings stuck to his refrigerator door.

Dom disappeared in the episode "Past Lives" (although his team does not realize this until the following episode "Missing"), and was finally found in the episode "Found". It was revealed that he had been captured by professional kidnappers hired by Islamic militants and held hostage in the hope of facilitating a prisoner exchange. Although Callen, Kensi and Sam eventually found him, they later found themselves caught up in a major gunfight with the terrorists. While pinned down on the rooftop, Dom took fire that was originally intended to hit Sam with the bullets piercing his body, essentially sacrificing himself to save Sam's life. Despite Sam's efforts to stop the bleeding, Dom died almost immediately with his death leaving the OSP team completely shell-shocked and grief-stricken. The team (particularly Kensi Blye) is shown to be heartbroken and devastated the following episode.

His role in the team was later taken over by Detective Marty Deeks. The season one episode "Past Lives" was the last to credit Adam Jamal Craig as a main cast member. He was later credited as a guest star in the season one episode "Found", also his final appearance on the show.

Henrietta "Hetty" Lange

[edit]

Henrietta Lange
Linda Hunt as Henrietta "Hetty" Lange in a promotional photo for NCIS: Los Angeles season one.
First appearance"Identity"
Last appearance“Subject 17”
Portrayed byLinda Hunt
In-universe information
AliasSylvia Cole
Sylvia Martin
Gloria Edwards
NicknameHetty, "Duchess of deception"
GenderFemale
TitleOperations Manager, Office of Special Projects, NCIS
OccupationOperations manager (NCIS)
NationalityAmerican

Henrietta "Hetty" Lange (portrayed by Linda Hunt) is the Operations Manager at NCIS in Los Angeles. She was introduced in "Identity", the first episode of NCIS: Los Angeles as a stand-alone series.

In spite of her small stature, the other characters find her intimidating, not least of all because of her colorful past; she has had many encounters, liaisons, and relationships with past agents (referenced in "Missing") and such Hollywood greats as George Hamilton and Frank Sinatra. She is a fan of Lady Gaga, stating that she "will always love the Gaga".[11] Hetty's favorite beverage is tea, to such an extent that in "Bounty" she approved a mission to Afghanistan after Callen and Sam promised to bring her back a bag of tea leaves. She was assigned to the Los Angeles office prior to December 2008.

According to Hetty's NCIS personnel file, which is accessed by Nell and appears on-screen in the Season 2 finale, "Familia",[12] Hetty:

One of the last surviving Cold Warriors, Hetty has unparalleled access to contacts throughout the intelligence and defense communities, which she does not hesitate to exploit when required for the success of a mission or to protect the lives of her agents. Her reputation has taken on an almost legendary aspect; it is such that the mere mention of her name is often enough to strike fear into those who have heard of, but never met, her.[14] She has an extensive list of aliases, as evidenced by multiple driver's licenses seen in a locked drawer of her desk and several passports hidden in a private safe deposit box.

She also subscribes to an older unwritten code of conduct, evidenced by her disgust at the new generation of Russian agents who have "broken all the rules" by killing innocents (Season 2 episode "Deliverance").

Hetty sometimes exhibits a maternal instinct towards her agents. When her agents were in serious danger in the episodes "Ambush" and "Found", she used her considerable political capital and aforementioned contacts to pull out all the stops in rescuing them (such as convincing SecAF to authorize a F-22 Raptor fly-over of the militia camp).

Like Eric Beale, she is fond of Abby Sciuto; and, when the latter visited the OSP Operations Center, Hetty points out to the other agents Abby's ability to "be functional and stylish at the same time".[15] When Deeks was shot and there was no one to call, Hetty told him to put her down as his next of kin for the future.

Hetty is deeply affected by the line-of-duty death of an agent and has twice resigned (albeit unsuccessfully) from NCIS. The first was in 1999, when a promising young NCIS Agent (Sullivan) she had personally recruited was killed when attempting to infiltrate a militia group.[16] The second time was following the death of Agent Dominic Vail in the Season 1 episode "Found". Although she delivers her letter of resignation to Director Vance personally, it is later returned to her by Callen, who had picked the Director's pocket to recover the letter.[17] Hetty does eventually resign in the penultimate episode of Season 2 and is replaced by Senior Agent Lauren Hunter as the new Operations Manager.

In the Season 2 finale, Hetty identifies herself as a member of the Comescu family and shows that she possesses the same tattoo as the mysterious man who gave a toy soldier to Callen as a child.[18] In the season three opening episode "Lange, H", it was revealed that Hetty is not a member of the Comescu family but, in fact, had spent decades trying to infiltrate their ranks to protect Callen. At the end of the episode, it was shown that she had been shot and had then fallen to the ground, ending the episode in a cliffhanger. In "Backstopped", having survived the shooting and taken time off to recover, Hetty officially returned to work. She also revealed to Callen that she knew his mother when she was a CIA officer and Hetty was her handler. During an operation in Romania, Clara Callen disappeared and reappeared six years later with two children; at that time, she contacted Hetty, stating that she had to get out of Romania. Although the CIA told Hetty not to bother, she decided to assist Clara Callen anyway, but Clara was killed by the Comescus before Hetty arrived. G. Callen and his sister somehow arrived in the U.S. and Hetty found them, arranging for G. Callen to get out of foster care; however, she was too late for Amy, who was already dead.

In the season three finale, Hetty resigns from the Operations Manager positions after Callen is arrested and Lauren Hunter and Mike Renko are both murdered. However, it is later revealed that the crime for which Callen was arrested had been staged, and Hetty eventually returns to her original position as Operations Manager.

Hetty is also shown to be aware of the growing romantic relationship between Kensi and Deeks since towards the end of the third season when they went undercover as a married couple. Since realizing their true feelings for each other, both Hetty and Granger begin heavily discussing their relationship in season five, questioning whether it was right for Kensi and Deeks to continue their partnership with their mutual feelings growing stronger and their relationship evolving romantically. Hetty expresses concerns for their relationship at times, but she is shown to happily approve of Kensi and Deeks being together and shows supports of the relationship developing between them and sometimes even helps to bring them further together.

In season nine, sometime following the events of the Season 8 finale, Hetty has mysteriously disappeared, apparently having retired from NCIS for good and sold most of her properties and taken her boat. Following Hetty's departure, Executive Assistant Director Shay Mosley appears to take her place and to oversee the team. Throughout the season, Callen and the team are greatly concerned regarding Hetty's disappearance and begin to try and locate her. Eventually, it is revealed Hetty has traveled to Vietnam to rescue Keane, a former teammate after the Vietnam War who Hetty thought was dead and later finds herself captured. Eventually, the team manages to find and locate Hetty along with her former associates and successfully rescue her and Keane, returning them to Los Angeles. Hetty resumes her duties as Operations Manager, but finds difficulty working together with Shay Mosley who intends to break up the team. In the season nine finale, Hetty strongly disapproves of the unsanctioned mission to Mexico, seeing that not only is it highly dangerous and that it could endanger the lives of everyone on the team, but also Hetty recognizes that Mosley is going completely out of control and is willing to sacrifice everyone's lives to get her son back. Hetty attempts to stop the mission, but is forced to give in when Mosley blackmails her, threatening to expose the team's less than legal actions.

In the season ten premiere, following the events of the team's off-the-books mission in Mexico from the previous season finale, Hetty calls retired Navy Admiral, Hollace Kilbride to help assist in rescuing them and later disappears again, leaving everyone wondering where she is. However, Hetty secretly contacts Callen, informing him she will be gone for some time, but eventually after being absent for almost the entire season, Hetty finally returns on the day of Kensi and Deeks' wedding and officiates their ceremony (Hunt took time off from the show while recovering from a car accident.)[19]

In the thirteenth season premiere, Hetty left OSP to embark on a long-term assignment in Syria and following her departure, retired Navy Admiral Hollace Kilbride has replaced her as the Operations Manager.

Hetty made an appearance in Scorpion in late October 2014.[20]

Sam Hanna

[edit]
Sam Hanna
NCIS: Los Angeles character
LL Cool J as Sam Hanna in a promotional photo for NCIS: Los Angeles.
First appearance"Legend (Part I)" (NCIS episode)
Portrayed byLL Cool J
Other appearancesHawaii Five-0
NCIS
NCIS: Hawaiʻi
In-universe information
Full nameOsama Hanna[21]
NicknameSam
GenderMale
OccupationSenior Field Special Agent, NCIS
Senior Chief Petty Officer, U.S. Navy SEALs (formerly)
FamilyCol. Raymond Hanna, USMC (father)
Unnamed (mother)
SpouseMichelle Hanna (deceased)
ChildrenAiden Hanna (son)
Kamran Hanna (daughter)
NationalityAmerican

Sam Hanna (portrayed by LL Cool J) is a Senior NCIS Field Agent assigned to the Office of Special Projects.

The son of a Marine Major, Osama "Sam" Hanna attended a military school and excelled in football, playing wide receiver.[22] Like the actor, Hanna is a native of New York City.[23]

Outside his job, Hanna has a varied range of interests, including boxing, origami,[24] acting, vinyl records, and antique cars.[25] He also tends to follow the latest health food and fitness fads. He suffers from coulrophobia (fear of clowns)[26] and has a fear of maggots.[27]

Prior to joining NCIS, Hanna served in the U.S. Navy, from which he retired with the rank of Senior Chief Petty Officer[28] (E-8), although this contradicts his service record as shown in the episode "Betrayal" which states that he left as a Chief Petty officer (E-7). When in uniform in the 20th episode of season 4, he is seen wearing the rank of a Senior Chief. He was a member of the Special Warfare Development Group (DEVGRU) (formerly "Team Six") based in Dam Neck in Virginia.[25][29] Despite his inability to swim when he first enlisted,[30] he went on to have a distinguished career as a SEAL and various characters have referenced his "legendary" status within the SEAL community.[31][32] Much of his career is vague due to the highly classified nature of most of his missions, although it has been mentioned that he served in Bosnia,[33] [31] (Yugoslav Wars),[34] Chad (Pan Sahel Initiative),[35] Iraq[31] and Afghanistan[36][37] and was stationed at the Naval Special Warfare Center in Coronado at some point. His area of expertise is the Middle East and he reads and speaks Arabic fluently and has an encyclopedic knowledge of the Qur'an.[27][38] He is also multilingual, having a working knowledge of Japanese, Persian, Danish, Hebrew, Korean, and Spanish.[39][40] Due to his background in the SEALs, he is able to withstand torture due to SERE training required for all special forces operators and detach himself emotionally during investigations. Although usually reticent about his service, Sam has hinted several times about how his experiences overseas have affected him: he mentions about getting help in "Field of Fire" when interviewing a homeless veteran who was distrustful of him[37] and admits to Nate Getz in the episode "Impact" of his worries that he would one day lose himself.[41]

Hanna has a strong sense of duty and becomes particularly indignant when the criminal is from a military background. In the episode "Vengeance" he was forced to interrogate a group of SEALs about their involvement in the death of a Navy officer suspected of leaking classified information and was visibly affected, leading Hetty to observe that she felt like she was "making him interrogate his family". In the final episode of season 11, "Code of Conduct", when investigating claims that a SEAL chief petty officer has murdered an unarmed prisoner, it is revealed that Sam is widely known and respected long even after his service ended, with multiple SEALs willing to defy their chief's orders after he reveals his presence.[42]

In the two-part crossover episode with Hawaii Five-0 it is revealed that he is friends with head of the Five-0 Task Force and former SEAL Lieutenant Commander Steve McGarrett, although the story of how they met was never addressed.

In the season two finale, Hanna resigns from NCIS along with Callen and Kensi in order to follow Hetty's trail to Prague without Director Vance's authorization.[9] It is revealed in the episode "Greed" that Hanna has been working undercover on a joint CIA task force in Sudan for the past year. His teammates had already been suspicious due to Hanna uncharacteristically turning up late for work and taking leaves of absence. During the investigation he crosses paths with fellow undercover operative Michelle, and Hanna said that he "pulled some strings" to get them into the USA. In this episode, Hanna is once again hunted by the Taliban. Later, it was revealed that Amir was working for a terrorist named Habib. His mission is to kill Sam, "the one that got away". Sam was trapped inside their boat shed and beaten up by Habib's men with Callen, Kensi and Deeks launching a rescue operation which was successful, resulting in the deaths of the terrorists. Throughout the episode, Callen and Hetty are worried because Hanna is personally involved in the case. Hetty "punishes" Sam for using federal resources, once again, by buying expensive Scotch at his expense.

Michelle is reactivated after NCIS, FBI and CIA discover that Sidorov has stolen three Cold War-era nuclear devices from former KGB sleeper agents in the United States. She confides to Sam that she misses her undercover work when he expresses his disapproval about her desire to return to active duty.[43] In the season four finale, Sam is partnered with Deeks who confronts him over his indifference towards him. Hanna admits to Deeks that he has some personal flaws. Later, Deeks saves Hanna's life and ends up captured and tortured by Sidorov. In the season five premiere 'Ascension', after being found by Kensi and Granger, Deeks tells Hanna he didn't give up Michelle even under torture. Hanna visits him, stating he now owes him for the rest of his life for what Deeks did for him and Michelle. When Deeks admits he was thinking about quitting, Hanna said it would be a mistake, saying that Deeks is a great cop. In the following episode "Impact", Hanna is sent for mandatory counseling with Nate Getz by Hetty. Hanna explains that he is able to detach himself when tortured and then bring himself back to reality once it is over but is worried that there will come a day when he is unable to go back to reality.[41]

In the episode before the season 8 finale Michelle is murdered, leaving him devastated. The team had tracked her down after her abduction but found her too late. Season 9 sees Hanna coping with his grief while struggling to remain professional. LL Cool J commented on Hanna's state of mind: "He has a single minded focus and he wants to get to the people that did this and deal with them."[44]

In season 9, Sam sells his home with his kids away at Boarding school, puts his belongings into storage and buys a boat, which he renames Michelle, in honor of his wife. He still struggles with his grief when his anniversary came around and ended up hungover the next day. Callen helps him through his grief and by Season 10, when he suspects Sam has an interest in fellow NCIS Agent Nicole Dechamps (Marsha Thomason), he tells him Michelle would want him to be happy and move on with his life. Eventually, in Season 11, Sam starts to date Katherine Casillas (Moon Bloodgood), a feisty insurance broker who helps NCIS out with cases involving finances and high-class cases.

Eric Beale

[edit]
Eric Beale
First appearance"Legend (Part 1)" (NCIS episode)
Portrayed byBarrett Foa
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationNCIS Tech operator (formerly)
Significant otherNell Jones (girlfriend)
NationalityAmerican

Eric Bartholomew Beale III (portrayed by Barrett Foa) is an NCIS technical operator and intelligence analyst stationed in Los Angeles with the Office of Special Projects. He often takes calls from Director Leon Vance (Rocky Carroll) at NCIS Headquarters in Washington, D.C.

He is a geek and, like Detective Marty Deeks (Eric Christian Olsen), enjoys surfing (twice standing his surfboard too closely to Hetty's car) and internet social networks. He, like Nate, often fails at attempts at humor. Hetty also disapproves of his attire (typically Bermuda shorts and flip-flops and, on occasion, pajamas) but tolerates it because of his skills. In the episode "Absolution", he is revealed to be German American and takes at least partial offense at the team's remarks about Germans in the episode. Other than Hetty, he is the only team member shown to wear corrective eyewear.

He is the main connection between agents in the field and OSP headquarters, often manipulating traffic cameras and going into networks and satellites to gain an advantage for the agents. And, in the season two episode "Empty Quiver", he managed to shut down the entire Internet for a few minutes. Although not as often as he likes to be, he is also seen being in the field carrying a service weapon. He has worked with Abby Sciuto, a main character from the original NCIS, and has grown quite fond of her with the two having a strong friendship. The two even went on a "date" together during "Random on Purpose", but it ended abruptly when Abby was kidnapped by a serial killer named The Phantom.

In the same episode, Eric, like Abby, is shown to be skilled in sign language, beginning to learn it when he was seven years old. Near the episode's end, Eric signs to Abby that his best friend growing up was deaf. Like G. Callen, Sam Hanna, Kensi Blye and Nate Getz, he was introduced in the back-door pilot "Legend". In the opening episode of season seven, "Active Measures", Eric asks Sam to show him how to fire a weapon and how to fight, leaving open the possibility that he may want to try his hand as a field agent in the future. In season 8, Eric shows his ability as an excellent marksman during an undercover work with Nell.

He is partnered with Nell Jones in season two, whom he originally disliked because of her taking over some of his technical duties and, at least once, whistling the other team members to attention, something he usually does. He seemingly has put that behind him and warmed up to her and clearly has feelings towards her, although it's assumed that Nell doesn't exactly share Eric's feelings. This, however, may be changing, as Nell is accused by Nate Getz of having feelings for Eric in the episode "Patriot Acts" and her reaction in the season three episode "Cyber Threat" when she is clearly jealous of Eric's new partner. They shared a kiss under the mistletoe during the season four Christmas episode "Free Ride" as well as Eric going home with Nell to spend Christmas with her family (with Nell throwing out Boyfriend as a possible cover for why he is joining her). In season 8, their relationship progresses, after telling the (heavily implied true) story of when he realized he was in love with her (they were undercover as a couple at a retreat for tech-oriented couples), they share a kiss after Eric shoots a suspect's car in "Getaway".

