People walking around all horrified like this is new. His knee was the noose, honey. They just got a new way to kill us now. 

Patient

Aaron: PTSD is no joke. Trust me.
Marie: Any tips? 
Aaron: Lean on your family. Talk it through. Don't think you can tackle this alone. 

Aaron: Is that the DA talking to the judge?
Henry: Welcome to Staten Island. It's the Good Ole Boys club.

Listen,  Henry and I, we have no idea what it's like to walk in your shoes, but we're here. We're standing next to you. Just remember that. 

Masry

I love AJ. I never thought I could love someone so much, but what was I thinking bringing a black child into this world? I feel like I sent my son to his grave.

Jazz

I'm not an activist or a lawyer. I'm a nurse. And being here in this hospital, it's what I can do.

Marie

Spencer: You know what I hate more than anything? Feeling helpless.
Aaron: You and me finally got something in common.Spencer: Now's the time to be a troublemaker. Just don't know what to do though. 

Aaron: You've been quiet all day.
Henry: Feels like a time for me to be quiet. 

Andy: You know the question I ask every day?
Aaron: What's that?
Andy: What the hell is their problem? I mean they got everything, but they're still on some genocide mess.
Aaron: We exist.

Aaron: You ever been handcuffed?
Lawyer: No. I have not. Aaron: Because if you had, you wouldn't shrug it off, like it's some harmless policy. And it's not. It's not.

Aaron: Hey, what's wrong?
Jasmine: They won't get off his neck. He just kept begging and they wouldn't let him up. He just wants to be let up. Why wouldn't they let him up? He was crying for his mother. He just kept crying!

Marie: Are you outside the gates?
 Aaron: Yeah.
Marie: Well, can I see the buses? I wanna see your brothers coming out.
 Aaron: Can you see them?
Marie: Three-hundred fifty-four.
Aaron: Three-hundred fifty-four going home.

For Life Quotes

Just know that it's you who got you where you are. Then caving right now? It means you won. Take that home with you and go meet your grandson.

Jamal

I used to have a vision of what it would be like of seeing a jury declare my innocence in front of the world. Of finally stepping out of this place no longer a convinced drug kingpin. Just a man with his family but that was a long time ago before I knew what it would take. Before I knew how powerful the forces adding me really were and what they were willing to do going after my wife, threatening my friends, leveraging everything in my life against me. But what if that was just a fantasy? What if life doesn't really work that way? What if somehow I get my freedom and have to give up justice? Would I be willing to live with that? 

Aaron Voiceover