Lie to Me
Lie to Me is an American crime drama television series created by Samuel Baum that aired on the Fox network from January 21, 2009, to January 31, 2011, spanning three seasons and 48 episodes.[1][2][3] The show centers on Dr. Cal Lightman, portrayed by Tim Roth, a psychologist and deception expert inspired by real-life researcher Paul Ekman (1934–2025), who uses scientific analysis of microexpressions, body language, and vocal cues to detect lies.[1][4][5] Lightman leads the Lightman Group, a consulting firm that assists federal agencies, law enforcement, and private clients in high-stakes investigations involving fraud, terrorism, and personal deceit, with key team members including Dr. Gillian Foster (Kelli Williams), Eli Loker (Brendan Hines), and Ria Torres (Monica Raymund).[1][6] Produced by Imagine Television and Twentieth Century Fox Television, the series blends procedural storytelling with educational elements on behavioral science, earning praise for its engaging format and Tim Roth's performance while popularizing concepts like microexpressions in mainstream culture.[4][7] In 2011, Lie to Me won the People's Choice Award for Favorite TV Crime Drama, reflecting its impact despite mixed critical reception over its run.[4]Premise
Plot
Lie to Me centers on the Lightman Group, a Washington, D.C.-based consulting firm founded by Dr. Cal Lightman, a renowned expert in deception detection who applies his skills to assist law enforcement agencies, corporations, and individuals in identifying lies through behavioral analysis. The firm tackles high-stakes cases ranging from criminal investigations to corporate fraud, with Lightman and his team serving as independent consultants who provide insights into human behavior to resolve conflicts and uncover hidden truths.[7] At the heart of the narrative is Lightman himself, whose relentless pursuit of truth stems from a traumatic childhood event: the suicide of his mother, which he believes was triggered by his father's infidelity, leaving him with a deep-seated distrust and an unyielding drive to expose deception in others. His professional partner, Dr. Gillian Foster, a psychologist and co-founder of the firm, contrasts Lightman's intensity with her principled, empathetic approach, often advocating for ethical boundaries in their work and navigating the personal strains it imposes on their close collaboration. Eli Loker, the group's tech-savvy researcher, embodies "radical honesty" by committing to absolute truthfulness in all interactions, which complicates team dynamics and underscores the challenges of unfiltered communication. Ria Torres, a former U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent recruited for her innate ability to spot lies without training, brings street-smart intuition to the team, evolving from a novice to a key operative amid her own unresolved family issues.[8][9][10][1] Throughout the series, interpersonal relationships within the Lightman Group deepen, marked by evolving trust and conflicts as personal lives intersect with professional demands—Lightman's strained ties with his ex-wife Zoe Landau and teenage daughter Emily create ongoing tension, while rivalries with federal agents and ethical dilemmas test the team's cohesion. These dynamics highlight broader themes of the moral ambiguities inherent in wielding truth as a weapon, where the pursuit of honesty can erode relationships, blur ethical lines, and exact a profound psychological toll on those who constantly probe the facades of others.[11][12]Scientific foundation
The scientific foundation of Lie to Me draws heavily from psychologist Paul Ekman's pioneering research on facial expressions and nonverbal behavior as indicators of concealed emotions and deception. Ekman, often regarded as the world's leading expert in deception detection, co-discovered microexpressions—brief, involuntary facial movements lasting a fraction of a second that reveal true emotions despite attempts to suppress them. His work emphasizes that these expressions, along with other nonverbal cues such as eye movements and body posture, can signal deceit when they deviate from expected patterns. This research forms the core of the show's techniques for reading deception through facial and behavioral analysis.[13][14] Ekman served as the scientific consultant for Lie to Me, ensuring a degree of authenticity in its portrayal of deception detection. In this role, he reviewed and critiqued every episode's script to align it with established psychological principles, trained the cast and crew in recognizing subtle emotional cues, and addressed the show's accuracies and dramatizations through his official blog. His involvement extended to on-set guidance, helping actors portray realistic microexpressions and baseline behaviors. Ekman's contributions were instrumental in grounding the series in real science, though he noted that the program's pace often amplified techniques for dramatic effect.