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Chicago Justice Season 1 Episode 6 Review: Dead Meat

Critic's Rating: 4.8 / 5.0

With Ben Stone as a father, Peter has a lot to live up to.

The elder Stone didn't have much of a personal life in the original Law & Order, but now Peter regularly describes him as strict, having high expectations for his son, and not always able to be there for him.

And on Chicago Justice Season 1 Episode 6, Peter seemed almost as haunted by the advice his father gave him after missing his baseball game as by his inability to get justice for a grieving widow.

The Murder Suspect - Chicago Justice
(Parrish Lewis/NBC)

At first, I wasn't sure why Stone was so affected by this case.

Sure, Gail Marcus was upset and cried on his shoulder, but he seemed to be taking her case awfully personally and not just because he'd lost at trial.

I was pretty sure Chicago Justice wasn't going to go the route of Stone having an affair with a witness so soon after Valdez had an ambiguous relationship with a judge. On the other hand, you just never know what TV writers may think makes great drama, and there was clearly something going on.

I was so relieved when it turned out Stone was trying to live up to his father's belief that you have to ease the pain of people who have lost everything!

Peter: My dad, he was a big ADA back East. He tried to make it to all my games when his trial schedule allowed. Senior year, we made it to the finals. He canceled everything, made it to all my games. Sat in the same seat every time. It’s the bottom of the sixth, I’m on the mound, I look up and his seat is empty. I didn’t hear from him for three days.

Valdez: He didn’t call?

Peter: I didn’t TAKE his calls. Screw him, right? So finally, he comes home. It turns out he caught a homicide. Ten-year-old girl. He said to me, ‘Someday you’re going to meet someone who’s lost the most important thing to them, and when you do, if you don’t do something to ease the pain, what good are you?’

🔗 permalink: Someday you’re going to meet someone who’s lost the most important thing to them, and when you d

The little conversation between Stone and Valdez was one of the highlights of the hour and possibly my favorite part of "Dead Meat."

I was enthralled by Stone's story of his father missing his baseball game and the reason that happened, and I loved seeing Valdez be supportive.

Valdez hasn't been on much since her judge got killed, and I wondered if she's on some sort of punishment for that whole mess. But it didn't matter because she shined in her small role as Stone's confidante and supportive friend.

Sookie St. James, Gilmore Girls

In any case, I could feel how much pressure Stone has lived with his entire life. I doubt the elder Stone will make an appearance, at least not played by Michael Moriarity, considering the circumstances under which he originally exited Law & Order.

But there's so much dramatic potential in a father-son reunion here that I hope I'm wrong!

Jeffries: You’re grinning like a twice-shot fox.

Peter: What does that mean?

Jeffries: Dunno, but my ma used to say it right before she smacked the smile off my face.

🔗 permalink: Dunno, but my ma used to say it right before she smacked the smile off my face.

It was utterly amusing that Jeffries made a joke about his mother right after Stone told that serious story about his father. That was a nice juxtaposition of the two men's experiences.

I also really liked Jeffries' advice to Stone. It seems like he often gets too caught up in the facts of the case and doesn't think about the role emotion plays in jury decisions.

Jonesy: Slit wrists. It was obviously a suicide.

Dawson: Hot water. Whoever did this wanted the body to decompose.

Jonesy: Excuse me, did you just say whoever did this? We know who did this. He killed himself.

Laura: Look again, Officer. What’s missing?

[as Jonesy looks] Dawson: The knife.

Laura: Maybe Officer Jonesy can get us some coffee.

Dawson: What a terrible way for a cop to go.

Jonesy: Wait a second, did you just say he was a cop?

Dawson: You mean your boss didn’t tell you?

Jonesy: No.

Laura: Officer Jonesy, meet Officer Ted Cody, Chicago PD.

🔗 permalink: Officer Jonesy, meet Officer Ted Cody, Chicago PD.

I should have known from the beginning that Officer Jonesy was going to do something stupid that may have cost the SA's office their case. He seemed pretty incompetent at the crime scene.

