After Jack is forced to settle the prosecution of a shooter who committed mass murder in Central Park, he decides to prosecute the gun manufacturer.After Jack is forced to settle the prosecution of a shooter who committed mass murder in Central Park, he decides to prosecute the gun manufacturer.After Jack is forced to settle the prosecution of a shooter who committed mass murder in Central Park, he decides to prosecute the gun manufacturer.
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Thomas Bellin
- Joe Wells
- (as Tom Bellin)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFirst appearance of Jesse L. Martin as Detective Ed Green. His character would remain on the show through the middle of season 18.
- GoofsThe gunman confesses to the crime, but his confession is thrown out on the grounds that the suspect's mother invokes his right to attorney by informing Lt. Buren she had called a lawyer and they had no right to continue questioning him. The suspect is not a minor, and no one else can invoke any of his rights on his behalf. As he had been informed of his rights and chose to waive his right to an attorney and right to remain silent, his confession was perfectly admissible, and the police had every right to continue questioning him.
- Quotes
Detective Ed Green: Hey, Old Spice! What did the Lieutenant tell you about me?
Detective Lennie Briscoe: Nothing. Did she tell you I don't like nicknames?
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 52nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2000)
Featured review
Not NYC in 2015
I never watched original Law & Order episodes....only syndicated. Reason: I discovered Angie Harmon. WOW! I still only watch L&O when Harmon appears as Abbie Carmichael, usually on Sundance.
Tough case for McCoy, but the legal system suffers when a judge can overturn a jury's verdict. However, I agree with the judge. The profit margin is much higher for a gun manufacturer than for a super market. I see this as greed, but not as proof that the manufacturer intended for purchasers to convert the Rolfe to an automatic.
Something McCoy said was 'bleeped.' Was it the comment about 'crystal balls?' I watched this episode on TNT and not Sundance, the latter not cutting anything. TNT is 'Turner' and cuts anything slightly objectionable, visually or vocally.
When the killer was interrogated by Briscoe's partner, he had a bandage around his head. He is called as the final witness late in the episode. Didn't look like the same man interrogated. I came in a few minutes late and don't know what the 'murder 1' defendant had against college women.
My summary? Quite obvious. There was no DiBlasio in 1999.
Tough case for McCoy, but the legal system suffers when a judge can overturn a jury's verdict. However, I agree with the judge. The profit margin is much higher for a gun manufacturer than for a super market. I see this as greed, but not as proof that the manufacturer intended for purchasers to convert the Rolfe to an automatic.
Something McCoy said was 'bleeped.' Was it the comment about 'crystal balls?' I watched this episode on TNT and not Sundance, the latter not cutting anything. TNT is 'Turner' and cuts anything slightly objectionable, visually or vocally.
When the killer was interrogated by Briscoe's partner, he had a bandage around his head. He is called as the final witness late in the episode. Didn't look like the same man interrogated. I came in a few minutes late and don't know what the 'murder 1' defendant had against college women.
My summary? Quite obvious. There was no DiBlasio in 1999.
helpful•92
- gamay9
- Jun 6, 2015
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