[5][15][16] Central to Ekman's framework are the seven universal emotions—anger, fear, sadness, disgust, contempt, surprise, and happiness—recognized across cultures through consistent facial muscle patterns, as identified in cross-cultural studies involving isolated tribes and urban populations. Effective deception detection begins with establishing a baseline of an individual's normal behavior under neutral conditions, allowing observers to spot "hot spots" where emotional leakage occurs, such as mismatched expressions or hesitations. Statement analysis complements this by examining verbal content for inconsistencies, like overly detailed denials or omissions, though Ekman stresses that no single cue proves deceit and multiple indicators must align. These concepts, detailed in his influential book Emotions Revealed (2003), provide practical tools for decoding hidden feelings.[17][18][19][20] While rooted in laboratory research showing trained observers achieving approximately 80% accuracy in detecting deception via emotional cues in controlled settings, the show's depiction dramatizes these methods for television. Real-time spotting of microexpressions is rare without extensive training, as they are fleeting and easily masked, and studies indicate they are not reliable standalone indicators of lying due to cultural variations and individual differences. Critiques highlight that viewing Lie to Me can reduce viewers' truth bias—increasing suspicion—but paradoxically lowers overall deception detection efficacy in real-world scenarios by fostering overconfidence in facial cues alone. Ekman's techniques have broader applications, including training programs for law enforcement agencies like the TSA, FBI, and CIA to enhance screening and interrogation processes.[21][22][23][24][25]Cast and characters
Main
Dr. Cal Lightman, portrayed by Tim Roth, is the eccentric founder and head of the Lightman Group, a private consulting firm specializing in deception detection. As a brilliant psychologist and former FBI consultant, Lightman is renowned for his expertise in analyzing microexpressions—brief, involuntary facial movements that reveal concealed emotions—to uncover lies. His methods often involve provocative and unorthodox techniques, driven by guilt over his mother's suicide that fuels his relentless pursuit of truth, though it also manifests in anger issues and emotional volatility. Lightman's family life is marked by estrangement, including a divorce from his ex-wife Zoe and a strained relationship with his teenage daughter Emily, which frequently intersects with his professional cases and heightens his interpersonal tensions.[5][26][27] Dr. Gillian Foster, played by Kelli Williams, serves as Lightman's business partner and the Lightman Group's resident psychologist, providing a grounding ethical counterpoint to his intensity. Specializing in body language, voice analysis, and psychological profiling, Foster emphasizes professional boundaries and moral considerations in their investigations, often mediating conflicts within the team and with clients. Her backstory includes a recent divorce and past trauma from a controlling former relationship, which influences her cautious approach to personal involvement but strengthens her empathy in assessing emotional states. Having previously worked for the Pentagon, she complements Lightman's facial cue expertise with broader behavioral insights, though their close friendship evolves into subtle romantic tension that tests their partnership.[28][27] Eli Loker, portrayed by Brendan Hines, is the team's tech-savvy lead researcher and analyst, responsible for data processing, voice stress analysis, and video breakdowns in the lab. A proponent of "radical honesty," Loker commits to never lying, even in social or professional settings, which stems from his academic training in reading people and group psychology but often leads to bluntness that disrupts team harmony. His skills in technical support and fieldwork enable him to handle diverse analytical tasks, from pattern recognition in surveillance footage to evaluating crowd behaviors, making him indispensable for corroborating the others' intuitive reads. Loker's evolving maturity, particularly in navigating ethical dilemmas and his budding rapport with Torres, adds layers to the group's collaborative dynamic.[27] Ria Torres, played by Monica Raymund, is a street-smart junior analyst and Lightman's protégé, recruited from the TSA for her innate talent as a "natural" deception detector. Lacking formal training, Torres honed her lie-detection abilities through personal experiences, including time in juvenile detention amid a turbulent upbringing with an abusive, alcoholic father, which sharpened her intuitive grasp of nonverbal cues and resilience under pressure. She excels in fieldwork and rapid assessments, often taking the lead in high-stakes interrogations, and her raw, empathetic perspective balances the team's more academic approaches. Torres's loyalty to Lightman fosters mentorship opportunities, while her personal vulnerabilities occasionally clash with the group's high-pressure environment.