The series finale of "Blind Justice" does not wrap up the series very well and should not even be considered as closure for the series. It leaves too many questions open, rathern than answering them. The relationship between Jim Dunbar, Marty Russo , Karen Bettancourt , Tom Selway and his boss has always been shaky. At the very beginning, Marty Russo is abusive, and has used his own prejudices against the blind against Jim.
Even when Jim proved himself to be a very great cop blind or not, Russo still continued to be abusive. As we saw from episodse three to four when Dunbar broke open an important case involving Korean store murders , Russo becomes abusive out of sheer jealousy and insecurity. Jim has not only proven himself to be an asset to the department but a better cop than Russo resulting in Russo throwing a tantrum and literally began Dunbar to ease solving cases.
The questions then this finale leaves open is whether or not, Jim or the department would later regret the decision to force Jim to ban his gun and make no question about Dunbar was forced to remove his gun. His expression gives away his heartache at the end.
As far as the episode, this then is just a filler, standard episode. The boxing promoter who is murdered, is a slimeball promoter who had many enemies.moreless





