» » Seaduse nimel Mad Dog (1990–2010)

Seaduse nimel Mad Dog (1990–2010) Online

Seaduse nimel Mad Dog (1990–2010) Online
Original Title :
Mad Dog
Genre :
TV Episode / Crime / Drama / Mystery / Thriller
Year :
1990–2010
Directror :
Christopher Misiano
Cast :
Jerry Orbach,Benjamin Bratt,S. Epatha Merkerson
Writer :
Dick Wolf,Rene Balcer
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
1h
Rating :
8.3/10
Seaduse nimel Mad Dog (1990–2010) Online

Detectives Briscoe and Curtis investigate the rape and murder of a young woman, Teresa Perez, who was found dead in her bed by her mother. They check out her boyfriend but he has a solid alibi. They're not even sure how the killer got into the building until they find a connecting duct with the building next door. The medical examiner can provide little forensic evidence but ADA McCoy is certain the perpetrator is Lewis Darnell, a convicted serial rapist who was recently released on parole in spite of his personal intervention at the parole hearing. With little evidence to go on, McCoy gets the police to harass Darnell - 24 hour surveillance, multiple searches of his home and workplace - in the hopes of getting him to break down and confess.
Episode cast overview, first billed only:
Jerry Orbach Jerry Orbach - Lennie Briscoe
Benjamin Bratt Benjamin Bratt - Rey Curtis
S. Epatha Merkerson S. Epatha Merkerson - Anita Van Buren
Sam Waterston Sam Waterston - Jack McCoy
Carey Lowell Carey Lowell - Jamie Ross
Steven Hill Steven Hill - Adam Schiff
Burt Young Burt Young - Lewis Darnell
Ned Eisenberg Ned Eisenberg - James Granick
David Fonteno David Fonteno - Munro (as David Wolos-Fonteno)
Dan Frazer Dan Frazer - Hon. J. McLellan
Carolyn McCormick Carolyn McCormick - Dr. Elizabeth Olivet
Lisa LoCicero Lisa LoCicero - Janeane Darnell
Leslie Hendrix Leslie Hendrix - Dr. Elizabeth Rodgers
John Fiore John Fiore - Detective Tony Profaci
Alice Liu Alice Liu - Karyn Sasabe

Briscoe makes a reference to Kojak (1973) while in the interrogation room. The judge hearing the case was played by the late Dan Frazer, who played Capt. Frank McNeil in 117 of the 118 Kojack episodes.

David Fonteno has portrayed seven different characters over the course of the series:

  • Episode 1.17 Νόμος και τάξη: Mushrooms (1991) - Coach
  • Episode 3.16 Νόμος και τάξη: Jurisdiction (1993) - Gavin McCrea
  • Episode 4.19 Νόμος και τάξη: Sanctuary (1994) - Jimmy Graves
  • Episode 6.4 Νόμος και τάξη: Jeopardy (1995) - CSU Tech Murrau
  • Episode 7.18 Νόμος και τάξη: Mad Dog (1997) - Munro
  • Episode 10.24 Νόμος και τάξη: Vaya Con Dios (2000) - John Groban
  • Episode 11.10 Νόμος και τάξη: Whose Monkey Is It Anyway? (2001) - Judge Derek Hafner
  • Episode 18.12 Νόμος και τάξη: Submission (2008) - Judge Derek Hafner
  • Episode 19.20 Νόμος και τάξη: Exchange (2009) - Judge Derek Hafner


User reviews

Mr.jeka

Mr.jeka

Veteran actor Burt Young ("Rocky," "The Sopranos," etc.) plays Mr. Darnell, a recently paroled violent sex offender. Now working and reconciled with his adult daughter, Darnell is the prime suspect in the rape and murder of a teenaged girl. D.A. Jack McCoy and company are in a race against time to get a civil commitment under the Mental Hygiene Law while investigators work to gather enough evidence to convict the suspect.

The question is, Is Darnell cured of his violent sexual proclivities? Or does he remain the same mad dog criminal the state put away years before?
WinDImmortaL

WinDImmortaL

I have no idea where the writers thought they were going with this episode but it casts Jack McCoy is an impossibly self-righteous and possibly criminal persecutor -- not prosecutor. In this respect, and in its ultimate conclusion, it's the most unusual story to appear during the first ten years of the series.

