Episodes
No. in series |
No. in season |
Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Production code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
89 | 1 | "Second Opinion" | Ed Sherin | Michael S. Chernuchin & Jeremy R. Littman | September 21, 1994 | 69408 |
A woman's death exposes an unorthodox method of treating cancer that Executive Assistant DA McCoy intends to prove is negligent homicide.
|
||||||
90 | 2 | "Coma" | Jace Alexander | Ed Zuckerman | September 28, 1994 | 69406 |
A comedy-club owner comes under suspicion for having shot his wife, now comatose with a bullet in her head, after it's discovered he was abusive and she was about to divorce him.
|
||||||
91 | 3 | "Blue Bamboo" | Don Scardino | Morgan Gendel, Hall Powell & René Balcer | October 5, 1994 | 69402 |
The killing of a Japanese nightclub owner who was visiting New York leads to the arrest of a singer who once worked for the deceased, and whose lawyer uses the "battered-woman syndrome" as a defense. While assisting on the case, Olivet remembers her own prior sexual assault.
|
||||||
92 | 4 | "Family Values" | Constantine Makris | William N. Fordes & René Balcer | October 12, 1994 | 69401 |
A missing victim, a suspicious ex-husband and a family hiding something all contribute to the ADAs' decision to risk their licenses on a hunch. After ruling out suicide, McCoy and Kincaid turn their focus on the missing woman's daughter – and take a giant leap to prove their far-fetched theory. Sarah Paulson (Leap of Faith) guest-stars.
|
||||||
93 | 5 | "White Rabbit" | Steve Robman | Ed Zuckerman & Morgan Gendel | October 19, 1994 | 69411 |
A burglary unlocks a decades-old case. A safety deposit box company unwittingly exposes a female political activist-fugitive who has been hiding for over 20 years. Detectives locate and arrest one of the four involved in the burglary, and ultimately catch the female fugitive who is accused of killing a policeman during a 1971 robbery . | ||||||
94 | 6 | "Competence" | Fred Gerber | Michael S. Chernuchin & Mark B. Perry | November 2, 1994 | 69409 |
When Lt. Van Buren is the victim of an attempted holdup by two teens, she fires her gun and kills one of them, and the detectives are faced with the fact that she shot an unarmed child in the back. | ||||||
95 | 7 | "Precious" | Constantine Makris | I. C. Rapoport & René Balcer | November 9, 1994 | 69410 |
When Briscoe and Logan suspect that a missing infant may have been murdered by her parents rather than kidnapped, they uncover a terrible family secret which hides a mentally ill serial killer. | ||||||
96 | 8 | "Virtue" | Martha Mitchell | Mark B. Perry & Jeremy R. Littman | November 23, 1994 | 69412 |
McCoy uses a charge of "larceny by extortion" against a councilman, whose former colleague claims he demanded sex in exchange for a law-firm partnership. | ||||||
97 | 9 | "Scoundrels" | Marc Laub | Ed Zuckerman & Charles C. Mann | November 30, 1994 | 69415 |
Among the suspects in a lawyer's murder are a swindler, who conned a woman out of her family fortune, and the woman's once-wealthy son.
|
||||||
98 | 10 | "House Counsel" | James Quinn | Michael S. Chernuchin & Barry M. Schkolnick | January 4, 1995 | 69413 |
The killing of a man who had served as a juror in a mob trial leads to a battle of wills between McCoy and his long-time friend, the suspect's attorney.
|
||||||
99 | 11 | "Guardian" | Christopher Misiano | Brad Markowitz, William N. Fordes & René Balcer | January 11, 1995 | 69404 |
After the body of a young female junkie is identified as the daughter of a wealthy family, Briscoe and Logan try to find out who left her to die in the yard of a day-care center. | ||||||
100 | 12 | "Progeny" | Don Scardino | Ed Zuckerman, Morgan Gendel & Mark B. Perry | January 25, 1995 | 69416 |
After the murder of an abortion clinic doctor, Briscoe and Logan are led to a suspect who belongs to a radical pro-life movement and their suspicion soon turns to the group's leader, who admits that he's glad the doctor died. McCoy faces the unpleasant task of charging the respected and charismatic former priest with murder, and the public debate over whether the secular community should interfere in spiritual matters.
