"I Wouldn't Mind Smacking Him in the Mouth!" | Law & Order

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  • Опубликовано: 22 сен 2024
  • This man is being arrested for the murder of an innocent individual, AND taking bonuses he didn't earn from his company - just another day for Law & Order fans! No wonder this detective wants to smack him in the mouth!
    Season 5, Episode 13 "Rage": A successful white stockbroker is found dead of rifle wound to the head. Although it initially looks like a suicide, the medical examiner reports that he was murdered.
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    Show Synopsis: In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: the police who investigate crime and the district attorneys who prosecute the offenders. These are their stories. From Emmy-winning creator Dick Wolf, with its groundbreaking "ripped-from-the-headlines" format, comes the highly-acclaimed, longest-running crime series in television history.
    Channel description:
    Welcome to the official RUclips channel for Law & Order. Watch all of the official clips from the series, some of the best moments from within the criminal justice system, where the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: The police, who investigate crime, and the district attorneys, who prosecute the offenders.
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Комментарии • 150

  • @NixonRules963
    @NixonRules963 10 месяцев назад +218

    This episode has a great ending. Essentially the defendant claims he was racially harassed at work and that after the racial harassment escalated he killed his co-worker during an argument. McCoy's counter is that racism is severely diminished in the modern day (he argues it practically doesn't exist) and isn't enough emotional abuse to justify killing. The jury convicts the Defendant, and on the way home after the trial McCoy and Kincaide are summoning a cab. A cab pulls up and while McCoy starts to get in, Kincaide points out that another African-American man down the street had been waiting longer and was skipped. As the African-American man angrily throws his hands up at the cab, the cab driver simply asks McCoy if he's getting in. The episode ends with McCoy realizing that perhaps racism isn't completely eradicated in modern society.

    • @ccvv1119
      @ccvv1119 8 месяцев назад

      Thing is throughout the trial you found out he was definitely racially harassed he hates his race too a regular Clarence Thomas but I’m glad the jury saw through the “black rage” defense

    • @jexelbur6872
      @jexelbur6872 8 месяцев назад

      That is… wow. That’s a bold argument to make, even for McCoy. I don’t think being discriminated against is reason to kill someone, but to say that racism practically doesn’t exist (whether directly or not) is a short-sighted tactic. Even if it’s to convict a person who the evidence says is guilty.

    • @benivinson3693
      @benivinson3693 Месяц назад +3

      i mean i feel like McCoy would know thats not true, like racism is 100% not as bad as the sixties, not eve n close but it still exists in many forms.

    • @Toneill029
      @Toneill029 Месяц назад +1

      @@benivinson3693
      MCoy seems to believe in anything that will ensure he wins in court at any given time.

  • @NonSenseMcGee
    @NonSenseMcGee Год назад +237

    "Without motive you couldnt convince a jury water's wet." Subtle and hilarious Adam. 😂

    • @christopherwalker5878
      @christopherwalker5878 Год назад +27

      “Just because I know how to scramble eggs doesn’t mean I made breakfast.” He had some hilarious dry one liners that often go unnoticed, but they’re great.

    • @vinceedwards3978
      @vinceedwards3978 Год назад +6

      Sciff did get some great lines!

    • @aileensmith6806
      @aileensmith6806 Год назад +2

      Lol

    • @NonSenseMcGee
      @NonSenseMcGee Год назад +1

      ​@@fruitpunch-mouth😂

    • @WadeAlma
      @WadeAlma 11 месяцев назад +1

      Water isn’t wet, water makes things wet.

  • @intldawn
    @intldawn Год назад +110

    “What psychic are you planning to call as your first witness?” I fucking love Adam 😂

  • @ryang183
    @ryang183 Год назад +63

    For those who do not know, Greer is played by Courtney Vance who went on to portray ADA Carver on Law and Order Criminal Intent

    • @Iamkcs2c
      @Iamkcs2c 11 месяцев назад +7

      I was listening to this and his voice threw me.

    • @johnofmalta
      @johnofmalta 6 месяцев назад +4

      Seaman Beaumont says it’s Paganini.

