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1[[WMG: The New York Police Department is secretly run by Shane [=McMahon=]]]
2This theory comes from [[http://www.tv.com/law-and-order/%3D%3Dofficial-avatar-discussion%3D%3D/topic/287-516622/msgs.html a couple]] [[http://www.tv.com/law-and-order/show/180/this-show-has-been-on-to-long-whos-with-me/topic/287-563891/msgs.html?&user_rating=90&rating_ref_type=101 of posts]] on the tv.com message board for the episode "Avatar." The poster's theory about Shane O Mac belongs in WildMassGuessing.
3
4[[WMG: Jack [=McCoy=] is a [[TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons Paladin]].]]
5His special mount is his motorcycle. His [[KickTheDog "occasional moral lapses"]] indicate that even though he's a Paladin, the [[SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism cynicism of the]] Franchise/LawAndOrder [[TheVerse Universe]], he's fallen every now and then... but that's what the spell [[TheAtoner Atonement]] is for.
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7[[WMG: [[ReplacementScrappy Detective Fontana]] was dirty.]]
8This was implied by the writers -- he seemed to have way too much money -- but never explored.
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10He could've been a NonIdleRich; but given L & O's attitude toward the rich, he would've been dirty anyway.
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12Perhaps he was dirty in Chicago, and came to New York to dodge Internal Affairs.
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14** They do explain his mysterious funds in the series, he is apparently descended from a famous celebrity chef (The FictionalCounterpart to Chef Boyardee) and lives off the family royalties. He might ''still'' be dirty on top of that (Nobody ever said the rich aren't greedy for more money), but the fancy car and suits he has do have an in-story explanation.
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16[[WMG: Jack [=McCoy=] is the ancestor of [[Series/StarTrekTheOriginalSeries Dr. Leonard McCoy]].]]
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18[[WMG: Nora Lewin was Dick Wolf's TakeThat to critics]]
19His way of saying to those complaining about the show's liberal bias, "You think [=McCoy=]'s a liberal? You ain't seen nothin' yet!"
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21[[WMG: Detective Briscoe used to be corrupt.]]
22Back in the seventies, he was on the [[Film/PrinceOfTheCity SIU squad under Detective Ciello]]. He was prosecuted for corruption, but was acquitted, and remained a detective in the NYPD. All the negative attention, however, drove him to drink. He eventually cleaned up his act, and legally changed his name from Gus Levy to Lenny Briscoe to get away from the ongoing stigma.
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24[[WMG: The cast of this show got a surprise when ''Series/{{Revolution}}'' happened.]]
25They found themselves having to get out of the city, and then having to survive the ensuing chaos. Then some of them get the idea that since "law and order" are effectively dead, they can go after all the guilty people who walked away free and ''make them pay''.
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27[[WMG: Briscoe either killed his daughter's killer or had him killed.]]
28If the above theory, that he used to be on the take, holds, then nothing could've stopped him from exacting some street justice. And then there was that phone call during one episode (I forgot the name). Given his reaction upon finding her body, I'd like to think he had something to do with the killer's death. And if your child was killed, wouldn't you want to personally hunt down the monster responsible?
29* This one is toyed with, but never fully established (as true ''or'' false), in-series. A criminal who owes Briscoe a favor offers to arrange some street justice for him; Briscoe doesn't outright accept but he doesn't immediately refuse either. The killer is dead half a season later, and it's never made clear whether or not that was a coincidence, leaving it up to the viewer.
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31[[WMG: Briscoe and Curtis had the strongest partnership/friendship.]]
32* While all the partners got along well, Lennie's friendship with Rey was the strongest. Aside from them being able to relate to him on a more personal level than the other partners since their both fathers and the job taking a toll on their home lives, they both share an intimate tragedy while on the job (the former's daughter's murder and the latter's wife's Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis). When he even discovered his daughter's body, Curtis took him home with him and his own family so he wouldn't be alone. Also, in both of Curtis' final appearances on the show (as a regular in the second half of season 9's "Refuge" two-parter and as a guest star, years later, in season 20's "Fed"), you can tell how much their friendship meant; Briscoe is nearly in tears when he ordered him to stay in touch and when Van Buren attends his wife's funeral, he reminisces about the last time he and Briscoe spoke, as he (and [[TheCharacterDiedWithHim his]] [[Creator/JerryOrbach actor]]) passed away in 2004.

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