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1967
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1968
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1969
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1970
| Original Air Date—12 January 1967 |
| Original Air Date—19 January 1967 Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of burglary division when they hear that a large quantity of high velocity gelatin dynamite has been stolen from a construction site. Whnen they interview the Night Watchman who tried to stop the crime they get a license plate # for the car involved. Further investigating leads them to a bar patron nicknamed Ziggy. When they finally track him down they find that four of the eight stolen cases are empty and set to go off somewhere in the city. |
| Original Air Date—26 January 1967 Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of homicide when a phone call comes in from Ray Righetti, the manager of the Universal City branch of the Bank of America. Janet Ohrmund claims to have information of a kidnapping and ransom demand. When they question her she tells them a young man is holding her employer Adele Vincent hostage for $75,000. She was told to get the money or else he will kill her. |
| Original Air Date—9 February 1967 Friday and Gannon question Officer Paul Culver, on the job only 114 days and currently working undercover out of the narcotics division, about the armed robbery of a liquor store in Hollywood. Despite a positive identification in the line-up and thinking he failed the lie-detector tests, Culver swears he is innocent. |
| Original Air Date—16 February 1967 |
| Original Air Date—23 February 1967 Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of Frauds Division, Bunco Section. An expert pair of confidence men have moved from Seattle into L.A. Their victims are the elderly and they have been very successful. They pose as bank examiners out to catch crooked tellers and cheat their victims out of their savings. Friday and Gannon will have to catch them in the process of an actual swindle if they are to make a case against them stick. |
| Season 1, Episode 7: The HammerOriginal Air Date—2 March 1967 The manager of an apartment building is beaten to death with a hammer. Clues at the scene point to a man named 'Fred', who was playing cards with the victim. Fred has fled, possibly in another tenant's car. Later, Friday gets a call notifying him that Frederick Tosca and his girlfriend are in custody in Arizona. Extradition papers are prepared and Friday, Gannon, and Policewoman Dorothy Miller head to Cottonwood. Tosca admits nothing, but a search of the stolen car turns up a key piece of evidence. |
| Original Air Date—9 March 1967 In the span of two weeks someone has robbed at gunpoint ten branches of the city's largest candy store chain--Rachelles. The suspect is described as an older man thin and gaunt. He's never held up the same store twice so Friday organizes two man teams to stakeout the remaining five stores. Just when they think they've figured out his MO he hits the same store twice. |
| Original Air Date—16 March 1967 Emile Hartman reports the theft of $100,000 worth of quality furs and his delivery van. Friday and Gannon aren't having much luck until an insurance agent reports a call from a man selling fur coats. When he calls back a meeting is set up. The furrier must then give Gannon a crash course in furs so the detectives can pose as buyers to make the arrest. |
| Original Air Date—23 March 1967 |
| Original Air Date—30 March 1967 |
| Original Air Date—6 April 1967 |
| Season 1, Episode 13: The BookieOriginal Air Date—13 April 1967 |
| Original Air Date—20 April 1967 |
| Season 1, Episode 15: The GunOriginal Air Date—27 April 1967 |
| Original Air Date—4 May 1967 |
| Season 1, Episode 17: The BulletOriginal Air Date—11 May 1967 Friday and Gannon are working the day watch out of homicide when they respond to a late night call at the house of Jessie Gaynor. Her daughter Nora Hamlin is staying with her due to a separation from her husband. The call involves a gunshot heard from a locked study where Carl Hamlin's body is discovered. It is assumed at first that he killed himself but when Ray Murray from SID tells them that the bullet doesn't match the gun it turns into a murder case. |
| Original Air Date—14 September 1967 |
| Original Air Date—21 September 1967 |
| Original Air Date—5 October 1967 |
| Original Air Date—12 October 1967 |
| Original Air Date—19 October 1967 |
| Original Air Date—26 October 1967 |
| Original Air Date—2 November 1967 |
| Season 2, Episode 9: The Big AdOriginal Air Date—9 November 1967 |
| Original Air Date—16 November 1967 |
| Original Air Date—23 November 1967 |
| Original Air Date—30 November 1967 Bonnie Bates is keeping her late husband's lucrative pyramid scheme alive by selling ten-year memberships in his "Dollar-Wise" buying club for $199.99. Friday and Gannon arrest her and she goes on trial where the jury seems to be on her side until they hear how many members are required for the scheme to work. |
| Original Air Date—7 December 1967 |
| Original Air Date—14 December 1967 |
| Original Air Date—21 December 1967 Friday and Gannon investigate the theft of a statue of the baby Jesus from a church's nativity scene on Christmas Eve. The figure itself has little monetary value. Father Xavier Rojas explains this Jesus statue has been at the church for decades and has great sentimental value to the parishioners. The detectives pursue a lead but come up empty. As they return to Father Rojas, a small boy is pulling a wagon with the statue in it. The boy had prayed for a new wagon and promised the baby Jesus the first ride if he received it. The episode is a remake of "The Big Little Baby Jesus" from the original series, with three cast members (in addition to Jack Webb) reprising their original roles. |