In season 9, it’s revealed Eric and Nell have started a relationship and they begin living together in season 10.

In season 12, it’s revealed Eric has resigned from NCIS to further work on technology he was developing the previous season and has now become a billionaire and by the end of the season, relocates to Tokyo and asks Nell to join him, which she accepts.

Marty Deeks

[edit]
Martin Atticus Deeks
First appearance"Hand-to-Hand"
Last appearance"New Beginnings, Part Two"
Portrayed byEric Christian Olsen
In-universe information
AliasMax Gentry
NicknameMarty, Party Marty
GenderMale
TitleNCIS Special Agent
LAPD-NCIS Liaison Officer (formerly)
Lawyer (formerly)
OccupationNCIS Special Agent
LAPD-NCIS Liaison Officer (formerly)
Lawyer (formerly)
FamilyGordon John Brandel (father; deceased)
Roberta Deeks (mother)
Donald Blye (father-in-law; deceased)
Julia Feldman (mother-in-law)
Rosa (adoptive daughter)
Significant otherKensi Blye (wife)
NationalityAmerican

Martin Atticus "Marty" Deeks (Eric Christian Olsen) is a member of the Los Angeles Police Department who went to law school and passed the California Bar Examination and was previously a Public Defender.[45] He accepts the position of NCIS/LAPD Liaison Officer at the end of the episode "Hand-to-Hand", in which he co-operated with the team when their investigation overlapped with his undercover operation. However, his position as Liaison Officer is not always effective given his less-than-warm relationship with other LAPD Officers, being brushed off on multiple occasions and stating, in the episode Fame, "You know how it is with undercover cops. I've pissed off more than my fair share of shields".[46]

At the end of his second appearance, "Fame", he tells Kensi that he will be going on a long-term undercover assignment and Kensi seemed disappointed by this. In the same episode, it is revealed through conversations between Hetty and Callen that they do not actually need a liaison officer, but that Hetty has been watching Deeks for some time and her true intention is to recruit him for NCIS. This is eventually revealed to him in the season two episode "Imposters" when Hetty presents him with a set of completed and approved NCIS application forms, which he declines. In the same episode, it is revealed that Marty's given name is Martin A. Brandel and that he was born January 8, 1979.[47] Deeks is a native of California.

He becomes a series regular in season two, during which he reveals that he has never lived more than two miles away from where he grew up. He is revealed to be a lawyer in the season premiere. He is partnered with Kensi Blye and frequently flirts with her, although he is not above attempting to use her as a wingman to meet other women. Deeks has a vintage comic book collection.

When Deeks is shot in "Personal", he is asked to provide a list of possible suspects. He includes a man named Gordon John Brandel; and it is later revealed that Brandel is his father, who frequently abused Deeks and his mother until Deeks shot him (non-fatally) when he was 11 years old. When Hetty asks her to find Brandel, Nell discovers that he died in an auto accident in 1998 after being released from prison. This, however, contradicts statements made in the earlier episode "Borderline", in which Deeks told Kensi that, at Thanksgiving dinner only six years earlier, his father fired a shotgun at him. He also said that the last thing his father said to him was, "Marty, I hate you". The contradiction brings into question whether Deeks' father is really dead. When Deeks asks Hetty who he should list as his next of kin, Hetty gives him her name.

Deeks is extremely personal about his choice of firearm, preferring the LAPD Beretta 92FS over the NCIS standard-issue SIG Sauer P229.[48] As stated in the episode "Bounty", this is because the 92FS's "manual safety saved [his] ass one time during a gun snatch attempt by a junkie".[49] In this episode, Deeks revealed that his father moved to Iowa. He also managed to make a connection with a child whose father was killed.

In the episode "Plan B", Deeks' best friend, Ray, tells him that he knows Deeks has "a thing" for Kensi; he knows this by observing numerous interactions between them. Though Deeks denies that he has "a thing" for Kensi, he blushes and cannot stop smiling while telling Ray that he does not have a thing. This leads some people to believe that Deeks may have feelings for Kensi. Ray tells Deeks to call him as soon "as things work out with Wikipedia" (Kensi). Near the end of the episode, Kensi asks Deeks if he is ever going to call Ray anytime soon. He walks close to her, then pulls back to look at her, then he smiles and says, "Why do you ask?" She said she was just wondering and that, when he does tell Ray that "things are working out", mention that Kensi says "Hi", he laughs;[clarification needed] and then Kensi says that she is glad that their "thing" is working out. Deeks once again denies any feelings he has for Kensi. In the next episode "Imposters", a waitress asks Deeks if he and Kensi are a couple, Deeks says they are but Kensi is surprised and denies that they are together.

In the season two finale, Deeks proves his loyalty to the team. When Callen, Sam, and Kensi resign to rescue Hetty in Prague, Deeks tells Director Vance that he would resign if he was an NCIS agent, before leaving with the team to find Hetty.

In the episode "The Recruit", Deeks said that he has Norwegian ancestry.

In the season three episode "Touch of Death", a crossover episode with Hawaii Five-0, Deeks, like the rest of the OSP team, meets Detective Sergeant Danny Williams (Scott Caan) and Detective Lieutenant Chin Ho Kelly (Daniel Dae Kim) as the two teams form a temporary partnership to stop a possible smallpox outbreak. During the episode, Deeks and Danny regularly butt heads, exchanging insults while Deeks jokingly regards Danny's hair as being bulletproof. This episode also reveals that Deeks is afraid of needles; and, when Hetty gives him a smallpox vaccination, Deeks can be heard screaming in agony before fainting, causing an amused Sam to remark, "Man down".

In "Neighborhood Watch", Kensi and Deeks go undercover as a married couple. Hetty has a talk with both of them about feelings that arise when two agents go undercover as a couple. The two laugh at the idea of having any kind of romantic feelings for each other, but their reactions are different. They play up the role, as their usual bickering goes very well with their current assignment together. They refer to each other as husband and wife, while in private they use their undercover names. This is unusual because throughout the episode they are shown talking to OPS inside their cover house. Deeks and Kensi have an awkward, yet enjoyable, confrontation with each other inside the cover house. Deeks walks in on Kensi in the bathroom, he in a velour jogging suit and Kensi in a towel. After a brief conversation about her making him worry about her, they stand awkwardly. Kensi tells Deeks to take off his fanny pack (he calls it his "bro-sack") because it looks ridiculous. Deeks, not understanding what Kensi was referring to, starts to take off his pants. Kensi screams, and Deeks enjoys the situation. Also, when Kensi talks about starting a family, he says that he could do that for her since he was her "husband". It is uncertain if he was talking about this through his cover or if he was actually talking to Kensi. The assignment becomes more personal when Kensi and Deeks talk about how they first met and even recall what each other was wearing on the day and later share their first kiss.

Despite their denial, it becomes quite clear that Deeks and Kensi are beginning to develop strong romantic feelings for each other for which they try to hide and ignore. However, after many tender and caring moments in season four, Deeks finally makes his feelings known in the season finale. Kensi accuses him of poor communication skills and "never saying what he means"; but Deeks cuts off her complaint with a kiss and then says, "How's that for communication?" The kiss leaves Kensi dumbfounded, and she drives away. Deeks is eventually paired with Sam and the two are eventually captured with the episode ending with Deeks being tortured as Sam helplessly looks on.

In the season five premiere, Kensi and Granger found Sam and Deeks, who were severely beaten and tortured. Deeks revealed that even under severe torture, he did not give up Michelle's identity, earning Sam's respect. Together with Kensi and Sam, Deeks helped take down Sidorov. At the end of the episode, Deeks tells Kensi that she was the person he thought of through the ordeal and it saved his life by keeping him going, leaving her deeply emotional. In the next episode, Deeks struggles with insomnia and the trauma he dealt with, but he has been avoiding Kensi's phone calls. However, at the end of the episode, Kensi visits Deeks and he manages to get to sleep with her help.

In the episode "Recovery", it's implied that Deeks and Kensi had become intimate after he told her he wanted to be with her at his apartment and she walked off with him following her. However, in the following episode "Frozen Lake", things have become full of tension when their emotions begin to impact their jobs. When Deeks doesn't take a needed shot, Kensi becomes mad at him for not taking it and he apologizes, only that while Kensi wants this relationship more than anything else, she thinks their relationship may not work. However, at the end of the episode, Kensi tells Deeks that they will find a way to make things work and to be patient with her. Deeks soon discovers that Kensi has been reassigned on a new classified mission, much to his disappointment. Hetty pointed out that the knife that Kensi entrusted to him during the case was her father's, meaning she has a great deal of trust in him. In 'Merry Invasion', Hetty gives both Kensi and Deeks secure satellite phones, under the guise of Christmas gifts, giving them a means to communicate while Kensi is on her mission.

In season six, Deeks and Kensi agree to make their relationship official and finally become a couple. They attempt to keep their romance secret until the rest of the team reveal their awareness of their relationship in "Fighting Shadows" when Deeks and Kensi are forced to partner with Callen and Sam respectively. In the same episode, Deeks and Kensi learn Deeks is under investigation by the LAPD for reasons unknown. In season seven, Deeks and Kensi’s relationship remains strong to the point Deeks introduces Kensi to his mother, but they are still worried about the LAPD internal Affairs Investigation. When Deeks is later arrested, the team learn Deeks supposedly murdered his former partner, Francis Boyle back when he was a rookie detective and work to clear his name. When the investigation is concluded, Deeks secretly confides to Hetty he did kill Boyle to protect his old LAPD informant, Tiffany Williams and is deciding whether or not he should tell Kensi. In the following episode, Deeks tells Kensi the truth to which she reveals she already discovered on her own and was waiting for him to tell her when he was ready. Deeks and Kensi's relationship grows significantly stronger and they decide to move in together. By the end of the season, Deeks indirectly proposes to Kensi for the first time.

In season eight, Deeks plans on proposing to Kensi, but their relationship faces challenges and difficulties when Kensi is severely injured in a helicopter crash, resulting in her falling into a coma and becoming practically paralysed. Deeks continues to show his love and support for Kensi during this difficult time, even when Kensi begins taking her anger and frustration out on him. Eventually, Deeks proposes to Kensi, but she is refuses to accept in her current state and wishes for him to wait until she has healed from her injuries. Eventually, Kensi fully recovers and resumes her place on the team and her partnership with Deeks. By the end of the season, Kensi and Deeks finally become officially engaged when Kensi proposes to Deeks, following the death of Sam's wife, Michelle Hanna.

In season nine, Kensi and Deeks begin planning their wedding, but face trouble when Shay Mosley, the new executive assistant director tries to send Deeks back to LAPD as she disapproves of their relationship together. However, Callen manages to convince her to keep Deeks on the team. Throughout the season, Kensi and Deeks continue planning their wedding as well as thinking about their future together, with Deeks expressing his hopes of someday leaving NCIS and starting a family with Kensi, especially after she almost risked her life to stop a nuclear threat. In the season finale, Deeks is fired by Mosley after confronting her about her unfair and disrespectful behaviour towards Callen and the rest of the team. During this time, Deeks and Kensi discuss leaving NCIS again, but Deeks shockingly discovers that Kensi never wants to leave or start a family with him, resulting in a massive fight between them and calling off the wedding. Despite Deeks and Kensi's falling out and the current uncertainty of their relationship, Deeks still joins the rest of the team on a dangerous mission to rescue Mosley's son. In the end while the mission is successful, the team are hit by a rocket launcher, leaving it unclear if they are dead or alive.

In the season ten premiere, following the events of the season nine finale, Deeks is unconscious and is suffering from a severe head injury. The team are forced to separate and Kensi drags Deeks through the desert to safety, eventually reaching a church. During his time unconscious, Deeks dreams that Kensi is pregnant with their child. Deeks later awakens and eventually after reaching the hospital, Deeks and Kensi reconcile after this whole event has helped them to realize just how much they truly love one another and they simply can't live without each other. With their relationship restored, Deeks and Kensi resume their engagement and continue making more progress in planning their upcoming wedding and at the same time open their bar. Eventually, the day of Deeks and Kensi's wedding arrives. After getting over last minute pre wedding jitters, Deeks locates the Box Kensi gave to him years ago and finally opens it, discovering it contains her father's wedding ring and a deeply heartfelt letter from Kensi, expressing her love for him. Deeks and Kensi finally marry and become husband and wife with Hetty officiating their ceremony.

In season eleven, Deeks and Kensi are happily married and begin to think more about having children together after Kensi has a false alarm, believing she might be pregnant. Eventually, they decide they are ready to have a baby together.

In season twelve, Deeks and Kensi are ready to start a family together when they begin to strongly consider fertility treatments to get pregnant. However, they begin struggling financially when Deeks’ position as the LAPD liaison is terminated due to police reform. Deeks begins to face serious pressure when he discovers his job has been terminated permanently and that he has been furloughed by the LAPD until their budget issues surrounding the reform are resolved, and learns that he cannot attend FLETC due to being too old at this point, forcing him to leave NCIS for good. In order to help with their finances, Deeks decides to sell the bar. However, thanks to Hetty’s efforts, Deeks learns that he has been accepted into FLETC, allowing him to become an official NCIS Special Agent and rejoin the team. Although he has difficulty with the training and supposedly washes out just before graduation, it's revealed that Hetty had arranged for Deeks to get his badge by her, officially making him an NCIS Special Agent at long last. However, his credential indicates he is an NCIS Investigator, and not a Special Agent.[50][51]

Nell Jones

[edit]
Penelope "Nell" Jones
Nell Jones promotional photo
First appearance"Special Delivery"
Last appearance"New Beginnings, Part Two"
Portrayed byRenée Felice Smith
In-universe information
NicknameNellasuoarus
GenderFemale
TitleNCIS intelligence analyst
OccupationIntelligence analyst
FamilySidney Jones (sister)
Unnamed brother
Significant otherEric Beale (boyfriend)
NationalityAmerican

Penelope "Nell" Jones (portrayed by Renée Felice Smith) is Eric's partner as an NCIS analyst. Introduced as a recurring character in the season two episode "Special Delivery", Nell joined the main cast as of episode 2.11 "Disorder". She has a red pixie cut hairstyle (which she grows out as the series progresses) and is of small-medium stature (being able to wear a Hetty-sized sweater—just barely—in the episode "Disorder"). In the episode "Harm's Way" she demonstrates at least a functional knowledge of written Arabic when she is called upon to translate the contents of a terrorist laptop. In the episode "The Fifth Man" Hetty states that Nell has the highest I.Q. of anyone currently serving in NCIS but the actual number is never stated. In the episode "Cyber Attack", Sam asks Callen if Hetty is grooming her for higher things after seeing Nell running things around the office. In the episode "Merry Evasion" Callen asks the same question of Hetty directly when Hetty states that she intends to keep Nell in the field a bit longer.

Although Nell is a recent college graduate she is frequently shown as very helpful to the others. She and Eric originally had an antagonistic relationship early on due to Nell taking over some of Eric's duties, being new and once getting the others upstairs for briefing, a task Eric normally does. As their working relationship has progressed, they seem to have warmed up to each other and it is implied there are growing feelings between the two. Nell also has a habit of finishing other people's sentences. In "Special Delivery" she reveals that this is because she is a "type A with borderline ADD, and control issues with men [she] admires"[52] (such as Eric).

In the episode "Lockup", it is shown that Nell and Nate have met previously, but the nature of their relationship—if any—remains unknown. She also seems to have a good relationship with Hetty, and has been called by her first name or as "Dear" by Hetty occasionally. She seems to be friends or at least on good terms with Kensi who invites her to join the others for drinks in the episode "Absolution". Nell is fluent in Spanish and an expert of South America (Enemy Within). She likes to receive flowers; in the episode "Greed", she sends flowers to herself and reveals to Eric only after his never-ending pestering. The flowers are noticed at first by Sam who comments, "Looks like somebody has a secret admirer." When Eric notices it, he stops mid-sentence and says, "Nice flowers".

Eric more than obviously has feelings towards Nell, although it often appears that she doesn't exactly return them. This is often up for debate though, since in the season three episode "Patriot Acts", Nell flirts with Nate (who immediately picks up on her true intentions) in order to get Eric's attention and in "Greed", she avoids the subject of who sent her flowers. One of the bigger signs is when she shows significant signs of jealousy when a new woman has some type of significant relationship with him. This is shown in the episode "Cyber Threat", when she is jealous of Eric's new partner and feels threatened by their relationship, also showing her dislike towards the young woman herself. Also, in the episode "Blaze of Glory", when a new college student named Blaze comes to help with an undercover mission and she and Eric show an interest in each other, Nell is seen clearly jealous of the two's growing relationship throughout the episode. She is also visibly disappointed when learning, after the mission, that Eric has made plans to meet up with Blaze and some of her friends in a suite later on.

