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» » Νόμος και τάξη Benevolence (1990–2010)

Short summary

A young, independent deaf woman is murdered, but was is it her scorned lover or her obsessed mentor? Detectives Briscoe and Logan scour phone transcripts, while forensics narrows the search. It's up to prosecutors Stone and Robinette to persuade the truth out of the victim's mentor, the founder of a local institute for the deaf.

This was both Dann Florek and Richard Brooks's final appearance as regular cast members. They were let go after the season because the network decided a female presence was needed on the show in order to attract more women viewers. Florek's character was later brought back for the spin-off Seaduse nimel: Seksuaalkuritegude uurimisüksus (1999) and Brooks revived his character as a defense attorney in several later episodes.

Both Paul Robinette (Richard Brooks) and Jamie Ross (Carey Lowell) played Assistant District Attorneys and, after leaving the show, returned and played defense attorneys.

Jaime Tirelli has portrayed four different characters over the course of the series:

  • Episode 10.17 Seaduse nimel: Black, White and Blue (2000) - Sgt. Palacio
  • Episode 4.17 Seaduse nimel: Mayhem (1994) - Santana
  • Episode 3.22 Seaduse nimel: Benevolence (1993) - Chick Sullivan
  • Episode 1.12 Seaduse nimel: Life Choice (1991) - CSU Rivera

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Jaime Tirelli (Chick Sullivan) also worked together on episode 2.18, The Good Wife: Killer Song (2011), of The Good Wife (2009) as Peter Florrick & Luis Flores respectively.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Kulabandis
    This episode is fine, as most of them were during the show's first decade or so, though the duel between Moriarty and George Grizzard is a little sluggish. The reason it seems slow is that the most thoughtful part of the story shows up at about its middle.

    A deaf college student is suspected of killing his deaf girl friend because she was planning on having a cochlear implant, which would have restored her hearing. Did he murder her because he figured, once she could hear, she would have nothing to do with a hearing-challenged suitor? One of the deaf characters shouts about how inferior hearing people are.

    The question doesn't last long, doesn't hang in the air exactly, because the hearing-challenged suspects prove to be canards. Yet, it's a good question. If one belongs to a devalued minority group -- deaf people, blind people, African-Americans, Jews -- doesn't one feel a sense of group cohesion, of "us" against "them", or the other way around? How can "they" possibly understand us, since they've never walked in our shoes? It's a temptation difficult to resist, the sense that "they" are an enemy and they all hang together. It doesn't really matter if someone in my group does something weak or even evil. The chief point is to stand together against the assaults of "them." Somewhere in the video archives is a clip of a classroom full of African-American students leaping to their feet and embracing as O. J. Simpson is judged innocent of murder on the television news. And these were all law students at Howard University in Washington.

    That's a clear expression of group solidarity and this program suggests that at least some blind people have that same sense of solidarity. Group solidarity is a more powerful motive than most of us -- who don't belong to any obvious minority -- realize. Stouffer's study of "The American Soldier" after World War II identified it as the strongest motivating factor in combat. In other words, people are willing to kill and be killed for it.

    This episode, good as it is, would have been more provocative had the girl been killed by a deaf man who saw her as a traitor to the group. Instead, the resolution devolves into simple jealousy and greed.
  • comment
    • Author: Arthunter
    This last episode of season 3 and last for Dann Florek and Richard Brooks as cast members deals with a charitable institution for deaf people and the man who runs it. In a fit of rage he kills a woman, a deaf woman he regarded as a protege and something more. The something more led Leon Russom to commit murder though Jerry Orbach and Chris Noth don't get to him right away.

    Russom is an interesting defendant, a man who thinks first, last and always of the charity he helped create and run. That is paramount in all his dealings with the criminal justice system.

    George Grizzard is in this one as criminal defense attorney Arthur Gold and I have to say I never saw Steven Hill more in his let's make a deal mode than in this episode. Just like the mere mention of his name is supposed to intimidate Michael Moriarty. Didn't and does it happen.

    But that final sitdown conference with Moriarty, Brooks, Grizzard and Russom reveals some interesting insights.
  • Episode cast overview, first billed only:
    Jerry Orbach Jerry Orbach - Lennie Briscoe
    Chris Noth Chris Noth - Mike Logan
    Dann Florek Dann Florek - Donald Cragen
    Michael Moriarty Michael Moriarty - Ben Stone
    Richard Brooks Richard Brooks - Paul Robinette
    Steven Hill Steven Hill - Adam Schiff
    Carolyn McCormick Carolyn McCormick - Dr. Elizabeth Olivet (credit only)
    Leon Russom Leon Russom - Gordon Bryce
    Sam Gray Sam Gray - Judge Francis Chabot
    Meredith Scott Lynn Meredith Scott Lynn - Corrine Sussman
    George Grizzard George Grizzard - Arthur Gold
    Camille L. Jeter Camille L. Jeter - Marcia Hendricks
    John F. Cleary John F. Cleary - Paul Crandall (as John Cleary)
    Eliza Rubin Eliza Rubin - Gina Peters
    Martin Priest Martin Priest - Jacob Brinkman
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