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Park sang joon Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

We're having crime scene issues

Eliot is the police chief
Walt is the fire chief
Eliot: Two dead bodies. Look, they got totally burned. That's murder.
Walt: Only if it's arson. And it's not arson until I say it's arson.
Elliot: It looks like an arson. If it is, we need to preserve the crime scene.
Walt: That's what I'm investigating. Until I decide you have no jurisdiction here.
Eliot: Well, we're having crime scene issues.

I'd like to know what "have crime scene issues" means.
Thank you in advance for your help.
  

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3 Answers
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"crime scene issues" = problems related to the crime scene
"crime scene" = place where the crime happened

(Not relevant to your question, but a comma is needed after "decide".)
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Thank you, GPY, for your helpful answer and proofreading.Emotion: smile
Korean translation says "they have different opinion on the crime scen
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park sang joonSo, I was wondering if by any chance, "have issues" has a meaning of "have different opinion."
"issues" can refer to any kind of problems or difficulties, or matters arising. It's not possible to tell exactly what the speaker is referring to just from what you posted. The "issues" could include a difference of opinion, or they may be about someth

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