Furillo stops the blasting of a guru's tenement; Belker hides in a trash bin; LaRue and Renko race for $100.
Furillo considers directing a corruption probe; Calletano earns the command of Ferry Precinct; freewheeling Norm Buntz arrives.
LaRue stalks an officer's killer; despite being robbed, a cancer victim continues a cross-country run; Fay protests aid cuts.
Immunity stops Furillo from arresting Garibaldi's killer; a stakeout team snubs Belker; a Korean grocer hires an ex-gang youth.
Furillo's corruption probe sweeps the media; a madman wreaks havoc with a water gun; Buntz screens prospective female workers.
Washington romances a single mother; a sculptor clings to his work; Renko explores past lives; guest Alex McArthur.
Renko and Hill puzzle over a sudden influx of bums; Belker has twin suspects in a diamond theft; Calletano considers resigning.
Furillo tries to obtain evidence on a major supplier; Goldblume must protect a neo-Nazi group on parade; Hill's father returns.
Buntz refuses to beg an escaped psychotic to spare his life; Urban Warrior magazine asks Hunter to be a cover model.
Unsure Davenport agrees to spend Christmas with Furillo's conservative family; a drug dealer thinks Buntz has an attack turkey.
Belker's wedding lacks only a groom; Buntz, Hill and Renko hunt for a stolen human heart; a veteran frames his rookie partner.
Furillo speaks up for a rookie accused of placing a weapon in a dead suspect's hand; Hill sees a familiar face in the morgue.
A political image-maker courts Furillo; dazed Hunter dreams he is held prisoner on a Soviet ship; Hill takes his father home.
Buntz's drug-dealer snare angers Goldblume; LaRue falls for a tattooist; a neighbor enchants Hill; guest Billy Drago.
A music-video director takes over the station and recruits Hunter's dog and Jablonski; elderly tenants fight eviction.
Furillo is shot, and vigilant Davenport recalls their rocky courtship; the officers search for the attacker.
Tragedy strikes as the officers adjust to Furillo's absence; ambitious LaRue oversteps; Buntz appears on a TV courtroom-show.
Buntz presses, but Bates begins to doubt her recollection of Coffey's shooting; an inept watchman bothers Belker.
Furillo asks Martinez to help expose a crooked judge; Buntz chooses between duty and loyalty; Bates has a new, female partner.
Bates defends McBride on charges of sexual harassment; Buntz confronts his ex-partner, who he thinks killed an officer.
Internal Affairs grills Buntz about the shooting; Belker cautiously tends an informant (Charles Levin) dying of AIDS.
While citizens vie for the reward for capturing ``The Creeper,'' Davenport prepares the suspect's defense.