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infosec is hard, even when you're Kira
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They don't have very much to work with, but they don't have nothing either. 

There's been one death by heart attack every twenty-four hours like clockwork. Maybe more than that -- there have been a handful of cases of inmates getting heart attacks at other times -- but every other case has had some sort of pre-existing risk factor, like "being eighty-seven years old." Their current working theory is that the deaths happening every twenty-four hours are all connected, and other deaths aren't.

The "untraceable poison" that her father mentioned at dinner is the current public theory. She doesn't think it's right, and neither do most of her colleagues. Poisons don't work like that; you can't time deaths that precisely. More to the point, implementing it would be nigh-impossible. Some of the deaths are halfway across the world from each other, and even if the killer is flying from Sydney to Los Angeles to England to Vancouver to Japan (they aren't, unless they're travelling under several false identities) they'd still need to somehow administer the poison.

That admittedly doesn't leave them with much in the way of plausible methods.

Even so, that's not the only information they have. The biggest clue is the countries. Several Anglophone countries, a handful of deaths from non-Anglophone countries that were reported in English, and a weirdly high concentration of deaths in Japan that were only ever reported in Japanese. The current working theory is "an American, probably living on the West Coast based on the timing, who speaks Japanese," but they aren't ruling out "someone from some other Anglophone country who speaks Japanese" or "someone from Japan who speaks English" or for that matter "someone from somewhere else entirely, who speaks English and Japanese and has carefully been avoiding killing people from their actual country."

They think it's probably not the last one, but that's a guess about psychology more than anything.

The point is, the killer speaks English and Japanese, which gives them strictly fewer possible suspects than if they'd stuck to one or the other. 

(Theoretically it could be a conspiracy. If so, it technically makes the poison theory more plausible. She doubts it, though; it would be weird for a conspiracy to target people whose deaths were reported in exactly two languages, and not bother to pick up anyone who knows Mandarin or Hindi or Spanish or any other widely-spoken language.)

Then there's information about the victims themselves. The most obvious clue, the one they picked up on as soon as they knew there was anything to pick up on, was that all the victims had been accused of serious crimes, primarily murder, and all of them had been let off easy, either by being acquitted or by receiving something lighter than a death sentence. There are other patterns, if you look for them -- disproportionately cases where the original victim was a child, disproportionately cases where the accused was let off on a technicality -- but they don't have a large enough sample size to be certain, yet.

Most of the people dying had mugshots published in the same articles that talked about the cases in the first place. That's not really surprising; most plausible murder methods require you to know who your victim is.

The weirder part, the part she didn't entirely believe her colleagues about until she double-checked the analysis of the agent proposing it, is that of the people whose mugshots weren't published, all of them had very uncommon names. That, she can't explain.

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She thinks the key here is going to be figuring out the method. She has a list of possibilities.

  • Untraceable poison
  • Someone has some sort of camouflage good enough to fool both security cameras and people, and also the ability to get through locked doors
    • Kazura Himiko? Did the police ever catch her?
  • Somehow, all of this is pure coincidence
  • Magic
  • Aliens
  • Something else I didn't think of
It's not a very good list. It has both "magic" and "aliens" listed as possibilities. It is a perfect list, because she is a Karuma and therefore perfect.
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"I mean, ghosts are real, so magic seems plausible to me?"

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"...What?"

What is this fool talking about??

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"Wait, you didn't know?"

"I still think they just made it up. I mean, ghosts? Really?"

"No, no, my cousin was on the case, she swears she saw that lady turn into the guy who died — uh, anyways. About a decade back, there was this murder case, with some defense attorney, do you remember his name—"

"No clue. Mitsu-something, maybe?"

"Okay. Well, anyways, it was a huge deal because it happened here in the courthouse — anyways, the police wanted to be absolutely sure they got it right, so they called in some 'spirit medium' lady to 'channel' the victim — and then it actually worked, and he showed up and said who killed him."

"I still think you guys are lying. Or maybe hallucinating."

"My cousin's not a liar."

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She flicks her whip. (Not at either of them, just at the air.)

"Tell me everything you know about 'spirit mediums.'"

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"There's not much to tell you. Spirit mediums can channel dead people, at least sometimes? They got one to channel what's-his-face the defense attorney? Guy ended up pleading insanity, I guess that was his only real option..."

"There was a big article a couple months after it happened, I remember Deputy-Chief Ganto was furious — well, that was before he was deputy chief, but you know what I mean."

"Oh, yeah, I remember that. I guess maybe try and look up the article?"

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One of the other non-Interpol detectives on the case is staring at her.

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All the non-Interpol detectives are so useless. For that matter, so are the Interpol ones.

"Did you have something to say?"

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"...There's a defense attorney by the name of Ayasato Chihiro who might know more about the case with the medium."

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She has two marginally plausible hypotheses (Kazura Himiko (or someone else using her methodology), and spirit mediums) and a host of less-plausible ones. This is better than she was expecting obviously this is what she was expecting, it's not like she's going to just fail to solve the case even if "being the prosecutor involved with an investigation" involves somewhat different tasks than "prosecuting a case in the courtroom."

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She starts with the one that doesn't risk leaking sensitive information to a defense attorney. The detectives from that case — Badō Ittetsu and Itonokogiri Keisuke — are both still employed by the police department here, though she's heard more than enough complaints about Itonokogiri's incompetence from her little brother. 

Speaking of which, he might remember some relevant details as well. As far as she knows, he hasn't been involved in the investigation since, but he was there with her that day, and as much as she hates to admit it he was the one who first realized that Kazura was the true culprit.

She sends him an email and goes to find Detective Badō.

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"What're you doing in the police station, kid?"

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She flicks her whip at him.

"I'm not a kid. I'm a prosecutor."

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"Whatever you say... kid."

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"I need to know what you know about the Kazura Himiko investigation. It's been two years, surely the police must have something to show for it."

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"I don't share... classified information... with civilians."

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"I'm a prosecutor, working on a related case."

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"I don't share classified information with children... either."

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Does he perhaps need to see her Interpol badge. Will that get him to stop treating her like a child.

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He sighs heavily.

"Look... we've been looking for her for two years. If we knew where she was... we'd have arrested her already."

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"Do you have any idea what could have happened to her, or are you as useless as your colleagues?"

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"I don't see you... having found her either."

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He sees the email from Mei in between two pieces of paperwork.

He's an idiot. If anyone is a dangerous criminal who needs to die for the good of society, it's the woman who killed an innocent prosecutor and got away with it because no one in the courthouse, including him, had noticed she had a gun.

She had held him at gunpoint. What sort of protector of justice was he, if it took him this long to make the connection?

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