
When the dust settles and agents scramble in the field, Supervisory Special Agent Jubal Valentine (Jeremy Sisto) is the man pulling the strings from behind the scenes — cold, calculating, and unyieldingly strategic.
Jubal’s calm exterior belies the pressure cooker inside. Every decision he makes sends ripples through the operation, where one misstep could mean death or disaster. The tension in the command center is palpable; lives depend on his flawless coordination.
But Jubal is no emotionless machine. His steely gaze hides years of personal loss and battles with guilt that threaten to surface at the worst possible moments. The cracks appear in quiet, intense moments — a clenched fist, a lingering stare — revealing the psychological weight of leadership in a high-stakes world.
Jeremy Sisto delivers a powerhouse performance, showing Jubal’s razor-sharp mind as well as his inner torment. His mentorship of younger agents like Maggie Bell is tough but grounded in a fierce loyalty that drives him to protect his team at all costs.
In episodes where the FBI faces brutal ambushes and impossible choices, Jubal’s nerve is the backbone of the unit. But even he is pushed to his limits when betrayal and internal conflicts arise, forcing him to question whom he can trust.
FBI peels back the layers on Jubal Valentine to reveal a man fighting battles on multiple fronts — with enemies outside and demons within.