There was no word about what happened to him after the debacle at trial, but I hope he ended up sitting on a desk for a while.

Jonesy made a lot of mistakes that were probably borne out of naivety, but his behavior got important evidence thrown out of the trial and who knows what else could happen to him or his partner while he's not following protocol and then lying about it.

Beckett: You know what I think? I think this is it for you. Day after day putting away the bad guys. But one of these days you’re gonna wake up in the morning, brush your teeth, shave, look in the mirror… and realize you’re the one in the cage.

Stone: But here I am.

🔗 permalink: But here I am.

I'm not sure how I feel about re-opening the Marcus case. It was kind of necessary to the plot, and I guess there are times where a trial should have been a mistrial, but I feel like the precedent of re-opening cases that resulted in an acquittal could be dangerous.

Certainly, the original case Stone referenced, in which a judge was bribed was grounds for a mistrial, and jury tampering fits that bill too, though I'd love to know why it took the SA's office so long to discover it.

But I wondered what the standard is for re-trying a case under the presumption that it should have resulted in a mistrial and how the judicial system protects itself against misuse of this exception to the rule against double jeopardy.

Josh Charles as Will Gardner -- The Good Wife

I was glad to see Beckett get his comeuppance, in any case, though I wondered if there was any truth to his claims about Paul Marcus

Up until almost the end, Beckett claimed that he didn't know that Paul was in the warehouse and that he was busy trying to get his pigs out of it. He said in a flat tone that he killed Marcus when Stone told him that admission was a requirement for his plea bargain.

That felt somewhat coercive to me. 

Beckett likely did commit the murder, since he paid off a juror to find him innocent. I don't like seeing coercive elements introduced even when a suspect is guilty, though, because if rights are eradicated on the basis that the defendant was guilty anyway, then they can be eradicated for people that those with power just believe to be guilty.

Laura: I wonder if there’s a bar around here.

Dawson: I could sure use one.

Laura: Not for us. The alcohol in Cody’s blood… he didn’t have a mini-bar in his room.

🔗 permalink: Not for us. The alcohol in Cody’s blood… he didn’t have a mini-bar in his room.

On the lighter side, I loved the banter between Laura and Antonio, as usual. I hated the Laura character at the beginning, but I'm warming up to her, or at least to her relationship with Antonio.

What did you think of Dead Meat? Did you figure out that Beckett used his pig-wrangling skills on Cody before Stone did? Do you think Stone's father will show up, and do you want him to show up?

Weigh in below, and don't forget you can watch Chicago Justice online if you missed anything.

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Canceled Chicago Fire Spinoff Never Got a Fair Chance to Succeed

One Chicago seems untouchable, but one canceled Chicago Fire spinoff from 2017 tells another story.

I’m talking about Chicago Justice — the Law & Order of Chicagoland, which only had 13 episodes before NBC canned it.

I loved this show and still miss it. NBC had its reasons, but I think the network made a mistake by axing this legal drama without giving it a chance to shine.

Obesessed With Justice - Chicago Justice
(Elizabeth Morris/NBC)

I Loved Chicago Justice’s Connection To The Law & Order Universe, But NBC Saw It As A Weakness

Chicago Justice was the most connected of all the One Chicago shows to the Law & Order franchise.

One of its biggest selling points was ADA Peter Stone — the son of Michael Moriarty’s Benjamin Stone, the ADA who tried cases during the first five seasons of Law & Order.

Stone had a compelling backstory. He felt he was a huge disappointment to his legendary father, from whom he was now estranged, and thus eager to prove himself in the courtroom.

He also tended to see legal issues in black and white terms — sometimes literally, as he didn’t understand the role racism played in many crimes in the Chicago area.

It seems like a perfect premise that would appeal to Law & Order fans, right? It certainly appealed to me. Sadly, however, that was one of the reasons NBC decided to axe Chicago Justice after only one season.

The network concluded it didn’t want to be overrun with One Chicago shows, already had three, and that Chicago Justice was redundant because of its similarity to Law & Order.