The story opens with a parole hearing. Burt Young, looking old but acting no more skilled than in his feature films, has spent 18 years in Sing Sing after being convicted of rape and is now asking for early release. He's been a good inmate. He expresses remorse, says he's overcome his impulses after eighteen years of penitance and claims he only wants to get a decent job, settle down with his daughter, and make restitution to his victims. His daughter -- a spot-on performance by Lisa LoCicero -- is eager to accept him.

McCoy is present and gives an impassioned speech about a rapist's character being unchangeable and no restitution being possible. The Board overrules McCoy and Young is released.

McCoy is not only dissatisfied but he does something about it. Young is monitored wherever he goes. Posters identifying Young as a serial rapist appear all over his neighborhood. ("That didn't come from our department," remarks Brisco.) A young girl is found raped and murdered, smothered to death, in an apartment in a locked building. The detectives discover that in the basement of the building next door, a long-abandoned ventilation shaft runs into the basement of the victim's building. Further investigation leads to the discovery that Young had lived in the building next door as a child of seven or so, and McCoy concludes that he probably discovered the shaft, remembers it now, and used it to gain entry into the victim's building where he raped and -- for the first time -- left the victim dead.

McCoy is now convinced that Young is not just a serial rapist but a murderer as well and police surveillance increases. They toss his apartment and find stroke magazines emphasizing bondage. Olivet, the police shrink, advises McCoy that there is "no cure" for serial rapists. (Neither is there one for the common cold.) The detectives enter the woodworking shop where Young has a job and loudly announce that Young is a rapist. He's fired.

When Young appeals for relief from what he sees as harassment, he's advised to leave town. Young would like to live in upstate New York with another relative, but the police have already queried the Broome County officials and they refuse to allow him to move there. Young then expresses a desire to move to the town in Ohio where he was born, but the police are ahead of him and he can't move there either.

An angrier-than-ever McCoy proposes to Schiff, the DA, that Young be charged with something he hasn't done. Schiff replies, "Do you realize what you're saying? False arrest? I won't allow the law to be dragged through a sewer to catch a sewer rat." With no preamble, Young is caught by his own daughter while assaulting the daughter's roommate, and his daughter beats his brains out with a baseball bat. McCoy's intuition is proved correct. "I guess he couldn't hold himself back anymore," says Brisco. The question of how much pressure the police practices put on whatever it was that Young couldn't hold back is not addressed or even brought up. Nobody ever defines "harrassment." The viewer is left to conclude that "once a serial rapist, always a serial rapist, and next, a murderer," and that McCoy should have been allowed to do whatever he wanted in order to prevent a rapist from continuing his career. It endorses a policy of allowing law enforcement to draw up its own rules (there's a name for governments like that) and that a criminal can't change, even after eighteen years in the slams.

The viewer is left to draw his or her own lessons from the episode. Mine are different from McCoy's.
Zahisan

Zahisan

And who makes that decision? Here ADA Jack McCoy doggedly pursues an ex-con rapist, played by Bert Young. McCoy is sure the guy is guilty of the rape and murder of a little girl, but he cannot prove it. McCoy is sure that the fellow is a repeat offender and will strike again. He brings him in for questioning, has him physically examined, and it is noticed that he shaves his entire body. I guess this was before DNA was prevalently used in such cases. McCoy has the police follow him at work, has posters put up around where he lives notifying the neighbors of his past crimes, and promises to hound him indefinitely unless he voluntarily commits himself under the Mental Hygiene Statute. Eventually, the man does indeed attack again - this time literally stopped dead in his tracks by his biggest advocate up to that point. The question is left open, however, - did the ex-con rapist actually kill the little girl, or did he attack this final time because McCoy's constant harassment sent him over the edge?
Goldendragon

Goldendragon

The rape and death of a young woman right in her own bed is the case that Jerry Orbach and Benjamin Bratt catch. But Sam Waterston jumps right into the police investigation with a suspect all his own that rings a bell with him.

Burt Young plays a recently released rapist who has even taken to shaving his body hairs lest some errant pubics find their way on to a victim. It's what convicted him last time. He may have added murder as well so there's no complaining witness.

As the cops with Jack McCoy personally supervising the investigation they go the extralegal mile to get him. 24 hour surveillance, the Civil Liberties Union should have jumped into this one.

Probably every one should have been censored even though Young is a pretty sleazy fellow. He has a daughter in Lisa LoCicero who only sees a daddy.

Good guest star turns by Young and LoCicero here.