Julianna Cox
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M.E. Julianna Cox | |
---|---|
First appearance | "M.E., Myself and I" |
Last appearance | "Lies and Other Truths" |
Cause/reason | Fired for disobeying orders |
Created by | Tom Fontana |
Portrayed by | Michelle Forbes |
Episode count | 31 (Homicide: Life on the Street) |
Information | |
Gender | Female |
Age | Approx 30 |
Julianna Cox is a fictional chief medical examiner in the TV show Homicide: Life on the Street for seasons 5-6, played by actress Michelle Forbes.
Cox was introduced in the season five episode "M.E., Myself, and I," where she is arriving back home in Baltimore to take a position as the chief medical examiner at the morgue. Her father, who had suffered severe injuries in a car accident, is in frail health and barely hanging on. He passes away within days of her arriving, devastating her; while it's first implied that he has died of natural causes, she later reveals that he died in a car crash caused by a drunk driver. She compensates for her sadness by speeding and drinking a lot.
As the chief M.E., Cox distinguished herself by being much more friendly and personable with the Homicide unit. The detectives were all impressed that she would actually make trips to see them once in a while, and she was very good at her job. She did not tolerate sloppy work or incompetence, and fired a morgue worker who stole jewelry belonging to a murder victim. She was also a regular at the Waterfront Bar.
Cox was immediately attracted to Det. Mike Kellerman during a time when he was under investigation for corruption and sidelined from active duty. Both in need of comfort, they had a one-night stand that turned into a very open, laid-back sort of pseudo-relationship which mostly consisted of them getting drunk and having sex. The relationship eventually went downhill fast, however, and they distanced themselves. Cox briefly had a relationship with Det. Tim Bayliss, although she later admitted that it was mostly wanting someone over the holidays, and she angrily ended any relationship when he returned a pair of earrings to her in front of everyone at a crime scene.
Towards the end of the 6th season, a truck driver working for the city ran a passenger van off the road, killing the driver and leaving his wife a quadriplegic. Facing a multi-million dollar lawsuit, the city pressured Cox to alter the evidence and report that the van driver was legally intoxicated and the truck driver was not, even though the reverse was true. Cox refused to lie, so she was fired, but found out the city had settled for $45 million with the wife. She said goodbye to Det. Kellerman and lamented that they hadn't put together a real relationship, implying she would have stayed around if they had.
After losing her job, she left Baltimore. She returned in Homicide: Life Everlasting to help with the biggest case of all.