SVU was dealing with discussions surrounding trans rights long before they were
receiving due attention, and the 2003 episode “Fallacy” is a heartbreaking example
of how the justice system has failed the trans community and is subsequently one
of the saddest SVU episodes. When Cheryl Avery kills her would-be rapist at a party in self-defense, detectives are taken through the wringer when it’s discovered that the DNA found in the bathroom where her attacker was killed that’s linked to Cheryl is biologically male.
“Rockabye” — Season 7, Episode 9
While some justice is seen in “Rockabye,” the issues surrounding a woman’s right to choose severely complicate the overall proceedings in one of the saddest SVU episodes. “Rockabye” sees 16-year-old Lauren lose her unborn child after being severely beaten. Though her father is adamant that Lauren’s pregnancy is a result of rape, Stabler and Benson’s investigations into her boyfriend Wayne prove to be fruitless. The real twist comes when Lauren tearfully reveals that she was the one who orchestrated her beating.
As it turns out, an abortion clinic that Lauren was attempting to make an appointment at kept dismissing her calls thanks to a seedy doctor that worked there. Backed into a corner, Wayne and Lauren sadly took matters into their own hands. Between Lauren’s tear-jerking confession and her subsequent treatment, “Rockabye” is a difficult watch. While the doctor is thankfully arrested for fraud in the end, Lauren still had to suffer in a way that no one should and was the subject of one of Law & Order: SVU’s saddest episodes.