This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style.(October 2024) |
Peter Stone | |
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Chicago Justice and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit character | |
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Portrayed by | Philip Winchester |
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Peter Stone is a fictional character portrayed by Philip Winchester. Peter was initially a guest character as part of a backdoor pilot in the third season of the police procedural Chicago P.D. Following the success of the backdoor pilot and his character, Winchester was cast as a main character in Chicago Justice , a spin-off of Chicago P.D. During the character's time in the Chicago franchise a guest appearance was also made in Chicago Med . Following the cancellation of Chicago Justice, Winchester was cast as a series regular in Law & Order: Special Victims Unit . He departed SVU ahead of the series' twenty-first season.
Stone is the son and second child of former Law & Order character Benjamin Stone, [1] and the younger brother of Pamela Stone. [2] He has an aunt Carol who raised him for most of his life. He was born circa 1980.
Before becoming a lawyer, Stone was a pitcher for the Chicago Cubs. He was forced to retire from baseball after tearing his UCL, and decided to follow in his father’s footsteps by going to law school and becoming an assistant district attorney. Nevertheless, he has described having a difficult relationship with his workaholic father, who he felt cared more about prosecuting criminals than about his own family.
Cook County Assistant State's Attorney Peter Stone is first introduced in the third season episode of Chicago P.D., entitled "Justice", which served as a backdoor pilot for Chicago Justice.
Following the success of the episode the character went on to appear as a main character in Chicago Justice. Stone has spent most of his adult life in Chicago, primarily as a prosecutor with the State's Attorney's office in Cook County.
The character later went on to make further guest appearances in Chicago P.D.. Stone also played a major role in a three-part crossover among Chicago Fire, P.D., and Justice. Following the cancellation of Chicago Justice, the character went on to reprise his role as a guest star in Chicago Med.
In his first appearance on Law & Order: SVU, Stone attends his father's funeral. He is later appointed by District Attorney Jack McCoy (Sam Waterston) as special counsel prosecuting Rafael Barba (Raúl Esparza) in the mercy killing of a terminally ill child, in the episode "The Undiscovered Country". When Olivia Benson (Mariska Hargitay) confronts him during the trial, he admits he sympathizes with Barba but cannot ignore the prosecution because he fears it will set a bad example to others. She urges him to talk to Barba and be more reasonable with him. This later results in Barba's being found not guilty, a result Stone ultimately approves.
After Barba resigns, traumatized by the case, Stone takes over as the Assistant District Attorney overseeing the New York County District Attorney's Special Victims Unit. His stint begins with a rocky start, involving initial tension with the rest of the members of the SVU team, but he eventually grows into the job.
He also reveals that he has an older sister named Pamela (Amy Korb) who suffers from paranoid schizophrenia and is committed to a psychiatric hospital, where he has visited her every week after their father's death. When Pamela begins to show signs of memory loss and believes that he is their father, Stone reluctantly increases her medication on her doctor's advice, concerned that stopping the medication could cause her to become suicidal. In the episode "Remember Me, Too", Pamela is abducted by sex traffickers whom Stone is trying to put behind bars. They eventually mortally wound Pamela during a brutal shootout with the SVU team; she dies in her devastated brother's arms. Benson tries to comfort Stone and as he tells her that the last thing his sister said was his first name, he breaks down crying in her arms.
In the season 20 premiere "Man Up", it is revealed that Stone has been drinking heavily and having anonymous sex with various women to numb the pain of Pamela's death, for which he feels responsible. He also turns down Benson's offer to talk about his feelings about this, despite her trying to be there for him.
In "Mea Culpa", Stone is accused of rape by a woman named Sarah Kent (Alexandra Breckenridge). He asks Benson to investigate the accusation and she arrests him after only questioning Kent, although Kent has no memory of a rape actually occurring and is unwilling to press charges. Stone is released on his own recognizance after being arraigned. He is later held hostage by Sarah's husband Gary (Kevin Kane) but he is able to talk Gary into turning over the gun and surrendering to police. Stone refuses to press charges against him. It is soon discovered that Stone's friend Reggie Gregg (Austin Peck) was the actual rapist. Benson arrests Gregg for rape, resulting in the charges against Stone being dropped.
The episode "Dear Ben" concerns a cold case which Stone's late father had worked on regarding a serial rapist who calls himself "Infinity". Stone later takes up the case and successfully brings the rapist to justice.