[26][27] The main characters' skills form a synergistic unit within the Lightman Group, where Lightman's microexpression prowess pairs with Foster's psychological depth, Loker's technical precision, and Torres's instinctive fieldwork to dissect complex deceptions across cases involving law enforcement, corporate intrigue, and personal crises. This complementarity drives investigative success, as seen in their division of labor during multi-threaded inquiries, but also fuels interpersonal dynamics, such as Lightman and Foster's simmering professional-personal tension, Loker's honesty challenging team secrecy, and Torres's growth under Lightman's guidance amid occasional clashes over methods and ethics. Over the series, these relationships deepen through shared challenges, revealing vulnerabilities that humanize their expertise and underscore the emotional toll of constant truth-seeking.[5][29][27]Recurring
Hayley McFarland plays Emily Lightman, the 16-year-old daughter of Dr. Cal Lightman and his ex-wife Zoe Landau, appearing in 40 episodes across all three seasons. Emily's storyline delves into family dynamics, including her father's workaholic nature and her occasional involvement in his deception detection techniques, which she picks up through observation and informal lessons from Cal. Her exposure to high-stakes cases strains her teenage life, highlighting themes of parental influence and rebellion while providing emotional grounding for Cal's character.[30][1] Mekhi Phifer portrays Ben Reynolds, an FBI special agent introduced in season 1 as a recurring character and elevated to series regular in season 2, appearing in 24 episodes before his departure in the season 2 finale. As the agency's liaison to the Lightman Group, Reynolds facilitates collaboration on criminal investigations but sparks inter-agency conflicts over methods and protocols, such as Lightman's unorthodox approaches versus FBI procedures. His presence underscores tensions between civilian consultants and law enforcement, contributing to procedural subplots without overshadowing the core team.[31][1] Jennifer Beals recurs as Zoe Landau, Cal Lightman's ex-wife and Emily's mother, an Assistant U.S. Attorney who appears in 6 episodes primarily in seasons 1 and 2. Zoe's professional role brings jurisdictional tensions into the narrative, as she occasionally hires or clashes with the Lightman Group on legal cases involving arson, corruption, and family-related matters. Her ongoing romantic entanglements with Cal, including a brief affair while engaged to another man, add layers to his personal vulnerabilities and influence Emily's family interactions.[30][1] Sean Patrick Thomas appears as Special Agent Karl Dupree in 3 episodes of season 1, assisting the Lightman Group on international cases like one involving a South Korean ambassador. Dupree's role introduces romantic subplots, particularly a flirtation with Ria Torres, while exploring themes of addiction through his backstory. His limited arc provides contrast to the team's internal dynamics, emphasizing external law enforcement partnerships.[30] These recurring characters enrich the series by weaving personal subplots—such as family strains and inter-agency rivalries—into the main investigative arcs, offering glimpses into the protagonists' lives beyond deception analysis without transitioning to full-time status. Their contributions maintain narrative balance, grounding the procedural format in relatable human elements.[32]Production
Development
Lie to Me was created by Samuel Baum in 2008, drawing inspiration from the work of real-life deception detection experts, particularly psychologist Paul Ekman, whose research on facial expressions and microexpressions formed the basis for the series' central concept.[33][34] Baum spent a year researching Ekman's studies and met with him multiple times during the development phase to shape the show's premise around scientific principles of lie detection.[35] The pilot episode was written by Baum and directed by Robert Schwentke, establishing the procedural format centered on Dr. Cal Lightman, a character modeled after Ekman.[36] From the outset, Paul Ekman served as the scientific advisor, granting the production team access to his research materials and reviewing scripts to maintain fidelity to the science of emotions and deception, with the authority to critique and influence content for accuracy.[34][37] The series was produced by Imagine Television, Pagoda Pictures, and 20th Century Fox Television, with executive producers including Brian Grazer and David Nevins.[38] Fox greenlit the project in September 2008, ordering an initial 13 episodes for the first season, attracted by its potential as a character-driven procedural akin to the network's successful medical drama House.[39][38] Samuel Baum initially served as showrunner and head writer, but departed after the first season due to personal reasons, leading to a transition where Shawn Ryan took over as showrunner for Season 2, followed by Alexander Cary for Season 3.[4][40] Early development faced challenges in integrating rigorous scientific elements with compelling dramatic storytelling, requiring writers to navigate the tension between factual deception analysis and narrative pacing to avoid overly didactic episodes.[41] The theme song, "Brand New Day" by Ryan Star, was chosen for its introspective lyrics and uplifting melody, which complemented the show's exploration of truth and personal revelation.[42]Filming
