Fallen Heroes (Homicide: Life on the Street)
Encyclopedia
"Fallen Heroes" is a two-part episode that concludes the sixth season
Homicide: Life on the Street (season 6)
The sixth season of Homicide: Life on the Street aired in the United States on the NBC television network from 1997-10-17 to 1998-05-08 and contained 23 episodes....

 of the American police drama television series Homicide: Life on the Street
Homicide: Life on the Street
Homicide: Life on the Street is an American police procedural television series chronicling the work of a fictional version of the Baltimore Homicide Unit. It ran for seven seasons on NBC from 1993 to 1999, and was succeeded by a TV movie, which also acted as the de-facto series finale...

. It comprises the 99th and 100th overall episodes of the series, and originally aired on NBC
NBC
The National Broadcasting Company is an American commercial broadcasting television network and former radio network headquartered in the GE Building in New York City's Rockefeller Center with additional major offices near Los Angeles and in Chicago...

 in the United States on May 1, 1998 (Part 1) and May 8, 1998 (Part 2).

The episode marks the final appearances of recurring character Junior Bunk, as well as the series' break-out character, Frank Pembleton
Frank Pembleton
Francis Xavier "Frank" Pembleton is a fictional homicide detective on the television drama series Homicide: Life on the Street portrayed by Emmy Award winning actor Andre Braugher. He is a primary character of the show through the first six seasons...

 (not counting the television movie that appeared after the series). It also marks the last appearance of Mike Kellerman
Mike Kellerman
Detective Michael Scott Kellerman is a fictional character on the television drama series Homicide: Life on the Street portrayed by Reed Diamond. He is a main character from seasons 4-6, 1995-1998.-Biography:...

 as a series regular, although actor Reed Diamond
Reed Diamond
Reed Edward Diamond is an American actor. He is best known for the role of Det. Mike Kellerman on Homicide: Life on the Street and the role of recurring character Laurence Dominic on Dollhouse...

 would later reprise this role as a guest star in a two-part episode of season seven.

Plot summary

While Falsone and Stivers investigate the murder of a probation officer, Bayliss and Pembleton investigate the stabbing of Judge Gibbons, and conclude that the culprit was Nathaniel Lee Mahoney, Georgia Rae's son. Their search for Nathaniel Lee reaches a dead end until Meldrick Lewis
Meldrick Lewis
Meldrick Lewis is a fictional character on the television series Homicide: Life on the Street played by Clark Johnson. The character was in the series for its full run and had the very first and last lines of the series...

 reveals that Nathaniel Lee is also called "Junior Bunk", a small-time hood who had crossed paths with the Homicide detectives in previous episodes. When Bayliss and Pembleton bring Junior Bunk into the Box
Interrogation
Interrogation is interviewing as commonly employed by officers of the police, military, and Intelligence agencies with the goal of extracting a confession or obtaining information. Subjects of interrogation are often the suspects, victims, or witnesses of a crime...

, they are taken aback by his new hard-core attitude, which contrasts sharply with his previously meek demeanor. Despite the detectives' confidence that the judge's murder was ordered by Georgia Rae, Junior refuses to give up his mother. Junior is left shackled to a desk in the squad room, where he waits to be processed and is mocked by Meldrick. Left unattended for a moment, Junior grabs a Glock 19 pistol from an unlocked desk drawer, where he had seen a detective put it away earlier, and starts firing randomly. His shots kill three uniformed police officers and wound Ballard and Gharty. After he stops shooting, there is a moment when the police are too stunned to respond, and he takes advantage of this by demanding he be released. However, he is then immediately cut down in a hail of bullets from Giardello
Al Giardello
Alphonse Michael Giardello, Sr. is a fictional character from the television drama Homicide: Life on the Street. The character was played by Yaphet Kotto...

, Kellerman, Lewis, and Bayliss.

As Ballard (who was hit in the foot) and Gharty who was hit in the chest) are rushed to surgery, Giardello declares all-out war on the Mahoney crime organization, resulting in a series of arrests and raids. In one raid, Georgia Rae is found dead, killed by her own panicked employees. When one fleeing suspect aims his weapon at Pembleton, Frank draws his Glock as well, but hesitates long enough for the perp to fire a shot. Tim Bayliss
Tim Bayliss
Timothy Bayliss is a fictional detective on Homicide: Life on the Street. He was a primary character, and was played by Kyle Secor. He was loosely based on the real-life Det...

 shoves Pembleton out of the way, and is hit by the bullet intended for Pembleton.

Meanwhile, Terri Stivers
Terri Stivers
Terri Stivers is a fictional police detective of the Baltimore Police Department on Homicide: Life on the Street. She was played by actress Toni Lewis....

 tells Giardello about her suspicions that this entire sequence of events is somehow the result of Luther Mahoney's shooting last year; she also reveals that Mike Kellerman
Mike Kellerman
Detective Michael Scott Kellerman is a fictional character on the television drama series Homicide: Life on the Street portrayed by Reed Diamond. He is a main character from seasons 4-6, 1995-1998.-Biography:...

shot Luther while he was unarmed, and Giardello orders Falsone and Pembleton to question Kellerman about the shooting. After a lengthy interrogation that seems to be getting nowhere, Pembleton and Falsone observe Kellerman's body language and realize that Luther was armed, but had his gun lowered when Kellerman shot him. Kellerman is ordered to turn in his badge and Glock 19 pistol, as Pembleton turns to the side and says he can longer stand to look at Kellerman.

Kellerman has a discussion with Giardello, who gives him two options. If Kellerman stays with the force and attempts to fight charges that he shot Luther illegally, he will have the full support of both Giardello and the Baltimore Police Department, and Gee says that a jury could very well acquit him under the circumstances. However, even if he is cleared, the reputations of the department as a whole, as well as Kellerman, Lewis, and Stivers (all of whom were on the scene) will be forever tarnished, and they will certainly be fired once their false reports of the shooting come to light. On the other hand, if Kellerman resigns on the spot, then Giardello will consider the matter closed and Lewis and Stivers will be able to keep their jobs.

Giardello and Pembleton visit Bayliss in the hospital, but learn that he has taken a turn for the worse and is still in emergency surgery. Pembleton, who in the past had repeatedly expressed a disdain for both friendship and God, breaks down and prays to God that his friend's life be spared. The combined strain of Kellerman's interrogation and confession, and Pembleton's own guilt and worry over Bayliss' nearly fatal shooting, motivates Pembleton to hand Giardello his badge and resign, over the lieutenant's protests. Back at the station, Kellerman asks Lewis if he can have his gun back and go alone into one of the interview rooms, clearly intending to commit suicide, but Lewis smiles sadly and says "I can't do that, Mikey" before leaving him alone.

Kellerman's decision is not revealed until the end of the episode, in which he gets into a confrontation with an irate customer at a bar. He tells the man that he is a cop and reflexively pushes back the front of his jacket to show the badge clipped to his belt, but it is no longer there - he chose to resign. The man laughs at him, and Kellerman's face floods with shame and regret.
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