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1-13 of 13
- The team must make the trek to Orange County, much further away in ideology than distance, to defend a bartender, from a restaurant Ron co-owns, against murder charges.
- Tom is unable to be an effective attorney for a friend's daughter when he allows his emotions to overcome him.
- The firm must adapt to a poor, attractive college student's dubious recollection when she pleads self-defense in the stabbing death of a bad-tempered music mogul.
- When a young mother is killed on a roller-coaster ride, Ron Trott sees an opportunity to go after corporate game... and his nemesis, the defending attorney.
- The team tackles the case of a high-profile real-estate agent accused of killing his patrician wife.
- The team tries desperately to exonerate a boy accused of crucifying a tormentor.
- Two friends are accused of the murder of one's wife and TNT&G scrambles for a believable defense after the widower speaks to the police against their advice.
- Trott and company take on a case for grieving parents alleging pilot error in a plane crash.
- The office Christmas party degenerates to a kidnapping mediation and an emergency assist for Tom who's in serious trouble at a trial.
- Ron takes on the defense of an ex, accused of killing her son, which raises questions about his objectivity with the rest of the team as her story keeps adjusting to the evidence.
- Tom goes on a crusade against an equally crusading and ambitious DA when he takes on the case of an illegal immigrant accused of shooting his wife.
- The team deals with the case of a teenage babysitter accused of murdering a six-year-old boy.
- Joshua Mortin, who years ago was convicted by then (still inexperienced) prosecutor Luther Graves, still claims innocence and has threatened Graves, whose restraining order against him ran out years ago as outdated, walks in at the firm, demanding Luther sees and defends him now Mortin, the only ex-con in his building, is accused of the murder on the landlord. Against Ron's instinct, Luther accepts, and thus finally becomes a pure defender rather then a mere investigator. The case seems to depend on the testimony of one witness, Alan Beck, and Luther's belief and strategy is that the police manipulated him, albeit legally. ADA Keller goes for the death penalty, and Mortin's first conviction was based on lousy crime scene investigation, as Tom and Alden find, but in this case proof or an alternative killer are hard to find...