    • @josephdell8056
      @josephdell8056 2 месяца назад +1

      His voice is the dead give away!

    • @AndyBluebear-fi9om
      @AndyBluebear-fi9om Месяц назад +1

      Quite a few members of the cast appeared in guest roles before being part of the main cast.

    • @themermaidstale5008
      @themermaidstale5008 Месяц назад

      And a brief tour of duty on The Closer.

  • @Tulane_Gargoyle
    @Tulane_Gargoyle Год назад +72

    "We would be remiss if we weren't ready to challenge his credibility". Now THAT is brilliant.

  • @curtisberard7831
    @curtisberard7831 Год назад +107

    "I graduated from..."
    Age does not denote maturity
    *Education does not denote intelligence.*
    Wealth and social status does not denote class.
    Volume does not denote veracity.

    • @newellaorbana
      @newellaorbana 10 месяцев назад +2

      Good. Homeless Bob do your dental work, You will save a ton of money!

    • @woodwyrm
      @woodwyrm 8 месяцев назад +3

      @@newellaorbana Considering this was shot in the nineties, I suspect Mr Bud Greer made it in to Harvard on a Affirmative Action ticket lel, so in effect, Bud Greer _is_ the homeless man fixing to die.

    • @chetthehoss
      @chetthehoss 7 месяцев назад

      @@woodwyrm Oh goodie! Another brainwashed soul who has a lack of understanding about affirmative action and diversity initiatives.

    • @mikekling7144
      @mikekling7144 28 дней назад

      It doesn't matter in prison 😂

  • @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780
    @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780 Год назад +83

    The criminals never understand that almost nothing can escape to the forensics

    • @kreigguardsman3355
      @kreigguardsman3355 Год назад +9

      Sadly that isn’t as true in real life

    • @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780
      @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780 Год назад +1

      ​@@kreigguardsman3355Yeep, but dreaming it's free

    • @dmf1301
      @dmf1301 Год назад +6

      Also that wasn’t as true in the 1990s.
      Forensic science has advanced greatly over the decades, but Lenny Briscoe and Mike Logan were paired together in the 90s for their episodes.

    • @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780
      @marianaguardiaa.k.amariana4780 Год назад +1

      @@dmf1301 That's true too

    • @jaimeduncan6167
      @jaimeduncan6167 Год назад

      The police either and plant a lot.

  • @ktom5262
    @ktom5262 Год назад +34

    One of the best shows ever. So well written and diected, and very consistently over the years.

  • @jayman105
    @jayman105 Год назад +40

    "Do your thing, Lenny."

    • @jeffreysnydr
      @jeffreysnydr 6 месяцев назад +1

      Should have stuck to the convience stores bud."

  • @September2004
    @September2004 Год назад +41

    0:03 I like that forensic accountant.

    • @metamorphicme9378
      @metamorphicme9378 Год назад +1

      An awfully excited forensic accountant 😂😂😂😂

  • @alex1vid
    @alex1vid 3 месяца назад +4

    What a U-Turn... to think he'd turn into an ADA later! lol

  • @Melina-fi3sc
    @Melina-fi3sc 10 месяцев назад +18

    That's funny.... Courtney B. Vance as a criminal 🤣
    He was a D.A. in Law & Order: Criminal Intent.

    • @misterwhipple2870
      @misterwhipple2870 7 месяцев назад

      That wasn't the ONLY thing he was . . . if I elaborated, they'd kick me off RUclips.

    • @juliantapia1407
      @juliantapia1407 22 часа назад

      ​@@misterwhipple2870 ?😮

  • @metamorphicme9378
    @metamorphicme9378 Год назад +7

    Logan retires NYPD and goes on to be Mr Big😂

  • @billcox8870
    @billcox8870 Год назад +75

    And after he comes out of the joint, he is Ada Carver😂

    • @Jaren929
      @Jaren929 Год назад +11

      From Criminal Intent

    • @billcox8870
      @billcox8870 Год назад +4

      @@Jaren929 absolutely correct!

