There was a disclaimer at the beginning of the episode, which suggests it was ripped from a real headline. Anyone know what headline that may have been?
WRITERS GO ON STRIKE.
I thought it was a pretty good episode. I definitely didn't know that a prosecutor could just be drafted into service as a defense attorney at a moment's notice.
Well, don't assume something can happen just because it happens on L&O. Sometimes -- okay, often -- they bend the law for dramatic effect. I don't know that it can't happen in real life, but its use in this show is not proof that it can.
I have one other question: Towards the end, Connie is seen reading a typed note that says something about how Dresner did not have asthma, doctors did not know for sure what he had, etc. etc. The note also said that Dresner's breathing problems prevented him from diving and that it put him in a bad mood. How could he have been diving buddies with Sanderson if he couldn't dive?
Because he
used to be an active diver, as his widow told Lupo and Bernard. The camera even made a point of focusing on Dresner's old scuba tank for a moment to make sure we noticed it for later. Dresner and Sanderson dove together over a decade ago, before Sanderson's conviction; the note presumably came from a later time, within the past year or two, based on the widow's earlier comments about when Dresner had to give up diving.
I liked this episode because I like any episode that features a lot of Connie (and those incredible, magnificent eyes). She really came off well here. In fact, maybe a little too well; I was left wondering, if she's such an incredibly good lawyer, why is she second banana to this Cutter jerk? Why isn't he working for her? Especially since she was there first.
I would've preferred it if Sanderson had actually been innocent and she'd proved it, but I guess that would've been a bit too conventional. And come to think of it, this was valuable because it showed the responsibilities of a defense attorney in a more sympathetic light than usual. Representing the guilty as zealously as the innocent is a necessary part of making a fair and unbiased legal system work.
I'm a little unsure about how Bernard was portrayed here. Two weeks ago he was an Internal Affairs officer, and now he's playing fast and loose with the rules and giving improper opinions on the witness stand? Given his former posting, shouldn't he know what's allowed and what's inappropriate? Or is the idea that he's eager to cut loose and break the rules now that he no longer has to enforce them? Either he's inconsistently written or he's a total creep.