Time on show || 1992-2004
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|Succeeded || Phil Cerreta
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|Preceded || Joe Fontana
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|First appearance || Point of View
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|Last appearance || C.O.D.
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|Portrayed by|| Jerry Orbach
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Detective Leonard "Lennie" W. Briscoe (played by Jerry Orbach) was a fictional character on NBC's long running drama, Law & Order for 12 seasons from 1992 to 2004. He also appeared in all three Law & Order spinoffs, and was part of the original cast of , appearing in only the first two episodes.
Logan was transferred in 1995 to the Domestic Dispute Department in Staten Island for slugging a politician who had just gotten off on a murder charge, and was replaced with Detective Rey Curtis (later, Detective Ed Green in 1999).
Over the 12 years Briscoe was featured on L&O, his wry, sarcastic wit became one of the show's most popular, endearing trademarks.
A veteran of three failed marriages, Briscoe had two daughters, Cathy and Julia, and a nephew, Detective Ken Briscoe (played by Orbach's son, Chris), who appeared in early episodes of . His family was fairly dysfunctional, however; an alcoholic for much of his life (he went sober in late middle age), he was often absent from his daughters' lives, and they had distant, fractious relationships with him as adults. Briscoe blamed himself, especially when Cathy, a methamphetamine addict, was murdered in 1998 by a drug dealer after she testified against him in court.
In 1996, Briscoe fell off the wagon with disastrous results; ADA Claire Kincaid was struck and killed by a drunk driver while driving him home from a bar. The experience shook him deeply, and he remained sober for the rest of his life.
Briscoe was raised Catholic, but was Jewish on his father's side and occasionally attended rabbinic services as a courtesy to his first wife. Whether he was actually Jewish depends on how one defines a Jew. According to the traditional Jewish definition, Briscoe was not. Nevertheless, he was sometimes the target of anti-semitism from criminals and even some of his own colleagues. He seemed to be distant from his father, calling him "a son of a bitch," but seemed to be close to his mother, once telling Van Buren that any mother who seemed too good to be true probably is - except his.
Briscoe is one of many characters on the show to have served in the military; he was at one point a corporal in the United States Army. After leaving the Army, Briscoe joined the NYPD in the 29th Precinct and walked a beat there with stops at the 31st 33rd and the 110th before rising to the rank of Detective.