: Kalinda discovers that the drugs Cary was accused of conspiracy to import were actually already in Chicago and meant for export to Canada. This means Cary couldn't be guilty of the specific conspiracy charge.

The episode title is a literal reference to the legal team's desperate, last-minute attempt to keep out of prison. With Cary facing a four-year sentence and just six hours left before he must surrender, the team at Florrick/Agos/Lockhart races against the clock.

: When a legitimate lead regarding a Brady violation (prosecutorial suppression of evidence) seemingly hits a dead end, Kalinda falsifies metadata on an email to make it look like the police had ignored the export evidence. Ironically, Cary’s team later finds legitimate proof of the violation, but Diane unwittingly uses Kalinda’s forged evidence in court first.

In the context of the filename you provided, is a tag for a well-known "scene" group that releases television content online. It does not refer to the tone of the episode, which is widely considered one of the series' most tense and fast-paced hours.

: The evidence works. Judge Cuestra dismisses the case, and Cary is a free man . Alicia’s Debate and a Surprising Kiss

: Alicia hires a prison consultant, Bill Kroft, to prepare Cary for life inside. Kroft’s advice is blunt: Cary needs to find a "white friend" for protection.

: Alicia practices with "Professor Fluke" (who is high on medical marijuana) and then Finn Polmar , before eventually facing off against Peter Florrick himself. The session becomes personal as Alicia eviscerates Peter for his own professional record.