In the fourth season of Netflix's The Lincoln Lawyer, protagonist Mickey Haller faces a murder charge that threatens life imprisonment. The 10-episode arc, based on Michael Connelly's books, blends courtroom drama with personal stakes as Mickey defends himself. Showrunners highlight emotional depth and rekindled relationships amid the tension.
Season 4 of The Lincoln Lawyer, now streaming on Netflix, centers on Los Angeles defense attorney Mickey Haller (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo), who finds himself arrested for murder and stripped of his freedom, along with his vintage Lincoln Continental. This emotional installment builds on the series' legal thriller roots, drawing from Connelly's novels, as Mickey navigates a high-stakes trial that could end in life behind bars.
The plot unfolds across 10 episodes filled with tense courtroom battles and investigative pursuits. Mickey initially relies on his team, including investigator Cisco (Angus Sampson), who scours Southern California for clues. At the firm, attorney Lorna (Becki Newton) manages new cases with help from assistant Izzy (Jazz Raycole) and her law student friend. Midway, Mickey pivots by enlisting his ex-wife Maggie (Neve Campbell), a prosecutor, as co-counsel instead of Lorna, intensifying their collaboration and stirring old romantic tensions despite their co-parenting dynamic.
Mickey's daughter Hayley (Krista Warner) grapples with the fallout, facing peer gossip on social media and witnessing her father's vulnerability in prison. A pivotal loss is the death of Legal (Elliott Gould), Mickey's mentor figure, whose passing serves as a guiding force. Showrunners Ted Humphrey and Dailyn Rodriguez describe the season as the most personal yet. "We feel that is our most emotional season, and most personal season," Humphrey notes, emphasizing the character's emotional roller coaster.
Rodriguez explains adaptations from the source material: "Mickey’s in jail for most of the book... we had to figure out a way to get him out of jail, but then a really big plot twist get him back in again." They highlight the push-pull in Mickey and Maggie's relationship, with Hayley sensing the undercurrents. The finale features legal maneuvers involving Jeanine Ferrigno-Warren to outmaneuver the FBI, culminating in a cliffhanger tease for Cobie Smulders' role.
Season 5 has been greenlit, promising higher stakes. Rodriguez draws from personal experiences, like her father's incarceration, to depict Hayley's distress and the dehumanizing prison calls. The season's ambitious visuals, including a drone-helicopter sequence over LA, underscore its production scale.