Principal photography for Lie to Me took place primarily in Los Angeles, California, beginning in August 2008.[43] The production utilized soundstages at 20th Century Fox Studios in Century City and Downey Studios for interior scenes, including the Lightman Group offices and interrogation rooms.[44] Exterior shots for case investigations were filmed across various Los Angeles neighborhoods, such as downtown streets and industrial areas, while specific venues like the San Pedro Brewing Company served as stand-ins for bar and meeting scenes in select episodes.[43] No international location shooting occurred, keeping all production within the greater Los Angeles area to manage costs and logistics efficiently.[43] The production timeline aligned closely with the broadcast schedule. Season 1, consisting of 13 episodes, was filmed from late 2008 through early 2009, allowing for its premiere on January 21, 2009, and conclusion on May 13, 2009.[45] Season 2 expanded to 22 episodes, with filming extending from mid-2009 into early 2010 to support its airing from September 28, 2009, to May 17, 2010.[46] Season 3, shortened to 13 episodes due to network decisions, was shot primarily in 2010, wrapping by late that year ahead of its October 4, 2010, debut and January 31, 2011, finale.[47] To ensure authenticity in portraying deception detection, the cast underwent specialized training led by psychologist Paul Ekman, the scientific consultant whose research inspired the series. Ekman conducted workshops on recognizing microexpressions—brief, involuntary facial movements lasting a fraction of a second—and the actors practiced these techniques extensively.[34] Tim Roth, in particular, spent time with Ekman studying the underlying science and rehearsed expressions in front of mirrors to master the subtle nuances required for close-up shots.[34] This preparation extended to on-set practical effects, where makeup and lighting were used to highlight facial details without relying heavily on digital enhancements, emphasizing natural performances.[48] Technically, the series employed a dynamic editing style featuring rapid cuts and extreme close-ups on faces to build tension and underscore microexpression reveals, a hallmark of its procedural format.[48] Budget constraints, typical for a mid-tier network drama estimated at $2-3 million per episode, influenced a studio-heavy approach, minimizing on-location shoots and focusing resources on character-driven interiors and visual effects for emotional cues.[49]Episodes
Season 1
The first season of Lie to Me consists of 13 episodes, which aired on Fox from January 21, 2009, to May 13, 2009. The pilot episode introduces Dr. Cal Lightman, a deception expert based on real-life psychologist Paul Ekman, and his team at the Lightman Group as they tackle high-stakes cases, beginning with the investigation of a teacher's murder by a student and a politician's sex scandal that highlights their use of microexpressions and body language analysis.[50][4] The season primarily features standalone cases while establishing the core team dynamics, including analyst Eli Loker's commitment to "radical honesty"—a philosophy where he avoids all deception, even in professional settings—and Ria Torres's street-honed intuition complementing Gillian Foster's psychological expertise. It also explores Lightman's personal vulnerabilities, such as his strained relationships with his ex-wife Zoe and daughter Emily, which occasionally intersect with professional investigations. The season averaged 10.1 million viewers per episode, contributing to Fox's strong midseason performance.[51][1] Production for the season emphasized scientific authenticity, with consultant Paul Ekman reviewing scripts and training actors like Tim Roth on facial cues to ensure realistic portrayals of deception detection. The pilot, directed by Robert Schwentke and written by creator Samuel Baum, focused resources on visual storytelling elements to depict subtle nonverbal signals effectively.[4][50]Episode list
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1 | Pilot | Robert Schwentke | Samuel Baum | January 21, 2009 | The Lightman Group investigates a student fleeing a teacher's murder scene and rumors of a congressman's affair, uncovering deception among students, staff, and politicians.[50] |