In addition to going into the field, Nell has been seen carrying and is proficient with her standard NCIS issue side arm in the episodes "Blye, K.", "Blye, K Part 2", and "Unwritten Rule" as well as having one tucked into her waistband in "Standoff" and telling Eric she is carrying one in "Recruit". Nell has also been seen apprehending suspects in season five. After Kensi's reassignment to the Middle East, Hetty makes Nell her replacement as a field agent and as Deeks' partner. Despite initial surprise at the new assignment, Nell and Deeks find that they work well together and Hetty hints that she intends to keep her in the field longer. However, Nell suffered a setback with regards to her field work in "Praesidium", when she shot and killed an assailant who was working for Matthias Draeger. In the episode "War Cries" Nell defends herself in the boat shed with a knife pulled from her boot, after the suspect gets her weapon away from her, dealing enough damage to send him to the hospital while she receives only a small cut above the right eye causing Granger to quip, "Not bad for an analyst". In the episode "The Queen's Gambit" and "Black Market", Nell shows her proficiency in hand-to-hand combat in apprehending suspects and is nicknamed "Give Them Hell, Nell!" by Deeks, who gave her the nickname Nellasaurus in the episode "Merry Evasion". In "Queen's Gambit" after Nell takes a suspect down Callan tells him, "You should never ignore the Nellverine." In the episode "Ghost Gun", as she is partnered with Granger, she introduces herself as Special Agent during an investigation. However, she states to Kensi in "Windfall" and to Granger in "Black Market" that although she does want to become an Agent she does not want to do it by replacing Kensi.

Her relationship with Deeks in the field (Merry Evasion, Windfall, Queens Gambit, Black Market) is more a partnership equals as they both have skills if not always in the same areas. When in the field with Granger on the other hand (Command and Control, Ghost Gun) it is more of a student-teacher master-apprentice relationship as she takes the opportunity to learn from a seasoned master who had been doing this since before, she was born.

Eric and Nell shared a kiss under the green mistletoe during the season four Christmas episode "Free Ride", this was at the end of the episode and when no one was around. In the season six Christmas episode "Humbug" Nell invites Eric to come with her to visit her family for the holidays, suggesting when he is trying to think of a cover story that he could say he is her boyfriend. At the end of "Blaze of Glory" when Nell is alone in OPS, Eric returns from his meeting with Blaze and apologizes for the way he has been acting. They then share an intimate moment as they fly the quadcopter together around OPS. In the episode "Tidings We Bring" when Eric becomes upset that Nell has to cancel on their plans to attend the Dickens Fair together because she got into a mentoring program to which he didn't know she was applying and becomes afraid they are beginning to grow apart, she gives him as a Christmas present a pendulum clock telling him that when two such clocks hang on the same wall the pendulums begin to swing together, meaning she and Eric will always be in rhythm with each other, thus implying that if they are not already a couple they are certainly best friends who will one day become a couple.

In "This Is What We Do", Nell's sister came to help on one NCIS' case, and she called Nell by her full name "Penelope". When Eric told her he can't believe she didn't tell him her first name and that it is a nice name, Nell answered "Yeah, maybe, if you are from Victorian England".

In "Superhuman", Eric explained to Nell his landlord was selling his place and he has to find a new place to live. Eric asked if she wanted to move in with him, not because of finances, and she cut him off, answering "I would love to move in with you", and they are now officially living together.

In "Fortune Favors the Brave", Hetty found out Nell is going to quit. Nell explained to her that she feels she can't give proper focus the job needs. Hetty suggested to Nell she should go on a two week vacation. Hetty also told her if she doesn't call her after that, she will accept her resignation. Nell accepted Hetty's suggestion. She later wanted to talk with Eric about her decision, but somebody called her on her phone so she didn't have a chance to talk to Eric. In the season 12 episode, "The Bear" it's revealed that Nell's mother had died after she returned to OPD.

Owen Granger

[edit]
Owen Granger
First appearance"The Watchers"
Last appearance"Payback"
Portrayed byMiguel Ferrer
In-universe information
GenderMale
TitleAssistant Director, Office of Special Projects, NCIS
OccupationAssistant Director (NCIS)
Children
  • Jennifer Kim (daughter)
NationalityAmerican

Owen Granger (portrayed by Miguel Ferrer) was the assistant director of NCIS, filling the position that was held by Leon Vance before he became the new NCIS Director.

Granger first appeared in "The Watchers", in which he questioned Hetty Lange's ability to lead the OSP team. He was a recurring character in seasons three and four and a main character in seasons five through eight. Granger's original motives are unknown though it seemed like he was trying to bring down Lange's team in order to score points in Washington and enhance his own authority over NCIS. He revealed at the end of "Crimeleon" that he had arrived in Los Angeles to catch a killer and glanced at Kensi Blye, suggesting that he might be involved in the investigation of her father's death. It was revealed in the episode "Blye, K., Part 2" that Granger had also belonged to the same sniper unit as Kensi's deceased father Donald Blye, and that he had helped the team track down his killer, Peter Clairmont. Granger shot Clairmont when the other man attempted to kill Blye in revenge for her having beaten him in hand-to-hand combat. As a result, Granger was assigned to stay in Los Angeles on a temporary basis. In the season three finale, he helped the team tackle the case of "The Chameleon", a serial killer responsible for the deaths of Agent Mike Renko and former Operations Manager Lauren Hunter.

Granger was heavily involved in the effort to apprehend Isaak Sidorov and the Cold War-era nuclear weapons he stole, proving a strong support to the team when he learns that the only agent to have been able to maintain a deep cover with him was Michelle, Sam Hanna's wife. He was also appointed to head the "White Ghost" operation, during which he became Kensi's handler when she was reassigned to the Middle East to conduct an assassination.

Along with the rest of the team, Granger is also heavily aware of the growing romantic relationship between Kensi and Deeks. He is shown heavily discussing and debating their relationship in season five with Hetty. Granger is unsure if Deeks and Kensi should continue working together as partners, with their feelings growing stronger for each other. However, Granger eventually comes to support their relationship when Deeks and Kensi officially become a couple.

In "Granger, O.", it is revealed that Jennifer Kim (Malese Jow), a North Korean spy captured by the OSP in "Cancel Christmas", is his illegitimate daughter (which was heavily implied in the former episode).

In the season 8 episode "Black Market", Granger tells Nell Jones to call him Granger, not assistant director. When she tells him, "That would be awkward, sir", he answers: "Too bad, because it's an order." In "Ghost Gun", he tells Marty Deeks to call him Granger and says that it is "what his friends call him".

In the season 8 episode "Crazy Train", Granger reveals that he is dying from a form of cancer which he admits could have been caused by any of his actions, including being exposed to Agent Orange from while he was in the Triangle prior to being extracted from Laos. He later ends up stabbed in "Hot Water" while being escorted to a jail cell and is left in critical condition. In "Payback", he was nearly the target of a hit by an agent of the CIA, although he managed to kill the assassin before she could inject a poison into his IV. In that same episode, it is revealed that he once tried to kill future Rear Admiral A. J. Chegwidden when "[Chegwidden] was young and [Granger] was stupid".

Granger was written out of the series in the season 8 episode "Old Tricks". Hetty tells her colleagues that the process of his recovery will be longer than expected. When she goes to the hospital to visit him, she discovers that his bed is empty. After asking his nurse of his whereabouts, she learns that Granger quietly fled the hospital and abandoned further treatment despite not being fully recovered. Granger left a farewell note for Hetty. In Granger's written good-bye, he expresses his thanks to Hetty, explaining that he has had enough bullets and hospitals for one lifetime and has decided to put his last affairs in order, effectively parting ways with the team without subjecting them to his impending death from cancer. His one wish is for her to break the news to the team gracefully; his note states that if she cannot immediately figure out how to do this, he trusts that she will eventually come up with a way to do so. The episode ended with a tribute to Miguel Ferrer, who had died a few weeks before the episode premiered. Ferrer had exhibited noticeable hoarseness and pronounced difficulty speaking in the episodes filmed shortly before his death. His deteriorating voice and failing health were justified through his character's development of terminal cancer, which reflected Ferrer's own worsening cancer. The character's abrupt departure was posthumous, and was designed around the actor's demise.[citation needed]

Although Granger himself does not actually appear in "Battle Scars", he is frequently mentioned throughout the episode. Like in "Battle Scars", Granger, owing to his heavily implied death, does not physically appear in "Golden Days", but he is alluded to several times. At the end of the episode, Hetty, A.J. Chegwidden and their fellow Vietnam friends raise a glass to him in honour and memory.

In "Liabilities", Granger is confirmed to have died. After leaving the hospital in "Old Tricks", he went to the safe house his daughter resided in and spent his last week with her, trying to make up for his failure to be a father to her. One morning, Jennifer found him dead under a tree overlooking a valley and buried him there.

Shay Mosley

[edit]
Shay Mosley
First appearance"Party Crashers"
Last appearance"Asesinos"
Portrayed byNia Long
In-universe information
GenderFemale
TitleExecutive Assistant Director, Pacific Operations, NCIS
OccupationExecutive Assistant Director (NCIS)
FamilyDerrick Mosley (son)
NationalityAmerican

Shay Lynn Mosley (portrayed by Nia Long) is the new NCIS Executive Assistant Director, Pacific Operations, succeeding Assistant Director Owen Granger as supervisor of the Office of Special Projects.

In "The Monster", Mosley separates Callen from the team and leads him to assist in the investigation led by ATF. Later, Hetty reveals to the team that this is in fact an undercover mission to catch an arms dealer, Spencer Williams. Later, Mosley confesses to Callen she was in a romantic relationship with Williams before she knew he was an arms dealer and they have a son, Derrick, whom Williams took to Mexico when he escaped and she had not seen him for 5 years. The team then ambushes Williams at the airport, but he manages to escape in an airplane to Mexico.

A month later, in "A Line on the Sand", Shay launches an investigation on Williams to find her son. However, during the investigation, Deeks falls into conflict with her, so she fires him and sends him back to LAPD. Before the team leaves for Mexico Hetty manages to stop the airplane and inserts Deeks with them. When they arrive in Mexico, the team finds out Mosley also sent Harley Hidoko there, but she disappears.

In "Ninguna Salida", Callen and Sam found a body burned beyond a recognition, but they do not know who it was. Later, the team succeeds in entering Williams' house and rescue Derrick. But Sam and Callen stay behind to allow Kensi and Deeks to escape with Derrick. Kensi and Deeks manage to bring Derrick to the location where Mosley is waiting for him in a chopper and the two of them leave. Deeks and Kensi go back to get Sam and Callen, but they are then hit by a missile.

During "To Live and Die in Mexico", Shay returned to Mexico and ambushes Williams and his men in a car. While speaking with Williams, Shay kills three men who were with him. After he was the only one alive, Mosley orders Williams to withdraw his people from the hospital where the team is, but he refuses so she shoots and kills him.

In "Hit list", Special Prosecutor John Rogers (Peter Jacobson) starts an investigation about the team's actions in Mexico and Mosley's involvement. Mosley sends her son Derrick with Sam's SEAL buddy in Sam's boat to a secret location. In the episode, "Asesinos", Mosley goes to take down the people who put a price on her head and later, with the help of the team, when it became obvious that she went rogue, sets them up to meet with a rival clan and kill each other. When Callen spoke with her after the action, one of the survivors attempts to kill her. Callen turns and kills him. When he looks back, Mosley has vanished.

Mosley's current whereabouts are unknown.

Fatima Namazi

[edit]

Fatima Namazi (portrayed by Medalion Rahimi) is an NCIS Special Agent. She is a devout Muslim, as indicated by her decision to wear a hijab.

Namazi first appears halfway through in season 10 in the two-parter "Smokescreen", where she helps the team pursue a terrorist cell responsible for bombing a movie theater in the first of a series of planned attacks on Los Angeles. From then on, Namazi appears periodically, helping the OSP team with cases from either in the Ops Center or out in the field, until she is reassigned overseas to Afghanistan early the following season.

In "Alsiyadun", she is captured by insurgents following a mission gone wrong and nearly executed before the team rescues her. Following this, she transfers to the OSP, becoming its newest addition until the following season.

Devin Rountree

[edit]

Devin Rountree (portrayed by Caleb Castille) is an NCIS Special Agent.

Rountree first appears late in season 11, in "Watch Over Me", as an FBI Agent who runs into the OSP team while undercover, during which he discovers that several colleagues have turned corrupt. Following this, he later accepts an offer from Sam to try out for an opening on the team. After working a few cases near the end of the season, he completes FLETC training and joins the OSP at the start of season 12, becoming its most recent addition.

Hollace Kilbride

[edit]

Kilbride is a retired United States Navy Admiral, who is a longtime friend of Henrietta "Hetty" Lange.

In Season 13, Kilbride takes over from Hetty after she goes on assignment. In one episode, he reveals some of his background to Rountree. As a child, he had Japanese American neighbors named the Sakamoto family who were detained in POW camps. Kilbride's parents were disgusted by racism and protected the Sakamoto house for two years. This left him inspired and he resolved to live up to their example, as seen when he defended a former lieutenant who was the target of a hate crime.

Kensi later revealed he has a son. Much later he reveals to Deeks that he and his son are estranged, having not spoken for a decade. He began to consider talking after Deeks reveals his status with his abusive late father.

Recurring characters

[edit]

Leon Vance

[edit]

Leon Vance (portrayed by Rocky Carroll) is the director of NCIS and also the person responsible for setting up the Office of Special Projects. He lives in Washington, D.C., and is a regular character on NCIS while also making regular guest appearances on NCIS: Los Angeles usually through video-conferences as well as making a few personal appearances at the OSP.

Mike Renko

[edit]

Mike Renko (portrayed by Brian Avers) is an NCIS agent introduced in the back-door pilot from NCIS. He first appeared in NCIS: Los Angeles as a recurring character in the episode "Ambush", in which he assisted the team with information on a dangerous militia group. He also appeared in the episode "The Bank Job". His next appearance was on the episode "Burned", when Hetty called for help as they had a shortage of agents since Callen went off the radar and the server was hacked. He was shot as he, Sam, and Kensi ambushed an alleged terrorist, but it hit his bulletproof vest and he escaped with minor injuries. It was assumed that Renko was still in an undercover assignment outside of the United States.

In the season three finale, "Sans Voir", Renko, after being shot in the upper jaw by a sniper, suffered cardiac arrest after surgery, which resulted in his death.

Kensi later called Hetty on the telephone and told her what had happened. Seconds later, Hetty, who was seen crying, managed to pull herself together and later told the OSP team what had happened, leaving them, especially Kensi, personally devastated.

Abby Sciuto

[edit]

Abby Sciuto (portrayed by Pauley Perrette) is a regular from NCIS who has appeared in two episodes of NCIS: Los Angeles ("Killshot" and "Random on Purpose"). Abby is complimented by Hetty as "the first NCIS employee [she] has ever met with a sense of style".[53]

Anthony "Tony" DiNozzo Jr.

[edit]

Tony DiNozzo (portrayed by Michael Weatherly) is a regular from NCIS who has appeared in one episode of NCIS: Los Angeles ("Blame It on Rio"). Tony is the Senior Field Agent and second in command of the Major Case Response team in Washington, D.C. since before the series premier to Weatherly's departure from the show at the end of NCIS' 13th season. He is the jokester of his team and its leader in special circumstances. In "Blame it on Rio", Tony stops in LA to transport a prisoner back to D.C. only to lose said prisoner before he can even get to LA. The LA team help Tony find and recapture his prisoner before he returns to D.C., getting a "Gibbs headslap" from Hetty who says, "that was from Gibbs."

Rose Schwartz

[edit]

Rose Schwartz (portrayed by Kathleen Rose Perkins) is a coroner in Los Angeles. She first appeared in season one, ep. 2 "The Only Easy Day". She has also appeared in the season one episode "Breach", the season two episode "Overwatch", and the season four episodes "Skin Deep" and "Paper Soldiers". Rose and Nate share a mutual attraction, which they've never acted upon. This has not been explored further as Peter Cambor is no longer a member of the regular cast.

Arkady Kolcheck

[edit]

An old "friend" and longtime ally of G. Callen, Arkady Kolcheck (Russian: Аркадий Kolcheck) (Vyto Ruginis) is a retired KGB agent who now owns and operates a private security company out of Los Angeles. He immigrated to the United States in 2002 and became a citizen in 2007; he lives in Studio City.

Like Henrietta Lange, Arkady is one of the last surviving Cold Warriors. It is believed that his new life in America came about because "he knows where the bodies are buried...probably because he's the one who buried them".[54]

In "Kolcheck, A.", Callen and the Office of Special Projects learn that Arkady has a Russian-American daughter, Anastasia Kolcheck (Bar Paly).

As of Season 9, Arkady is the only recurring character to appear in every season.

Talia Del Campo

[edit]

DEA agent Talia Del Campo (portrayed by Mercedes Mason) first appears in Season 5 episode "Fish Out of Water", where she is introduced as an undercover investigating a case after a witness and civilian are killed. She allies with NCIS after Hetty pulls some strings, and is partnered with Marty Deeks. During the case, she develops a connection to Deeks, having empathized with him over his relationship with Kensi (who was on assignment in Afghanistan) and nicknames him partner after the end. She returns in "Deep Trouble", where she meets Kensi and a rivalry forms between them over Deeks, who is caught in the middle.

Nicole Dechamps

[edit]

NCIS agent Nicole Dechamps (portrayed by Marsha Thomason) who first appears "Old Trick", where she is introduced as a Secret Service agent. She helps NCIS agent in procuring a valuable coin from a Navy Lieutenant and is partnered with Sam Hanna. She returns in an undercover assignment in Season 9, where she is shot in the shoulder but is saved by Sam. Afterwards, Sam suggests she join NCIS.

Moe Dusa

[edit]

Mowahd[55] (variant spelling Mowadh[56]) "Moe" Dusa (portrayed by Ronald Auguste) is a Sudanese national who was brought to the US as a child by Sam Hanna (who was still serving as a Navy SEAL at the time). Sam was on a mission in Chad rescuing foreign aid workers, and killed Moe's father who was one of their kidnappers.

