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White Rabbit

  • Episode aired Oct 19, 1994
  • TV-14
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
403
YOUR RATING
Peter Friedman in Law & Order (1990)
CrimeDramaMysteryThriller

A conservative suburban wife and mother turns out to be a fugitive student radical who was involved in an armored car heist and murder of a police officer 23 years earlier.A conservative suburban wife and mother turns out to be a fugitive student radical who was involved in an armored car heist and murder of a police officer 23 years earlier.A conservative suburban wife and mother turns out to be a fugitive student radical who was involved in an armored car heist and murder of a police officer 23 years earlier.

  • Director
    • Steven Robman
  • Writers
    • Dick Wolf
    • Ed Zuckerman
    • Morgan Gendel
  • Stars
    • Jerry Orbach
    • Chris Noth
    • S. Epatha Merkerson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    403
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Steven Robman
    • Writers
      • Dick Wolf
      • Ed Zuckerman
      • Morgan Gendel
    • Stars
      • Jerry Orbach
      • Chris Noth
      • S. Epatha Merkerson
    • 10User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos12

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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Jerry Orbach
    Jerry Orbach
    • Detective Lennie Briscoe
    Chris Noth
    Chris Noth
    • Detective Mike Logan
    S. Epatha Merkerson
    S. Epatha Merkerson
    • Lieutenant Anita Van Buren
    Sam Waterston
    Sam Waterston
    • Executive ADA Jack McCoy
    Jill Hennessy
    Jill Hennessy
    • ADA Claire Kincaid
    Steven Hill
    Steven Hill
    • DA Adam Schiff
    Peter Friedman
    Peter Friedman
    • Professor William Goodwin
    Mary-Joan Negro
    • Susan Forrest aka Rita Levitan
    Peggy Roeder
    Peggy Roeder
    • Margaret Pauly
    Dick Anthony Williams
    Dick Anthony Williams
    • Sam Burdette
    Marilyn Chris
    Marilyn Chris
    • Mary Perella
    William Kunstler
    William Kunstler
    • William Kunstler
    Norman Snow
    Norman Snow
    • Stuart Levitan
    Philip LeStrange
    • Wick
    Jonathan Teague Cook
    • Henry Maybrook
    Tom Cappadona
    Tom Cappadona
    • Eddie Maybrook
    Roger Serbagi
    • Trial Judge Robert Quinn
    Don Billett
    • FBI Agent Tilley
    • Director
      • Steven Robman
    • Writers
      • Dick Wolf
      • Ed Zuckerman
      • Morgan Gendel
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    8.1403
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    Featured reviews

    8bkoganbing

    Soccer Mom of the year

    The investigation of a robbery of a bank vault with a lot of safety deposit boxes yields clues for Jerry Orbach and Chris Noth. A lot of money, proceeds from a robbery and a pistol used to kill a beat cop who responded to the robbery are found and not so strangely not claimed by whoever owned the box.

    This was some robbery. It was of a defense plant that was a Vietnam war contractee. Two men and two women robbed the place. One man was killed and the other arrested and one woman was arrested and did her time and now Peggy Roeder is your basic community activist, leaving one out still unaccounted for. A twisted trail leads to Mary-Joan Negro who is now a suburban housewife with a husband and two kids and no idea who mom really is.

    So now Sam Waterston and Jill Hennessy have the task of prosecuting your ideal soccer mom who has led an exemplary life. The family even contributes to the Republican National Committee. That makes no difference to William Kunstler who defends her playing himself.

    I have to give kudos to Dick Anthony Williams who plays a career criminal and the surviving male on the job. He fully bears out Waterson's contention that all he was interested in was a big score and a chance to bed some radicals with a few choice quotes from Chairman Mao to get in their pants.

    In the end the fact that the FBI was doing some highly illegal wiretapping that gives Waterston some extra leverage.

    It was interesting watching Waterston and Hennessy who come at this case with different perspectives argue things out.
    9Better_TV

    Brilliant Episode from the Very Beginning of the Sam Waterston Era

    This is the first great episode of season 5; it's got a lot of meat on its bones, with a juicy, thoughtful script and a variety of strong supporting performances.

    The plot involves a group of militant antiwar protestors (think the SLA or the Weather Underground) who killed a cop Detective Briscoe knew in the '60s and robbed a bank vault in the present day.

    There's lots more to chew on here then simply "whodunnit"; plenty of great lines explore the craziness of the '60s, and Sam Waterston as EADA Jack McCoy is unusually sympathetic to the antiwar aspirations of these aging activist-turned terrorists - at least he is at first, before the extent of their activities/intent comes pouring out by episode's end.

    Mary-Joan Negro is great as a GOP donor trying to hide from her extremist past, as are Norman Snow, Peggy Roeder, and Dick Anthony Williams playing the other members of her group. Williams in particular has only two scenes in the episode (he's the only one of the band to have been put in prison), but he perfectly sells a character who was always cynical about "the cause," admitting that he simply tagged along in the hopes of bedding some "free love" hippy-types back in the day.

    Other highlights include the detectives working with the FBI in the front half of the episode, where they get something of a history lesson on how surveillance was conducted in the '60s, and famed real-life lefty lawyer William Kunstler putting in a legitimately awesome performance as himself.

    This is one I'll definitely be re-watching in the future!
    8mjsm60

    A definite favorite

    This is one my favorites. Start with the title, which is a great song. Growing up in the 70s, this brings back a lot of memories. Then we have Lennie and Jack who, initially, kind of want to let this go (Lennie - "you had to be there, Mike"; Jack - "it was the 70s, Claire"). All around great episode.
    10SteveG-297

    Someone doesn't know very much about the law.