    • @teodorusdikypermadi
      @teodorusdikypermadi Год назад +4

      No freakin way

    • @DaneOrschlovsky
      @DaneOrschlovsky Год назад +4

      Amazing how that works 😂

    • @billcox8870
      @billcox8870 Год назад +3

      @DaneOrschlovsky they do tend to recycle actors. The woman who played lieutenant Anita Van Buren played a mother of a child in one of the first three seasons of the original Law & Order

  • @UNIT294
    @UNIT294 6 месяцев назад +4

    They pretty much just described the entire Enron scheme.

  • @Jodacro-it4zz
    @Jodacro-it4zz Год назад +30

    Is that courtney b vance aka ada carver from criminal intent

  • @stevenwiederholt7000
    @stevenwiederholt7000 Год назад +8

    I was a Security Policeman (back when dinosaurs walked the earth :-)). One Sat. night a Colonel comes up to the EC (entry control point) with some civilians. They are all fairly Hammered, and he wants to bring them on to the flight line. I ask him to wait, and he plays the Don't You Know Who I Am game.Long story short, He's eating through a straw and I don't know where he went, but I never saw him again.
    2 games you do NOT want to play with Law Enforcement 1. Don't You Know Who I Am! and related The Attitude Game. Nothing good comes from them.

  • @myrnalaboy2840
    @myrnalaboy2840 Год назад +12

    No one outruns forensics

  • @viettungtruong2660
    @viettungtruong2660 Год назад +22

    That’s Courney B. Vance, he played ADA Ron Carver in Criminal Intent

    • @moodyblues1273
      @moodyblues1273 Год назад +4

      Angela Bassett's husband.

    • @ifeelpretty5790
      @ifeelpretty5790 Год назад +4

      And won an Emmy for playing Johnnie Cochran in American Crime Story!

    • @JedEmpleo
      @JedEmpleo Год назад +5

      Don't forget, Sonar Tech Jones from Hunt for Red October

  • @jmckdekalb316
    @jmckdekalb316 Год назад +12

    From suspect to lawyer on their series

  • @frostgfx
    @frostgfx Год назад +16

    This was Enron only in the 90s.

    • @ashb7846
      @ashb7846 Год назад

      Oh there were so many big fraud scandals prior to Enron, but I think Enron was the one that forced laws to change because it happened on such a huge scale. I wonder if this was based somewhat on Bankers Trust since it took place in NY but idk.
      Or I wonder if this episode was based on all the rumors of fraud with companies like Enron and Arthur Anderson but before investigators actually had enough evidence gathered to make charges.

  • @nyosito
    @nyosito Год назад +15

    Should have stuck to the convenience stores Bud

  • @ItsAllLove4Real
    @ItsAllLove4Real Год назад +56

    I love how they recycle their actors😆

    • @javierpatag3609
      @javierpatag3609 Год назад +17

      The good news is that most of them are good actors anyway, so welcome back. 🙂

    • @ExplorerDS6789
      @ExplorerDS6789 Год назад +9

      A lot of TV shows do that. Someone guest stars one season, the next season they plan a recurring character.

    • @ItsAllLove4Real
      @ItsAllLove4Real Год назад

      @@ExplorerDS6789 I know

    • @ItsAllLove4Real
      @ItsAllLove4Real Год назад

      @@javierpatag3609 Okay

    • @glambertgurl1117
      @glambertgurl1117 Год назад +2

      ​@@javierpatag3609Yes, especially Jerry Orbach. I mean, I wasn't around when he was a big name in Hollywood, not that he isn't now, but I have great respect for him and other older actors. If it weren't for them, movies and shows wouldn't be what they are now.

  • @nicholasmaude6906
    @nicholasmaude6906 11 месяцев назад +3

    1:09 - Hey, it's a younger ADA Carver from L&O:CI.

  • @jbevan4411
    @jbevan4411 Год назад +7

    Gotta love Courtney B Vance

  • @vinceedwards3978
    @vinceedwards3978 Год назад +22

    I wish you could watch these early seasons of L&O more easily. Peacock only shows seasons 13-20, and season 22!