Although Sam maintains close contact with Moe, he has not adopted him, and Moe instead lives with foster parents.

Introduced in the episode "Breach", Moe later joins an Islamic militant group after finding out that Sam was the one responsible for his father's death, resulting in young Moe becoming an orphan. He is later seen in the episode "Found" as one of the Islamic militants holding Agent Vail hostage.

In the episode "Lockup", after being sent to jail for his involvement in the Dominic Vail kidnapping case which ended with Vail dying, Moe is convinced by NCIS to infiltrate an Islamic gang in the prison in order to get close to a suspected terrorist leader. Moe was tortured for information and executed by the terrorist leader at the end of that episode with Sam eventually discovering Moe's body. His death left Sam deeply devastated and hellbent on seeking revenge but Hetty promised him that he would get the opportunity to do so some day.

In "Harm's Way", the concluding episode and months after Moe's death, Sam soon caught up with the terrorist responsible and successfully received clearance from Vance to get his own justice for Moe. He did so by having a UAV launch a missile at the fleeing car with the terrorist leader.

The missile hit its target, resulting in the leader's death and Moe's passing being avenged.

Lauren Hunter

[edit]

Senior Agent[57] Lauren Hunter (portrayed by Claire Forlani) is the new Operations Manager, assuming charge after Hetty resigns in the second-season episode "Imposters". She was recommended for the position by Hetty herself, a claim corroborated by Director Vance.[58] Hunter is an expert marksman, but deliberately conceals this from Callen when she notices him watching her practice on the firearms range.[59] Hunter is a linguistics expert and in addition to English is fluent in at least six other languages, i.e. Polish, Russian, German, Italian, French, and Romani.[3]

Prior to her introduction to the series, Hunter had spent two years undercover. She adopted the identity of Ilena Vadim, a minor member of the Comescu family, a crime syndicate based in Romania. Ilena had left Romania and settled in Argentina, wanting nothing more to do with her family and prompting Hunter to play on the family's belief that their niece would one day come back to them. She became Ilena, gathering information on the family for NCIS.

While the Special Projects team is in Romania trying to find the Comescu family, they discover that Hunter has infiltrated their ranks, and believe her to be a traitor. Hunter reveals her allegiance to the team when she shoots and kills Alexa Comescu, the head of the Comescu family. Hunter's cover within the Comescu family is so deep that not even Hetty—who was in the room when Alexa was shot—knew where her loyalties lay.

She was on a deep undercover assignment in an undisclosed country, until the Chameleon who rigged her car with a bomb, killing her. Her ghost was later seen talking to Hetty in the morgue, revealing that like Callen, Hetty had taken care of Hunter when she was seven while also stating that the first time she'd held onto Hetty's hand, Hunter hadn't been able to let go for three days.

Michelle Hanna (a.k.a. Quinn)

[edit]

Michelle Hanna (portrayed by Indira G. Wilson in season 3 and Aunjanue Ellis in seasons 4–6 & 8) is Sam's wife. She is a former CIA officer, and she has a history with Sidorov (a known terrorist and arms dealer). She often goes undercover as his girlfriend/assassin. She remained dormant for a period of time after she and Sam got married and had their daughter Kamran, but she has recently gotten back into the game. Sam is extremely protective of her, although she has been shown to be more than capable of protecting herself. She has even been thrown out of a high rise (end of season four) and saves herself while Kensi is fighting other opponents. In the episode "Humbug" she surprised her husband by bringing their son Aiden home for Christmas. Unfortunately, in the two-part finale to Season Eight, she is abducted by terrorists working for Tahir Khaled (the warlord brother of Jada Khaled, a Sudanese woman Sam once employed as an intelligence asset) and tragically dies of suffocation.

Joelle Taylor

[edit]

Joelle Taylor (portrayed by Elizabeth Bogush) was G. Callen's girlfriend in 2014–2016. Introduced in "War Cries", they met on a blind date arranged by Sam and Michelle, who knew her from teaching their daughter in kindergarten. She is mentioned sporadically until "Humbug". After a malware robbery Joelle's life was put in danger and Callen had to put his life in danger to save her and at the same time revealing his true identity of being an NCIS agent. She was initially hurt by this revelation, pointing out that "humbug" refers to deception, then asking Callen to leave. She later opens the door to possibly continuing their relationship if she can get to know who Callen really is.

In "Black Wind", Sam confirms that Callen and Joelle are still together. Callen also tells Deeks that Joelle is fine in "Fighting Shadows". In "Cancel Christmas" Callen reveals that he and Joelle have broken up, but they are still going to spend Christmas together to avoid being lonely.

In "Payback", Joelle is revealed to be an undercover CIA officer assigned to spy on Callen, and that she is married with a child. Despite having genuine feelings for Callen, their relationship is completely severed.

Anna Kolcheck

[edit]

The estranged daughter of Arkady Kolcheck, Anastasia "Anna" Kolcheck (Bar Paly) was born in Moscow, but grew up in Champaign, Illinois and holds dual Russian and American citizenship. She joined the Chicago Police Department, where she worked as a homicide detective, before leaving the force and going to work in the private sector, specializing in security, surveillance, kidnap and ransom, and working predominantly for Russian corporate interests.[60]

Anna was kidnapped in Moscow in order to force her father's hand. She was rescued by the NCIS Office of Special Projects and returned to the United States (although Arkady, who was also on the rescue mission, went MIA). Some months later, Anna returned the favor by joining up with the OSP in order to rescue her father, who was being held in a Russian prison along with a suspected CIA operative. During the mission, she and Callen are implied to have become romantically involved.[61]

Jennifer Kim

[edit]

Born Yujin Kim (Korean: 유진 김), Jennifer Kim (Malese Jow) is the illegitimate daughter of NCIS Assistant Director Owen Granger and works as a spy for North Korea. While in Los Angeles, her assignment was to kill other North Korean operatives in the area. She was captured by the Office of Special Projects and held in various secured facilities.

According to her, Jennifer grew up knowing that her mother worked for the government as an intelligence operative and her father was an American spy (much to the dismay of Granger, who had always assumed that her mom never told her who he was). She herself volunteered for "spy school" at the age of 12, where she was trained as an operative. NCIS Assistant Director Owen Granger spent his last days with Jennifer Kim. She buried him under a tree where he died.

A.J. Chegwidden

[edit]

A.J. Chegwidden (portrayed by John M. Jackson) is the retired Judge Advocate General of the United States Navy, now in private practice in Washington, D.C., and an old friend and colleague of NCIS Operations Manager Hetty Lange.

Harley Hidoko

[edit]

The executive assistant to NCIS Executive Assistant Director Shay Mosley, Baltimore native Special Agent Harley Hidoko (Andrea Bordeaux) joined NCIS after serving in Afghanistan with a Marine Female Engagement Team. She is extremely loyal to EAD Mosley, but has developed friendships with the members of the Office of Special Projects, which has led her to sometimes bend the rules when the rest of the team does. She is a widow; her husband was a fellow Marine who was killed in action.

In "Where Everybody Knows Your Name", Hidoko is revealed to be a Staff Sergeant in the United States Marine Corps Reserve. In the season 9 finale, upon learning the truth about Mosley's son, Hidoko travels to Mexico ahead of the team to gather intel to help rescue Derrick, but later goes missing. During the episode, an unknown person is held hostage by the Mexican cartel and is killed, being burned alive; it was initially unknown if the captive was Hidoko, leaving it unclear if she was dead or alive. At the end of the season 10 premiere, it is revealed via lab tests on the captive's remains that it was indeed Hidoko, confirming her status as dead.

Louis Ochoa

[edit]

Louis Ochoa (portrayed by Esai Morales) is the NCIS Deputy Director who takes control of the Los Angeles office in Hetty's absence, and after the departure of Shay Mosley.

Harmon Rabb Jr.

[edit]

Harmon Rabb (portrayed by David James Elliott) is a Naval officer who served as a pilot before transferring to the Judge Advocate General's Corps. In 2005, he was promoted to captain and originally planned to become the Force Judge Advocate in Europe until he became engaged to his long-time best friend and partner, Sarah MacKenzie. As of season 10, he has returned to the fleet and is XO on the USS Intrepid.

Katya Marinova

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Katya Marinova (portrayed by Kate Miller (season 10) and Sasha Clements (season 13)) is a former Russian spy who grew up with Anna in the Soviet "Institute for Noble Maidens". Like Callen and Anna, she was conditioned as a child to become an operative.

She was in prison for being a prostitute and was cellmates with Anna. Their escape made it obvious there was more to her that meets the eye. In the season 10 episode "No More Secrets", she helps Anna to track Russian asset Pavel Volkoff. In love with Anna after they were together in prison, she later grows obsessed with Callen when he begins dating her. She develops deepfakes of him to mess with him and later to interfere in agency operations. She uses other women trained in the same institute multiple times to get near Callen and Anna. In the season 12 episodes "Red Rover, Red Rover" and "The Noble Maidens", she orders the abduction of Joelle and then uses her to lure out, capture and imprison of Anna who is later rescued by the team.

Frustrated with NCIS inability to stop her, Callen enlists Joelle's help to track Katya who has undergone plastic surgery in order to change her appearance. When he discovers that Dr. Howard Pembrook, who ran both the Soviet and the American child conditioning programs, is still alive, he surmises that Katya wants to take revenge on him. In "Down the Rabbit Hole" (season 13), Katya reveals that she has created deepfakes of the other team members as well to manipulate their investigations. She uses her resources to trick Callen into a trap to capture him and uses further deepfakes in order to throw the team from her trail and to torture him and the team with deepfaked videos. Katya soon learn that he knew where Pembrook is but decided to kill Callen because he took Anna. She is shot and killed by Joelle while waiting for the bomb she put in Callen's prison to explode, while Callen was rescued.

Other characters

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Lara Macy

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Special Agent Lara Macy (portrayed by Louise Lombard) does not appear on NCIS: Los Angeles, but was introduced as Hetty's predecessor as OSP Operations Manager in the back-door pilot "Legend" on NCIS.

She was a former USMC Lieutenant working as a military police officer, and almost two decades earlier had investigated then-USMC Gunnery Sergeant Leroy Jethro Gibbs' role in the murder of Mexican drug lord Pedro Hernandez. Due to the past investigation, their relationship was volatile until the OSP's operational psychologist Nate Getz revealed to Gibbs that Macy had been protecting him for eighteen years by covering up the evidence. Since Hernandez was responsible for the slaying of Gibbs' wife and daughter, Macy felt that his actions against Hernandez were justified, a move that would later end up costing Macy her own life years later.

In the episode "Ambush", Hetty remarks to Director Vance that the last she'd heard, as the result of a political "witch-hunt", Macy was "working out of a quonset hut in Djibouti".[62] This was contradicted on a subsequent episode of NCIS, where Macy's personnel file states that she never worked in Djibouti but was instead reassigned to Marseille, to head up an NCIS undercover team there. While there, she also began working on a rape case involving a Petty Officer Second Class before Macy later returned to the United States.

In the NCIS episode "Patriot Down", badly burnt remains were discovered in Annapolis with NCIS Special Agent Timothy McGee confirming that the remains were those of Macy, leaving the NCIS Washington D.C. major case response team and agency itself devastated. It was later revealed that Macy had been brutally murdered and her body set alight with her killer being revealed as Jason Paul Dean, a mercenary and former U.S. Army Ranger, as part of a plot to get to Gibbs in relation to the Hernandez case.[63]

Aiden Hanna

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Aiden (portrayed by Tye White) is the son of Sam Hanna and his wife Michelle. He is elder brother of Kamren.

His existence is first touched on when Sam reveals he has kids in Season 2, though he was not formally introduced until Season 3.

Kamren Hanna

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Kamren is the daughter of Sam Hanna and his wife Michelle, as well as the younger sister of Aiden.

Her existence is first touched on when Sam reveals he has kids in Season 2, though they were not formally introduced until Season 3. Sam mentioned his overprotective nature towards his daughter when she was young in order to get a woman who was a victim of a shooting to open up to him.

Alexandra Reynolds

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Alexandra is the daughter of Nikita Rezinokov and his lover Katerina Pulonin, as well as the younger half-sister of Agent G. Callen.

Her existence is first revealed in Season 8 when Nikita revealed to Callen of his other daughter. After her mother was poisoned, Callen and Nikita decided to reveal their status as her family.

In Season 9, she has cultivated a familial bond with the pair.

Jake Reynolds

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Jake is the son of Alexandra Reynolds and Pacey Reynolds as well as the half nephew of NCIS agent G. Callen.

Rosa Reyes

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Rosa Reyes is a young Guatemalan immigrant seeking asylum in the United States and the adopted daughter of NCIS Special Agent Kensi Blye and NCIS Investigator Marty Deeks.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The list of NCIS: Los Angeles characters comprises the fictional individuals featured in the American military police procedural drama television series, which aired on from September 22, 2009, to May 21, 2023, spanning 14 seasons and 323 episodes. Created by as the first spin-off of the original NCIS series, it focuses on the elite team of the Office of Special Projects (OSP), a covert division of the (NCIS) based in , where highly trained agents utilize advanced technology and undercover tactics to capture dangerous criminals posing threats to . The core ensemble includes lead field agents G. Callen (portrayed by ), an enigmatic and skilled operative with a mysterious past who serves as the team's tactical leader; Sam Hanna (), a disciplined former SEAL and Callen's trusted partner specializing in high-stakes operations; Kensi Blye (), a proficient martial artist and intelligence expert known for her sharp instincts and resilience; and Marty Deeks (), a charismatic LAPD liaison to OSP whose humor and street smarts complement the team's covert work. Supporting the field operatives are operations manager Henrietta "Hetty" Lange (), a shrewd and resourceful veteran who oversees missions with unyielding authority; tech operator Eric Beale (), the team's quirky gadget guru handling surveillance and ; and analyst Nell Jones (), an intelligent operative who evolves from support staff to . Additional notable figures include Nate Getz (), Assistant Director Owen Granger (), and various recurring antagonists, allies, and guest characters that enrich the series' narrative arcs across its long run.

Overview

Series Context

NCIS: Los Angeles is an American action drama television series that serves as the first spin-off from the original NCIS[], centering on the Office of Special Projects (OSP), a covert division of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) based in Los Angeles. The show's premise revolves around OSP agents conducting high-risk undercover operations to combat threats to national security, often involving surveillance, infiltration, and tactical interventions in urban environments. The series aired on from September 22, 2009, to May 21, 2023, spanning 14 seasons and 323 episodes, during which the evolved to reflect shifts in team dynamics and operational needs. The core team at OSP typically comprises pairs of field agents for undercover work, supported by technical analysts providing intelligence and gadgetry, and overseen by a operations manager who coordinates with higher NCIS leadership. Foundational leads such as G. Callen and Sam Hanna anchor the primary field partnerships, emphasizing teamwork in high-stakes scenarios. Central to the series are themes of , counter-terrorism, and inter-agency , as the OSP frequently collaborates with entities like the FBI, CIA, and local to neutralize domestic and international dangers. These elements drive character interactions, highlighting the blend of covert tactics and personal resolve in addressing complex threats.

Categorization of Characters

The characters featured in NCIS: Los Angeles are organized in this article according to their professional roles within the Office of Special Projects (OSP), length of tenure, and significance to the overarching narrative, ensuring a structured overview that reflects the series' ensemble dynamics. Primary team members encompass the current or long-term core OSP personnel who function as series regulars, appearing in the majority of the show's 323 episodes and forming the foundational undercover operations unit. In contrast, former core characters refer to those who served as main cast members during the early or middle seasons but exited the series, shifting from regular status to limited or absent roles thereafter, which allows the article to trace evolutions in team composition without redundancy. Recurring characters are identified by their criterion of multiple appearances (two or more) across the series without achieving series regular billing; they are further subgrouped by affiliation, such as NCIS headquarters staff versus external collaborators or adversaries, to emphasize their intermittent support or complications to OSP missions. This categorization incorporates crossover figures from the parent NCIS series and predecessor JAG for franchise continuity, exemplified by NCIS Director Leon Vance's multiple appearances linking organizational oversight, as well as JAG alumni like Lieutenant Colonel in recurring capacities. To ensure completeness, overlooked recurring roles from later seasons, particularly post-2020 episodes amid cast transitions, are included under relevant affiliations. Family relations and antagonists are delineated into distinct categories to delineate personal ties and oppositional dynamics separately from occupational hierarchies, thereby minimizing overlap and enhancing navigational clarity in the entry.

