G'd looked at what all the techs were working on. Garcia's plate was the least full of all of them. But, if Morgan wanted to baby her, G was fine relying on Eric and John as he could. "I'm pretty sure Eric would pass out if he were to be asked if he minded. But, as you pointed out, Eric has those other priorities and I'd rather have him available for the times I need someone to help us out on OSP when it's too much for John to handle on his own. We'll give Neal access and when caseload increases, we'll see about adding someone else."
Laughing, he shook his head. "Unlikely has a way of happening more often than people like to admit."
He snorted. "We actually wanted to find a way to work together and we both acknowledge why it's necessary. Some of these people have enough problems understanding it's this or some very unpleasant alternatives." Smirking, he shrugged. "Doesn't make seeing the angles as a lead any less useful. And you can keep your paperwork. The less paperwork we generate, the less reason for Vance to try taking me out of the field for real."
G just boggled as he listened to Morgan. Had the man not paid any attention in the training they'd given on undercover work? "Paperwork cannot be a substitute for living the cover. It can support it, but your cover's blown as soon as a reporter asks for the agent's name, or the agent signs something into evidence, or a witness remembers speaking to a different agent. While Kensi would be more than capable of remembering whose alias she was supposed to use on each case and which badges she should carry, I wouldn't bet on most of them being able to and that's what they'd have to do to make it match up. It's not about truth versus lies. It's telling nine truths to pass off one lie. If you dot the T and cross the I, people notice."
He couldn't help sighing. "And that only works when you have a single unit of experienced agents working together. We could do that with OSP, too. Hell, I've built my reputation at home on breaking every operating procedure there is out there. But, this isn't the BAU and this isn't OSP. A bunch of inexperienced agents, most of whom are still half-rebelling at being agents at best, need some direction out there." And G hated having to be the voice of procedure. The world was seriously fucked up. "Yeah, that's fine. We'll use this as a guinea pig case and figure out the answers we need as we go."