    • @Wolffen51
      @Wolffen51 Год назад +1

      That and it’s not available in Canada

    • @vinceedwards3978
      @vinceedwards3978 Год назад +3

      @@Wolffen51 That is sad. I am a 100% New Yorker, I miss the early stuff!

    • @thewkovacs316
      @thewkovacs316 Год назад +1

      and finding pirate streams for this show is almost impossible

    • @bsngrl1
      @bsngrl1 Год назад

      WEtv

    • @thewkovacs316
      @thewkovacs316 Год назад

      @@bsngrl1 we shows all seasons?

  • @ajvanmarle
    @ajvanmarle 8 месяцев назад +1

    Also known as "can dish it out, but cannot take it"

  • @MuzzyBarker
    @MuzzyBarker Год назад +19

    Okay, but if the detectives were within their rights to open the drawer in search of other items related to elements of the crime, why wouldn't they have the right to look at something in that drawer?

    • @MainDrainStudios
      @MainDrainStudios Год назад +5

      prosecution did make that point, and made it well. and as the clip shows, the problem ended up being that the warrant is for 'elements of the crime', and the judge declared that 'motive' is not an 'element of the crime'

    • @boredlawyer3382
      @boredlawyer3382 Год назад +10

      The 4th Amendment protects against "unreasonable searches and seizures." It has to be both. They might have had the right to look into the drawer, but not just take anything there. And financial records are not obvious evidence of a murder, the way, say, a gun or a bloody knife would be.

    • @MuzzyBarker
      @MuzzyBarker Год назад +1

      @@MainDrainStudios But at the point that the drawer is open, it's in plain view.

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 Год назад +1

      @@MuzzyBarker they are saying even though paper such as financial records aren’t an obvious indicator of a crime the way a bloody knife or bloody clothes they might have found inside the drawer.

    • @newellaorbana
      @newellaorbana 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@MuzzyBarker They were looking for murder evidence, not fraud evidence.

  • @boredlawyer3382
    @boredlawyer3382 Год назад +13

    The whole scene with the financial records is off. The same records are with the company, and if you know what to look for, they can uncover the whole scheme. They can just subpoena the records from the company, who will be happy to help prove they were being defrauded.

    • @bgdancer100
      @bgdancer100 Год назад +6

      Except that they would only know to subpoena the records the company has because of what they know from the records that have been excluded. Fruit of the poisonous tree.

    • @boredlawyer3382
      @boredlawyer3382 Год назад

      @@bgdancer100 Not necessarily so. He was already a suspect, they had a valid search warrant for some things, and they found the victim's print in the guy's bathroom. That certainly makes him a suspect. He also works in the financial industry, as did the victim (I think). So it would be perfectly natural under those circumstances to look into the suspect's financial dealings, even if they had not wrongfully seized the records from his house. Pulling the suspect's bank and other financial records is SOP, especially in a case like this, where other motives (like a love triangle or adultery) do not appear present.

    • @studentofsmith
      @studentofsmith Год назад +2

      Actually the company might not be so eager to make it public knowledge that they were defrauded. It might damage their reputation.

  • @twoofthree
    @twoofthree Год назад +5

    2:04 Like They Care about Your Diplomas.

  • @rachelgarber1423
    @rachelgarber1423 Год назад +2

    Courtney B. Vance later hired to work for the DA

  • @Blueboy0316
    @Blueboy0316 25 дней назад

    "Now brush your teeth in a rapid vertical motion! Troop!"

  • @moonmama24
    @moonmama24 8 месяцев назад +1

    I immediately thought y'all better leave Angela Bassett husband Courtney alone lol

  • @frankbonini7085
    @frankbonini7085 Год назад +3

    CBV Would Make a FREAKING Awesome Duke Brother in a (Hypothetical) "Trading Places" Reboot!

  • @sdaiwepm
    @sdaiwepm Год назад +8

    Stanford GSB does not award summa, magna, etc.

