- Pronouns
- They/Them
Huh, 66% Rick's murder, if I'm reading this right?
Councilman Ash left office in disgrace, fleeing as fast as he could into public life. He stopped taking calls on Sunday, October 24th.
Okay, no matter who the killer is, one thing is for sure; They are currently in complete control of the investigation's pace.
I am not allowing this murderer to stay in charge here, no matter how smart they may be.
Therefore, i propose we put them under pressure - Shake up the environment a little, so that they need to react, rather than act. Do something that affects their position as we know it currently, and take back the initiative of this case.
Give me a moment and i will come up with a plan.
...wait one second. I gotta ask. Did *I* add that last tag? I might have. But now I don't remember?
Don't remember ie being there at the start, seems adequate tho.
Maybe use the yellow press?
[X] [Alex] Talk to Wendell.
[X] [James] Tries to convince Abramson to press harder.
Try to geta picture on the bulling and either add wendell to our possible suspects list or cross him off.
And get more presure on our bosses so shit starts flowing downhill and maybe we can get a team out off it. Lets just hope they dont put us in a basement.
Are you the one who was marathoning The Wire? If not, why not?
[X] [Alex] Look into the supernatural.
[X] [Alex] Continue looking over GuiltMonger to get a profile of possible targets
[X] [James] Talks to the six members of Mid-Hill High School who were outside the mayor's town hall when he died.
I doubt pressing harder would do anything. Better to mark out the possible targets, then make use of that to figure out who might have a recent offense against them to narrow the list.
HMM. Combined with Alex's penchant for changing appearances, and I can't help but wonder, does Alex have some sort of many-personalities thing going on? I wouldn't think they would be full personas much less Hollywood-MPD personas, but it seems like they could be aspects.but at the moment they were on the clock, and they were the ones in control.
I do not believe that we, the readers, have enough information on Mr. Ash to predict how he would die if/when he is killed. However, Alex might. If so, that would be a powerful piece of proof, if we can also prove that we made the prediction in advance.If so, that meant that the third death, Mr. Ash's, would be soon. But not too soon. Within a few days. Or maybe longer. It was hard to tell, of course.
Well that's not ominous at all.Councilman Ash left office in disgrace, fleeing as fast as he could into public life. He stopped taking calls on Sunday, October 24th.
Hmm. Could we use this to set a trap? Gives our killer a target of one of our disguises, and their technique fails to work because it's a fake persona? Of course, this assumes the killer is using a Death Note as in the anime. If they're doing something else, this may backfire!By staying out of the limelight, we reduce the chances of being targeted by as much as possible whilst still maintaining the opportunity to act in other, less obvious and (Relatively) vulnerable disguises.
*slowly raises hand* male-female binary? That was me. Newly created (as of... well, since Thursday anyways, I'd have to check exacts). I'm trying to get it on appropriate threads, figured this seemed like one of them....wait one second. I gotta ask. Did *I* add that last tag? I might have. But now I don't remember?
[] [James] Talks to the six members of Mid-Hill High School who were outside the mayor's town hall when he died.
Hopefully at some time in the far future, we will gain permission from trusted higher ups to forge a legal third persona - One which will carry out all of our decisive actions against the killer.
As our Alex identity is the last line of defence before our real identity (and we could potentially have some evidence to that effect waiting around somewhere), it must be as uninvolved as possible. To that end, I suggest we keep mostly out of the way, looking into unrelated cases and taking just enough interest in the DN case to satisfy expectations of our co-workers (It would be strange for them to see us not focus on a mysterious and supernatural killing, so let's put them at ease by doing so slightly)
What would actually be useful supernatural info? I don't really know the Death Note lore, but I don't imagine we'd just sort of stumble across the actual DN listed somewhere. Is there any other supernatural elements that would be useful to find out about?
Well, the setup and premise seem to imply that the world is basically like ours, apart from the supernatural killer. So if, for example, ESP is thoroughly debunked, that may imply that the killer needs real-time line-of-sight on the target, either when they die or to set up the control conditions that cause them to die.What would actually be useful supernatural info? I don't really know the Death Note lore, but I don't imagine we'd just sort of stumble across the actual DN listed somewhere. Is there any other supernatural elements that would be useful to find out about?
Vote closes tomorrow. Also, yes of course you can do write-ins. Though I have veto.
Well, the setup and premise seem to imply that the world is basically like ours, apart from the supernatural killer. So if, for example, ESP is thoroughly debunked, that may imply that the killer needs real-time line-of-sight on the target, either when they die or to set up the control conditions that cause them to die.
Okay then. Poking at the idea of a write-in for Alex:
[Alex] Look at public knowledge about Councilman Ash. Think of ways that a killer who can act at a distance could use this to frame/disguise a death.
Hmm. Would we want to write a prediction down? That could be turned against us, with a claim that we are the killer. But how else would we provide proof? We could deliver the prediction directly to higher-ups, but they may well think us crazy. We could use such a prediction as pressure to take this case seriously, give it official resources. That might work in conjunction with leverage from Abramson (is Abraham a typo?).
Actually, on review of the official voting options, that is poorly phrased. Another approach.
[X] [Alex] We have a potential target in Councilman Ash. Accurately predicting their death could make this case more official. Look at public information on the man, is there anything which could be used to disguise a death?
More precise to what I'm doing, and more in style with the default options. Even more in style if I remove the last sentence. Risky, unambiguously works better in conjunction with pressure from Abramson.
Meta-analysis: If this works how I want/expect, Mr. Ash is probably going to die in the same update. This action requires our QM to come up with things that could be used to disguise Mr. Ash's death, ways Alex thinks they could be used to do so, and decide on the actual results.
Could split it up:
[Alex] Look into public information on Councilman Ash.
Gives us, the readers, some of that information, and puts the onus back on us to find ways to use it -- we'd make the prediction, presumably as part of the next vote while deciding what to do with it. I'm not sure how that would work narratively. That approach may be out of style for the quest -- but then again it may be perfectly in style and we just haven't tripped it yet.
Gah. Done with this for now.
[X] [James] Talks to the six members of Mid-Hill High School who were outside the mayor's town hall when he died.
Following NemoMarx' lead on the James vote for now, because otherwise I don't have much of a preference.