Primary Team Members

G. Callen

G. Callen, portrayed by , served as a series regular from season 1 through the conclusion of season 14 in 2023. As the senior field agent and de facto leader of the Office of Special Projects (OSP) team in , Callen specialized in undercover operations, leveraging his ability to assume multiple identities seamlessly. His leadership role involved coordinating high-stakes investigations into threats, often placing him at the forefront of the team's tactical responses. Callen's enigmatic backstory centers on his orphaned childhood, having been raised in numerous foster homes after losing his family at a young age, with no knowledge of his first name—initially listed only as "G." in official records. It was later revealed that his full name is Grisha Aleksandrovich Nikolaev-Callen, born to Clara Callen, a CIA operative with a deep history tied to activities, and Nikita Reznikov, a major. The family was targeted by the Comescu crime organization due to a long-standing blood feud originating from Callen's grandfather, OSS agent George Callen, who had killed several Comescu members during operations; this vendetta led to the murder of Clara in while protecting her children and the presumed death of Callen's older sister, , who drowned in a river during an escape attempt from in 1978. Callen's quest to uncover these truths formed a central arc, driving much of his personal development throughout the series. Key events in Callen's narrative include an arc in season 1, where he awoke in a with no following a shooting, forcing him to reconstruct his identity while resuming duties at OSP. His romantic involvement with Joelle Taylor, a CIA agent initially posing as a schoolteacher, spanned 2014 to 2016 and was marked by mutual deceptions about their professional lives, ultimately ending amid trust issues. In later seasons, following the departure of OSP operations manager Henrietta Lange, Callen received a formal promotion to supervisory , solidifying his command over the team. Callen exhibited a stoic personality, often maintaining emotional distance from colleagues while demonstrating exceptional skills in hand-to-hand combat, marksmanship, and fluency in multiple languages including Russian, which aided his undercover work. His partnership with fellow agent Sam Hanna proved instrumental in operations, blending Callen's improvisational style with Hanna's disciplined approach.

Sam Hanna

Sam Hanna is portrayed by rapper and actor as a main character and series regular across all 14 seasons of the procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, which aired from 2009 to 2023. As a senior special agent with the 's Office of Special Projects in , Hanna serves as a key field operative, often partnering with G. Callen in high-stakes undercover missions. His military expertise as a former SEAL informs his proficiency in surveillance tactics, hand-to-hand combat, and operations in hostile environments, including deployments in and . Hanna's skills also extend to linguistic abilities, such as fluency in , and deep knowledge of Middle Eastern culture, making him invaluable for cases. Hanna's personal life underscores his family-oriented motivations, positioning him as the team's moral anchor amid the dangers of their work. A devoted father to sons and , he was married to Michelle Hanna until her tragic death from during a kidnapping orchestrated by terrorist Tahir Khaled in the season 8 episode "." This event highlighted Hanna's ongoing struggles to balance the perils of undercover assignments with protecting his family's safety, a tension that frequently drives his decisions and adds emotional depth to his role. In addition to his operational duties, Hanna mentors younger team members, notably guiding agent Devin Rountree through the challenges of NCIS fieldwork, as seen in episodes like season 11's "," where he provides paternal advice on and resilience. His personality—charismatic yet principled, deeply rooted in as a source of strength, and marked by humor even under intense pressure—contrasts with more solitary colleagues, emphasizing his role as a stabilizing force. For instance, show dialogue references his and of humor as personal anchors during crises.

Kensi Blye

Kensi Blye is a fictional character in the American television series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress . Ruah appeared as Blye in all 14 seasons of the show, serving as a series regular from its premiere in 2009 until the finale in 2023. As a junior field agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service's Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , Blye specializes in undercover infiltration operations and is highly proficient with weapons, often partnering with her teammate Marty Deeks during missions. Blye's backstory reveals her as a former U.S. Marine from a military family, who lost her fiancé, Jack Simon, during a deployment in ; he was later revealed to have survived but suffered severe PTSD. Her entry into NCIS stemmed from a personal quest for after her father, a Marine, was murdered when she was young; Blye pursued and confronted his killer before joining OSP to channel her skills into federal investigations. Throughout the series, Blye experiences significant personal and professional milestones. In season 7, she sustains a severe during a mission in , resulting in partial paralysis and a temporary reassignment to a desk role while undergoing extensive and psychological recovery. She marries Deeks in season 10 during an episode centered on their long-developing relationship. In the final seasons, particularly season 14, Blye and Deeks become foster parents to a teenager named Rosa and discover Blye is pregnant, marking her transition into motherhood amid ongoing OSP duties. Blye's personality is characterized by her tough, headstrong demeanor forged from experience, balanced by deep toward victims and colleagues, which aids her in undercover roles. She is bilingual, fluent in , a skill utilized in several investigations.

Marty Deeks

Marty Deeks is portrayed by , who joined the cast as a series regular starting in season 2 and continued through the show's conclusion in season 14. Introduced in the season 1 episode "Fame" as an undercover LAPD detective infiltrating a drug ring that intersects with an NCIS case, Deeks transitions into the role of liaison officer between the Los Angeles Police Department and the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP). His position leverages his street smarts and undercover expertise to support OSP operations, often providing through witty banter amid high-stakes investigations. Over time, Deeks fully integrates into the team, completing Federal Law Training (FLETC) to become an official NCIS investigator in season 12 after his LAPD position is furloughed. Deeks' backstory reveals a challenging upbringing marked by domestic abuse from his alcoholic father, Gordon John Brandel, whom Deeks shot in self-defense at age 11 when Brandel threatened him and his mother with a shotgun. After the incident, Deeks pursued higher education, earning a and briefly working as a before joining the LAPD as a specializing in undercover work. His recruitment to OSP stems from collaborative joint operations with NCIS, where his law enforcement background proves invaluable for bridging civilian and federal investigations. Key events in Deeks' arc include a season 3 incident during a joint NCIS-LAPD operation where he shoots an unarmed suspect, leading to temporary between the agencies and exposing risks in his undercover role. In the season 4 finale "" and season 5 premiere "Ascension," Deeks endures brutal torture alongside Sam Hanna at the hands of arms dealer Isaak Sidorov, resulting in lasting psychological trauma that affects his performance and relationships. His romance with teammate Kensi Blye evolves from flirtatious tension to commitment, culminating in their marriage in season 10's "Till Death Do Us Part" and the revelation of Kensi's pregnancy in the series finale. These milestones underscore Deeks' journey from outsider to core family member within OSP. Deeks is characterized by his sharp wit, unwavering loyalty to the team, and proficiency in interrogations, often using humor as a mechanism and tool to disarm suspects. Despite his laid-back demeanor, he demonstrates resilience forged from personal hardships, balancing levity with dependable fieldwork skills that complement the team's more intense operatives.

Henrietta "Hetty" Lange

Henrietta "Hetty" Lange is portrayed by actress , who appeared as a series regular from season 1 through season 10 of NCIS: Los Angeles (2009–2018) and in a recurring capacity thereafter until the series concluded in 2023. As the operations manager for the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , Lange oversees logistical support, covert funding, and strategic direction for the team's undercover missions, often providing resources and intelligence from her perch above the . Her oversight extends to key agents like G. Callen, whom she has guided throughout his career. Lange's backstory reveals a shadowy past as an intelligence operative during the , with involvement in high-stakes operations for agencies including the CIA, where she honed her skills in and . Born in post-World War II Romania, she rose through the ranks of British and American intelligence circles, amassing a network of contacts and secrets that inform her enigmatic decisions at OSP. Notably, Lange mentored a young G. Callen during his turbulent youth, recruiting him into the intelligence world and shaping his path as an NCIS agent, a connection that underscores her profound influence on team loyalty. Throughout the series, Lange faces several major crises that test her resolve. In season 3, she is kidnapped by a criminal syndicate seeking leverage over Callen, leading to a high-tension rescue operation that exposes vulnerabilities in her otherwise impenetrable facade. She temporarily resigns amid ensuing scandals in season 6, grappling with internal investigations and ethical dilemmas tied to her covert past, though she ultimately reaffirms her commitment to the team. Later seasons see her disappearance during a classified mission abroad starting in season 10, prompting concerns for her safety; she returns dramatically in season 11, resuming her role on a more limited basis while continuing to exert influence from afar. Lange's personality is marked by eccentricity and despite her diminutive stature, blending sharp , moral , and a collector's passion for global artifacts that adorn her office and reflect her worldly experiences. Her diminutive frame belies a commanding presence that inspires fear and respect among subordinates, fostering unwavering loyalty through her unorthodox mentorship and protective instincts.

Eric Beale

Eric Beale is a fictional character on the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actor Barrett Foa as a series regular from season 1 through season 12. As the senior technical operator at the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in Los Angeles, Beale specializes in providing real-time surveillance, cybersecurity breaches, and custom gadget support to the undercover field team during investigations into naval crimes. His expertise enables the team to access secure networks, deploy drones for reconnaissance, and utilize advanced tracking devices in high-stakes operations. Beale's backstory portrays him as a prodigious who honed his skills in his youth, often collaborating on early technological innovations that foreshadow his role at OSP, including rudimentary AI-assisted tools for data and used by the team. Characterized by social awkwardness stemming from his deep immersion in , he exhibits a nerdy yet relentlessly optimistic personality, blending intellectual brilliance with a relaxed, surfer-inspired vibe evident in his casual flip-flops, Hawaiian shirts, and enthusiastic problem-solving approach. This quirkiness manifests in his inventive gadgets, such as improvised hacks and playful tech prototypes that occasionally inject humor into tense missions. Over the series, Beale demonstrates growth by stepping into limited field assignments, including a covert operation in season 10 where he poses as a tech consultant to infiltrate a suspect network, and a clandestine mission in season 11 that tests his adaptability outside the ops center. His personal arc includes a developing romance with intelligence analyst Nell Jones, progressing to dating and engagement by season 12, during which they briefly collaborate on joint tech projects. In the season 12 finale, Beale departs OSP for the private sector after inventing the Kaleidoscope software—a revolutionary AI-driven cybersecurity tool that generates substantial wealth, allowing him to pursue independent ventures.

Nell Jones

Penelope "Nell" Jones is a key member of the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP) team in NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress . Introduced in the second season as an intelligence analyst, she provides critical technological and analytical support to field agents, often partnering with tech operator Eric Beale on operations. Smith first appeared in the role during the 2010 episode "Special Delivery" and transitioned to series regular status beginning in season 7, continuing through the show's 14th and final season in 2023. Her character is depicted as highly intelligent and quick-witted, with a sassy demeanor that adds levity to high-stakes missions while demonstrating remarkable adaptability in dynamic environments. Recruited directly to OSP by operations manager Henrietta "Hetty" Lange for her expertise in intelligence gathering, Nell's backstory highlights her New York origins and background as a recent graduate, which equips her for complex analytical tasks. Her petite stature—standing at approximately 5 feet 1 inch—frequently aids in undercover roles, enabling her to assume disguises that larger agents could not, such as posing as a or in various operations. This versatility allows Nell to transition from the OSP control room to the field, where she excels in and support tasks, contributing to the team's success in cases. Nell's career saw rapid advancement following Hetty Lange's unexplained absence in season 12, when she was promoted to acting operations manager, overseeing team logistics and decision-making during critical investigations. This leadership role tested her strategic skills and earned respect from colleagues, though it also amplified the personal toll of the job. In her personal life, Nell's long-simmering romantic tension with Beale evolved into a , marked by their in the season 12 finale, reflecting a dynamic of mutual support and shared professional challenges. She returned briefly in the series finale to assist in a high-risk rescue operation in , underscoring her enduring loyalty to the team.

Shay Mosley

Shay Lynn Mosley is a fictional character on the procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress as a series regular during seasons 9 and 10. Introduced as the new Executive for Pacific Operations (EAD-PAC) of the (NCIS), Mosley assumes oversight of the Office of Special Projects (OSP) following the death of Assistant Director Owen Granger, succeeding him in a leadership role amid bureaucratic restructuring. Her appointment later evolves into an acting capacity for the office, emphasizing her role in enforcing stricter protocols on the team's operations. A former Secret Service agent, Mosley's backstory reveals a career marked by high-stakes protective duties before transitioning to NCIS ranks, where her ambitious drive propels her to executive leadership. She is depicted as composed and professional, often leveraging her multilingual skills in international investigations to navigate complex threats. However, her rigid, by-the-book approach creates immediate tensions with the OSP team's more autonomous, improvisational methods, positioning her as a counterpoint to their freewheeling dynamic and sparking ongoing bureaucratic challenges in team integration. Mosley's tenure is overshadowed by hidden family ties that entangle her professionally: she is the mother of 12-year-old Mosley, from a past relationship with international arms dealer , whose criminal activities draw dangerous reprisals. In season 9, 's abduction by Mexican drug cartels—retaliating against Williams—forces Mosley into ethical conflicts, as she authorizes off-the-books operations and covers up team actions to prioritize her son's rescue, including rogue missions that violate protocols. This culminates in a high-risk extraction in , where the team retrieves but exposes Mosley's personal vulnerabilities and leadership biases. The fallout from these events leads to Mosley's resignation early in season 10, driven by the irreconcilable strain of her family secrets and the ethical compromises required to shield her son from ongoing threats; she ultimately goes into hiding with to ensure their safety. Mosley's arc highlights the perils of personal entanglements in high-level NCIS roles, marking her departure as a pivotal shift in the series' command structure.

Fatima Namazi

Fatima Namazi is an NCIS with the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , portrayed by Iranian-American actress . Rahimi first appeared as Namazi in season 10, episode 14 ("Smokescreen"), initially as a , before being promoted to series regular at the start of season 11 and remaining so through the series' end in season 14. As a , Namazi specializes in operations, affairs, and cryptology, frequently undertaking undercover assignments that leverage her linguistic and cultural expertise. Namazi's cultural background as a devout Muslim woman of Iranian descent, who wears a , adds a distinctive layer to her portrayal, emphasizing representation without centering her faith as the primary narrative focus. Raised in after her family immigrated from , she embodies an all-American identity while navigating operations that sometimes highlight cultural tensions, such as family dynamics in cases or ethical dilemmas in undercover roles abroad. Her rapid assimilation into the OSP team is marked by her quick adaptation to high-stakes fieldwork alongside veterans like G. Callen and Sam Hanna, demonstrating resourcefulness in decoding threats and providing on-the-ground intelligence. Throughout her tenure, Namazi's principled nature shines in major events, including joint operations where her humor diffuses tense situations and her expertise resolves crises, such as tracking arms dealers or infiltrating terrorist networks. She forms a key partnership with fellow agent Devin Rountree, collaborating on missions that test their compatibility and lead to team bonding. Namazi's arc includes a developing romantic subplot with Rountree, evolving from professional camaraderie to a personal relationship that culminates in mutual commitment by the series finale, underscoring her growth in balancing duty with vulnerability.

Devin Rountree

Devin Rountree is a fictional character on the CBS procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actor Caleb Castille. Introduced in season 11 as an FBI Special Agent evaluating a potential transfer to the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP), Rountree brings a fresh, rookie perspective to the team with his background in federal law enforcement. He appears recurrently during season 11 before being promoted to a series regular for seasons 12 through 14, the show's final season. As a probationary upon joining OSP, Rountree specializes in physical operations and high-speed driving, leveraging his athletic build and endurance for demanding fieldwork such as pursuits, extractions, and close-quarters combat. Recruited directly from the FBI for his tactical skills and adaptability, he navigates the challenges of transitioning to NCIS protocols while proving his reliability in high-stakes missions. His athleticism is evident in episodes where he excels in physically intensive scenarios, contributing to the team's operational success. Rountree's development is shaped by mentorship from senior agent Sam Hanna, who guides him through probationary training, emphasizing discipline, intuition, and in undercover roles. This relationship fosters Rountree's growth from an eager novice to a competent full-fledged NCIS by the start of season 12, marked by his official integration into the core team. His personality—characterized by respectfulness, enthusiasm, and a strong sense of duty—helps him build rapport with colleagues, though he confronts personal trials like that test his resilience. A key aspect of Rountree's arc involves his evolving partnership with fellow agent Namazi, which blossoms into a romance amid shared missions and personal vulnerabilities.

Hollace Kilbride

Hollace Kilbride is portrayed by actor , who first appeared as the character in a recurring capacity starting in 2014 before being promoted to a series regular for seasons 13 and 14. As a retired U.S. admiral, Kilbride serves as an NCIS liaison to the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , providing counsel during undercover operations and eventually assuming the role of acting director. Kilbride's backstory includes a distinguished career in the Navy and a longstanding friendship with Henrietta "Hetty" Lange, the OSP's operations manager, whom he has known for years and who once recruited him for a specific case. In season 13, with Hetty on a classified mission, Kilbride steps into the official leadership role at OSP, enforcing strict adherence to protocol and the chain of command, which leads to tensions with agents like G. Callen and Sam Hanna who prefer more flexible methods. Despite initial clashes, he gradually builds trust by recognizing the team's effectiveness, though he insists operations align with his directives, stating that "things will be done his way or not at all." Kilbride's personal vulnerabilities emerge in season 14, particularly through his strained family relationships, including a reunion with his estranged ex-wife Elizabeth and efforts to reconnect with their adult son, highlighting a softer side beneath his authoritative exterior. His personality is marked by a gruff, principled demeanor tempered by , reflecting a strong sense of duty that sometimes borders on condescension toward unconventional approaches.

Former Core Team Members

Dominic Vail

Dominic Vail is a fictional character on the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by Adam Jamal Craig. Introduced in the series premiere "Identity" as a rookie NCIS assigned to the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , Vail is depicted as a recent graduate of the NCIS Academy, eager to prove himself in the field. He initially partners with Special Agent Kensi Blye before frequently teaming up with partners G. Callen and Sam Hanna on high-stakes undercover operations. Vail's personality is marked by optimism, bravery, and a strong team-oriented spirit, often displaying enthusiasm for missions despite his inexperience, which leads to both successes and tense learning moments. As the team's newest member, he contributes fresh energy to the OSP unit, handling fieldwork that involves , , and gathering. Throughout season 1, Vail's arc builds to a dramatic undercover assignment in "Past Lives," where he is kidnapped by arms dealers; the team realizes his disappearance in "Missing," and his is confirmed in the following episode "Found," marking a heroic sacrifice during the rescue attempt. His loss profoundly affects the team, leading to memorials and tributes in later episodes, such as "Past Lives," where his contributions are honored. Craig's portrayal as Vail spans 13 episodes, establishing the character as a main cast member in season 1 before recurring in flashbacks and references. Following Vail's , the OSP recruits LAPD Marty Deeks as a liaison to fill the operational gap.

