The storytelling is entertaining and really highlights racial inequities in the 90's and the opioid epidemic of the early 2000's. At points it reaches the haunted house of cliche of "Are you all trying to get yourselves killed?!" Later episodes are better than the first.
E1: The pharmacist with the dead child becomes less and less sympathetic over the course of the episode as he harasses an innocent witness and her family. Eventually his harassment leads to her receiving death threats from the same people who killed the pharmacist's son. They claim that this behaviour will lead to "justice" for their son but don't care at all about whether this witness loses her life, home and family because of them.
E2 and E3: Follows the same pharmacist who goes on a dogged camapaign to stop a local criminal doctor who is over-prescribing opioids and seems to be in cahoots with the local police. The FBI, DEA and medical board all get involved. These episodes are much more engaging than the first episode.
The doctor later appears in E4.
E4: Talks about the Purdue pharmaceutical company, the national opioid epidemic and how this lead to the later heroin epidemic,