When discussing how the victim's fatal heart attack was caused as a direct result of her being raped, Detective Jeffries says that the heart attack "was induced during the commission of a class A felony. That's murder two." It is true that if a victim dies as a direct result of injuries sustained during an act that constitutes rape in the first degree the person that committed the rape is guilty of felony murder, charged as murder in the second degree. However rape in the first degree is not a class A felony, it is a class B felony with a minimum sentence of five years in prison and a maximum of 25 years. The only sex crime that is a class A felony is predatory sexual assault, which is charged when a person commits the crime of rape in the first degree, criminal sexual act in the first degree, aggravated sexual abuse in the first degree, or sexual conduct against a child in the first degree against at least two, or more, persons. It can be also charged when a person who has committed one of the aforementioned crimes has previously been convicted of a felony sex crime, incest or use of a child in a sexual performance; or if the victim of the aforementioned crime(s) is under the age of 13. Predatory sexual assault is a class A-II felony and carries a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison and a maximum sentence of 25 years.
Det. Jefferies refers to someone to be questioned as "Jonathan Smith," but seconds later, the intertitle card noting where Dets. Stabler and Benson are reads "Apartment of Johnny Schmidt."
When Munch pulls the prescription out of Alfonso's pockets he says he scored salicylamide, a prescription diuretic. Salicylamide is actually used for pain relief and fever reduction, not as a diuretic.