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: It highlights the contrast between the "rural black poverty" of the 1960s and the middle-class lives of the detectives in the present, crediting past activists for the progress made while acknowledging how much history is still "concealed". Episode Highlights

The episode " Strange Fruit " (Season 2, Episode 19) is one of the series' most emotionally heavy and socially significant hours. Originally aired on April 3, 2005, it reopens the 1963 murder of Zeke Williams , a 16-year-old African American boy who was planning to attend the historic March on Washington before his life was cut short . Why This Episode Still Resonates:

: This is the case that motivated Detective Will Jeffries to become a cop. As a child in 1963, Jeffries was the one who discovered Zeke’s body in an alleyway—a memory that has haunted him for decades.

: The investigation reveals deep-seated racial tensions in a white neighborhood where Zeke’s family had recently moved, drawing loose inspiration from the real-life tragedy of Emmett Till .

Strange Fruit - [s2e19]

: It highlights the contrast between the "rural black poverty" of the 1960s and the middle-class lives of the detectives in the present, crediting past activists for the progress made while acknowledging how much history is still "concealed". Episode Highlights

The episode " Strange Fruit " (Season 2, Episode 19) is one of the series' most emotionally heavy and socially significant hours. Originally aired on April 3, 2005, it reopens the 1963 murder of Zeke Williams , a 16-year-old African American boy who was planning to attend the historic March on Washington before his life was cut short . Why This Episode Still Resonates: [S2E19] Strange Fruit

: This is the case that motivated Detective Will Jeffries to become a cop. As a child in 1963, Jeffries was the one who discovered Zeke’s body in an alleyway—a memory that has haunted him for decades. : It highlights the contrast between the "rural

: The investigation reveals deep-seated racial tensions in a white neighborhood where Zeke’s family had recently moved, drawing loose inspiration from the real-life tragedy of Emmett Till . Why This Episode Still Resonates: : This is