    • @Sponsorship4u2
      @Sponsorship4u2 Год назад +3

      It’s a TV show they embellish! It’s not a documentary 🙄

    • @Icecube88
      @Icecube88 Год назад +3

      it was just showing that he was ambitious/determined/smart/how good he is/whatever

    • @MichaelKurse
      @MichaelKurse Год назад

      He's a liar, and a fraud.

  • @misterbin00
    @misterbin00 Год назад +10

    He's the director of NCIS, so I do think it makes him better than an ordinary detective.

    • @MrPolicekarim
      @MrPolicekarim 3 месяца назад +2

      I think that you have gotten him mixed up with Rocky Carroll, who plays Director Leon Vance!

  • @Idez15
    @Idez15 Год назад +2

    2:36 same 😂

  • @Wolffen51
    @Wolffen51 Год назад +10

    Ok so spoilers requested please…what was the continuation of this episode and what was the final outcome?

    • @michaelcollins2030
      @michaelcollins2030 Год назад +5

      The persons defence was that essentially because of his race as a black man in a all white Wall Street firm he was in over his head and the final outcome was guilty on all charges

    • @Wolffen51
      @Wolffen51 Год назад +1

      @@michaelcollins2030 ok thanks

    • @toastnjam7384
      @toastnjam7384 Год назад

      Him and his lawyer played the race card all through the trial and during jury selection his lawyer got him a majority black jury. He arrogantly refused a plea deal for man one and was convicted with second degree murder.

  • @madunwagbo4769
    @madunwagbo4769 Год назад +3

    When Logan met Carver

  • @syedhaider5009
    @syedhaider5009 Месяц назад

    There should be also videos from Law and order criminal intent also on this channel

  • @aaronbrigham4743
    @aaronbrigham4743 Год назад +5

    Well I have resulted in a trillion dollars in trade so you can be quiet since you only went to a billion. 🤣🤣🤣

  • @carloruiz2814
    @carloruiz2814 Месяц назад

    This episode is based on Joseph Jett, who was a trader for Kidder Peabody.

  • @crucifire9224
    @crucifire9224 Год назад +2

    I saw smack and a blur looking like will smith in thumbnail

  • @MrBmick79
    @MrBmick79 6 месяцев назад +2

    a lotta racial undetones in this one. Mike didn't like being talked to like that by a Black man

    • @sav9798
      @sav9798 5 месяцев назад +1

      at allll lmao

    • @themermaidstale5008
      @themermaidstale5008 Месяц назад

      Mike wouldn’t have liked it from any man, regardless of color. Mikes not the one being considered a person of interest for a murder and a broker defrauding his employer for undeserved bonuses from bogus accounting practices.

  • @MJMonroe
    @MJMonroe Год назад +2

    christopher darden

  • @joshuaengleman1131
    @joshuaengleman1131 Год назад +2

    # 262
    Palindrome!!!!
    WHOOOOOOO.... DOGGY!!! 🤘🤘🤘🤘

  • @afihaileywibowo1095
    @afihaileywibowo1095 6 месяцев назад

    Logan should've replied to Greer, calmly: Maybe. But I'm not the one accused of doing a bogus job which is why you are sitting on that chair right now so self-righteously defending your bogus trade with your 'degrees' and bonus, Bud. You are what you are, not your degrees. Lenny, do your job.

  • @wickidblazed420
    @wickidblazed420 Год назад +8

    My mum went to Harvard and graduated

  • @mew10521
    @mew10521 5 месяцев назад

    Why didn't Greer leave the job if his boss was racist?

  • @YuvalQ
    @YuvalQ Год назад +8

    I feel that if this episode aired nowadays, the jury's decision to convict, based on the blatant racism the defendant had to endure, would have seemed somewhat unreasonable by today's terms. Or at the very least, it wouldn't be such a straight and easy conviction and the prosecutor would have much rathered plea him down.

    • @MuzzyBarker
      @MuzzyBarker Год назад +1

      Anger isn't a defense for homicide. People commit crimes of passion all the time. He could have plead to manslaughter by arguing that there was no premeditation, but that would be a tough sell considering he went to the apartment uninvited and had the presence of mine to stage a suicide. Anyway, he said he wasn't interested in any deals. I think the conviction had less to do with the relevance of the racism he faced than it had to do with the burden of an insanity plea. His being offended by his boss didn't negate his ability to know that breaking a man's neck was wrong.

