Law & Order Episode "Survivor" with Karen Allen, about ancient coin collectors, and "Roman Cleopatras". This episode is one of the best episodes of the 20-year run of the American television series "Law & Order". I posted this writeup originally on a board for fans of the Indiana Jones films. I was originally interested in it because it involved a treasure hunt for rare coins. The story also involves coin collectors and historical references to World War II. Besides that, another interest to Indiana Jones fans is an uncommon television appearance by actress Karen Allen. The broadcast details: Law & Order, Season 7 Episode 4, Originally aired October 23, 1996 The story: While investigating the murder of a coin collector, detectives discover the existence of extremely rare coins that belonged to a Holocaust survivor. Mr. Stephen Campbell runs an antiques and rare coins gallery in New York City. Two people passing the store notice something wrong and call the police. The police detectives, Briscoe and Curtis, look around the store and at some of the coins on display, Briscoe facetiously asks an employee whether he has a "56 Willie Mays". The detectives talk to Mrs. Campbell who tells them "He dealt with coin people, not murderers". Detective Briscoe They find out that some Wiemar Commemorative coins are missing, but that they weren't worth very much compared to what was left in the store. They also find out that Mr. Campbell had a girlfriend that he shared with Richard Peterson, a millionaire building and airline owner. Peterson is an avid coin collector and has been one since he was a kid. Richard Peterson He tells the detectives "I was the fat kid at the coin show at the Hilton". Peterson's coins He shows some ancient Greek coins to the detectives and asks "Plato might have bought lettuce with that coin" "With this coin, Pericles might have had his sandals fixed, hired a prostitute, bought a slave" Det. Briscoe interjects "Bribed a cop" Peterson continues that he used rare coins to buy his first building, "Cleopatras, Alexanders, ..". The detective tells Peterson "At least you're insured", and Peterson replies "These coins, they're like my children" It is noted that Homage Magazine did a profile on Peterson when he launched his airline, and stated that banks vied to loan him money The article had details about his coin collection. The detectives question several people who tried to see the coins at Campbell's store, he gave them all excuses for not showing them the coins, and the excuses differed. The detectives visit Judith Sandler, an art restorer. Judith Sandler, art restorer Judith says that she asked Campbell about some other coins, then asked to see the Peterson collection, Campbell said that the coins were out with a potential buyer, Mark Lehmann. Judith unmasked Lehmann meets the detectives at his yacht, he tells the detectives that he buys rare coins to have "bragging rights". "Those coins are classics, they're works of art and antiques and rare". "Peterson sold them to a Korean who wanted to rub it in the nose of the Japanese". At another interview, Peterson tells the detectives that the coins were collateral for his new airline. The detectives discover that Campbell was short of money because he paid for some rare coins, then couldn't sell them when more were found on a sunken ship. Campbell had put together a syndicate to purchase rare coins as an investment and Peterson was a member. The detectives search Peterson's apartment and find the Wiemar commemoratives. Peterson says he won the Wiemars from Campbell in a bet. Detectives ask Peterson if he killed Campbell for stealing his coins, Peterson says the coins were only 3% of his net worth. The detectives arrest Peterson for the murder. The detectives talk to Peterson's secretary who says that all of his telephone calls were logged, and that a woman called three times about the Homage article, saying that some of the coins "six Roman Cleopatras" belonged to her family. She called again on the day of the murder. The woman was "hot to see the coins" and Peterson passed her to Campbell. The detectives go to the "Numismatics Society" and ask an officer about the coins. The officer tells them that there are three sets of Cleopatras known, one in a Dutch museum, one with the Rothschilds, and one sold in London in 1931 and not seen since. The museum and the Rothschilds still have theirs. The coins sold in 1931 went to an Isador Schoenberg, a wealthy Jew living in Munich, Germany. The detectives find from the Immigration office that Isador survived Auschwitz and emigrated to America in 1948, where he later died. They talk to his wife Ann who tells them that Isador bought the coins at the London auction in 1931, and when the Nazis took power, he put them in a Swiss bank box. After World War II, he went to Switzerland but without documents, the bank would not return the coins. Isador and Ann have a daughter Judith who uses her married name of Sandler. She is, of course, the art restorer. The detectives and Jamie Ross, a prosecutor, go to Judith's apartment and ask to look around. Judith stalls them, then lets them in, and they find a Homage magazine copy. The detectives interview Judith's manager who tells them that Judith is a good worker but has some problems; she doesn't like tight spaces and becomes extremely emotional about news stories about suffering. Judith usually works at night but was not at work on the night of the murder. The police visit Judith again, find some green glass similar to the window glass at the coin gallery, and arrest her. The head prosecutor District Attorney Schiff chews out his two assistants McCoy and Ross about having two suspects with different motives. The prosecutor's psychologist Olivet interviews Judith, she then tells the prosecutors that Judith has mental problems common to children of Holocaust survivors, including claustrophobia and depression. She also relays that Judith's father was obsessed with getting back the coins because he had lost everything to the Nazis, including his dog. The Psychologist states that Judith equated the coin dealer who had her father's coins with the Nazis. At his office, DA Schiff drops the murder charge against Peterson but the prosecutor argue that "Peterson hasn't been straight with us since this began". Peterson and his lawyer leave the office and Jamie Ross wonders "Funny, he didn't ask about his coins". Schiff, McCoy, Ross have a meeting, Schiff asks "Has anybody ever seen these famous coins?" "No", "no", "no" Jamie Ross interviews a bank official of the bank who loaned Peterson the money, he says he never saw the coins, every time he asked he got a different excuse, first "being appraised", then "took to Europe". The banker admits that he never saw the collection, but that if his bank had turned Peterson down for a loan, other banks would have loaned him the money. Jamie asks "Nobody ever saw the collateral for a $20 million loan?", then says that she is going to move her bank account out of that bank. McCoy then finds that Peterson's list of coins matches the coins in the 1931 London auction catalog. At a meeting of Peterson, the prosecutors, and Judith, McCoy asks Peterson why never told the police that a woman called him on the day of the murder, and why is he covering for her?. Peterson claims Judith has the coins, she denies it. McCoy asks "Where did you buy those coins, Mr. Peterson?" Peterson replies "From a collector in Austria, he must have gotten them from that Swiss bank" McCoy asks "And the rest of the special collection" Peterson replies "From various sales" McCoy shows the 1931 auction catalog which Judith's mother gave him It has 20 auction lots which went to 20 different buyers scattered all over Europe. McCoy asks "What are the odds of reassembling all those lots 65 years later in a single collection?" Judith looks at the catalog and realizes that Peterson said that he had all those coins, she says "It was all a lie, you never had my father's coins". McCoy tells Peterson that he committed a fraud (in getting the loan from the bank). Judith says "That's why Campbell wouldn't show them to me, he was lying for you" Peterson confesses "It was just an old auction catalog I found at the library, I never meant for anyone to get hurt". Judith replies "You b..d". Peterson confesses that he covered up his talk with Judith because he was worried that she would expose his fraud to the bank. Judith cries "I killed a man for nothing!". Karen Allen
What I remember most about this episode was Carey Lowell (Jaime Ross) wearing a short skirt. Actually it was a good episode. The better writing for this show was in the beginning episodes.
I like the Hawaii Five-O episode with the 1913 nickel. I enjoyed your breakdown of that one. You can always expect a good show from H50.
A writeup of this episode (with pictures) is on my website under "Coins on Television" along with the Hawaii 5-0 episode about "The $100,000 nickel".