This season is supposed to tackle major issues that are currently affecting Chicago as it relates to police and racial tension. I don't know anyone more qualified for the job than Hank Voight. The bad guys need to realize that he will always come out on top because this is his city. Just check out that victory smirk!
Olinsky and Burgess didn't get off on the right foot when she first joined the unit but it looks like they've finally learned to work together. The same can't be said for their partnership with the Mayor because she doesn't look pleased.
Don't move until I say so. That's what I imagine Voight saying to his team. He's been known to run a tight ship when it comes to Intelligence, but will he continue being a trusted leader with all the changes in his unit?
Jay looks a little shaken up and we don't blame him. Not only is he chasing down the bad guys, he's also trying to cope with the fact that his ex-girlfriend, who he was planning on proposing to, left the unit!
The Intelligence Unit is back in business. Halstead, his new partner Upton and Olinsky are suited up and ready to jump into action, pending Voight's orders of course.
Ruzek and Atwater may be in their summer clothes but don't be fooled, they are all work and no play. Just look at Atwater's expression. If he doesn't get his intel soon, someone is going to pay the price.
Detective Upton appeared briefly last season. With Erin Lindsay leaving the Intelligence Unit (and the show), she'll be taking her place and finding her footing as Halstead's new partner. Will she be assertive and dominating as Lindsay was?
Things were pretty rocky for Ruzek and Burgess last season after they ended their engagement. Somehow, they found their way back to each other and Intelligence. Will they give romance another shot? Or is it strictly business from now on?
We may have been on a "summer break" but not much has changed in the Intelligence unit. Det. Voight is still making shady deals and using morally questionable methods in the name of justice.
Morgan William's senseless death has caused this city great distress and pain. And as a result, we've gone to great lengths to find someone to blame. Someone to hate. And no one has wanted to hate Detective Halstead more than me. But, the more I learned about what actually transpired that morning, the more I'm convinced Detective Halstead did nothing wrong. In fact, his actions saved several lives, several black lives.