Advanced search
- TITLES
- NAMES
- COLLABORATIONS
Search filters
Enter full date
to
or just enter yyyy, or yyyy-mm below
to
to
to
Exclude
Only includes titles with the selected topics
to
In minutes
to
1-34 of 34
- Rosie struggles with both personal & ethical issues with her latest case. Her client is an unrepentant about his past crimes & views Rosie's hard work as his free ticket out of Jail. Meanwhile Rosie finds her long time friend, Prosecutor Deb Grant (Meg Foster) may be hiding evidence to help get her a better job. Now Rosie has to debate ruining her friend's career to help free a guilty man.
- Rosie continues her relationship with the very dashing & very married Peter Donovan (Robert Wagner). The two plan a romantic weekend get away, but Rosie finds it difficult to enjoy herself as she struggles with her guilt. It gets worse for her, when her guilt begins to manifest itself as some familiar looking people.
- After a chance encounter with newspaper editor Peter Donovan (Robert Wagner), Rosie's love life is reawakened. As she becomes closer with Peter, she finds Hank has fallen for her newest client. Rosie struggles to keep Hank's own budding romance from forming a conflict of interest which could harm her case, but as she finds this woman is not who she says, she must find a way to protect Hank.
- The man Rosie defends in a case of mistaken identity gets the wrong idea about their relationship; Steve (Doug Wert) wants a decision from Rosie on their future.
- Rosie faces two trials: quitting smoking and defending a prostitute (Alix Koromzay) accused of killing her vicious pimp with the gun he used to threaten her.
- Rosie struggles with the Mother of all cases when her client is on trial for kidnapping her own foster son. The client claims he ran away after being reunited with his junkie mother who is fresh out of of jail. To make matters worse her other client Walter Kovacs (Ed Asner) is a gruff former cop who hates Public Defenders! Now Rosie must convince him to help her find the missing kid!
- Rosie's high-school pal (Tyne Daly), now a Broadway star, returns for their 25th reunion---only she's not exactly singing Rosie's praises. Carole King performs the show's theme song, which she wrote.
- After a client's mother puts a hex on her, Rosie is cursed with a seemingly unwinnable case and a personal life that seems jinxed as well.
- Rosie's put through her paces by a client who's charged with killing her newborn infant. Meanwhile, she struggles with her feelings of loss over her recent divorce, and the needs of her mother, sister, and step-daughter.
- Rosie hopes to spring a client claiming to be an elf (Paul Williams) before Christmas Eve, the night a Scrooge of a judge has set for trial.
- Rosie battles her conscience and her fear when she fights to clear a rapist who shows no remorse and says he'll strike again.
- Rosie's 44th birthday is no party as she burns the candle at both ends searching for evidence to clear a man accused of child molestation.
- Rosie finds herself in the middle of an unusual case when she becomes Co-Council to Defense hotshot Angela Gianelli (Brenda Vaccaro) on a case where two Frat brothers accidentally killed a pledge. Rosie's client Pete Ellis (Danny Nucci) refuses to make a deal to turn on his "brother", but Rosie finds brotherhood only goes so far when Angela proves to be a snake in the grass.
- Rosie comes face-to-face with her own mortality when her handling of an AIDS euthanasia case gets her thinking about her own susceptibility to the disease.
- Rosie becomes preoccupied with curing the ills of a system that allows a mentally unstable woman (Peggy McCay) to live on the streets.
- Rosie struggles with her latest client, a battered woman who is on trial for failing to prevent the murder of her son, by her abusive spouse. Rosie argues battered women's syndrome prevented her from acting, but an unsympathetic Prosecutor, Judge & her own client disagree. Meanwhile Rosie has a house guest after her mother's injury forces the usually strong willed woman to ask for help.
- Rosie's latest client is a pregnant woman on trial for stealing a credit card, & while convinced she can get her off, a crusading D.A. wants her thrown in jail because she was a drug addict. He claims that she's likely to begin using again & now Rosie must find a way to help her out of this. Meanwhile Rosie & Doreen are suspicious of their mother's new boyfriend, since she's giving him a loan.
- In Rosie's first capital offense case, which could end in the death penalty, Rosie and Hank defend a young black man accused of murder. Rosie insists that she should make the closing arguments, but Hank, haunted by his own experiences of racism, says she can't possibly speak for a black man in America. Later, circumstances put Rosie to the test and her client's life hangs in the balance.
- Rosie notices a family resemblance---in attitude---when she defends Hank's obstinate brother (Kevin N. Davis), who laments his lack of opportunity while refusing to give up the guy who committed an armed robbery.
- An ecoterrorist (Robert Foxworth) holds Rosie's conscience hostage, pressuring her to argue the issue, which Rosie feels could be toxic to her mistaken-identity defense.
- Rosie fights with a fragile Kim while representing a woman (Sheila Johns) who shot and killed her drug-addicted daughter.
- Thanksgiving gives Rosie the blues when she tries to help a homeless blues legend (Bill Cobbs) charged with kidnapping the rocker who stole his song.
- Rosie believes in her All-American client, who's accused of defacing a Jewish cemetery, while Hank (Dorian Harewood) questions Ben's beliefs on personal freedom.
- The severity of the gang problem hits home with Rosie, who tries to help an ex-gang member beat an assault charge, even though the fight was videotaped.
- At an awards dinner, Rosie discovers a side of her father she doesn't like, and a side of Kim (Lisa Rieffel) she does, when Kim tags along for a school project on the justice system.