"The Family Hour" | |||
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Law & Order episode | |||
Episode no. | Season 17 Episode 22 |
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Directed by | Matthew Penn | ||
Written by | Richard Sweren David Slack |
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Original air date | May 18, 2007 | ||
Episode chronology | |||
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List of Law & Order episodes (season 17) |
"The Family Hour" is the 393rd episode of NBC's legal drama Law & Order, and the season finale of 17th season. It is the last episode for both Milena Govich as Detective Nina Cassidy and Fred Thompson as District Attorney Arthur Branch.
The ex-wife of a former senator, a prominent New York socialite, is found dead in the rooftop garden of her apartment. A bloody fire poker is lying near her, and a wooden spoon is found inserted in her vagina. Detectives Green and Cassidy discover that both the son and daughter were abused by their parents, and that the daughter was frequently struck with a wooden spoon. When the detectives go to question the daughter, they find her dead, her father standing over her grasping a knife. Cassidy then witnesses him poking himself in the stomach to make himself bleed. The senator claims that he killed her in self-defense when she stabbed him, and that she killed her mother. Physical evidence appears to confirm that the daughter did kill her stepmother.
During pretrial motions, an extremely emotional and erratic judge is deferential to the defense in order to prevent the family any further trauma. Jack McCoy asks for the judge to recuse himself, but he refuses.
At trial, assistant chief medical examiner Elizabeth Rodgers testifies that the senator's wounds are most likely self-inflicted. When challenged about the positioning of the wounds, she testifies that the senator could have stabbed himself in such a way to concoct a self-defense story. As she is an avid fan of crime fiction, she happens to know that a very similar situation occurred in a novel, and names a book that happens to be by an author the senator (himself a fan) collects.
After her testimony, Rodgers realizes that she has confused the novel with another one by a similar author and tells McCoy she has written a letter to the judge to clarify her error. District Attorney Arthur Branch, afraid that the judge is seeking publicity, decides that the new information is not exculpatory and decides that it should not be revealed. McCoy disagrees and refuses to do the closing, so Connie Rubirosa does it instead.
At closing, Rubirosa makes reference to "a novel" during closing, but not the specific one referenced by Rogers. She mainly concentrates on the physical disparity between the senator and his daughter, and notes that she was stabbed 13 times, punctuating her closing with 13 stabs of the knife into a law book.
The jury seems to be swayed by this, and returns a guilty verdict.
Afterwards, McCoy offers his resignation. Branch asks him to reconsider, saying that McCoy would have been gone long ago if he had wanted a yes-man, and goes on to hint that McCoy would be a suitable successor for himself as D.A.; the following exchange between the two ends the episode:
Branch: "You know, Jack, one day this chair will be empty."
McCoy: "I'm no politician, Arthur".
Branch: "Yeah, that's what they all say."
Fred Thompson, who played Branch, left the series to return to politics, attempting a run for President. In the following episode at the start of the next season, Branch has resigned as D.A. and McCoy is now the acting D.A.