Product Description
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In this explosive hour-long dramatic adventure series, David
James Elliott stars as Lieutenant Commander "Harm" Rabb, Jr., a
brave, outstanding Navy Lawyer and officer in the Judge Advocate
General (J.A.G.) Corps. His missions are to investigate and
prosecute all crimes, accidents, acts of terrorism and espionage
related to the Navy and Marine Corps. Playing the diverse roles
of investigator, prosecutor and defense attorney, Harm and his
partner Major Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie (Catherine Bell), use their
intelligence and determination to uncover the mysteries behind
cases involving murder, treason, espionage and other high crimes
to bring world-class criminals to justice. JAG combines all the
intensity of the battlefield and all the suspense of a criminal
investigation into an action-packed hour!
.com
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JAG (Judge Advocate General): The Sixth Season begins with a
bang in the two-part "Legacy," a complex story that sees
Commander Harmon "Harm" Rabb, Jr. (David James Elliott) sent to
Russia to help the former Communist nation evolve its
justice system. While there, Harm becomes involved in an
investigation of a corrupt general running s to Chechnyan
rebels while fighting them at the same time. What Harm doesn't
know is that his work happens to be intersecting with an
investigation by Lt. Colonel Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie (Catherine
Bell) into the murder of an American naval officer tried for
espionage. Everything is leading toward an assassination plot of
global dimension, but there is a remarkable development in these
episodes concerning Harm's efforts to find out more about what
happened to his her, a naval pilot down over Vietnam.
Following "Legacy," most of The Sixth Season carries on with the
series' typically interesting stories about the prosecution of
law. But there are also some very strong personal
developments, including a tragedy endured by Lt. Bud Roberts
(Patrick Labyorteaux) and his wife, Lt. Harriet Roberts (Karri
Turner). There are also major complications surrounding Mac's
engagement to her Australian boyfriend, Lt. Commander Mic Brumby
(Trevor Goddard). By complications, of course, one is really
speaking of Harm's unexpressed feelings for Mac, a subject that
finally comes to a head toward the end of the season,
particularly in a cliffhanger finale taking place on the eve of
Mac's wedding.
"Florida Straits" is a very good episode about Harm's
investigation of a Cuban-American Navy captain who manipulates
events so that a little Cuban girl can possibly qualify to live
in the U.S. "JAG TV" finds Mac a television sensation when a
court martial she prosecutes makes her a cable TV star. "The
Princess and the Petty Officer" puts Mac squarely in the middle
of America's relations with a Mideast nation when she defends a
princess who left her arranged marriage back home to wed an
American in the navy. The two-part "A Separate Peace" is an
unnerving tale of a high-profile admiral (Terry O'Quinn), a
friend of Harm's her, whose possible appointment to an
important position is jeopardized by rumors he participated in
the slaughter of innocent Vietnamese civilians decades before.
The admiral doesn't help himself by being vague with Mac, who is
trying to defend him. "Miracles" is an odd story about a Marine
sergeant (Gerald McRaney) accused of murdering his wife. Though
the evidence points to him, the accused officer is defended by
Harm in his cl that he did not kill his spouse but rather
found her body after being led to her by the spirit of a former
chain. Finally, "Lifeline" and "Adrift (Part 1)" bring Mac and
Harm's true feelings for one another to the surface, forcing them
to figure out what they're going to do now that Mac is getting
married. Making matters worse is the terrible situation in which
Harm finds himself after trying to fly through a terrible storm
while Mac and Brumby host their pre-wedding rehearsal dinner.
--Tom Keogh