The episode ends with a tribute to United States Attorney Charlie Rose, who died shortly after this episode was filmed. [ "Dedicated to United States Attorney CHARLES ROSE: He made the world a safer place" ] He worked for 15 years with the United States Attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York. He helped prosecute bank robbers, narcotics traffickers, terrorists, and organized-crime figures. His biggest case was prosecuting terrorists from Puerto Rico who wanted their country to no longer be a territory of the United States: they had bombed the headquarters of the New York City Police Department and the F.B.I. headquarters at Federal Plaza. Mr. Rose prosecuted the terrorists responsible for the bombings and got convictions on all of them. In 1990, he prosecuted one of the largest cases involving organized crime since that of Al Capone: he prosecuted notorious mobster Vincent Gigante, who conspired with 14 other reputed gangsters to rig bids and extort payoffs from contractors on multi-million-dollar bids with the New York City Housing Authority. Everyone charged was convicted on multiple counts of extortion, racketeering, and murder, except for Mr. Gigante who stalled his trial by pretending to be mentally unfit. However, he was eventually convicted, although it was after Mr. Rose left the U.S. Attorney's office. Charles Rose has been credited with doing more than any other U.S. Attorney (at the time of his death in 1998) to clean up organized crime in New York City.