The police find two dead bodies. One is slumped over on a car seat; one is found in an alley some distance away, a .45 in his hand. Seretta and Logan track the shooting down to Adam Arkin, a Greek immigrant who runs a nearby shop and has been robbed at gunpoint before. A surveillance tape reveals that the two dead men entered the shop as far as the anti-robbery gate would allow, demanded entry, Arkin produced his revolver and a shoot out followed. The two robbers, wounded in the exchange, managed to make it outside. Arkin rushed after them, shot them and killed them.
Ben Stone's problem: convince the jury that there is a difference between self defense, which is justified in cases like this, and revenge, which is not. Arkin's shoot out, with bullets whizzing past him, was self defense but the chase and subsequent killings were murders.
Stone really does have a problem and it goes way behind conceptual distinctions between defense and offense. It gets into endocrinology. In the movies, policemen shoot an armed and threatening suspect once or twice and the suspect immediately drops his weapon and falls to the ground. In real life, as video clips often show us, the shooting doesn't stop until the perp is clearly dead. The police officer isn't prosecuted for using more force than was necessary to just disable the suspect.
The problem is that people aren't robots responding to programming that has incorporated charter documents like the NYC penal code. They're biological entities, whether police or civilian. Once the glands start twitching and the adrenalin squirting, once the amygdala hijacks the brain, no human being can simply shut it off. It's why police officers tend to shoot armed suspects full of holes. It's why soldiers in combat rush into a danger zone and slaughter the enemy, armed and unarmed alike, soldier or civilian. If Arkin had been a U. S. Marine he'd have been decorated for his act.
Nobody in the episode brings this up because to them it all looks like a question of legal and illegal motives. Stone and Robinet are lawyers after all, and to somebody with a hammer every problem begins to look like a nail.
As it is, the writers leave the issue hanging in the air, which they usually do. Arkin is judged guilty of murdering the guy in the car, who may have been reaching for a weapon on the floor, but he is found innocent of executing the other man. At any rate, Arkin is headed for Attica.
Ben Stone's problem: convince the jury that there is a difference between self defense, which is justified in cases like this, and revenge, which is not. Arkin's shoot out, with bullets whizzing past him, was self defense but the chase and subsequent killings were murders.
Stone really does have a problem and it goes way behind conceptual distinctions between defense and offense. It gets into endocrinology. In the movies, policemen shoot an armed and threatening suspect once or twice and the suspect immediately drops his weapon and falls to the ground. In real life, as video clips often show us, the shooting doesn't stop until the perp is clearly dead. The police officer isn't prosecuted for using more force than was necessary to just disable the suspect.
The problem is that people aren't robots responding to programming that has incorporated charter documents like the NYC penal code. They're biological entities, whether police or civilian. Once the glands start twitching and the adrenalin squirting, once the amygdala hijacks the brain, no human being can simply shut it off. It's why police officers tend to shoot armed suspects full of holes. It's why soldiers in combat rush into a danger zone and slaughter the enemy, armed and unarmed alike, soldier or civilian. If Arkin had been a U. S. Marine he'd have been decorated for his act.
Nobody in the episode brings this up because to them it all looks like a question of legal and illegal motives. Stone and Robinet are lawyers after all, and to somebody with a hammer every problem begins to look like a nail.
As it is, the writers leave the issue hanging in the air, which they usually do. Arkin is judged guilty of murdering the guy in the car, who may have been reaching for a weapon on the floor, but he is found innocent of executing the other man. At any rate, Arkin is headed for Attica.