Detective Briscoe's integrity is brought into question more than once as he pursues a Hispanic robbery/murder suspect.Detective Briscoe's integrity is brought into question more than once as he pursues a Hispanic robbery/murder suspect.Detective Briscoe's integrity is brought into question more than once as he pursues a Hispanic robbery/murder suspect.
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Luna Lauren Velez
- Ms. Torres
- (as Lauren Vélez)
Guillermo Diaz
- Bobby Sabo
- (as Guillermo Díaz)
Maximiliano Hernández
- Victor Sabo
- (as Maximiliano Hernandez)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThis episode appears to be based on the Jacqueline Frezza case. On April 15, 1999, at about 9:10 in the morning, then 18-year-old Shaun Harris rode his bicycle south on Broadway and confronted Jacqueline Frezza, demanding her money. When she refused she was shot and killed, Harris was later arrested and convicted of her murder.
- GoofsThe bicycle Det. Green rolls out of the kitchen is made of aluminum, not titanium. Aluminum bicycles many times are polished and would be shiny. Titanium bicycles are a darker gray color.
- Quotes
Det. Lennie Briscoe: [to Ed Green] Uh, can I have that transcript I threw at you?
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 52nd Annual Primetime Emmy Awards (2000)
Featured review
She just got in the way
The normally unflappable Lennie Briscoe gets good and rattled in this episode where he and his partner arrest Guillermo Diaz for a pair of murders. The first
is another drug dealer and the second some poor woman who just got in his
path after he was fleeing the first.
Jerry Orbach is usually pretty good under pressure, but this one gets to him. Diaz whispers a confession to him that only he hears. Even Jesse Martin is out of earshot. The brazeness just makes Orbach lose his cool.
Diaz is great in a chilling portrayal of evil. Also good is Lauren Velez as Diaz's attorney.
This episode belongs to Jerry Orbach for a different kind of Lennie Briscoe.
Jerry Orbach is usually pretty good under pressure, but this one gets to him. Diaz whispers a confession to him that only he hears. Even Jesse Martin is out of earshot. The brazeness just makes Orbach lose his cool.
Diaz is great in a chilling portrayal of evil. Also good is Lauren Velez as Diaz's attorney.
This episode belongs to Jerry Orbach for a different kind of Lennie Briscoe.
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- bkoganbing
- Aug 11, 2019
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