Laura Ballard
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Det. Laura Ballard | |
---|---|
First appearance | "Blood Ties (part 1)" |
Last appearance | "Forgive Us Our Trespasses" |
Cause/reason | Still active |
Created by | Tom Fontana |
Portrayed by | Callie Thorne |
Episode count | 42 (Homicide: Life on the Street) |
Information | |
Gender | Female |
Age | Approx 30 |
Laura Ballard is a fictional police detective of the Baltimore Police Department on Homicide: Life on the Street, She was played by Callie Thorne. At 29, Ballard first appeared in Season 6 having moved from Seattle to Baltimore for purposes of changing police departments. She came into the unit and quickly impressed Lieutenant Al Giardello, who saw her as a young and promising detective, and after a rocky start won over Detective Frank Pembleton as well. She was often partnered with Detective Stuart Gharty whom she generally got along well with.
At the end of Season 6, Ballard was shot along with Stu Gharaty and three other officers by Nathaniel Mahoney, also known as "Junior Bunk," in the Homicide Unit's office. Ballard suffered a serious injury to her foot, but fully recovered between Seasons 6 and & and began dating Detective Paul Falsone early in Season 7.
In the episode "Bones of Contention," Falsone questions Ballard about her ethnic heritage prior to bringing her home to dinner with his Italian mother, shortly after the start of their affair. She explains that Ballard is a Swedish name which belongs to her stepfather. She herself is Armenian, Assyrian, and, she says, "LBJ — little bit Jewish." In the same episode, Giardello warns Falsone about the regulations against intimate fraternization among members of the same shift, and Falsone and Ballard agree to stop seeing each other rather than risk discipline or a forced transfer out of Giardello's shift.
Ballard also became close friends with Detective Terri Stivers, and the two of them worried about the perception of female cops, particularly after the beating of the unit's third female detective, Renee Sheppard. Although Ballard gently expressed her concerns to Sheppard and angered her co-worker, the two detectives worked perfectly together on a case involving girl-gang members, and were pleased that they didn't have to call on their male colleagues to come in and "save the day".