A man wants the return of a confiscated embryo which is a clone of his son. Three members of a band sue the fourth member for not undergoing surgery to stay young-looking.
A woman asks Lukas and Lee May to represent her when she claims she was raped by a man who was miles away at the time. Darwin represents a boy who wants to stop growing so he could keep his job of being a child star.
The lawyers helps a baseball player with a mechanical eye when he is given an unfair advantage. A wife claims her husband is violating their pre-nup agreement and is filing for divorce.
A man has to decide whether to keep an implant that is killing him or remove it and go back to being retarded. A man sleeps with a woman who has a penis and sues her for non-disclosure.
Hannah, Marty and Tom represent a fertility specialist who, with the help of science, provides couples the opportunity to choose their child's genetic make-up. The doctor is being sued for not revealing to his clients that the embryo they choose will be gay. Meanwhile, Lukas, Darwin and Lee May take on a case where an affluent man burgles his ex-girlfriend's house to steal back his likeness.
When a girl with a Child Safe tracer implant is abducted and the system fails, her parents seek help to sue the manufacturers. A plot twist sees the girl suing her parents for her right to privacy. A man is accused by his fiance of violating his prenup agreement not to talk to other women. They are referred to him through a 'mate finder' device he claims he canceled. The man accuses his ex of hacking into his PDA and reactivating the mate finder to sabotage his marriage plans.
Martin and Hannah fight for a father's right to give his son a mind-altering drug to rid him of nightmares about past abuses. However, the drug would remove all memory of the mother who abused him.
Marty takes on the case of a woman fighting for possession of her dead husband's computerised likeness. Lee May and Darwin find themselves defending a son whose mother is sabotaging his dating life in order not to lose him.
A husband-kills-wife murder case becomes complicated when the man proclaims his innocence and there may be a previously unknown identical twin involved.