A murdered shoe-shine man turns out to be a veteran who was trying to return the Bronze Star he received during the Vietnam War.A murdered shoe-shine man turns out to be a veteran who was trying to return the Bronze Star he received during the Vietnam War.A murdered shoe-shine man turns out to be a veteran who was trying to return the Bronze Star he received during the Vietnam War.
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- Interim DA Nora Lewin
- (credit only)
- Trial Judge
- (as Daniel Desmond)
- Translator
- (as Leon Quangle)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode appears to be based on two separate incidents:
- The Thanh Phong raid controversy surrounding Senator Bob Kerrey.
- The My Lai massacre, which occurred during the Vietnam War on March 16, 1968.
- GoofsThe funeral for the victim, Joe Eastman, was peculiar. As a veteran, he is eligible for a full funeral service paid for and conducted by members of the US Army. The playing of "Taps" on a tape recorder by a uniformed officer is not the proper portrayal of a funeral for a war veteran.
- Quotes
A.D.A. Serena Southerlyn: Gardner's accepted our offer of man two. She intends to ask the judge for the minimum.
Jack McCoy: A mayor and an oil executive. I'm sure she'll make a strong case. I think there were mitigating factors.
A.D.A. Serena Southerlyn: Based on what they did or who they are?
Jack McCoy: They were kids. Kids armed to the teeth, put in a place where most of the time they couldn't tell who was for them and who was against them. We need to be careful how we judge.
An episode related to Vietnam post-war syndrome, maybe the first one in Law & Order. A witness reports at trial (with the help of a translator) what happened to her family and village thirty years after the event. I've already seen too much about this in Hollywood movies.
- Mrpalli77
- Nov 10, 2017