- A smug African American stock broker who resents other people of his own race is accused of murder. However, he hires a high-profile civil rights attorney, who presents a "black rage" defense.
- 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. His coworkers immediately point the finger at "golden boy" Bud Greer -- a young, black junior trader. Bud tells Logan and Briscoe that success isn't about money, it's about power and with his major competitor dead, Bud now has the power. When Bud pleads insanity due to "black rage" the ADAs don't buy it for a second.—Anonymous
- Detectives Briscoe and Logan investigate the death of Wall Street high-flyer Wallace Holbrook who is found in his very expensive home, shot in the head. It has all of the appearance of a suicide but Holbrook's daughter Krista insists that her father, who was about to leave on his first holiday in years, was anything but suicidal. The medical examiner agrees with her and the medical evidence clearly points to murder. After catching one of Holbrook's traders, Bud Greer, in a lie they dig deeper and find that he may have made an enormous number of bogus trades. Greer has a brilliant mind and hires a well-known civil rights attorney who argues that Greer was discriminated against at the firm as he was an Africa-American and the murder was the result of "black rage".—garykmcd
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