Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9 Review: The Law & Order Crossover with the Eugenics Plot
Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9 is the second half of a crossover with the mothership, which means the very beginning of the hour is really the middle of the action. So, by the time “Purity” begins, we’ve already experienced a woman who appeared pregnant shot in front of Lieutenant Brady, a car bomb, Ukrainian refugees promised US citizenship in exchange for so-called “anchor babies” — a term usually used by racists to describe children of immigrants who receive birthright citizenship — thus conning them into paying for their own trafficking, something about a scammy religious charity to help “faithful” people adopt those babies on the cheap, and an “underground baby farm” discovery. Oh. And, no small detail: There’s yet another explosion to end Law & Order Season 25 part of this crossover, courtesy of some white supremacists.
So, what viewers who missed the “hi, this is a crossover” memo will have seen upon tuning in to SVU is Benson and Bruno exchanging some dark jokes, followed by her…desperately trying to help save him as he flatlines. A choice. Has she not lost enough people? Did Fin not just end up in the hospital in the Season 27 premiere, and did that same premiere not also include Cragen’s memorial service? At some point, there has to be some other way to create drama, especially when the last Law & Order crossover featured the death of Maria Recinos, the little girl Olivia saved back in Season 7. Luckily, “Purity” doesn’t go the expected route — Bruno survives and even makes it back to the office by the end of the hour.
Also on a positive note, both hours give us plenty of Benson/Brady scenes — which means we get the privilege of watching Mariska Hargitay and Maura Tierney together again. Fin is here, something that’s becoming more of a rare treat this season than anything else. And there’s personal stuff! Olivia mentions her adopted son, meaning someone, somewhere took the note (constant screaming from critics and the fanbase alike) about the recent trend of Noah erasure. The scene in question is, admittedly, not necessarily the best executed of the night…but it’s not the worst either. And, of course, the list of highlights must include Liv calling El when she’s spiraling after nearly losing Bruno. It’s so simple. Christopher Meloni doesn’t even have to be here in order for Elliot Stabler’s presence in Olivia Benson’s life to be acknowledged. Finally, someone listened to that advice, too.
Additionally, the way the storyline makes eugenicists and white supremacists who believe in some nonsensical, non-existent “white genocide” out to be equal parts violent, mediocre, and clownish is more than welcome at a time when far too many people want to make excuses for them. The victims in these two episodes are clear. They’re the Ukrainian girls who, in a dark twist of irony, are actually purposely brought into the U.S. with the sole purpose of affecting the racial makeup of the country a certain way. (Unlike the Black and brown immigrants who are demonized by people who share the same views as our perps.)
Overall, while neither Law & Order Season 25 Episode 9 “Snowflakes” nor this SVU hour is without its flaws — some more glaring than others — it’s worth the watch. Definitely better than the mid-season finale. So, we’ll take it.
More Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9 reactions

- Olivia’s reaction to the patient/victim being missing at the beginning of Law & Order Season 25 Episode 9. Priceless. And classic Benson.
- “Spam. Wife and I joined this new gym? Ever since, we’ve been getting peppered with ads for longevity supplements and testosterone boosters for men of a certain age…” “And you qualify?” “Apparently!” Uh. Detective Riley is…not happy about this.
- “You’re safe now…Look, I promise.” And the gunshot. Horrible.
- Normally, I’d understand Brady needing to get right to work without any kind of a breather, despite…that. But there’s literally Captain Benson, Captain Curry, Sergeant Tutuola, and Sergeant Rollins on this one, so…
- Like, this girl’s blood is on her face. That’s…a lot.
- “I’m going to get this to Fin. He’s got some free time on his hands.” Also: He knows things!
- This first interrogation scene. Yes. Brady leaning against the two-way and glowering as Benson does her thing, followed by that seamless swap to Brady’s shot to take a crack at the suspect with her, uh…going a little off the rails. Yes. Hargitay and Tierney are so good, and I’m actually glad to see Brady do the unstable(r) thing here. Not just because Liv is experienced in these situations either. Again, Nadiya was shot in the head after Brady promised her she was safe with her. That’s not something you can just let go overnight!
- Also: “Look, lady…” “It’s Captain.” It so is.
- “You feel me?” “No. Not even a little.” The timing. And honestly? That tone on the “no” tells us everything we need to know — no “not even a little” required. (Though, that’s a good delivery, as well.)
- “Is she insane?” “Good luck!” I cracked up.
- I think maybe this investigation has some magical jumping to conclusions, a bit? But, I mean, they’re right in the end. There’s that!
- I think Brady could’ve gone with a “what about thou shalt not lie” instead of going so hard on her knowledge of the law here.
- So glad Liv checks in to see if Jess is ok, but I also wonder why it is that this same care is…not always extended to Liv.
- “I don’t like begging people to help me solve a freaking murder. But yeah, sure, I’m fine. Why?” Narrator: She was, uh, not fine.
- More absolute excellence from Tierney: Both that scathing tone on the “fine” stuff and then the “she pushed me out the way, Liv.” That just…begging her colleague to get it. (Which she does.)
- “…what?” Exactly.
- “He wanted to make sure I was not Jewish. Or Muslim.” Yeah, so…Great Replacement Theory is explicitly Islamophobic and antisemitic, so I’m glad this line was included. But, admittedly, I’m also slightly bummed that this gets glossed over in the greater scheme of things. It’s also frustrating that it takes seeing all the neo-nazi symbols at the end of Law & Order Season 25 Episode 9 before anyone so much as starts asking questions about connecting the dots.
