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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dark_JusticeDark Justice - Wikipedia

    Dark Justice is an American crime drama television series about a judge who becomes a vigilante by night so that he can bring high-level offenders who use technicalities to "escape" the legal system to what he calls "dark justice."

  2. Dark Justice is an American crime drama television series about a judge who becomes a vigilante by night so that he can bring high-level offenders who use te...

  3. Dark Justice (TV Series 1991–1993) cast and crew credits, including actors, actresses, directors, writers and more.

  4. Dark Justice: Created by Jeff Freilich. With Clayton Prince, Dick O'Neill, Bruce Abbott, Janet Gunn. After the murder of his wife and daughter, Judge Nicholas Marshall loses faith in the system.

  5. Dark Justice is an American comedy television series created and written by Mike Gerbino. Che Holloway stars as the first Officer of color to work in a small town police department. The series premiered January 10, 2016. The first season had six episodes.

  6. Dark Justice is an American crime drama about a judge that turns into a vigilante by night in order to bring to justice high-level offenders that use technicalities to "escape" the legal system. The role of Judge Nicholas Marshall was played by actors Ramy Zada and Bruce Abbott.

  7. Dark Justice. List. Page 1 of 2, 3 total items. In Theaters At Home TV Shows.

  8. Fri, Jun 7, 1991. A criminal who avoided being sent to prison by claiming to be insane, has been living like a king in the facility he was sent to. When he orders the death of an inmate and avoids being tried, Nick decides to go after him.

  9. Dark Justice was a CBS network crime drama TV series created by Jeff Freilich. The show aired from April 5, 1991 to September 28, 1993, lasting for 3 seasons and 66 episodes. It aired as part of CBS's " Crimetime After Primetime " line-up.

  10. 5 days ago · The New Yorker investigative podcast In the Dark, hosted by Madeleine Baran, asks why one of the most high-profile war-crimes prosecutions in U.S. history failed to deliver justice.

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