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» » Law & Order Navy Blues (1990–2010)

Short summary

When two patrolman find a dead body in a park Detectives Briscoe and Curtis think the man, Navy Chief Robert Stroud, is the fifth victim of a mugger who also kills his victims. They break the case rapidly but when ballistics confirms that Stroud was shot with a different gun, they still have a murder to solve. They soon learn that the married Stroud was having an affair with a pilot, Lt. Kirstin Blair. The DA's office soon finds itself in a tussle over jurisdiction with the Navy but manages to charge Blair with murder. She's a very cool customer and claims that Stroud was shot accidentally. Her lawyer bases her case on the defendant's character. So does ADA Jack McCoy.

Molly Price has played four different roles over the course of the series:

  • Episode 16.15 Law & Order: Choice of Evils (2006) - Allison Ashburn
  • Episode 8.3 Law & Order: Navy Blues (1997) - Quartermaster Stroud
  • Episode 6.15 Law & Order: Encore (1996) - OCCB Det. Jones
  • Episode 2.6 Law & Order: Misconception (1991) - Amy Newhouse

Jack Gwaltney has played three different characters over the course of the series:

  • Episode 1.8 Law & Order: Poison Ivy (1990) - Officer Davis
  • Episode 8.3 Law & Order: Navy Blues (1997) - Jack Young
  • Episode 14.3 Law & Order: Patient Zero (2003) - Ian Hopkins

John Speredakos has played four different characters over the course of the series:

  • Episode 20.23 Law & Order: Rubber Room (2010) - A.U.S.A. Schlicter
  • Episode 15.5 Law & Order: Gunplay (2004) - Bob Ardall
  • Episode 8.3 Law & Order: Navy Blues (1997) - William T. Ottenberg
  • Episode 2.18 Law & Order: Cradle to Grave (1992) - Dr. Orton

The murder victim's name is Robert J. Stroud. In real life, Robert F. Stroud was the "Birdman of Alcatraz". A convicted murderer serving a life sentence, he became a world famous ornithologist while in prison. The story was made into the movie Der Gefangene von Alcatraz (1962) starring Burt Lancaster.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Taun
    Most of the episodes in this series involve legal issues on which the outcome of the case depends. Did Lennie and Ray properly mirandize the suspect? Can Jack and Jamie get the disputed evidence admitted? That sort of thing.

    This story belongs to a type I usually find more interesting, in that it raises social issues that transcend the strictly legal ones. In this case, a beautiful young pilot has shot to death the enlisted man with whom she was having an affair. The circumstances of the killing are cloudy. She lies about it frequently. And, of course, the Navy has rules against fraternization, and Lieutenant Blair is looking into the abyss if only because of her doing a Chief Aviation Machinist's Mate -- never mind the murder.

    McCoy wants to try her in civilian court for Murder in the Second Degree, but the Navy argues that it has jurisdiction over the case and is conducting its own investigation. The problem is that the Navy's investigation is moving along very slowly. Lieutenant Blair is one of the first women pilots in the Navy and, stunningly gorgeous, is a poster child for both the Navy and the women's movement.

    Superficially it looks like an ordinary jurisdictional dispute, which is interesting in itself. Some of the scenes are shot aboard Navy ships. But it goes beyond that. Lieutenant Blair isn't really a very good pilot, as McCoy demonstrates in court. The limit for major mistakes in an F-14 pilot is two. Blair has managed to rack up five and she's still flying.

    The issue behind the issue is more like affirmative action than anything else. The Navy is forced to modernize by training women pilots and the standards have been lowered in order for Blair to continue flying F-14s instead of, say, helicopters. Is it proper? Or, to put it differently, is it just? Should the Navy make up for its former discriminatory practices by rushing people like Blair through the system? The issue hangs over the case but is never directly dealt with.

    In the last scene, McCoy and Ross leave the courthouse and pass a gaggle of reporters interviewing Blair, who has been convicted and sentence to jail, and she's explaining to the press that with the entire might of the state of New York and the U. S. Navy against her, she confessed to a crime of which she might not be guilty.
  • comment
    • Author: Dog_Uoll
    A Navy CPO, a married one at that, is found shot to death in Central Park and it's first thought to be the work of a serial killer. But the end result for Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt is the arrest of Kate Walsh, a Navy pilot who is the first to be stepping into the shoes of Tom Cruise.

    The Navy has a lot invested in Walsh who has become a poster girl for the Navy's new acceptance of women in combat. They've got a major public relations disaster here, Sam Waterston and Carey Lowell have a murder case to try and prove. The two work at complete cross purposes.

    The 'no fraternization' policy comes under scrutiny in this story, but never gets resolved. Walsh says that it was an accident and she's always cool under fire as any top gun is supposed to be.

    Waterston gets real lucky when a piece of evidence turns up from out of the blue that belies Walsh's claims.

    Lowell who regarded Walsh as a feminist heroine is crushed. Catch the last couple of lines in the story about hero disillusionment.
  • Episode cast overview, first billed only:
    Jerry Orbach Jerry Orbach - Lennie Briscoe
    Benjamin Bratt Benjamin Bratt - Rey Curtis
    S. Epatha Merkerson S. Epatha Merkerson - Anita Van Buren
    Sam Waterston Sam Waterston - Jack McCoy
    Carey Lowell Carey Lowell - Jamie Ross
    Steven Hill Steven Hill - Adam Schiff
    Kate Walsh Kate Walsh - Lt. Kirstin Blair
    Daniel von Bargen Daniel von Bargen - Commander Billings (as Daniel Von Bargen)
    Molly Price Molly Price - Quartermaster Stroud
    Joyce Reehling Joyce Reehling - Lt. Commander Coleman
    Reuben Jackson Reuben Jackson - Lt. Lopez
    Jack Gwaltney Jack Gwaltney - Jack Young
    John Speredakos John Speredakos - William T. Ottenberg
    Patti LuPone Patti LuPone - Ruth Miller
    Lee Shepherd Lee Shepherd - Lt. McIntyre
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