| 2 | 2 | Moral Waiver | Adam Davidson | Josh Singer | January 28, 2009 | The team examines a sexual assault accusation against a soldier and bribery claims involving a basketball star, revealing hidden truths in military and sports contexts. |
| 3 | 3 | A Perfect Score | Eric Laneuville | Samuel Baum | February 4, 2009 | Lightman probes a judge's daughter's murder at a competitive prep school, while Foster investigates a NASA pilot crash, exposing academic and professional fraud.[52] |
| 4 | 4 | Love Always | Tim Hunter | Tom Szentgyorgyi & Steven Maeda | February 18, 2009 | The group attends a high-profile wedding amid death threats to a Korean ambassador's son, working to prevent an assassination. |
| 5 | 5 | Unchained | Lesli Linka Glatter | Josh Singer | March 4, 2009 | Torres and Lightman assess a former gang leader's parole suitability, while Foster and Loker investigate a firefighter's suspicious death. |
| 6 | 6 | Do No Harm | John Behring | Jami O'Brien | March 11, 2009 | Lightman and Foster search for a missing girl, as Torres and Loker verify the authenticity of a peace activist's autobiography. |
| 7 | 7 | The Best Policy | Arvin Brown | T.J. Brady & Rasheed Newson | March 18, 2009 | Lightman uncovers a pharmaceutical conspiracy, while the team negotiates the release of American hostages in Yemen. |
| 8 | 8 | Depraved Heart | Adam Davidson | Dustin Thomason | April 1, 2009 | The team aids victims of an investment scam and investigates suicides among Indian women linked to an immigration official. |
| 9 | 9 | Life Is Priceless | Clark Johnson | David N. Tuterow | April 8, 2009 | Lightman assists FEMA after a building collapse, while Torres and Loker interview a billionaire's fiancée amid suspicions. |
| 10 | 10 | Better Half | Karen Gaviola | Ilana Bar-Din Giannini & Josh Singer | April 22, 2009 | Lightman's ex-wife enlists the team for an arson investigation, revealing family secrets and a pattern of fires. |
| 11 | 11 | Undercover | Seith Mann | David T. Berger | April 29, 2009 | The group probes a police shooting of an unarmed teen that risks a terrorism case, while facing potential legal repercussions.[53] |
| 12 | 12 | Blinded | Milan Cheylov | Sarah Fain & Elizabeth Craft | May 6, 2009 | Partnering with the FBI, the team hunts a copycat serial rapist, with Lightman going undercover in prison. |
| 13 | 13 | Sacrifice | Adam Davidson | Samuel Baum | May 13, 2009 | The Lightman Group aids the FBI after terrorist bombings in D.C., as personal stakes rise for Foster and Torres. |
Season 2
The second season of Lie to Me expanded to 22 episodes following the show's initial success, with Fox ordering nine additional episodes beyond the original 13 on November 24, 2009. It premiered on September 28, 2009, and concluded on September 13, 2010, after a mid-season hiatus from December 2009 to June 2010.[3] The season introduced more serialized storytelling under new showrunner Shawn Ryan, who replaced creator Sam Baum and shifted the tone toward heightened adrenaline, character-driven personal stakes, and interconnected arcs, while maintaining the procedural case-of-the-week format.[54] The narrative progressed by deepening ethical dilemmas for Dr. Cal Lightman, such as his willingness to bend rules for justice, and escalating personal risks in high-stakes investigations, including international cases and confrontations with government agencies.[55] New technologies like voice stress analysis were incorporated to complement microexpression reading, enhancing the team's deception detection capabilities in episodes involving witness credibility and hidden motives.[56] Personal subplots gained prominence mid-season, particularly Gillian Foster's evolving marriage and romantic entanglements, adding layers to team dynamics and contrasting the professional deception hunts. The season averaged 9.1 million viewers per episode, reflecting sustained popularity despite the break. Key developments included Lightman's growing conflicts with FBI Agent Ben Reynolds and revelations about his past, contributing to a transitional arc that built tension for future seasons without resolving major threads. The expanded order allowed for more complex cases, such as corporate espionage and terrorist threats, blending procedural elements with ongoing character growth.Episode Highlights
The season featured diverse cases, from psychological thrillers to real-world crises. Below is a table of selected representative episodes, highlighting titles, air dates, brief synopses, and notable guest stars where applicable.| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis | Notable Guest Star |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Core of It | Sep 28, 2009 | Lightman helps a woman with multiple personalities recall details of a murder she believes she witnessed, while dealing with his ex-wife's decision to move to Chicago. | |