Nate Getz

Nate Getz is portrayed by Peter Cambor on NCIS: Los Angeles, where he serves as the operational psychologist for the Office of Special Projects (OSP) team in Los Angeles. Introduced in the series' backdoor pilot episodes from NCIS Season 6, Getz provides analytical support through behavioral profiling, interrogation assistance, and mission planning based on psychological insights. As a main cast member in Season 1, he integrates into the early team dynamics, offering non-field expertise to aid investigations. Getz's backstory highlights his expertise in , positioning him as a key asset for understanding criminal motivations and team morale, though he occasionally faces field exposure that tests his limits. In Season 1, he participates in operations, including undercover elements and combat scenarios, revealing underlying skills in hand-to-hand fighting despite his primary desk-based role. After the first season, his status shifts to recurring, with sporadic returns that emphasize his analytical contributions amid personal challenges, such as emotional entanglements and ethical dilemmas during missions. Major events in Getz's arc include his 2011 return from a secret assignment, where he uncovers interpersonal team tensions, and subsequent appearances in Seasons 2 through 8, often involving undercover work or counseling roles that push his psychological boundaries. By mid-Season 8, his involvement diminishes, but he reappears in Season 13 for consultations with OSP leadership, underscoring his ongoing value in behavioral analysis. These reduced appearances reflect a focus on his support function rather than frontline action. Getz's personality is characterized by intellectual sharpness, perceptiveness in reading others, and a shy demeanor that contrasts with his insightful counsel on team dynamics and case strategies. He exhibits emotional investment in personal relationships, such as past flirtations, and demonstrates resilience under pressure, often questioning his decisions while adhering to OSP directives. As a non-combat specialist by training, his neurotic tendencies surface in high-stakes scenarios, highlighting his role as the team's empathetic analyst rather than a tactical operative.

Owen Granger

Owen Granger is a fictional character on the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, serving as the Assistant Director overseeing the Office of Special Projects (OSP) and direct superior to Operations Manager Henrietta Lange. Portrayed by actor Miguel Ferrer, Granger first appeared in a recurring capacity during season 3, episode 3 ("The Watchers"), and transitioned to a main role from season 5 through season 9. As a career NCIS bureaucrat, Granger oversees high-stakes undercover operations from the agency's Los Angeles field office, often intervening with stern directives while displaying a cunning strategic mind and underlying paternal protectiveness toward the team. Granger's backstory reveals a life marked by professional secrecy and personal regrets, including an illegitimate daughter, Jennifer Kim, born from a past affair with a woman connected to intelligence; Kim grew up unaware of her father's identity and became a spy for . This hidden family dynamic fuels his arc of redemption, particularly in season 7, when Granger personally escorts Kim back to the after her , confronting their estranged relationship amid threats from operatives. His health deteriorates significantly in season 8 with a terminal cancer diagnosis, mirroring Ferrer's real-life battle with throat cancer, which adds layers to Granger's resolve as he balances duty with personal reconciliation. In a sacrificial turn, Granger vanishes after surviving a stabbing during an internal mole hunt in season 8, choosing to leave his position and spend his final days protecting and bonding with Kim rather than continuing his oversight role. Season 9 confirms his off-screen death, revealed through Kim as having occurred while aiding her against lingering threats tied to the team's investigations; he is buried under a tree at her , symbolizing his ultimate redemption through family over career. Following his exit, the role of passes to Shay Mosley.

Recurring NCIS and Government Personnel

Leon Vance

Leon Vance is portrayed by actor Rocky Carroll in a recurring role throughout the NCIS franchise, including multiple appearances in NCIS: Los Angeles as the Director of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS). Based in Washington, D.C., Vance serves as the authoritative liaison to the Los Angeles-based Office of Special Projects (OSP), overseeing high-risk undercover operations and providing strategic approvals for missions involving national security threats. His involvement often includes video conferences with the OSP team to coordinate efforts on complex cases, such as those requiring inter-agency support. Vance's backstory is rooted in law enforcement and military service; he grew up in Chicago, trained as a boxer during his youth, attended the U.S. Naval Academy, and served as a Second Lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps before becoming a field agent with NCIS. A dedicated family man, he is married to Jackie Vance and has two children, son Jared and daughter Kayla, which influences his balanced approach to leadership. In NCIS: Los Angeles, Vance plays a key role in major events, including approving assistance for investigations into international threats and visiting the OSP during team crises to offer direct intervention and policy guidance. For instance, he provides critical oversight in episodes involving high-stakes pursuits, ensuring compliance with NCIS protocols while supporting the OSP's covert activities. His personality is depicted as authoritative yet diplomatic, occasionally infused with dry humor to navigate tense situations. He maintains brief ties to the main NCIS cast in , facilitating cross-team collaborations.

Mike Renko

Mike Renko is a recurring character in the NCIS universe, portrayed by actor Brian Avers. He serves as an NCIS temporarily assigned to the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in , providing support for high-risk undercover operations. Renko is depicted as a seasoned investigator with extensive field experience, often brought in from NCIS's broader network to augment the OSP team's capabilities during critical missions. Renko first appears in the NCIS episode "Legend (Part I)" (season 6, episode 22), where he collaborates with OSP agents G. Callen and Sam Hanna on a joint investigation involving a murdered Marine and a conspiracy within the agency. His partnership with Callen proves particularly effective, as seen in subsequent NCIS: Los Angeles episodes such as "Ambush" (season 1, episode 8), where he assists in tracking a targeting Navy personnel, and "The Bank Job" (season 1, episode 15), involving a heist tied to . Renko's combat skills shine in these scenarios, demonstrating his proficiency in undercover work, tactical maneuvers, and direct confrontations, often stepping in to bolster the team's operational strength during personnel shortages. Renko's tenure ends tragically in the NCIS: Los Angeles season 3 finale "Sans Voir, Part I" (episode 22), where he is killed during an undercover investigating illegal arms dealing. While posing as a gun shop employee, Renko is ambushed in a violent involving an SUV ramming and multiple gunmen, succumbing to his injuries despite the OSP team's efforts to intervene. Throughout his appearances, Renko is characterized as reliable and no-nonsense, a steadfast operative who prioritizes mission success with minimal personal flair or hesitation.

Lara Macy

Lara Macy is a fictional character in the CBS television series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by English actress Louise Lombard. Introduced in the backdoor pilot episodes "Legend" (Parts 1 and 2) from NCIS season 6, Macy serves as the initial Operations Manager for the Office of Special Projects (OSP), an elite undercover division of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) based in Los Angeles. As a temporary leader, she oversees a team of specialized agents handling high-risk covert operations, emphasizing strict adherence to protocol and operational secrecy. A former Major in the U.S. Marine Corps , Macy is characterized as an ambitious and highly driven NCIS official with a calculating, detached personality that prioritizes efficiency over personal rapport. Her backstory includes a pivotal encounter 18 years earlier with during her time as a investigator, where she handled a sensitive case tied to the of Gibbs' wife and daughter; Macy ultimately covered up Gibbs' unauthorized killing of the perpetrator, Pedro Hernandez, forging a tense, unresolved dynamic between them. This history fuels ongoing , as Macy's decisions reflect a pragmatic willingness to bend rules for institutional protection while maintaining a professional facade. During the pilot events, Macy's leadership is marked by controversies arising from her rigid methods and insistence on compartmentalized information, leading to clashes with both the OSP field agents—such as Special Agents G. Callen and Sam Hanna—and the visiting Washington, D.C., NCIS team under Gibbs. She adopts a hands-on role in coordinating a joint investigation into the of a Marine, which uncovers a broader threat from the targeting undercover agents; however, her secretive directives and reluctance to share intelligence exacerbate team distrust and operational risks. These tensions peak in direct confrontations with Gibbs, who questions her past actions and current judgment, underscoring her detached style as both a strength in high-stakes environments and a source of internal conflict. Macy's tenure ends abruptly after the failed containment of the Comescu threat, which results in casualties and exposes vulnerabilities in OSP's structure; she is subsequently relieved of her duties and reassigned, allowing Henrietta "Hetty" Lange to step in as the new Operations Manager and establish a more enduring leadership era.

Lauren Hunter

Lauren Hunter is a fictional character on the American television series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress in a recurring capacity during seasons 2 and 3. Introduced in the season 2 episode "Imposters," Hunter arrives as the new Operations Manager for the Office of Special Projects (OSP) amid the unexplained absence of Henrietta "Hetty" Lange, assuming oversight of the team's covert missions and serving as their primary handler. As an NCIS Special Agent, she demonstrates proficiency in both administrative leadership and field operations, occasionally joining agents like G. Callen and Sam Hanna on high-stakes assignments that involve and undercover work. Hunter's background ties her closely to the NCIS universe through her professional expertise and personal connections, positioning her as a capable liaison figure with community ties, though her exact prior affiliations remain enigmatic in the series. She exhibits a professional demeanor marked by authority and precision, often maintaining a cool, calculating facade that underscores her effectiveness in high-pressure environments. Attractive and composed, Hunter rarely reveals personal vulnerabilities, but moments of guarded openness highlight her depth beyond the role of overseer. Her tenure brings tension to team dynamics, particularly in her interactions with Callen, where subtle romantic undertones emerge amid their collaborative efforts. A pivotal arc in Hunter's storyline culminates in the season 3 finale episodes "Sans Voir, Parts 1 and 2," where she becomes entangled in a deadly confrontation with the international criminal Marcel Janvier, known as the . Believing Callen to be dead following an ambush, Hunter pursues leads in a bid for retribution, only to fall victim to Janvier's orchestrated murders alongside fellow agent Mike Renko. Her abrupt death via execution propels the team's pursuit of justice and underscores the perilous stakes of their undercover operations.

Harley Hidoko

Harley Hidoko is a fictional character on the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by American actress Andrea Bordeaux. Introduced as a recurring role in the ninth season, Hidoko serves as an NCIS Special Agent assigned to the Office of Special Projects (OSP) in Los Angeles, functioning primarily as the executive assistant and chief of staff to the newly appointed Executive Assistant Director for the Pacific (EAD-PAC), Shay Mosley. Her position involves providing essential liaison support for team communications and technical assistance during investigations, while also participating in field operations as a capable agent. Hidoko's backstory remains largely enigmatic, with limited details revealed about her prior experiences, hinting at her status as a highly skilled operative possibly connected to other federal agencies, though specifics are never fully explored. She joins the OSP team in the season 9 premiere episode "Party Crashers," arriving amid the leadership transition following the death of Owen Granger, and quickly integrates into the group by offering efficient support in high-stakes cases involving cyber threats, international , and . Throughout her 22-episode arc, Hidoko demonstrates proficiency in firearms, tactical maneuvers, and analytical skills, contributing to operations such as tracking arms dealers and dismantling trafficking rings. Depicted as efficient and resourceful yet mysteriously reserved, Hidoko's personality adds an air of intrigue to the ensemble, often handling sensitive logistics with quiet competence while forming subtle bonds with team members like Callen and Sam Hanna. Her tenure culminates dramatically in the season 9 finale "A Line in the Sand," where she independently pursues a lead in to rescue Mosley's kidnapped son, resulting in her sudden disappearance during the unsanctioned mission. The season 10 premiere "To Live and Die in Albion" later confirms her tragic fate, with her remains discovered, marking a poignant end to her brief but impactful presence on the series.

Louis Ochoa

Louis Ochoa is a on the series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actor beginning in season 10. Introduced as an NCIS Deputy Director, Ochoa arrives in to oversee an investigation into the Office of Special Projects (OSP) team's unsanctioned mission in to rescue the son of Executive Assistant Director Shay Mosley. Described as smart, authoritative, polished, and trustworthy, Ochoa accompanies Department of Defense Special Prosecutor John Rogers to conduct interviews with the team members. His role expands as he temporarily assumes control of the OSP in the prolonged absence of Operations Manager Henrietta "Hetty" Lange, providing oversight during critical operations. Following the resolution of the investigation and Mosley's departure, becomes the permanent successor to lead the OSP, supporting the team's efforts with a balanced approach that grants them operational flexibility. He appears in seven episodes across season 10, contributing to cases involving terrorist threats and internal NCIS matters, though his personal backstory and individual arcs remain minimal and underdeveloped.

Crossovers from NCIS Universe

Anthony DiNozzo Jr.

Anthony DiNozzo Jr. is portrayed by actor as a guest character in NCIS: Los Angeles, crossing over from his role as a senior field agent in the original NCIS series. In the series, DiNozzo serves as a special agent based in , under NCIS Director , bringing his expertise in undercover operations and investigative work to the Los Angeles Office of Special Projects during a key crossover event. His appearance highlights franchise connections, showcasing how the NCIS teams collaborate across coasts. DiNozzo's major visit occurs in season 7, 5, "," aired on October 19, 2015, where he arrives in to track an escaped money launderer, Rio Syamsundin (played by ), who slipped custody en route from . Partnering with the LA team led by G. Callen and Sam Hanna, DiNozzo aids in the pursuit, utilizing the boatshed for interrogations and coordinating with federal authorities. The episode emphasizes his backstory as a skilled, charismatic investigator from the D.C. team, known for his quick wit and pop culture references that inject humor into tense situations. Throughout the crossover, DiNozzo's flirtatious personality shines, particularly in interactions with Kensi Blye, where he attempts lighthearted banter and movie quotes to break the ice, such as comparing the boatshed to scenes from . This charm, drawn from his established NCIS persona, provides comic relief while underscoring his professional competence in joint operations. Post his departure from active NCIS duty in 2016 to focus on family life with daughter Tali, DiNozzo's legacy includes implied ongoing ties to the broader NCIS network.

Abby Sciuto

Abby Sciuto is portrayed by as a guest character in the first season of NCIS: Los Angeles. As the chief forensic scientist for the (NCIS) headquarters in , Sciuto specializes in ballistics, , and evidence analysis, often providing expert consultation across NCIS offices. In NCIS: Los Angeles, her role involves remote assistance in the episode "Killshot," where NCIS Director contacts her to review evidence related to a murdered U.S. citizen of North Korean descent and classified software secrets. She makes her in-person appearance in "Random on Purpose," traveling to to aid the Office of Special Projects team when a matches the modus operandi of a she has been tracking, dubbed "The Chameleon" for random victim selection. Originating from the parent series NCIS, Sciuto's backstory establishes her as a brilliant, self-taught forensic genius with a Ph.D. in chemistry and multiple areas of expertise, honed through unconventional education including a brief stint at a school before embracing her scientific career. Her rare consultations in highlight her value as a cross-office resource, culminating in an emotional farewell after solving the case, where she bonds briefly with the LA team, including a nod to her close friendship with from the D.C. office. Sciuto's personality is characterized by her bubbly, eccentric energy and goth aesthetic, often expressed through black clothing, pigtails, and enthusiastic scientific , contrasting the more stoic LA operatives while injecting levity into high-stakes investigations.

Harmon Rabb Jr.

Harmon Rabb Jr. is portrayed by in a three-episode guest arc on NCIS: Los Angeles, spanning the end of season 10 and the start of season 11. As a Navy captain and former Judge Advocate General (JAG) Corps officer originating from the spin-off series JAG, Rabb serves as the executive officer (XO) aboard the aircraft carrier USS Allegiance during his appearances. His role highlights his transition from legal duties to operational command in naval aviation environments. Rabb's backstory establishes him as a former naval aviator who, after a career setback due to night blindness, retrained as a in the JAG Corps. This dual expertise in aviation and law informs his contributions to NCIS investigations, particularly those involving carrier-based threats. In season 10's "The Guardian," NCIS agents G. Callen and Sam Hanna board the USS Allegiance to collaborate with Rabb in thwarting sympathizers plotting attacks on U.S. carriers in the . The operation escalates in the season finale "False Flag," where Rabb provides critical on-ship coordination amid suspicions of internal sabotage. The arc concludes in season 11's premiere "Let Fate Decide," with assisting the team in apprehending foreign spies embedded on the , leveraging his aviation knowledge for secure extractions and threat assessments. Portrayed as an honorable and principled leader, demonstrates skilled piloting abilities and a steadfast commitment to naval protocol, often bridging military and investigative protocols effectively. His brief partnership with former JAG colleague Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie underscores shared professional ties from their legal service.