- “You want to play follow the embryos?” Somehow, not even the most absurd thing anyone says here.
- Drink every time someone says “baby farm” or “baby mill.”
- “…went online. We found a Christian charity that made adoption affordable.” Red. Flag.
- So, let me get this straight: They mention the “underground baby farm” in front of this man’s daughter, but then, the way Brady gets him to cooperate is by…threatening to tell his daughter? Ok then. Also, they should’ve spared a child from so much as hearing “underground baby farm” to begin with.
- Nevertheless, “we’ve got two people dead, Derek” is a moment.
- …but the rest is…too much. I laughed. None of this is funny, but it’s just…nuts enough to…yeah.
- “What’s the cause?” “Hate.”
- “What does a hate group have to do with a baby mill?” No, seriously, how do y’all not make the connection? White supremacists want more babies — but only more white babies. This is a way to take advantage of desperate white women and get their wish of more white babies. Even the “unwitting” or “innocent” (whatever) group that chooses to only place children who they consider “faithful” fits into this! White supremacist Christofascism is a thing!
- Anyway.
- End Law & Order half of the crossover. Begin Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9. We don’t even have to guess where the split is. You know it’s the SVU half because Olivia Benson has been traumatized. Again.
- “You just had to be the hero, huh?” “Nah, you were going too slow. I was just trying to get past you. I must’ve slipped.” I love him.
- That camera pulling away as Liv’s left alone, watching Bruno be wheeled off…Hm. Yes. It just works.
- “El, it’s me.”
- Super work from Hargitay on this one-sided voicemail. Can we talk about how much vulnerability Liv shows here? The tone of her voice, asking Elliot to call — not just “hey, I’m going to text you about my case” or anything — and then, admitting “things are maybe not great” before asking him to call her again before she hangs up: That is all…a lot. There’s no way Elliot wouldn’t have known something was wrong from the sound of voice alone, but Olivia actually using her words to admit she’s not ok is huge.
- Whatever you do, don’t think about her leaving him a zillion voicemails asking him to call that one time and never hearing back.
- A Law & Order crossover with Ukrainian refugees — you know, like, people fleeing an actual war aimed at their annihilation — being brought in to make America white again (or whatever), in light of recent events…
- That first interrogation with Sara is one of those situations where all I could think at the time was “what if she is also a victim?” Kind of off base for Benson, in particular, to doubt the claim without doing at least a little bit of a token investigation first.
- Then again, fun fact: Aligning yourself with people in these kinds of groups makes you one of them. And culpable.
- “Stabler sent me a name.” Oh, he jumped when she called, huh.
- I would’ve liked to have seen more of Fin and Walker in general. With that being said, at least both Ice-T and David Ajala make the most of that visit to see Stabler’s informant.
- “Blonde hair, blue eyes, gnarly tattoos, piss-poor attitude…” Now, is he talking about the perps or…
- Oh, the cops being surrounded by folks like that could’ve ended very, very badly.
- “Hateful racists sounds more like on brand?” “Or terrorists.”
- “…preserve the real America.” When Dubya left you so far behind, you don’t know your people aren’t actually from here.
- “You’re an unemployed three-time loser.” And that head tilt. Curry deserves more, not just in Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9 but in general. But I’m so glad she got to rub it in this dude’s face that he’s nothing. Meanwhile, she’s here, with a job, and a rank, and not getting out of his face because she knows it makes him uncomfortable.
- “…there’s a genocide happening in this country. Traditional Americans — white Americans — are being replaced.” Again: This child was left behind. The genocide already happened. To actual real Americans — indigenous ones — committed by white people. And nobody’s being replaced!
- Also, ya loser, words have meanings. Genocide, in particular, requires specific things. This ain’t it.
- “Have fun in Rikers, patriot.” GET HIM.
- Brady’s “what the H—’s going on here” is a thing I ask a lot lately.
- We all know who the tech bro is, right? Right.
- It’s Mike Ross’ shi**y friend Trevor from Suits. What did you think I meant????
- “Come on, Jess. This is not yours to carry.” I need someone supporting Liv like this on a regular basis.
- “The word of a racist sociopath doesn’t go far with a jury.” If only we could still believe that to be true.
- “…poison the blood…” Yeah, he’s a nazi.
- …and doing eugenics experiments, which is illegal. Or was? No one even knows anymore.
- Yeah, so. That “uplifting” ending with the girls becoming citizens is kind of out of touch. Look at the people getting snatched out of their hearings while they’re going through the process the legal way and sent to God knows where. These white women getting a favor, somehow, through two white woman cops…based on them being refugees from the war in Ukraine, and based on what they’ve been through, is good. But in the current climate, without anyone pointing this out, and after a whollllleee episode about white supremacist conspiracy theorists doing bad things…the optics are…something.
- Very sweet Curry/Bruno stuff there at the end. More, please!
- Glad they ended by admitting Dahlsson had the money to just keep going back to court to get his precious embryos, at least. Reality, and all that. Not glad that is reality. But…yeah.
Agree? Disagree? What did you think of Law & Order: SVU Season 27 Episode 9 and/or the Law & Order crossover as a whole? Leave us a comment!