All deaths in The Night Agent Season 3 explained 

Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)
Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)

The third season of The Night Agent has a few devastating final moments for some important characters, and it raises the stakes for the narrative. With themes of conspiracy, betrayal, and retaliation all on alert, it weaves together terrorists, financiers, government officials, and assassins into one volatile web.

All the deaths we see carry narrative weight, pushing our protagonist Peter Sutherland closer to the truth while exposing just how deep the rot runs. Here are all the deaths in The Night Agent Season 3 explained, in case you're still reeling from how things turned out on the show.


All deaths in The Night Agent Season 3 explained

Catherine Weaver

Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)
Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)

One of the early deaths in the third season of The Night Agent that hit hard was the death of Catherine Weaver, who, despite being a skeptical superior once, had grown into a trusted ally for Peter. Her death comes during an operation targeting Jacob Monroe, when she approaches a self-driving car believed to contain Monroe. Instead, it is a decoy rigged with explosives, and the blast kills her instantly.


Raul Zapata

International Short Film Festival Press Conference - Source: Getty
International Short Film Festival Press Conference - Source: Getty

Raul Zapata, leader of the LFS terrorist organization who orchestrates the catastrophic attack on Flight Pima 12, also dies. It comes at the hands of President Hagan, who authorizes a targeted airstrike, and Zapata and his inner circle die.

However, the strike also serves political convenience, allowing leadership to appear decisive while concealing deeper financial complicity.


Mike Fonseca

53rd International Emmy Awards - Source: Getty
53rd International Emmy Awards - Source: Getty

Journalist Mike Fonseca becomes a casualty of curiosity, and it's one of the more devastating deaths on the show. Working alongside Isabel De Leon, he uncovers suspicious banking activity that puts him at risk. He dies at the hands of The Father, an assassin who is hired to neutralize threats, and he gives Mike a poison that makes it seem like his body is going through a medical emergency.

It's a death that sends a signal to anyone pursuing the truth to be aware of the dangers.


Senator Lansing

SAG-AFTRA Foundation Conversations With "The Haunting Of Hill House" - Source: Getty
SAG-AFTRA Foundation Conversations With "The Haunting Of Hill House" - Source: Getty

Mike isn't the only person the Father gets to in The Night Agent Season 3. Senator Lansing also gets involved with the LFS, and Isabel questions him about super PAC funding, but before he can explain himself, he is killed by the Father with a precise gunshot.

His death prevents testimony that could have linked powerful figures to terrorism financing. Lansing's fate underscores how disposable political players become when they threaten larger networks. Whether complicit or unaware, he becomes a liability. His assassination escalates the conspiracy and confirms that proximity to truth is often a death sentence.


Sofia De Leon

Sofia De Leon's story takes place off-screen in The Night Agent, but it carries enormous emotional weight. She was involved with Jacob Monroe while he operated within Raul Zapata's orbit, but when suspicions of betrayal arise, she is framed and sent to prison.

She then dies giving birth to Isabel. It's another devastating death on the show, particularly that of an innocent woman. Although we see little of her on screen, her demise looms in the background of the premise and is a representation of the innocent lives lost in this brutal game.


Brian Mott

Brian Mott's death comes at the hands of Chelsea Arrington after First Lady Jenny Hagan claims he threatened her with a gun, even though no weapon is found. Investigations reveal Mott had been helping Jenny leak confidential presidential briefings to Jacob Monroe. When tensions rise between them, events spiral. His death exposes fractures within the administration and casts suspicion on the First Lady. What seemed like swift protection becomes layered with deception.


Jacob Monroe

Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)
Still from The Night Agent (Image via Netflix)

Jacob Monroe operates all season in The Night Agent as a broker of secrets, balancing redemption with survival. Though responsible for years of corruption, he attempts to shield his daughter Isabel from retaliation, but ultimately, he knows too much about President Hagan's financial misconduct. Rather than risking exposure, Hagan orders Monroe to be killed.

The assassination is carried out by Adam, who stages it as a suicide. Monroe's death signals desperation at the highest level of government. He believed he could negotiate immunity as he had before. Instead, he becomes another silenced witness, proving that proximity to power guarantees neither loyalty nor protection.


Vernon Tyvek

Vernon Tyvek, a former compliance officer connected to suspicious financial reports, understands the risks of disclosure. When approached for information, he remains guarded, aware that revealing too much could endanger his life, but his caution proves insufficient.

Another death that happens at the hands of the Father, he eliminates him before investigators can extract meaningful testimony. Tyvek's death reinforces the climate of fear surrounding financial institutions complicit in terrorism funding. Silence offers no shield, and partial knowledge is dangerous. By removing minor players like Tyvek, the conspiracy ensures that accountability remains distant and fragmented.


The Passengers on Flight Pima 12

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The attack on Flight Pima 12 marks The Night Agent's second season's inciting catastrophe. Dozens of civilians die when the LFS carries out the strike, funded indirectly through manipulated banking channels. This mass casualty event forces federal agencies into action and frames the narrative stakes.

The tragedy transforms abstract corruption into tangible human loss. Every subsequent investigation, betrayal, and assassination traces back to this single moment. Without Flight Pima 12, the network of deceit might have remained hidden.


Freya Myers

Freya Myers, CEO of Walcott Capital Bank, orchestrates financial schemes that empower terrorists while protecting elite clients. As pressure intensifies, she turns on President Hagan, exposing corruption in exchange for leniency. Her cooperation appears to secure her safety. However, she threatens The Father's loved ones, sealing her fate.

In the final scene, he approaches her under a false identity and poisons her drink. The method mirrors Mike Fonseca's death, which means we have come full circle.


All three seasons of The Night Agent are streaming on Netflix.

Edited by Ritika Pal