A.J. Chegwidden

A.J. Chegwidden, portrayed by , is a recurring guest character in NCIS: Los Angeles, appearing in six episodes across seasons 8 and 9. As a retired and former (JAG) of the , Chegwidden serves as a to the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP) team, leveraging his extensive military and legal expertise to assist in complex investigations. His involvement often stems from connections to OSP operations director Henrietta "Hetty" Lange's past, particularly her Vietnam War-era activities, where he provides strategic guidance and legal counsel on sensitive matters. Originating from the JAG series, Chegwidden's backstory includes service as a Navy SEAL during the Vietnam War, followed by a distinguished career in surface warfare commanding destroyers before earning a law degree and rising through the JAG Corps to become its head. A black belt in karate, he demonstrates proficiency in martial arts, reflecting his disciplined and physically capable persona honed through SEAL training and naval service. In NCIS: Los Angeles, this background informs his role as a reliable ally, notably during the season 8 gold heist probe in "Golden Days," where he collaborates with Hetty's former Vietnam comrades—Admirals Sterling Bridges and Charles Langston—to uncover terrorist links, offering authoritative insights into covert operations. Chegwidden's major contributions include aiding the team in high-stakes scenarios tied to Hetty's history, such as the season 9 Vietnam arc culminating in "Goodbye, Vietnam," where he joins an off-the-books rescue mission to extract Hetty from captors, drawing on his SEAL experience for tactical support and mentorship to agents like G. Callen and Sam Hanna. He first appears in "Payback" (season 8, episode 15), possessing Hetty's old identification, which draws the OSP team into a case involving her past secrets, and continues providing counsel in episodes like "Battle Scars" and "This Is What We Do," where his legal acumen helps navigate border security threats and ethical dilemmas akin to tribunal proceedings. His mentorship extends to offering wise, no-nonsense advice that bridges military protocol with fieldwork improvisation. Known for his wise and authoritative personality, Chegwidden embodies a paternal figure to the team, blending stern command with empathetic understanding shaped by decades of service. This trait is evident in his interactions, where he asserts leadership without overstepping, often resolving tensions through decisive judgment. He maintains a professional tie to former subordinate Harmon Rabb Jr. from his JAG tenure.

Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie

Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie is portrayed by Catherine Bell as a guest character in NCIS: Los Angeles, crossing over from her role as a U.S. Marine Corps (JAG) Corps officer in the series JAG. In the series, MacKenzie appears as a in the United States Marine Corps, providing legal and investigative support during high-stakes operations. Her appearances highlight connections within the extended NCIS universe through JAG ties. She first crosses over in the season 10 finale "," aired on May 19, 2019, where she collaborates with Captain Jr. aboard the USS Allegiance to address threats from spies and sympathizers. This partnership continues in season 11's premiere "Let Fate Decide," aired on September 29, 2019, assisting the OSP team in resolving the onboard crisis. MacKenzie returns in season 11, episode 22, "," aired on April 26, 2020, overseeing an investigation into a commander's apparent that uncovers deeper conspiracies, leveraging her JAG expertise for protocol adherence and ethical guidance. Originating from JAG, MacKenzie's backstory includes a career as a lawyer and aviator, marked by complex personal and professional dynamics, including her relationship with Harmon Rabb Jr. Her Marine Corps discipline and legal acumen make her a steadfast ally in NCIS: Los Angeles, often mediating between command and field operations. Portrayed as intelligent and composed, she brings a sense of duty and resolve to missions, underscoring the interconnected naval across the franchise.

Personal and Family Connections

Michelle Hanna

Michelle Hanna is a in NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed primarily by Aunjanue Ellis in seasons 4–6 and 8, with Indira G. Wilson appearing as her in season 3. She serves as the second wife of NCIS Sam Hanna and a former deep-cover CIA operative who uses the alias "Quinn" during missions. Hanna's backstory involves her recruitment into the CIA, where she worked on high-risk operations before retiring to focus on family life after meeting Sam during a mission. The two fell in love while collaborating on undercover assignments, leading to their marriage following Sam's divorce from his first wife. She and Sam became parents to two children, and , prompting her temporary exit from active fieldwork. Throughout the series, Hanna resumes her CIA career against Sam's wishes, engaging in perilous undercover roles that highlight her expertise in operations. In season 4's "Rude Awakenings," she infiltrates an arms smuggling ring led by Isaak Sidorov, posing as Quinn to gather while navigating loyalty tests, including a staged shooting of her husband and colleague Marty Deeks. This arc exposes her to significant dangers, such as capture and by criminal networks. Later, in season 8's "," she faces a fatal kidnapping orchestrated by terrorist Tahir Khaled, who demands his release from in exchange for her; Hanna is confined in a portable freezer, succumbing to poisoning before rescue, with her body subsequently taken and threatened with dismemberment. Her death profoundly impacts Sam, fueling his rogue pursuit of vengeance in the season finale. References to her assassination and its aftermath appear in season 10 episodes like "Till Death Do Us Part," underscoring the ongoing emotional toll on the team. Hanna is depicted as brave and devoted, consistently prioritizing mission success and family protection despite the personal risks involved in her intelligence work. Her character arc emphasizes the conflicts between her professional duties and domestic life, portraying a resilient operative who returns to the field with unwavering commitment.

Aiden Hanna

Aiden Hanna is a recurring character on the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actor Tye White across multiple seasons. As the elder son of NCIS Special Agent Sam Hanna and his wife Michelle Hanna, Aiden is introduced as a teenager navigating the challenges of military academy life while dealing with the repercussions of his father's dangerous career. He shares a close but occasionally strained relationship with his family, including his younger sister Kamran, and is often drawn into perilous situations that highlight the protective instincts of the NCIS team. Aiden's backstory establishes him as a biological child of Sam and Michelle, raised in a household shaped by Sam's naval SEAL background and Michelle's CIA ties. Aspiring to follow a path in , Aiden attends a in , where he excels as a and later pursues aviation training, demonstrating his talent and discipline. His personality blends rebellious independence—seen in his determination to carve his own path amid family expectations—with notable skill in high-stakes environments, such as coordinating during crises. These traits are evident in episodes where he asserts his autonomy, like expressing interest in investigative work after witnessing team operations. Major events underscore Aiden's exposure to threats stemming from Sam's job, emphasizing family protection themes. In the season 7 episode "Talion," sends a to his father when extremists seize his academy, prompting the team to launch a covert rescue operation in to safeguard him and other hostages. Similarly, in season 14's "Dead Stick," , now in flight school, ejects from a crashing test plane and faces accusations of sabotage; the NCIS team investigates to clear his name, revealing memory lapses from a and ultimately exonerating him through evidence of mechanical failure. These incidents, along with earlier brushes like accompanying Sam during a spy apprehension in "Cancel ," illustrate Aiden's recurring vulnerability and the team's commitment to shielding him. His college pursuits culminate in acceptance to pre-flight school in Pensacola, marking his growth toward a career.

Kamran Hanna

Kamran Hanna is the biological daughter of NCIS Special Agent Sam Hanna and his wife Michelle Hanna, serving as the younger sibling in their family unit alongside her brother . Her character underscores the personal sacrifices of Sam's high-risk career, with the Hanna family maintaining a secretive existence to shield the children from potential threats linked to his undercover operations. Sam first references his daughter in season 2's episode "Anonymous," confiding in a pregnant informant about his own children while emphasizing his protective instincts, marking the initial on-screen acknowledgment of her without revealing details to the broader team. Kamran makes her physical debut in season 3's "," during a gathering at the Hanna home where Sam reluctantly introduces her and Aiden to his colleagues, a pivotal moment that exposes the family's previously concealed life even to trusted NCIS partners like Kensi Blye and Marty Deeks, who were previously unaware of their existence. Portrayed initially by child actress Layla Crawford in recurring roles across seasons 3, 4, 6, and 8, is depicted as an innocent young girl embodying the normalcy her parents strive to preserve amid ongoing dangers. The family's safeguarding intensifies following a season 7 incident where surveillance photos of Kamran, Aiden, Michelle, and Sam surface in , prompting an international investigation into the leak by terrorist Tahir Khaled and heightening threats to their . In season 8, the protective measures prove tragically vital when Michelle is kidnapped and killed by terrorist Tahir Khaled, who confines her in a portable freezer leading to her death by poisoning. This leaves Sam to raise and alone while continuing to keep their lives compartmentalized from his professional world. 's early years highlight themes of vulnerability and resilience, with her limited appearances focusing on tender interactions that contrast the violence of Sam's cases, such as celebrations that reinforce the bonds shielding her . The character recurs sparingly to emphasize this safeguarding dynamic, avoiding deeper involvement in plots until her teenage portrayal by Kayla Smith in season 12.

Joelle Taylor

Joelle Taylor is a recurring character in the American television series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress . Introduced in season 5 as a teacher and friend of NCIS Special Agent Kensi Blye, Taylor serves as an undercover specialist for the (CIA), using her civilian cover to maintain a low profile while conducting operations. Her role highlights the tensions between personal relationships and covert work within the intelligence community. Taylor's backstory as an experienced undercover operative is gradually uncovered throughout her appearances, beginning with her debut in the season 5 episode "War Cries," where she aids the Office of Special Projects (OSP) team informally. She reappears in season 6's "," becoming entangled in a case as a , which forces G. Callen to disclose his true profession, straining their budding connection. By season 6's "Blast from the Past" and into season 7's "Active Measures" and "Ascension," Taylor and Callen develop a genuine romantic relationship, marked by shared vulnerabilities and domestic moments, such as celebrating holidays together. However, her secretive nature—rooted in her CIA training—creates underlying distrust, as she compartmentalizes her professional life to protect her cover. The pivotal revelation of Taylor's true identity occurs during season 8's mole hunt arc, culminating in the episode "." Suspected by the OSP team of being the internal traitor leaking information, Taylor is exposed as a CIA officer embedded to monitor the team and identify the real mole. This disclosure shatters her relationship with Callen, who feels deeply betrayed by her deception, especially after their intimate history; the team views her actions as a professional and personal violation, leading to her and . Despite the compromise of her cover, Taylor defends her role as necessary for , emphasizing the isolation of undercover work. Following the exposure, Taylor disappears to evade threats from the compromised operation, going as part of standard CIA protocol for agents whose identities are revealed. She resurfaces in season 9's "Fool Me Twice" after escaping a orchestrated by arms dealers targeting her former colleagues, seeking Callen's help despite lingering resentment. This event underscores her resilience but reinforces the irreparable damage to her ties with the OSP. Taylor's personality is depicted as charming and approachable in her teacher guise—warm, empathetic, and quick to form bonds—yet inherently secretive, prioritizing mission integrity over transparency, which ultimately isolates her. Her arc with Callen, a brief but intense romance, serves as a cautionary exploration of trust in high-stakes espionage.

Rosa Reyes

Rosa Reyes is a recurring character on the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress Natalia del Riego. She appears as a guest star across 10 episodes in seasons 13 and 14, serving as a foster daughter to NCIS agents Kensi Blye and Marty Deeks. Introduced in season 13, episode 8 ("A Land of Wolves"), Rosa is depicted as a teenage Guatemalan migrant fleeing violence and threats associated with cartel activity in Central America. While attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border with a group of other migrants, she encounters Kensi Blye, who is providing covert assistance to the group. The migrants face an ambush by a paramilitary militia targeting undocumented immigrants, resulting in Kensi's kidnapping; Rosa, showing early signs of her resilient nature, aids in leaving clues for the NCIS team before escaping capture herself. The team successfully rescues Kensi and the remaining migrants, including Rosa, highlighting the NCIS Office of Special Projects' role in protecting vulnerable individuals from exploitation and danger. Throughout her arc, Rosa grapples with deportation fears amid her asylum application process, relying on the team's advocacy to navigate immigration challenges and secure temporary protected status. By the season 13 finale ("Come Together"), Kensi and Deeks formalize their decision to foster her, offering stability and support on her path toward legal permanent residency and eventual citizenship. This fosters a deep, familial bond with Kensi, evolving from rescuer to mentor and parental figure. In later episodes, such as season 14's "New Beginnings" and "The Other Shoe," Rosa integrates into their household, participating in family dynamics while pursuing education and adjustment to life in Los Angeles. Rosa's personality is characterized by resilience forged from her harrowing journey and profound gratitude toward those who aid her, contrasting her initial vulnerability with growing confidence in her new environment. Her storyline underscores themes of struggles, community support, and second chances, culminating in where she learns of Kensi's , embracing an expanded role with optimism.

Alexandra Reynolds

Alexandra Reynolds is a recurring character in the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress India de Beaufort across four episodes from seasons 8 to 10. She serves as the paternal half-sister of NCIS Special Agent G. Callen, sharing the same father, former KGB operative and defector Nikita Aleksandr Reznikov, which establishes a key family connection that enriches Callen's backstory involving his fragmented childhood and international intrigue. Introduced in the season 8 episode "," Alexandra's existence comes to light during an NCIS investigation into a radiation poisoning incident targeting her mother, Pulonin (alias Mary Reynolds), a coach. In this episode, she is briefly kidnapped by Russian FSB agents attempting to coerce Reznikov, but the NCIS team intervenes to secure her release, marking her initial alliance with the agency through familial ties rather than professional ones. Her backstory reveals a strained relationship with her mother, whom she had only recently begun reconciling with, underscoring her resilient yet guarded nature amid inherited dangers from her father's history. Alexandra reappears in the season 8 episode "Old Tricks," where Callen and Reznikov visit her home amid a separate case at a facility, allowing for deeper exploration of their nascent bond and her adjustment to sudden family revelations. She demonstrates a sharp, driven personality, navigating personal threats with composure while prioritizing her young son, Jake Reynolds, Callen's nephew from her prior marriage to Pacey Smith. In season 9's "Warrior of Peace," is involved peripherally as Reznikov faces apprehension by the U.S. in a hostage exchange with , highlighting the persistent risks to her and her role as a stabilizing civilian figure caught in geopolitical tensions. Her final appearance occurs in season 10's "Searching," during an operation to locate a threatened former U.S. border patrol officer, where she shares a brief reunion with Callen and Jake, emphasizing themes of and fleeting unity. Throughout her arc, Alexandra embodies an ambitious and independent civilian—implied through her management of family life without a specified career—who aids the NCIS team indirectly via her connection to Callen, though no formal professional collaboration, such as legal trials, is depicted. Her character adds emotional depth to the series' exploration of legacy and loyalty, portrayed with a focused intensity that reflects her determination to shield her son from her father's shadowy past.

Jake Reynolds

Jake Reynolds is a recurring character on the CBS procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by child actor Makai Dudeck. Introduced as the young son of Alexandra Reynolds and her ex-husband Pacey Smith, he serves as the nephew of NCIS Special Agent G. Callen, adding a personal family dimension to Callen's otherwise enigmatic backstory. Jake first appears on-screen in season 8 and recurs briefly in subsequent seasons, primarily highlighting family bonds and protective instincts amid threats tied to Callen's career. Born circa 2011 in , , Jake's backstory centers on his birth during Alexandra's relationship with Pacey Smith, a uninvolved in . His existence comes to light for Callen through his estranged father, Nikita Reznikov, after a attempt on Alexandra's mother draws the family into NCIS investigations. As a and later young child, Jake embodies innocence, often shown in quiet domestic scenes that contrast the high-stakes world of his uncle's profession, with limited reflecting his age and unawareness of surrounding dangers. Major events involving Jake underscore custody concerns and protection from external threats linked to the Reznikov-Callen lineage. In the season 8 episode "Old Tricks," Callen and Reznikov visit Alexandra's home, where they meet Jake; Reznikov, suspecting Pacey of drug dealing, kidnaps him to safeguard the family, raising temporary custody tensions resolved when Pacey's innocence is confirmed. Jake reappears in season 9's "Warrior of Peace," amid Reznikov's apprehension by authorities, emphasizing the family's vulnerability. His season 10 outing in "Searching" features a family interaction during an NCIS operation, further solidifying Callen's uncle role. By season 11, Jake becomes a recurring off-screen presence, notably in "The Circle," where Callen expresses concern over potential retaliation from captured adversaries like those from his past, prompting NCIS colleague Marty Deeks to monitor Jake at school for safety. These incidents highlight ongoing protective measures without altering formal custody arrangements.

International and Ally Contacts

Arkady Kolcheck

Arkady Kolcheck is a recurring character on the CBS procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by Lithuanian-American actor Vyto Ruginis. Introduced in the first season, he appears in 29 episodes spanning from 2009 to 2023, evolving from a mysterious Russian contact into a key ally for the NCIS Office of Special Projects team. A former KGB operative, Kolcheck defected to the United States and now operates as a private security consultant in Los Angeles. His backstory includes a close professional history with NCIS Special Agent G. Callen, stemming from their joint work on Operation Cossack, a covert mission in Russia where Kolcheck served as a liaison. During this operation, he was suspected of betraying the team by leaking information that led to the deaths of Callen's fellow DEA agents, highlighting his double-agent past and initial unreliability. Despite these suspicions, Kolcheck proves to be a valuable, if opportunistic, informant, leveraging his Russian connections to assist the NCIS team in various international threats. He is also the father of Anna Kolcheck, whose personal ties occasionally draw him deeper into agency affairs. Kolcheck's arc features several instances of apparent duplicity, reflecting his scheming personality and history of playing multiple sides, often for personal gain or survival. In season 5's "Reznikov, N.," he aids Callen in dismantling the Comescu crime family, a Romanian group with a vendetta against Callen due to his heritage, providing crucial intelligence that leads to the capture of key members. Later, in season 6's "Kolcheck, A.," his secret dealings with Russian operatives surface when a tanker ship tied to him goes missing, resulting in the kidnapping of his daughter and forcing him to seek NCIS help to resolve the crisis. These events underscore his recurring role as a reluctant but effective collaborator, blending loyalty with self-preservation. Ruginis portrays Kolcheck with a distinctive Russian accent and charismatic, roguish charm, emphasizing his cunning and affable demeanor amid tense espionage scenarios. By the series' 14th and final season, Kolcheck attempts retirement from his shadowy world, but episode "Blood Bank" pulls him back when a violent shootout on a yacht registered in his name implicates him in the theft of a rare artifact, revealing ongoing entanglements with old adversaries. This storyline culminates his journey from active operative to a semi-retired figure still drawn into conflict.

