A real estate broker is accused of being an unlikely hit man for a former mob boss recently released from prison and trying to get his old crew back.A real estate broker is accused of being an unlikely hit man for a former mob boss recently released from prison and trying to get his old crew back.A real estate broker is accused of being an unlikely hit man for a former mob boss recently released from prison and trying to get his old crew back.
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- DA Arthur Branch
- (as Fred Dalton Thompson)
- Director
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJerry Orbach, who plays Detective Lenny Briscoe, was present at the table of Joseph "Crazy" Gallo, the Mafia crime family Boss, when he was murdered at Umberto's Clam House. Orbach refused to cooperate with police, even though he was an eyewitness to the murder of Joseph 'Crazy Joey' Gallo, right up until his death.
- GoofsBoth Dr. Rogers and Detective Briscoe describe a .380 slug as "small caliber". However .38 caliber bullets are known as "medium caliber". Anything below .30 caliber (such as a .22 LR or .223 Remington) is considered small caliber, .30 to .38 is medium caliber and any slug larger than .40 caliber (such as a .40 S&W, .44 Magnum or .45 Auto) are large caliber.
- Quotes
Dr. Elizabeth Rodgers: Your cop at the scene wasn't that far off. Based on core temperature and rigor, I estimate time of death to be around midnight.
Lennie Briscoe: I don't suppose you got a couple of small caliber slugs floating around in there?
Dr. Elizabeth Rodgers: [handing him an evidence baggie] Pair of .380s. Hallmark execution. First shot was close contact. Second, inches away. Both seared his scalp.
Ed Green: Damn, he was right about that, too.
Lennie Briscoe: Now we'll never hear the end of it.
- ConnectionsReferences Have Gun - Will Travel (1957)
This episode also presents the latest thing in hit men. The shooter of this bookie who informed on Ragno and the husband of a US Attorney who prosecuted him is in fact a real estate salesman who moonlights as a hit man. What I could not buy is the fact that T. Scott Cunningham puts his own trademark on his work. I mean that's just plain ridiculous.
There are wheels within wheels on this one with different branches of law enforcement and different factions of organized crime all working their own agendas here. Not sure if justice is truly done in this story.
- bkoganbing
- Oct 26, 2013