| 3 | Control Factor | Oct 12, 2009 | Lightman travels to Mexico with his daughter Emily to find a missing woman, while Foster clashes with a rival over a tainted blood scandal. | |
| 4 | Honey | Oct 19, 2009 | A grieving man takes Lightman hostage, demanding help to identify his wife's killer using deception analysis. | Garret Dillahunt |
| 8 | Secret Santa | Nov 23, 2009 | Lightman journeys to Afghanistan to extract captured Marines based on intel from a deceptive expatriate. | |
| 10 | Tractor Man | Dec 14, 2009 | Lightman negotiates with a farmer wired to a bomb who insists on speaking only to the President about corporate wrongdoing. | Miguel Ferrer |
| 11 | Beat the Devil | Jun 7, 2010 | Lightman suspects a sociopathic student in a disappearance, while the team aids a UFO sighting witness facing ridicule. | Jason Dohring |
| 19 | Pied Piper | Aug 16, 2010 | Lightman questions the innocence of an executed man, risking the agency's future by uncovering potential wrongful conviction. | |
| 22 | Black and White | Sep 13, 2010 | Lightman's journalist friend is murdered, leading to a tense investigation where Agent Reynolds is shot, heightening Lightman's ethical conflicts. |
Season 3
The third season of Lie to Me consisted of 13 episodes and aired Mondays at 9:00 p.m. ET on Fox from October 4, 2010, to January 31, 2011.[57] This final season emphasized the Lightman Group's collaborations with law enforcement amid shifting dynamics, including reduced direct FBI oversight after Agent Ben Reynolds' arc concluded in the prior season, and introduced new alliances such as with Detective Maria Wallowski (Monique Gabriela Curnen).[58] The narrative arc raised stakes through cases tied to government and institutional corruption, such as police profiling and potential terrorism, while resolving key personal relationships—including tensions between Cal Lightman and Gillian Foster, and developments in Eli Loker's professional growth—leading to a finale that delivered closure without unresolved cliffhangers.[59] The season averaged 6.7 million viewers per episode, reflecting a decline from previous years but maintaining a solid audience for the procedural drama. Production for the season began with an initial 13-episode order, but Fox announced in December 2010 that it would not commission the customary back-nine episodes, limiting the run and signaling the network's waning commitment amid slipping ratings.[60] This decision, confirmed during filming, prompted last-minute script revisions to wrap up ongoing threads and provide a satisfying conclusion, even as full cancellation came on May 11, 2011.[61] The shortened structure allowed for tighter serialization, focusing on the team's independence and external pressures from authorities. The season's episodes explored deception in diverse contexts, from institutional abuses to personal vendettas, often highlighting microexpressions in high-stakes interrogations. For instance, the finale "Killer App" delved into online deception when the team investigated a social network co-creator's murder amid suspicions of corporate betrayal.[62]| Ep. | Title | Air date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3.01 | In the Red | October 4, 2010 | Lightman infiltrates a bank robbery crew only to uncover a robber's personal revenge motive rather than financial gain. |
| 3.02 | The Royal We | October 11, 2010 | The team probes abuse allegations at a teen beauty pageant while Lightman grapples with writer's block on a book project. |
| 3.03 | Dirty Loyal | October 18, 2010 | Internal Affairs pressures Lightman to evaluate police profiling after an incident involving Detective Wallowski.[58] |
| 3.04 | Double Blind | October 25, 2010 | Lightman assesses deception among art museum staff and becomes involved with a enigmatic woman during the evaluation. |
| 3.05 | The Canary's Song | November 1, 2010 | The group investigates a coal mine explosion as the FBI scrutinizes Foster over Lightman's gambling connections. |
| 3.06 | Beyond Belief | November 15, 2010 | Lightman infiltrates a cult to expose its leader following a member's suicide attempt. |
| 3.07 | Bullet Bump | November 22, 2010 | An Alzheimer's patient aids Lightman in recalling a hospital incident that suggests an "angel of death" killer. |
| 3.08 | Smoked | November 29, 2010 | As a favor to Wallowski, Lightman examines a robbery at a terminally ill man's barbecue restaurant. |
| 3.09 | Funhouse | January 10, 2011 | Lightman risks his mental stability to assist a schizophrenic man in navigating reality. |
| 3.10 | Rebound | January 17, 2011 | Lightman and a lawyer target a sociopathic con artist preying on divorced women. |
| 3.11 | Saved | January 24, 2011 | The team investigates a fatal teen car accident, revealing deception around a paramedic's heroism. |
| 3.12 | Gone | January 31, 2011 | Lightman uncovers family secrets in a child's kidnapping case. |
| 3.13 | Killer App | January 31, 2011 | Foster handles a social media startup dispute that turns deadly, while Lightman proves a partner's guilt in a murder.[62] |