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Seaduse nimel Consultation (1990–2010) Online

Seaduse nimel Consultation (1990–2010) Online
Original Title :
Consultation
Genre :
TV Episode / Crime / Drama / Mystery / Thriller
Year :
1990–2010
Directror :
James Hayman
Cast :
Jerry Orbach,Chris Noth,Dann Florek
Writer :
Dick Wolf,Matt Kiene
Type :
TV Episode
Time :
1h
Rating :
7.8/10
Seaduse nimel Consultation (1990–2010) Online

Detectives Briscoe and Logan investigate the death of a Nigerian woman, Kelani Amoda, who died soon after her arrival in New York City. She was a drug mule and had ingested packets of heroin but one obviously burst killing her and her unborn child. Her husband was already in New York and she had arranged a job with a Nigerian oil company's US offices. Her visa was sponsored by her tribal chief Ola-Gimja Nwaka who also holds diplomatic status in the United States. ADA Stone has every intention prosecuting Nwaka and receives some cooperation from the Nigerian Embassy's lawyer, Sir Idris Balewa. Stone's case is shaky however but Sir Idris has a solution for that.
Episode cast overview, first billed only:
Jerry Orbach Jerry Orbach - Lennie Briscoe
Chris Noth Chris Noth - Mike Logan
Dann Florek Dann Florek - Donald Cragen
Michael Moriarty Michael Moriarty - Ben Stone
Richard Brooks Richard Brooks - Paul Robinette
Steven Hill Steven Hill - Adam Schiff
Carolyn McCormick Carolyn McCormick - Dr. Elizabeth Olivet (credit only)
Roscoe Lee Browne Roscoe Lee Browne - Sir Idris Balewa
Andrew Robinson Andrew Robinson - Phillip Marietta
Wendell Pierce Wendell Pierce - Chief Ola-Gimju Nwaka
Keith Szarabajka Keith Szarabajka - Harry Sibelius
Talia Balsam Talia Balsam - Turner
Seth Gilliam Seth Gilliam - Babatunde Amoda
Robert Katims Robert Katims - Jacob Bloom
Beatrice Winde Beatrice Winde - Sarah De Witt

In a nod to real life, the flirtation between Chris Noth and Beverly Johnson was not difficult, as the two were in a long-term relationship at the time that would end in 1995.

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Jim DeMarse (Ralph Walton) also worked together on episode 2.18, Gera žmona: Killer Song (2011), of Gera žmona (2009) as Peter Florrick & Judge Alan Breen respectively.

Jim DeMarse (Ralph Walton) also played the role of Walter in episode 9.7, Istatymas ir tvarka: Venom (1998).

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Seth Gilliam (Babatunde Amoda) also worked together on episode 2.23, Gera žmona: Closing Arguments (2011), of Gera žmona (2009) and two episodes of Law & Order: Criminal Intent (2001).

Seth Gilliam (Babatunde Amoda) also played the role of Michael's Attorney in episode 20.21, Istatymas ir tvarka: Immortal (2010).

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Walter Bobbie (Fred Drake) also worked together on episode 4.16, Gera žmona: Runnin' with the Devil (2013), of Gera žmona (2009) as Peter Florrick & Seth DeLuca respectively.

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Talia Balsam (Turner) also worked together on episode 5.3, Gera žmona: A Precious Commodity (2013), of Gera žmona (2009), as Peter Florrick & Anne Stevens respectively.

Talia Balsam (Turner) also played the role of Teri Marks in episode 6.10, Istatymas ir tvarka: Remand (1996).

Chris Noth (Mike Logan) & Charles Malik Whitfield (Babatunde's Roommate) also worked together on episode 5.11, Gera žmona: Goliath and David (2014), of Gera žmona (2009), as Peter Florrick & Rebel Kane respectively.

Wendell Pierce and Seth Gilliam also starred together in The Wire


User reviews

Celak

Celak

This was a good episode, which made an important point about the world we live in, and how cultures in our world are vastly different. A drug smuggling ring in NYC is uncovered, and it appears that a very prominent member of the Nigerian community is running it. He is both a diplomat and a chief in a tribe in his homeland, and of course has many character witnesses praise him as a man of tremendous integrity. The investigation is interesting, as is the result in court, which I will not spoil. Most interesting for me, however, is a point made about the cultural differences between the USA and Nigeria. A man suspected of smuggling drugs insists he is innocent, and it looks as though may go free. However, all the prosecutors have to do is suggest he might be extradited to Nigeria to face justice there, and he suddenly cooperates with the District Attorneys and is desperate to do whatever they want. This shows the extreme differences between the two cultures, and, not to offend anyone from Nigeria, but how lucky we are in the free world to have a high standard of living and basic human rights. This episode made me think.
Arcanescar

Arcanescar

A young pregnant Nigerian woman gets off the plane at JFK and gets into a cab, but going over one of the East River bridges she starts going into seizure. At the hospital she's pronounced DOA and her baby is stillborn.

No wonder this happened the woman had swallowed several balloons of cocaine and one of them burst. Where the investigation takes Jerry Orbach and Chris Noth is to a Nigerian tribal chief Wendell Pierce who expedites work visas and Andrew Robinson hires them at his construction business.

The problem that Michael Moriarty and Richard Brooks have is the tribal loyalty that the members of Pierce's own tribe whom he uses in his dirty work have generational ties to their chief. Even Roscoe Lee Browne from the Nigerian consulate tries his best. but as we learn Browne has an agenda of his own, a most interesting agenda and solution to all the problems law enforcement has here.

The ending is truly poetical.
Jwalextell

Jwalextell

A pregnant young wife arrives from Nigeria and in the taxi to the city pops a condom full of heroin in her digestive tract and kills herself and the fetus. Brisco and Logan track down the people responsible for her immigration status -- Andy Robinson, who works for Nigerian Petroleum and sees to it that mules are recruited from the streets of Lagos, and Wendell Pierce as the Oxford-educated dandy who is a consular official for Nigeria, who funds the smuggling, and who has diplomatic immunity.

It looks like a dead end. The evidence against Robinson is weak, and Pierce can't be prosecuted for crimes in the United States. But all is not lost. Stone and Robinet manage to roll Robinson, who testifies against Gilliam in return for a reduced sentence. And Roscoe Lee Browne shows up as some kind of high Nigerian muck-a-much and deports Pierce back to Nigeria where he'll meet a harsher fate than he would at Sing Sing, if that's possible.

The usual cast does its usual professional job. Andy Robinson, who was the psychopathic killer in "Dirty Harry," is suitably snotty and contemptuous. Roscoe Lee Browne doesn't have much screen time but with that crackling resonant voice he dominates the screen. He was a remarkable guy, an academic, an athlete, and an unforgettable actor. Talia Balsam doesn't have much screen time either, which is too bad because she has the kind of facial features that are so pleasant that you could fall into them. She was named after Thalia, the muse of comedy or one of the three graces of Greek Mythology. Thank the gods that she resembles her mother, Joyce Van Patten, more than her father, Martin Balsam. This role as the usual kind of tough-as-nails defense attorney must have been difficult for her because she simply doesn't fit the part. Seth Williams has a prominent role as the husband of the dead girl but he fails to clear the authenticity bar, not quite having gotten the Yoruba accent down.

A solid entry in the early years of a good show.