    • @YuvalQ
      @YuvalQ Год назад +2

      @@MuzzyBarker If I remember correctly, Hullbruck invited Greer to his apartment to confront and berate him. And while I agree anger isn't a defence for homicide, the case made by the civil rights attorney was strong enough and has shown a consistency of abuse to justify the defendant state of mind at that time. As such, convicting him forthwith would have been challenging.

    • @MuzzyBarker
      @MuzzyBarker Год назад +2

      @@YuvalQ He didn't, though. He cited a couple of incidents, one of which had a major consequence, and neither of which came from the victim. And we didn't get enough of a timeline to establish consistency. The incidents, abusive though they were, justified anger, not insanity. In order for the insanity defense to work, they would have to establish that the abuse took away his ability to know that what he was doing was wrong. The defense not only failed to establish that, but made very little effort in that vain, from what we saw. Considering they had a majority black jury and a barebones defense, it seems more likely they were shooting for nullification.

    • @RebekahCurielAlessi
      @RebekahCurielAlessi Год назад

      ​@@YuvalQthanks for your reasoning....

    • @RebekahCurielAlessi
      @RebekahCurielAlessi Год назад

      ​@@MuzzyBarkerit's enjoyable reading your conversation with the other fellow.

  • @erikafigueroa5128
    @erikafigueroa5128 7 месяцев назад

    Ms Kincaid are you surprised? Come on.

  • @Icecube88
    @Icecube88 Год назад +3

    so what happened with this case?

    • @FrankWolenczak
      @FrankWolenczak Год назад +2

      "On the sole count of the indictment, Murder in the second degree, how do you find?"
      "We find the defendant Benjamin Greer, Guilty."
      Who then looks shocked that the Jury sided against him

  • @dyquancrawford6818
    @dyquancrawford6818 6 месяцев назад +1

    3:02

  • @89five3five
    @89five3five Месяц назад

    Courtney B. Vance is truly an underrated actor.

  • @MichaelKurse
    @MichaelKurse Год назад +1

    Black man in the White Man's World? Why?😑😑😑

  • @arielg7000
    @arielg7000 Год назад +1

    😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @JeremyRobbins-b1n
    @JeremyRobbins-b1n Месяц назад

    Courtney B. Vance was terrific character in this L&O episode as Bud Greer.
    He was imo really great as Ron Carver on Criminal Intent.

  • @shesarunningshesatrackstar7882
    @shesarunningshesatrackstar7882 25 дней назад

    Very handsome see why Angela Bassett married him 😅😅

  • @timwood225
    @timwood225 Год назад +1

    Not real accounting described here. Ok for a story, but not how the world works.

    • @paulkennedy927
      @paulkennedy927 Год назад +3

      Wasn't that how Arthur Anderson made it work for Enron?

    • @timwood225
      @timwood225 Год назад

      @@paulkennedy927 In the video, the actor describes recording profit when cash received. This is not how most of the world works. What actually happens is that revenue/income is recorded at time of sale whether or not cash changed hands. And that revenue/income is what, for example, taxes are based on (subject to adjustments). If not paid at time of sale, then both revenue and a receivable are recorded, and when that is paid, cash is increased (because received) and the receivable reduced (because paid). And this is called accrual accounting, which is correct for almost all businesses. The alternative is "cash accounting," in which the movement of cash determines when things have happened, which is approximately what is described in the video. And sometimes cash accounting is the right way. In the video the "criminal" is doing accrued accounting the right way, except there never was a sale. Enron did something else. If memory serves, they found a way to list expenses as assets. And that is a complete 100% no-no. Also fraud and a crime. A little like telling your girlfriend's father you're worth $100,000 when really you owe $100,000 on a car you should not have bought.

  • @armandgordon
    @armandgordon Год назад +1

    Like it

  • @main___name___main___name
    @main___name___main___name Год назад +2

    The so-called law protects the criminal's right to commit crime.