Marine Major Sarah "Mac" MacKenzie, a Duke graduate, and Lieutenant Commander Harmon "Harm" Rabb Jr., a former naval aviator, work at the Headquarters of the Judge Advocate General, the internal law firm of the Department of the Navy which investigates, prosecutes and defends cases under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. This season, Harm and Mac are assumed dead following an altercation with a Russian fighter pilot, however after punching out of their plane before impact, they begin a journey to uncover the truth about Harm's father. Later, Harm and Mac head several investigations including an undercover operation at an embassy, the suspected rape of a Japanese national, an escape from a VA hospital, an execution on national television, and a pilot who defied direct orders after hearing the voice of God. Meanwhile, Bud is promoted to Lieutenant, Harriet Sims is promoted to Lieutenant J.G., Mac's "little sister" Chloe arrives at JAG shortly before Christmas, Rear Admiral A.J. Chegwidden rescues his daughter from the Italian Mafia, and Royal Australian Navy Commander Mic Brumby arrives in the United States as an exchange officer. Also this season, Harm receives combat orders and departs JAG, Mac and Harm make a pact to have children together, and both Clayton Webb and Admiral Chegwidden heads to Italy to rescue a common mentor from captivity.
Production
During this season the production team filmed partially on location in Washington, D.C. for scenes for a few episodes with the main characters. By this point, the United States Navy was now enthusiastic about its support to the series, "We treated JAG the way we would any other production," according to Captain Ron Morse at Navy Office of Information West, the Los Angeles-based liaison office with the entertainment industry, "We look at the scripts, the principal characters and how they respond to the situations they're presented." And both Harm and Mac was clearly to their liking, "hey're attractive, smart, dedicated individuals who behave the way naval officers should and know what they're doing." In summation, "e found JAG to reflect well on the Navy." This season also advertised the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, while the telephone number 1-800-The-Lost was featured in the closing credits of the season finale, "Goodbyes".
Reception
During its fourth season, JAG ratings were "up 11 percent in households, 8 percent in adults 18-49 and 10 percent in adults 25-54" when compared to the third season, positioning the series as the fourteenth most watched show in household ratings in the United States. Michael Kilian in Chicago Tribune opined that at this point in the series, in contrast to JAGs first more action oriented season, "the scripts have become much more intelligent and the stories more realistic, sophisticated and personal" and that the series had "carved itself a niche in the viewing audience" as the "numerous fan Internet sites attest."