What is the plot?

Michael Desiato begins the day in his routine as a respected New Orleans judge, moving between court and home with no visible sign that anything is about to rupture his life. Adam, his teenage son, is already carrying private anguish after the anniversary of his mother's death, and he leaves home emotionally unsettled and distracted.

Adam rides his bicycle through the city and stops at a gas station. He is preoccupied and forgetful, and after leaving the station he ends up in a panic when he realizes he has not acted carefully enough to protect himself from the emotional spiral he is in.

As Adam heads back out, he is hit by a car and becomes involved in a fatal hit-and-run accident. The collision is sudden and chaotic; the other boy is thrown from the bicycle and dies from the impact. Adam is horrified by what has happened and leaves the scene in shock.

After the crash, Adam does not immediately turn himself in. Instead, he goes to Michael and confesses what happened, telling his father that he killed a boy in a car accident. Michael first reacts as a parent trying to force the truth into the open, and he tells Adam that he must go to the police and confess.

Michael then learns the identity of the dead boy and realizes the victim is the son of Jimmy Baxter, a powerful and violent crime figure in New Orleans. That discovery changes Michael's decision instantly: instead of surrendering Adam, he chooses to protect him and hide the truth from the authorities.

Michael begins constructing a cover story and takes control of the situation step by step. He tells Adam to stay quiet, helps him clean up the immediate evidence of the accident, and starts thinking through how the police investigation will unfold if the death is connected back to his family.

The police and the Baxter family begin converging around the dead boy's case, and Michael is drawn deeper into the consequences of Adam's decision. Because of his position as a judge, Michael has to act outwardly normal while privately managing fear, guilt, and the practical problem of preventing the truth from reaching Jimmy Baxter.

Michael's choice to conceal Adam's role becomes the central turning point of the episode, because it transforms the accident from a private tragedy into the start of a dangerous chain of lies, evasions, and escalating danger that will pull Michael, Adam, and the Baxter family into direct conflict.

What is the ending?

In the end, Adam is killed, and Michael is left holding his son as he dies. Michael has spent the story trying to protect Adam, but the violence and lies catch up with them, and the family is destroyed.

At the end of Season 1, the story moves through a chain of revenge and collapse. Michael's efforts to shield Adam begin after the hit-and-run and continue through the lies, false leads, and legal manipulation that follow, but those choices only deepen the conflict with the Baxter family. The Baxter side stays focused on retaliation, and the danger keeps tightening around Adam as the season reaches its final stretch.

In the closing moments, Eugene seeks revenge for his brother's death and points a gun at the Baxters. During that chaos, Adam is shot and dies in Michael's arms. Michael survives, but he ends the season devastated and alone with the consequences of everything he did to keep his son safe. The Baxter family remains shattered by the loss and the violence that has consumed them.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no evidence in the available sources that Your Honor, Season 1, Episode 1 has a post-credit scene. The episode is described only as a 44-minute series premiere ending with the main story setup, and the soundtrack listing for "End Credits" indicates standard closing credits rather than an extra scene.

Based on the sources provided, the episode appears to end normally after the credits, with no separately documented post-credit moment.

How does Michael Desiato try to cover up Adam’s hit-and-run in Episode 1?

What role does the Baxter family play in the first episode, and how do they become tied to the accident?

Why does Adam’s involvement in the accident put Michael in danger in Episode 1?

What clues in Episode 1 point to Michael’s behavior changing after the crash?

How does the first episode establish the conflict between Michael Desiato and Jimmy Baxter?

Is this family friendly?

No--Your Honor Season 1, Episode 1 is not family friendly. It is rated TV-MA and includes sexual content, violence, suggestive dialogue, and strong language.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting content for children or sensitive viewers includes: - A tragic accident that quickly turns serious and distressing. - Violence and crime-related tension, with the show centered on dangerous criminal fallout and threatening situations. - Sexual content / nudity, including references in the episode's parental guidance notes. - Strong profanity and crude language. - Drug/alcohol-related material and other mature adult behavior. - Intense, frightening scenes and a generally heavy, suspenseful tone.

If you want, I can also give you a very short "kid-safe suitability" rating or a more detailed parent warning for this episode.