Anna Kolcheck

Anna Kolcheck is a recurring character in the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress Bar Paly. She serves as a freelance NCIS special agent and is the estranged daughter of Arkady Kolcheck, a former KGB operative turned informant for the NCIS team. Introduced in season 6, Kolcheck appears in 34 episodes across seasons 6 through 14, evolving from a peripheral figure tied to her father's shadowy world into a key operative and romantic partner to team leader G. Callen. Born Anastasia Maria Kolcheck in , , she holds dual Russian-American citizenship and was raised primarily in , after her family relocated. Her early life was marked by rebellion; as a teenager, she got into trouble and was sent to a juvenile detention center, an experience that shaped her path toward . Inheriting her father's legacy of , Kolcheck trained in covert operations, working briefly for the ATF and CIA before joining the as a homicide detective. She later transitioned to the private sector, specializing in undercover assignments, often leveraging her bilingual skills and familiarity with international intrigue—traits directly influenced by growing up in the shadow of Arkady's secretive career, which occasionally drew her into high-stakes family entanglements. Kolcheck's major contributions to the NCIS team involve daring undercover operations, such as infiltrating a Russian consul general's gala in season 7 to access sensitive data and posing as an in a during season 9 to dismantle a ring, which led to her temporary imprisonment and dramatic escape with a cellmate later revealed as a Russian spy. These missions highlight her resourcefulness and willingness to blur ethical lines, echoing her father's opportunistic style. Her romantic arc with G. Callen begins in season 7 amid a joint operation to rescue from Russian custody, developing into a committed relationship marked by mutual trust forged in danger. The pair faces challenges, including Arkady's interference delaying Callen's proposal in season 12, but they become engaged in the season 13 finale. Their story culminates in an impromptu wedding during the season 14 , symbolizing Callen's long-sought personal stability after years of professional intensity. Depicted as tough and resilient, Kolcheck navigates the male-dominated NCIS environment with sharp instincts and physical prowess, often taking point in volatile situations. Her flirtatious demeanor, particularly in early interactions with Callen, adds a layer of charm that softens her otherwise no-nonsense approach, making her a dynamic foil to the team's more reserved members. This blend of inherited cunning and personal vulnerability underscores her growth from a reluctant heir to her family's legacy into a fully integrated NCIS asset.

Talia Del Campo

Talia Del Campo is a recurring character in the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by Swedish actress Mercedes Mason. She operates as a special agent for the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), specializing in investigations related to drug cartels and international narcotics trafficking. Introduced in season 5, Del Campo frequently forms temporary partnerships with the NCIS Office of Special Operations team in Los Angeles, providing expertise on cross-border operations and undercover tactics during joint missions. Del Campo's backstory establishes her as a seasoned operative with a focus on high-risk drug enforcement, often drawing from real-world DEA methodologies in handling threats. In her debut episode "Fish Out of Water" (season 5, episode 16), she joins the team to pursue a drug smuggling ring, demonstrating her proficiency in multi-agency coordination. Subsequent appearances, such as the two-part "Deep Trouble" storyline spanning seasons 5 and 6, involve her in a submarine-based operation against arms and drug dealers, where she reunites with the NCIS team and exhibits strong field skills. Major events highlight her collaborative role and interpersonal dynamics; in season 7's "" (episode 2), Del Campo turns to the NCIS team after her partner's murder, leading to a revenge-driven mission that tests her resilience and trust in allies. She returns in "The Long Goodbye" (season 7, episode 8) for a personal vendetta case tied to her DEA work, and makes a final appearance in season 13's "Live Free or Die Standing" (episode 19), aiding in the search for a missing whistleblower. These arcs underscore her departure from ongoing storylines after fulfilling key operational objectives. Known for her seductive yet professional personality, Del Campo employs charm and wit to build rapport, often creating flirtatious tension with NCIS agent Marty Deeks that sparks jealousy from Kensi Blye. This dynamic adds levity to her otherwise intense collaborations, while her cultural insights into diverse trafficking networks—stemming from DEA's international scope—enrich the team's approach to global cases.

Jennifer Kim

Jennifer Kim is a recurring character in the CBS procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress Malese Jow. Introduced in season 7, she serves as a North Korean operative whose covert activities bring her into conflict with the Office of Special Projects (OSP) team in Los Angeles. As a suspected double agent, Kim's role involves espionage that initially positions her as an adversary to the NCIS unit, prompting intense scrutiny from agents like G. Callen and Sam Hanna. Of Korean-American descent, Kim's backstory reveals a life shaped by geopolitical tensions and personal secrecy; she operates under aliases, such as a personal trainer, to maintain her cover while executing assignments for North Korean intelligence. Her enigmatic personality emerges through subtle hints of internal conflict, as she navigates loyalties divided between her handlers and emerging ties to the U.S. Her portrayal highlights a woman burdened by her past, often displaying guarded demeanor and calculated ambiguity in interactions with the OSP team. Major events in Kim's arc center on her capture during a mission to eliminate a North Korean defector in the episode "Cancel Christmas," leading to accusations of betrayal against U.S. interests. Transported back to under OSP custody in "Granger, O.," she confesses her familial link to Owen Granger, marking the start of her redemption efforts through cooperation on spy-related threats. This undercover betrayal unravels as she provides critical intelligence, though lingering suspicions from the team underscore her precarious position. Later appearances, such as in "Liabilities," further her integration as an ally, where she aids in dismantling North Korean networks while grappling with her conflicted identity. The OSP team harbors early suspicions toward Kim, viewing her operative history as a potential ongoing despite her overtures of assistance. Her character arc emphasizes themes of redemption, as she transitions from a figure of distrust to a reluctant collaborator in international operations.

Moe Dusa

Mowahd "Moe" Dusa is a Sudanese-American portrayed by Ronald Auguste, appearing as a from season 1 to season 2 of NCIS: Los Angeles. As a young man brought to the by NCIS Special Agent Sam Hanna, Moe functions as a cultural liaison, leveraging his background to bridge gaps between and the Sudanese immigrant community in . His experiences provide the NCIS of Special Projects team with insights into cultural dynamics and potential risks among refugees, emphasizing his value as an on . Moe's backstory centers on his escape from war-torn Sudan, where his father was killed during a conflict; Hanna, then a Navy SEAL, rescued the orphaned boy and facilitated his relocation to America to support his integration and education. This act established a brotherly bond, with Moe initially thriving in his new life but later becoming vulnerable to recruitment by a terrorist cell seeking to exploit disenfranchised immigrants. Despite this misstep, Moe's commitment to community welfare shines through his efforts to protect fellow Sudanese refugees from exploitation and violence, often sharing knowledge of local networks to prevent further radicalization. In major events, Moe delivers pivotal intelligence during the kidnapping of NCIS agent Dominic Vail, revealing the location of the captors after being coerced into the group himself, which aids the team's rescue operation. Later, while imprisoned for his unwitting involvement, he provides additional intel to Hanna on the terrorist leader responsible for Vail's death, cooperating from within the facility despite personal danger. However, Moe's cover is blown, and he is tortured and executed by the terrorists in prison, devastating Hanna, who vows revenge while the team protects Moe's family from reprisals by the extremists, relocating them and ensuring their safety amid ongoing threats. Moe exhibits a wise and community-focused personality, marked by loyalty to his adoptive family and a desire to foster stability for other refugees, even as he grapples with the cultural clashes of his dual identity. His actions underscore a dedication to redemption and collective well-being, turning personal adversity into contributions against .

Nicole Dechamps

Nicole Dechamps is a recurring character on the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by English actress . She debuts in season 8, episode 16, "Old Tricks," initially introduced as a with the assisting the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP) team in . Dechamps is later revealed to be an NCIS on loan from another field office, with a backstory rooted in her prior Secret Service tenure where she first crossed paths with NCIS Senior Field Agent Sam Hanna. This experience positions her as a skilled operative specializing in undercover assignments and financial crimes, such as counterfeiting and scams. Over the course of eight episodes spanning seasons 8 through 12, she temporarily joins the OSP team for high-stakes cases, providing tactical support and field expertise. In her debut, Dechamps aids in investigating a at a that uncovers a duo of con artists preying on elderly residents, showcasing her ability to blend into sensitive environments. Subsequent appearances highlight operational challenges, including a season 9 episode where she emerges from deep cover to thwart high-quality smuggling from , leading to tense pursuits and alliances with international contacts. In season 10, episode 2, "Punch Drunk," she engages in close-quarters combat during a mission gone awry, demonstrating her physical prowess amid complications from an assassin's ambush. Later, in season 12's "," she partners with the team to dismantle a money-laundering ring, navigating betrayals and high-speed chases that test her adaptability. Dechamps frequently teams up with Hanna, forming a dynamic partnership built on professional synergy and flirtatious banter that hints at underlying romantic interest, though it remains unfulfilled amid ongoing operations. Her confident demeanor and alluring presence add levity to intense scenarios, as she confidently spars verbally with team members while executing precise fieldwork.

Rose Schwartz

Rose Schwartz is a recurring character in the American television series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress Kathleen Rose Perkins. She works as a medical examiner for the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office and provides forensic support to the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP) during various investigations involving naval personnel. Schwartz makes her debut in season 1, episode 2, "The Only Easy Day," where she conducts an autopsy on a Navy SEAL's body to aid the team's probe into a high-stakes operation. Her expertise proves valuable in cases requiring detailed pathological analysis, such as the season 2 episode "Overwatch," in which she alerts the OSP team to the theft of a body bearing a naval signature from the morgue. She reappears sporadically through season 4, including in "Paper Soldiers," assisting with inquiries into a Marine lieutenant's suspicious death in combat. A notable aspect of Schwartz's character is her prior romantic involvement with Nate Getz, the OSP's operational psychologist, portrayed by ; their past relationship adds a layer of personal tension during joint casework, as seen when Getz interviews her in "." This connection underscores her role as a reliable ally to the team, blending professional collaboration with subtle interpersonal dynamics.

Other Recurring Figures

Vostanik Sabatino

Vostanik Sabatino is a recurring character on the CBS procedural drama series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actor Erik Palladino. Introduced as a CIA officer specializing in black ops and covert operations, Sabatino operates with ambiguous loyalties, often blurring the lines between ally and adversary to the NCIS Office of Special Projects (OSP) team. His background includes paramilitary work through the CIA's Special Activities Division, reflecting a survivalist mindset honed in high-risk environments like Afghanistan. Sabatino first appears undercover as Roger McAdams in season 4, episode "The Watchers," conducting surveillance for the CIA at a research facility. By season 5, his true identity is revealed during joint operations with the OSP team in Afghanistan, where he collaborates with Special Agent Kensi Blye on a mission targeting Taliban forces; however, his CIA partner betrays the team by shooting Blye, leading to her capture and highlighting Sabatino's unreliable alliances. This event underscores his mercenary-like pragmatism, prioritizing mission objectives over team safety. In later arcs, such as the season 8 mole investigation, Sabatino is implicated in a rogue CIA faction plotting against the OSP, planting malware via shared communications with Blye and evading capture after interrogation, further eroding trust within the team. Despite these betrayals, he provides utility in arms-related threats, including operations disrupting illicit weapons flows tied to international criminals. By season 10, Sabatino transitions to the role of Special Deputy U.S. Marshal, occasionally aiding the OSP in domestic pursuits while maintaining his untrustworthy, self-preserving nature—evident in his willingness to manipulate situations for personal gain or operational success. The OSP team consistently views him with suspicion due to his history of double-dealing, yet his expertise in shadowy intelligence networks proves invaluable in crises. Palladino's portrayal spans 21 episodes across seasons 4–5 and 7–14, emphasizing Sabatino's enigmatic presence as a foil to the team's more principled agents.

Kirkin

Anatoli Kirkin is a recurring character in the CBS procedural drama NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by Russian-American actor Ravil Isyanov. Introduced as a low-level Russian mobster affiliated with a criminal syndicate, Kirkin evolves into a reluctant ally for the NCIS team through a series of comedic misadventures and betrayals. His character provides levity in the series, blending inept criminality with unexpected loyalty, particularly toward NCIS agent Marty Deeks, whom he develops an odd, obsessive fondness for. Kirkin's backstory positions him as a bumbling operative in the Russian underworld, often out of his depth in high-stakes operations, which leads to his whiny complaints and survival-driven antics across multiple episodes. He first appears in season 4's "Wanted," where his syndicate ties draw NCIS attention, and recurs prominently in seasons 7 ("" and "Matryoshka"), 9 ("Warrior of Peace"), 10 ("Till Death Do Us Part"), and 12 (", , " and "The Noble Maidens"). In these storylines, Kirkin frequently attempts double-crosses against the team or his own associates for personal gain, only to comically fail and pivot to helping NCIS, such as providing intel on Russian threats in exchange for protection. His personality—marked by whining, clumsiness, and self-preservation—highlights the show's lighter moments amid and action. Key events underscore Kirkin's unlikely alliances, including his season 7 betrayal attempt in "Matryoshka," where he tries to sell out the team but ends up aiding their mission against a larger syndicate plot, and his season 10 return in "Till Death Do Us Part," involving a botched arms deal that forces cooperation with Deeks. The character's arc culminates in season 12's "The Noble Maidens," where Kirkin sacrifices himself by pushing Deeks out of gunfire during a rescue operation for agent Anna Kolcheck, dying from his wounds despite medical efforts; this poignant exit was influenced by Isyanov's real-life battle with cancer. Kirkin occasionally intersects with other Russian figures like Arkady Kolcheck through shared criminal networks.

Shyla Dahr

Shyla Dahr is a recurring character in the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by actress Kavi Ramachandran Ladnier. She appears as an NCIS Reserve Agent in seasons 13 and 14 of the show. Dahr serves as an analyst in the Office of Special Projects (OSP) and acts as the assistant to Operations Manager Admiral Hollace Kilbride, providing support in investigations and operations. She also partners with Special Agent Fatima Namazi on analytical tasks within the team. Her role involves handling administrative and intelligence duties, contributing to the team's efforts in high-stakes cases, such as aircraft incident probes and drone-related threats.

Raymond Hanna

Raymond Hanna is the estranged father of NCIS Special Agent Sam Hanna, portrayed by in a recurring capacity during seasons 13 and 14 of NCIS: Los Angeles. A retired in the United States Marine Corps, Raymond's military career often kept him distant from his family, contributing to a strained relationship with his son. His strict disciplinary approach, including sending a young Sam to , instilled a sense of toughness in his son but also fostered resentment, leading Sam to address him formally as " Hanna" rather than "Dad." Raymond's backstory reveals a life defined by service and rigor, where his demanding nature shaped Sam's path into the Navy SEALs and eventual NCIS career, though it came at the cost of emotional closeness. The character is introduced in season 13, episode 20 ("Work & Family"), marking the long-awaited on-screen reunion between father and son. At this point, is grappling with early-stage , prompting Sam to make significant life adjustments, including having his father move in with him to provide care. This development forces Sam to confront their past while navigating the challenges of Raymond's declining health, which manifests in confusion and wandering episodes. Throughout his appearances in episodes such as "MWD" (season 13, episode 16), "" (season 13, episode 22), and several in season 14 including "Game of Drones" and "New Beginnings," Raymond's tough exterior softens, revealing a regretful side as he and Sam work toward reconciliation. Their interactions highlight moments of guidance, with offering paternal advice amid his illness, ultimately helping Sam reflect on priorities. By , their bond has strengthened, with hopes expressed for 's participation in a promising medical trial for his condition. 's personality blends military hardness with emerging warmth, often teasing Sam to lighten tense situations, underscoring themes of forgiveness and familial duty.

Katya Marinova

Katya Marinova, also known as Kate or Katie Miller, is a recurring character and antagonist in the CBS series NCIS: Los Angeles, portrayed by Eve Harlow during season 10 and Sasha Clements during season 13. She operates as a skilled Russian spy, employing manipulative strategies rooted in psychological warfare and personal leverage against NCIS Special Agent G. Callen. Her intense and cunning personality drives her actions, often blending seduction with deception to achieve her goals. Katya's backstory is intertwined with Callen's childhood, as both were orphans trained under the harsh regime of CIA handler Pembrook in a covert program designed to create future operatives. This shared history provides her with intimate knowledge of Callen's vulnerabilities, which she exploits to destabilize him emotionally. In season 10's episodes "The One That Got Away" and "No More Secrets," escapes federal prison alongside Anna Kolcheck, using the breakout to pursue a hidden agenda in tied to her spy network. She attempts to manipulate Callen by staging a video depicting her executing Anna, aiming to inflict profound psychological torment based on their past connections. Her exposure as a Russian operative comes during the NCIS team's unsanctioned pursuit, highlighting her role in broader while focusing on personal vendettas. Returning in season 13, deploys seductive operations to ensnare Callen, luring him into a trap in the episode "" by exploiting their mutual history and her alluring persona. This scheme endangers the team, forcing a frantic search to rescue him from her clutches. Her manipulative intensity is further evident in her prior romantic entanglement with Angela Pak, which resurfaces during investigations into her activities.

References

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