I think she mostly destroyed her with the comment about the guy dumping the victim and how she must have felt about that.
And the deaf woman taking the syringe to her was a huge mistake i think. She should have backed off and still see if the woman wanted to still commit suicide, or see if she does it again later/maybe help her if she still wanted to do that. Not go to a hospital with the tool to kill her and then giving it to her.
If she hadn't of done that and the suicide pact, and if the victim wasn't distraught around that time, then i'd say not guilty.
But in this instance, i'd probably say guilty, with a minimum sentence. Plus, the deaf woman tried to hide her involvement in multiple ways in the case. It's a bit of a surprise for me to say guilty, considering i probably agree more with the deaf woman's views than the law and detectives involved. But i like the detectives have different views about the situation and discuss it a little. I like Wong's points about it when on the stand, but looking like he ultimately lost in the debate.
Mistrial was expected though, it's a hugely controversial topic in society. And honestly, i don't know what the right answer is. Judges, politicians, scientists and philosophers have tried, and it's still a controversial debate with different views.
Munch was looking a long while at that bent over chick, in the hospital scene.
Shout by JasperKazaiVIP 2BlockedParentSpoilers2022-08-23T21:14:01Z
"There's always going to be hate and racism on the internet. What are you going to do about it?" Very true, Stabler.
This episode hits a bit harder when you know that Richard Belzer's (Munch) father actually did commit suicide in real life. Additionally, sadly, his older brother committed suicide 10 years after this episode (2014).