Law & Order's long-awaited comeback spin-off finally has a cast take a look
Law & Order: Criminal Intent is coming back with Law & Order Toronto: Criminal Intent

A brand new Law & Order spin-off is coming fans' way, a decade after the spin-off it's based on went off the air.
Though at the time was the Dick Wolf franchise's third longest-running series, it concluded after ten seasons back in 2011. The original cast featured Chris Noth, Vincent D'Onofrio, Courtney B. Vance, Jeff Goldblum, Kathryn Erbe, and more.
Now, however, it's coming back, with an all-new cast and new location, as ten-part series , the franchise's first international spin-off.
The show "follows two elite detectives from the Specialized Criminal Investigations unit as they investigate high-profile crimes and homicides in metro Toronto."
Filming in Toronto with a proposed spring 2024 air date (launching on CityTV), the series has already landed on its cast, all Canadian actors.
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The cast is composed of Aden Young as Detective Sergeant Henry Graff, Kathleen Munroe as Detective Sergeant Frankie Bateman, star Karen Robinson as Inspector Vivienne Holness, actor K.C. Collins as Deputy Crown Attorney Theo Forrester, Nicola Correia-Damude as forensic pathologist Dr. Lucy Da Silva, and Araya Mengesha as tech expert Mark Yohannes.
View post on InstagramThe franchise currently includes flagship series – which was revived two years ago with cast members Camryn Manheim, Sam Waterson, Hugh Dancy, and others – with Mariska Hargitay, and with Mariska's former co-star Chris Meloni.
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Because the show is based in Toronto and will film there, its production doesn't hinge on rules that over 100,000 American actors have had to follow amid the ongoing SAG-AFTRA strike, which prohibits actors from filming or promoting their projects.

Now – though the US-based shows are still barred from filming – following the end to the historic 148-day Writers Guild of America strike, The Hollywood Reporter confirmed that the writers rooms for both and have all been reopened and are back in business.
The only exception to the writers' comeback is for , which is still searching for a new showrunner.
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Beyond that, the remaining two shows will come back with their usual writers crew, David Graziano for SVU's season 25, and Rick Eid for season 23.
As for when they'll be able to film, there appears to be no end in sight to the SAG-AFTRA strike, after negotiations last week were suspended because they were "no longer moving us in a productive direction," the New York Times reported.
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