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  1. Prostitute Katka Cizek is stabbed to death in her rented flat with four thousand pounds under her mattress. The porter may have tried to blackmail her but the DNA of history professor Gavin Williams is found in her finger-nails. Furthermore the murder weapon matches a knife missing from his kitchen, the money was drawn from his account and the prosecution allege Katka was about to expose his ...

  2. Crush might refer to: Crush (SVU), the Law & Order: Special Victims Unit season 10 episode. Crush (UK), the Law & Order: UK series 5 episode. This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that points to other pages that have the same or a similar name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the ...

  3. Crush: Directed by Mat King. With Bradley Walsh, Jamie Bamber, Harriet Walter, Dominic Rowan. Found dead in an upmarket apartment, call girl, Katka Cizek, seems to have only one admirer capable of the murder.

  4. Elizabeth Binns ... line producer Emilia di Girolamo ... co-producer Jane Featherstone ... executive producer: Kudos Film and Television

  5. Hilda Marsden was a corrupt judge in the Manhattan Family Court. In her career, Marsden had a reputation for handing down harsh sentences to minor juvenile offenders as a pretense to have them sent away to serve hard time at a facility for sex offenders in Wellsburg, Ohio. The political pundits loved her, viewing her as a corrective to out-of-control kids, but her sentencing methods brought up ...

  6. Law & Order: Special Victims Unit continued using motion picture cameras for another two years but ultimately switched to digital for Season 13. Cast changes and returning characters. The unit's new Assistant District Attorney, Kim Greylek, played by Michaela McManus, began appearing in the season premiere.

  7. Samantha Copeland is the Corporation Counsel who was assigned to the Kim Garnet case. Seeming to have a strong hate of domestic violence and is not willing "to watch another young woman be killed by that violence", Copeland wanted to catch whoever was abusing Kim, even if it meant using extreme or morally wrong methods about doing it. When Kim refused to name her abuser (quite obviously out of ...