In "Endgame", Stone prosecutes serial rapist Rob Miller (Titus Welliver) for sexually assaulting defense attorney Nikki Staines (Callie Thorne), but the case is weak. When Miller threatens Benson and her adopted son Noah, Stone decides to stage a prosecution based on fake charges designed to get Miller to admit to what he had done, with Staines’ help. The ruse works; even though Stone’s plan is exposed in court, it angers Miller enough that he inadvertently admits to assaulting Staines. Stone then tells Benson that he is leaving the SVU bureau because she "became more important to him than the case he was trying," that he lost perspective, and, while he does not regret it, he cannot risk it happening again. [3]
Philip Winchester was first announced to be starring in Chicago Law (later renamed Chicago Justice) on February 19, 2016. [4] It was later reported that Winchester would first appear in a backdoor pilot episode embedded in Chicago P.D. [5] Winchester continued to guest star in P.D. and made also an appearance in Chicago Med. [6] Following the cancellation of Justice, it was announced that Winchester would move to Law & Order: SVU in a starring capacity. [7] [8] Winchester replaced Raúl Esparza's character, Rafael Barba, on SVU who departed the series in Winchester's debut episode. [9] On March 29, 2019, Winchester announced that he would not be returning for the twenty-first season of SVU. [10] [11]
Peter Jankowski, COO and President of Wolf Films, stated "When we cast Philip, the idea going in wasn't to make that character Ben Stone's son but as we saw it develop and we saw the actor, it made sense." [12]
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit is an American police procedural crime drama television series created by Dick Wolf for NBC. The first spin-off of Law & Order, it stars Mariska Hargitay as Detective Olivia Benson, now the commanding officer of the Special Victims Unit after originally having been Stabler's partner in a fictionalized version of the New York City Police Department, and Christopher Meloni as Detective Elliot Stabler. Law & Order: Special Victims Unit follows the detectives of the Special Victims Unit as they investigate and prosecute sexually based crimes. Some of the episodes are loosely based on real crimes that have received media attention.
Benjamin "Ben" Stone is a fictional character portrayed by Michael Moriarty in the TV drama Law & Order. He was the Executive Assistant District Attorney for New York County until his resignation at the end of season four. He appeared in 88 episodes.
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Olivia "Liv" Margaret Benson is a fictional character and the main protagonist of the NBC police procedural drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, portrayed by Mariska Hargitay. Benson holds the rank and pay-grade of Captain and is the Commanding Officer of the Special Victims Unit of the New York City Police Department, which operates out of the 16th Precinct. She investigates sexual offenses such as rape and child sexual abuse.
Chicago P.D. is an American television police drama series broadcast by NBC. The series was created by Dick Wolf and the series is the second installment of Chicago franchise. It stars Jason Beghe, Jon Seda, Sophia Bush, Jesse Lee Soffer, Patrick Flueger, Marina Squerciati, LaRoyce Hawkins, Archie Kao, Elias Koteas, Amy Morton, Brian Geraghty, Tracy Spiridakos, Lisseth Chavez, Benjamin Levy Aguilar and Toya Turner, it aired from January 8, 2014 to present. The show follows the uniformed patrol officers and the Intelligence Unit of the 21st District of the Chicago Police Department as they pursue the perpetrators of the city's major street offenses.
Philip Winchester is an American actor. He is known for his roles in The Patriot, The Hi-Line, LD 50 Lethal Dose, Thunderbirds, CSI: Miami, King Lear, Strike Back, Flyboys, In My Sleep, The Heart of the Earth and Shaking Dream Land. He is also known for his role as Peter Stone in Chicago Justice and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.
Nicolas Fiorello Amaro, Jr. is a fictional character on the NBC police procedural drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, portrayed by Danny Pino. Amaro was a detective with the Manhattan SVU at the 16th Precinct of the New York City Police Department and later a Biophysics doctorate student.
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Rafael Barba is a fictional character portrayed by Raúl Esparza, who joined the cast of the long-running NBC crime drama series Law & Order: Special Victims Unit on a recurring basis during the 14th season episode "Twenty-Five Acts". The character was promoted to a series regular for the 15th season and exited the series during season 19. He has since made guest appearances in the 21st, 22nd and 23rd seasons and a brief appearance in the spin-off series Law & Order: Organized Crime.
The fifteenth season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit made its debut with a two-hour premiere episode on September 25, 2013, at 9pm/8c - 11pm/10c (Eastern), on NBC. The season ended on May 21, 2014, after 24 episodes.
The sixteenth season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit debuted on Wednesday, September 24, 2014, at 9pm/8c (Eastern), and concluded on Wednesday, May 20, 2015, on NBC.
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The seventeenth season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit debuted on Wednesday, September 23, 2015 on NBC, and concluded on Wednesday, May 25, 2016.
The eighteenth season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit debuted on Wednesday, September 21, 2016, on NBC and finished on Wednesday, May 24, 2017, with a two-hour season finale.
Chicago Justice is an American television legal drama series broadcast by NBC. The series was created by Dick Wolf and the series is the fourth installment of Chicago franchise. It Stars Philip Winchester, Jon Seda, Joelle Carter, Monica Barbaro and Carl Weathers, it aired from March 1 to May 14, 2017. A backdoor pilot aired on May 11, 2016, as part of the third season of Chicago P.D. before being ordered to series. The show follows the prosecutors and investigators at the Cook County State's Attorney's Office as they navigate their way through Chicago area politics, the legal arena, and media coverage while pursuing justice.
"Comic Perversion" is the fifteenth episode of the fifteenth season of the American police procedural-legal drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. The episode aired on February 26, 2014 on NBC. In the episode, a comedian, who makes jokes about gang rape to his audiences, is put on trial after it emerges that he has raped a young woman. Towards the end of the episode, Chicago P.D. character Erin Lindsay visits the Manhattan Special Victims Unit to obtain information regarding rapes that are occurring in Chicago. This episode continued in the Chicago P.D. episode "Conventions".
The nineteenth season of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit premiered on September 27, 2017 and finished on May 23, 2018 with a two-part season finale. Michael S. Chernuchin, who had previously worked on Law & Order, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, and Chicago Justice took over from Rick Eid as showrunner. This is also the first season since season twelve in 2010–2011 where another Law & Order series—Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders—aired alongside SVU on NBC.