| Original Air Date—28 December 1967 |
| Original Air Date—4 January 1968 |
| Original Air Date—11 January 1968 |
| Original Air Date—25 January 1968 |
| Original Air Date—1 February 1968 |
| Original Air Date—8 February 1968 |
| Original Air Date—15 February 1968 |
| Original Air Date—22 February 1969 |
| Original Air Date—29 February 1968 |
| Original Air Date—7 March 1968 |
| Original Air Date—14 March 1968 |
| Original Air Date—21 March 1968 |
| Original Air Date—28 March 1968 |
| Original Air Date—13 February 1969 |
| Original Air Date—19 September 1968 |
| Original Air Date—26 September 1968 |
| Original Air Date—3 October 1968 |
| Original Air Date—10 October 1968 |
| Original Air Date—17 October 1968 |
| Original Air Date—24 October 1968 |
| Original Air Date—7 November 1968 |
| Original Air Date—14 November 1968 |
| Original Air Date—21 November 1968 |
| Original Air Date—28 November 1968 |
| Original Air Date—5 December 1968 |
| Original Air Date—12 December 1968 |
| Original Air Date—2 January 1969 |
| Original Air Date—9 January 1969 |
| Original Air Date—23 January 1969 |
| Original Air Date—30 January 1969 |
| Original Air Date—6 February 1969 |
| Original Air Date—20 February 1969 |
| Original Air Date—27 February 1969 |
| Original Air Date—6 March 1969 |
| Original Air Date—13 March 1969 Friday and Gannon go undercover at a hotel to find the location of a illegal gambling operation. Soon after spreading the word they're looking for some action they are driven to a late-night game in the Hollywood Hills. After the game the detectives give the location of the residence to their boss and a raid is set for the following night. |
| Original Air Date—27 March 1969 |
| Original Air Date—27 March 1969 Friday and Gannon have less than two hours to find the dog that bit a little girl five days earlier. Normally, treatment consists of serum injections followed by vaccine inoculations, but in this case the girl is highly allergic to the anti-rabies serum and it could kill her. |
| Original Air Date—3 April 1969 When a four-day-old baby is found barely alive in an apartment trash receptacle, Friday and Gannon search for the person who abandoned the newborn. |
| Original Air Date—10 April 1969 |
| Original Air Date—17 April 1969 |
| Original Air Date—18 September 1969 |
| Original Air Date—25 September 1969 The detectives investigate an especially creepy college freshman suspected of the sniper-rifle deaths of two other students, for no apparent reason than the sport of killing. |
| Original Air Date—2 October 1969 |
| Original Air Date—9 October 1969 |
| Original Air Date—16 October 1969 |
| Original Air Date—23 October 1969 |
| Original Air Date—30 October 1969 Self-defense or murder one? The title object plays a key part in determining which occurred when a man shot his girlfriend's lover during an argument. |
| Original Air Date—13 November 1969 |
| Original Air Date—20 November 1969 |
| Original Air Date—27 November 1969 |
| Original Air Date—4 December 1969 |
| Original Air Date—11 December 1969 |
| Original Air Date—8 January 1970 |
| Original Air Date—22 January 1970 |
| Original Air Date—29 January 1970 A horrifying mass murder at a rooming house leaves no discernible suspects, unless a witness who fled the scene can be found. Meanwhile, still another corpse shows up in an upstairs bedroom. |
| Original Air Date—5 February 1970 |
| Original Air Date—12 February 1970 It's Friday evening, Bill's wife is out of town and Joe has agreed to spend the weekend with him for some R & R, starting with a little pinochle with two neighbors. The next day the partners plan to "sleep in, watch the ball game on the tube, and have a dinner fit for kings. We're gonna live like sultans for two days, without harems, of course." What could go wrong with this plan? |
| Original Air Date—19 February 1970 |
| Original Air Date—26 February 1970 Brought to their attention by a member of the Department of Animal Regulation, and with an okay from the Captain, Friday and Gannon investigate a rash of reports of lost dogs from a shopping center. Since only one lost dog had been previously reported from the same area, Friday and Gannon suspect criminal activity. |
| Original Air Date—5 March 1970 |
| Original Air Date—12 March 1970 A forest ranger is brought in when checks and credit cards bearing other names than his own are found in his possession after he is stopped for a traffic violation. Even though he seems to be knowledgeable on the subject of forestry, his answers about the cards and checks lead Friday and Gannon to suspect he is a thief just posing as a ranger. |
| Original Air Date—19 March 1970 Friday arrests a fellow student after their night school class and incurs the wrath of Professor Grant, who expels him after a vote of the other students at their next meeting. Friday demands a chance to plead his case to the students before a second vote is taken. Grant says he must garner 2/3 of the votes to be reinstated. |
| Original Air Date—26 March 1970 Friday and Gannon are assigned to investigate Norm Bivins and Earl Malone, veteran homicide investigators accused of stealing $800 from a dead man. Agnes Emerson, who handled the man's business affairs, claims she gave Bivins and Malone his personal property, including $1000. They say the amount received was $200. Unfortunately, neither side can produce a receipt. |
| Original Air Date—2 April 1970 As Friday and Gannon investigate a series of robberies, a vindictive woman, Jean Sawyer, makes a pest of herself by calling headquarters repeatedly to accuse her husband of the thefts. The detectives investigate John Sawyer and find no evidence against him, but the man responsible for three of the robberies is found and arrested. |
| Original Air Date—9 April 1970 |
| Original Air Date—16 April 1970 |
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