|
||||||
101 | 13 | "Rage" | Arthur W. Forney | Michael S. Chernuchin | February 1, 1995 | 69414 |
A Wall Street broker accused of murdering his mentor uses the defense of "black rage" in court.
|
||||||
102 | 14 | "Performance" | Martha Mitchell | René Balcer, Jeremy R. Littman & Ed Zuckerman | February 8, 1995 | 69419 |
Briscoe and Logan set out to identify the apparent victim in a snuff film, but find her alive and really the victim of a points-for-sex club at her prestigious high school.
|
||||||
103 | 15 | "Seed" | Don Scardino | Michael S. Chernuchin & Janis Diamond | February 15, 1995 | 69420 |
A routine investigation into a woman's death leads Briscoe and Logan to a fertility doctor guilty of unethical practices, but who apparently cannot be touched because of confidentiality rules, and patient reluctance to talk. The name of the doctor, "Delbert," was changed after filming and crudely dubbed in. | ||||||
104 | 16 | "Wannabe" | Lewis H. Gould | I. C. Rapoport & René Balcer | March 15, 1995 | 69417 |
The shooting of a board member of an exclusive private school leads to a blue-collar family and a classist system.
|
||||||
105 | 17 | "Act of God" | Constantine Makris | Ed Zuckerman & Walter Dallenbach | March 22, 1995 | 69422 |
A bomb at a construction site kills a 12-year-old boy, and the suspects include the bankrupt contractor and a jealous husband.
|
||||||
106 | 18 | "Privileged" | Vincent Misiano | Jeremy R. Littman & Suzanne O'Malley | April 5, 1995 | 69418 |
The investigation into a double murder leads to a young alcoholic whose family once lived in the victims' house and who admitted to his AA group that he had nightmares about the killings.
|
||||||
107 | 19 | "Cruel and Unusual" | Matthew Penn | René Balcer & Michael S. Chernuchin | April 19, 1995 | 69423 |
The death of an autistic youth (Steven Burns) in custody reveals a multitude of unusual and possibly illegal therapies being used, but also parents reluctant to pursue a prosecution. | ||||||
108 | 20 | "Bad Faith" | Dann Florek | René Balcer | April 26, 1995 | 69426 |
Logan relives unhappy childhood memories when a friend is found dead; a presumed suicide, until the investigation reveals recent contact with a former priest who has a history of pedophilia.
|
||||||
109 | 21 | "Purple Heart" | Arthur W. Forney | Morgan Gendel & William N. Fordes | May 3, 1995 | 69421 |
The investigation into a taxi driver's murder involves a loan shark, a forged check, a missing plumber and the victim's wife.
|
||||||
110 | 22 | "Switch" | Christopher Misiano | Jeremy R. Littman & Sibyl Gardner | May 17, 1995 | 69425 |
Suspects in a psychiatrist's murder include the victim's ex-husband, a patient suffering from multiple-personality disorder and her obstructive father. | ||||||
111 | 23 | "Pride" | Ed Sherin | Ed Zuckerman & Gene Ritchings | May 24, 1995 | 69427 |
A gay city councilman is murdered and the trail leads to a bigoted rival politician and a male prostitute.
|
Read more about this topic: Scoundrels (Law & Order)
Famous quotes containing the word episodes:
“Twenty or thirty years ago, in the army, we had a lot of obscure adventures, and years later we tell them at parties, and suddenly we realize that those two very difficult years of our lives have become lumped together into a few episodes that have lodged in our memory in a standardized form, and are always told in a standardized way, in the same words. But in fact that lump of memories has nothing whatsoever to do with our experience of those two years in the army and what it has made of us.”
—Václav Havel (b. 1936)
“What is a novel if not a conviction of our fellow-mens existence strong enough to take upon itself a form of imagined life clearer than reality and whose accumulated verisimilitude of selected episodes puts to shame the pride of documentary history?”
—Joseph Conrad (18571924)