The Murder Suspect - Chicago Justice
(Parrish Lewis/NBC)

NBC Was Wrong About This Canceled Chicago Fire Spinoff

It burns me up (no pun intended) that NBC canceled Chicago Justice because its similarity to Law & Order made it more expendable than the other Chicago Fire spinoffs.

First of all, this was 2017 — the original Law & Order was long gone and wouldn’t return until 2021.

So what was NBC saying here? That people who like Law & Order didn’t deserve a show they enjoy?

Let’s be real, too — Chicago Justice was buried on Sunday nights. Yes, it had lower ratings than the other One Chicago shows, but did it really stand a chance during that timeslot?

The Good Wife had just ended, so NBC might have hoped to get an edge over CBS by offering a replacement legal drama in that time slot.

A Link To Other Murders - Chicago Justice
(Elizabeth Morris/NBC)

Still, Chicago Justice was competing with Madam Secretary, which meant there were two intelligent shows about complicated legal and political issues going head to head.

If NBC wanted to improve Chicago Justice’s ratings, it should have moved it to another night instead of giving up on it. Since it was similar to Law & Order, airing it and Law & Order: SVU back-to-back should have been a no-brainer.

The three other Chicago shows aired on Tuesday through Thursday, but it would have made more sense to pair Chicago Justice with Law & Order: SVU, which was the lead-in to Chicago P.D. in those days.

In any case, the ratings aren’t the real story here any more than they were for Blue Bloods.

Chicago Justice was lower rated than the other One Chicago shows, but it still had a total viewership of between 5 and 6 million viewers per week — something other shows that were renewed struggled with a bit.

Sharing a Drink - Chicago Justice
(Parrish Lewis/NBC)

The TV Landscape Was Different in 2017, But NBC Made a Mistake CBS Is Repeating Today

The biggest reason for canceling Chicago Justice was that NBC feared having too many One Chicago shows.

That was more forgivable in 2017 than it would be today. It was the pre-streaming era, where networks were limited to whatever slots they had available in primetime.

It also was before TV was oversaturated with reboots and spinoffs. There was no such thing as monopolizing the schedule with three episodes of the same franchise.

So NBC decided one of these spinoffs had to go, and Chicago Justice was the easiest to axe.

A Second Murder - Chicago Justice
(Parrish Lewis/NBC)

Of course, NBC knew this would be the fourth One Chicago show when the network greenlit it, confusing its decision.

Plus, it sent Stone to Law & Order: SVU for a season, demonstrating the premise was worthwhile even though the show didn’t make it.

Eight years later, here we are again, only it’s a different network making a ridiculous decision about a Dick Wolf franchise.

FBI: International and FBI: Most Wanted‘s cancellations aren’t about ratings either. They’re partially about expense, and partially to make room for a fourth FBI spinoff.

CBS’ decision is less forgivable because the TV landscape has changed. Today, we have streaming services that can handle the overflow.

NBC has experimented with this, successfully transitioning Days of Our Lives to Peacock only and experimenting this season with Law & Order: Organized Crime going there too.

Jefferies Oversees The Case - Chicago Justice Season 1 Episode 1
(Parrish Lewis/NBC)

So if Chicago Justice were airing today, maybe NBC would put it on Peacock instead of panicking about how many One Chicago shows were eating up time on its schedule.

Yet CBS canceled two popular shows outright to make room for another member of the same franchise, and we’re no less overrun with police procedurals than we were before the network made that decision.

What do you think, One Chicago fanatics?

Is CBS making the same mistake that NBC did with its canceled Chicago Fire spinoff?

Vote in our poll about whether you would watch a rebooted Chicago Justice (theoretically — there are no such plans as far as I know!) and then hit the comments with your thoughts.

Would You Watch Chicago Justice If It Were Rebooted Today?

All 13 episodes of Chicago Justice are available on Apple TV+.

Watch Chicago Justice Online


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Comments

Michael

Wednesday 2nd of April 2025

I own the only season on DVD. Did it deserve better? Possibly.

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