    This was a very good episode, one of my favorites. One of the reviewers said the suspect would not be guilty of first degree murder. That is wrong. If four people are committing an armed robbery or any felony and one of them kills someone, all four are guilty of first degree murder. Even though she never fired a gun or even had one, she is still just as guilty of first degree murder as the guy who fired the gun. Considering that this was an armed robbery, terrorism, and murder, all four of these criminals should have gotten the death penalty. And they would have gotten death if it was a few years earlier.
    10TheLittleSongbird

    The hollow

    While liking the first four episodes of Season 5, loved actually in the case of "Family Values", "White Rabbit" was the first episode of the season to have a concept that sounded very complex and above the ordinary. The other four had quite simple concepts, though mostly their execution was more twisty (only "Blue Bamboo" was over-derivative). And when reading all the plot synopsis's for all the Season 5 episodes, "White Rabbit" struck me as one of the more complex ones.

    The execution is even more surprising than the synopsis sounds, while not being overloaded or convoluted. While the previous episode "Family Values" for me was great, and for me it was the first great Season 5 episode, "White Rabbit" was just outstanding and even better. In my view too, it is overall one of Season 5's best episodes, one of the ones that really holds up to repeat viewings and one that really sticks in the mind after. It is far from a hollow episode, emotionally it is one of the more investable ones of the season.

    Everything here in "White Rabbit" works, and brilliantly. The slick grit and the sharper and tighter visual look that the previous four seasons had is still maintained, and equally had no problems with the generally understated and not too melodramatic music. Nor with the sympathetic but crisp direction in primarily the second half.

    Some of Season 5's most thoughtful and concise writing is in "White Rabbit". The exploration of the 60s was quite insightfully handled and a subject that had potential to be heavy-handed in the wrong hands is done with both force and tact thankfully. The story (based on a true story) has plenty of twists and turns, again though without feeling like there are a couple too many and without muddling what happens. Had no trouble following it, there is some good nail-biting suspense throughout, a lot surprises and there is much more to the episode than your average whodunnit.

    Furthermore, the character writing is some of the meatiest, Susan especially, and McCoy makes his most sympathetic and most professional appearance up to this still early point of his long run. The performances are all spot on, cannot say anything bad about the regulars and Dick Anthony Williams is riveting in his screen time. Susan is also powerfully played.

    In conclusion, outstanding and one of the season's best. 10/10

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This episode appears to be based on the three different cases/incidents including:
      • The 1975 Sara Jane Olson case. Born Kathleen Soliah, Olson was a member of the Symbionese Liberation Army (SLA) in the 1970s, who went into hiding in 1976 after having been indicted in a bombing case. She lived much of her life in Minnesota under her new name, which she changed to be her legal name. She was eventually arrested in 1999, and plead guilty in 2001 to two counts of possessing explosives with intent to murder, and in 2003 to second-degree murder, both stemming from her SLA activities in the 1970s. She received a sentence of 14 years in prison.
      • The 1993 Katherine Ann Power case. Power is an American ex-convict and long-time fugitive, who along with her fellow student and accomplice Susan Edith Saxe, was placed on the F.B.I's Most Wanted Fugitives list in 1970. The two participated in robberies at a Massachusetts National Guard armory and a bank in Brighton, Massachusetts where Boston police officer Walter Schroeder was shot and killed. Power remained at large for 23 years. Power turned herself over to authorities in 1993 after starting a new life in Oregon. She pleaded guilty and was imprisoned in Massachusetts for six years before being released on 14 years' probation.
      • The Weathermen underground anti-war movement. The Weathermen were a radical left militant organization active in the late 1960s and 1970s, founded on the Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan.
      • The 1981 Brink's robbery. On October 20, 1981, six Black Liberation Army members: Mutulu Shakur, Kuwasi Balagoon, Solomon Bouines (Samuel Brown), Mtayari Shabaka Sundiata, Edward Joseph, and Cecilio "Chui" Ferguson; and four former members of the Weather Underground, now belonging to the May 19th Communist Organization, consisting of David Gilbert, Judith Alice Clark, Kathy Boudin, and Marilyn Buck stole $1.6 million in cash from a Brink's armored car at the Nanuet Mall, in Nanuet, New York. They killed Brinks guard, Peter Paige as well as seriously wounding Brinks guard Joseph Trombino and slightly wounding Brinks truck driver guard, James Kelly. Subsequently, they killed two Nyack police officers, Edward O'Grady and Waverly Brown, as well as seriously wounding Police Detective Artie Keenan.The first to be tried were Donald Weems (aka Kuwasi Balagoon) and 19 May Communists David Gilbert and Judith Alice Clark amid a heavy police presence. They represented themselves and were given three consecutive 25-year to life sentences. Weems said, "As to the 75 years in prison, I am not really worried because the State simply isn't going to last 75 or even 50 years." He died of Aids on 13 December 1986. Boudin was sentenced to 20 years to life. She was paroled in 2003. Samuel Brown was sentenced to 75 years to life. Williams was jailed for 60 years in 1988.
    • Goofs
      At the first scene of this episode a hospital patient is shown receiving a blood transfusion and the size of the bag shown is the standard 1000ml bag. Blood transfusion is standardized everywhere as a 450ml volume "unit." Also, when transfusions are given, the bag typically has several stickers on it attesting to handling along its course to the patient. No stickers were seen on the unit of blood being given.
    • Quotes

      Jack McCoy: [to Claire] She'll be in jail until 2003... the '60s should be over by then.

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • October 19, 1994 (United States)
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
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    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • Wolf Films
      • Universal Television
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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