
If you notice something funny in a Lynley episode you can mail me and I put it on the site.
One Guilty Deed. Lynley's wedding ring on the wrong
finger.
Havers is out on the marsh with Carly, when her cell phone starts to ring. Carly freaks out and hits Havers on the right side of her head with a big piece of stone. When Lynley finds Havers and pulls her out of the ditch, the wound is on the left side of her head. (Many thanks to Dennis Walker for this goof)
For The Sake Of Elena
10 minutes into the series, and Lynley brings Havers home. Then he gets in his car and we hear him drive off. But he got in at the wrong side of the car.
A Great Deliverance. Barbara's
brother was called Tony and died of leukemia at age 15. In One Guilty Deed, his
name was Terry and he died when he was 10 years old. Thanks, Louise and
Beth.
Lynley is talking to Roberta and wears an earphone. At one moment the doctor annoys him and he takes off the earphone. One scene later he wears it again.
A Traitor to Memory. Havers and
Lynley visit Katja Wolfe at the laundrette and Havers locks the door to make
sure that Katja doesn't walk away. When Havers and Lynley leave, Havers opens
the door as if she never locked it.
If Wishes Were Horses. When Lynley examens the body of Gina
Stephanopoulos by the lake, you can see her pulse, just above the collarbone.
You have to look closely, but you can see it.
Word of God
The first time Lynley and Havers meet Professor Blackwell you see a woman coming down the stairs. But if you look very carefully you see the woman going up the stairs and after that downstairs twice.
Know Thine Enemy
AC Evans wears his whistle the wrong way. Some background information on the whistle: It was first used from the 1860s onwards, but in 1883 a feasbility test compared a rattle with a whistle, and the whistle won. After that, the Met and other constabularies started issuing them as standard to all their policemen. Obviously, in this age of radio comms and mobile phones, bobbies don't really need whistles any more, but they are still part of the dress uniform, a tribute to how deeply they are embedded in police history.
Many thanks to Marmite. Here are some pictures to show the mistake.

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