3.2
/10
Trial Judge Shirley Taylor is a fictional character portrayed by Connie Winston in the TV series Law & Order.
They appear in 7 episodes out of a total of 501 aired so far

Trial Judge Shirley Taylor

by Connie Winston

character

Episodes7

  • 7.6
    /10

    Whiplash

    episode S11.E19 april 2001
    Two personal injury attorneys go on trial, accused of masterminding an insurance fraud scam involving staged rear-end automobile accidents.
  • 8.3
    /10

    Shangri-La

    episode S13.E2 october 2002
    The investigation into the murder of a high-school teacher unearths some unsettling truths about another teacher and one of the students.
  • 8.6
    /10

    Bodies

    episode S14.E1 september 2003
    A serial killer refuses to tell Jack McCoy the names and locations of all of his victims. The killer's defense attorney has the information too, but refuses to disclose it because of attorney-client privilege.
  • 7.5
    /10

    Everybody Loves Raimondo's

    episode S14.E20 april 2004
    A film producer is killed at Raimondo's, a restaurant known for its mob ties and celebrity clientèle. Briscoe and Green discover that the producer was feuding with a novelist over profits for a movie based on the writer's book about Raimondo's.
  • 7.3
    /10

    Cry Wolf

    episode S15.E8 november 2004
    A mob boss is accused of ordering a hit on a urban vigilante group leader who was seeing his mistress. However, when the mistress is killed before the trial, he insists that he truly loved her and had absolutely nothing to do with it.
  • 7.6
    /10

    Sects

    episode S15.E19 march 2005
    A murder/attempted suicide investigation leads to a religious cult that promotes pedophilia, but finding charges that will stick to the group's leader proves to be difficult.
  • 7.9
    /10

    Ghosts

    episode S16.E3 october 2005
    A deathbed confession reopens one of Fontana's old murder cases involving a young model, one in which he believed that the father was the killer. Branch and the father want the case to go away, but McCoy is bent on going to trial.