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Hot Bench
Many popular court shows are on TV. How can the genre improve? How about using a three-judge panel? That's the concept of "Hot Bench," created by Judge Judy Sheindlin. After hearing each case, the judges discuss it among themselves before rendering a verdict. The show's title comes from a term describing a court action in which a judge frequently interrupts lawyers with questions.
S11, EP55 "The Opioid Odyssey"
A woman says she lent her van to a friend for some errands, but it was never returned; the "friend" says she made a down payment of $1,300 worth of pain pills to purchase the van, and therefore she couldn't "steal" something that belonged to her.
S11, EP106 "Tick-IT Girl"
A man who sold his car to a woman who then sold it to the defendant and her daughter says he received a flood of tickets he traced back to the defendant, who said the car was stolen but promised to handle the fines.
S10, EP12 "I'm Not a Money Machine"
An ex-football player is sued by an old girlfriend who helped him out of a spot by paying money to get him back from Mexico and now wants repayment for a laundry list of small loans.
S10, EP105 "Under Fire"
A man having a medical emergency crashed into a fire hydrant, and his landlady got stuck with the bill; he denies responsibility and says she should be suing the HOA for poorly kept roads.
S11, EP106 "Tick-IT Girl"
A man who sold his car to a woman who then sold it to the defendant and her daughter says he received a flood of tickets he traced back to the defendant, who said the car was stolen but promised to handle the fines.
S11, EP105 "Car Rental Remorse"
The plaintiff rented his car to a stranger through an app, then the car was returned damaged, and the stranger vanished.
S11, EP104 "Gucci, Rent & Flea Markets"
When the defendant found herself with nowhere to live, the plaintiff offered her a place to stay, then another friend moved in, turning the household into a whirlwind of chaos and shrinking the defendant's living space, so she wants her rent reduced.
S11, EP103 "RV There Yet?"
After getting a secondhand RV without keys or paperwork, a homemaker stops making payments; the seller sends a mechanic to repossess it and the homemaker calls the police, accusing the mechanic of pulling a gun on her.