The third season opens with a wide range of issues and events. By returning to new missions when one of Win Davy's colleagues gets involved in a very sensational murder, the police try to find out who killed the security officer, and Boyd may find a new way To send a letter to Dickie Bennett in prison. On the other hand, Boyd and his new crew are trying to start a shop in Harlan.
Lean, laconic, precise and as carefully word-crafted as any series on TV, there's pretty much nothing here to suggest that the third season won't be as good as the second -- or better.
One of the many reasons why Justified is so good is the fact that no matter how convoluted the relations among the series' characters appear in retrospect, they never feel as such (at least to excess) while watching.
The great thing about Justified is the way it fills itself with characters who live and die by a code that strives to keep even the most dastardly of characters from crossing some sort of ethical or moral line they have put down for themselves.
I'm still enjoying the hell out of Justified, and the upside of my quibbles here is that there's so much good to work with: there's nothing wrong with Justified that can't be fixed by the many, many things that are right with Justified.