Law & Order: Trial by Jury (2005)
The inner workings of the judicial system, beginning with the arraignment, and continuing through the prosecutors' complicated process of building a case, investigating leads and preparing witnesses for trial.
Seasons & Episode
Tough New York Assistant D.A. Tracey Kibre tackles the murder of an aspiring Broadway actress but has little evidence to prosecute the suspect – an acclaimed but arrogant theater producer who smugly knows that the police have found no blood or even a body.
Kibre and Gaffney must prosecute an accused cop killer, who was shot by the police 41 times.
Kibre and Gaffney take on the job of prosecuting a man who is suspected of killing a pedophile, whom was recently paroled from prison.
Kibre must prosecute three boys, who implicate each other in a rape and murder, only she can't decide who is telling the truth.
Kibre and Gaffney must prosecute a nanny accused of killing the baby she was caring for by causing shaken baby syndrome. The only problem is they receive a judge who favors the defense since he was a former legal aid attorney.
Kibre tries a celebrity basketball star accused of raping and murdering his mistress. However, she runs into trouble when the star's wife has a slip of the tongue on the stand.
Kibre prosecutes a man who shot up the bank where he worked, killing the woman responsible for his son being in a coma. She runs into trouble when the man decides to represent himself, and the jury is sympathetic for him.
Kibre tries a man who got away with murder, and she is desperate to convict him.
Kibre prosecutes two cops for the murder of a man being held in custody, who was sodomized by the two officers. However, she hits a wall when none of the officers will talk about the events of the evening in question.
Kibre prosecutes the man accused of murdering a transvestite, but she runs into trouble when his father confesses to the same crime.
Kibre and Gaffney are forced to prosecute a doorman who killed a homeless man while he attacked a frightened woman who lived in the building. After the woman tells the grand jury that she's been stalked for four months, thinking it was the homeless man, Kibre and Gaffney look into who the stalker was.