- A paraplegic Marine veteran kills a Vietnamese man in Georgetown, then he goes to the JAG headquarters and confesses. The victim was the cruel commandant of the vet's PoW camp. Harm volunteers to represent the vet in the civilian court.
- In Georgetown, a paraplegic sidewalk accordionist, a Marine who was a POW in Vietnam, kills a Vietnamese man, then goes to JAG headquarters and confesses. Harm hopes to gain some information from the veteran about his father, and he tries to do so. The vet first spins a fanciful yarn for Harm, then he admits to the falsehood, and eventually he gives a remarkable account of the savage treatment accorded him and his fellow prisoners in a camp in North Vietnam. The Vietnamese man in the street was the camp commandant, who later got asylum in the US, and who had lived in the US for 16 years. The veteran recognized the man in the crowd on the sidewalk. The man approached to compliment his playing and, lured close, was stabbed to death. Harm volunteers to represent the vet in the civilian court.—DocRushing
- When a former Vietnam POW arrives at JAG headquarters to report a murder he's just committed, Harm confronts a very complex individual who may know something about his MIA father. When Willie relates the fact that he was imprisoned with Harm's father and then blindsides Harm by claiming that his father was a turncoat, the information has a profound effect on the JAG lawyer. Willie, a very complex individual, has been waiting 30 years to tell his story in his own way. Ultimately, Harm finds out that Willie's murder victim was the contemptible, sadistic commander of the POW camp where Willie had been -- but that's just the beginning of Willie's incredibly sad war story.
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