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csyphrett

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  1. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from archer in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    I agree with Pattern Ghost. Taking away the suicides (depression followed by a split second decision), accidents (kid shoots their parent, sibling, or friend by mistake) police involved shootings (him or me), self defense (again him or me), murders are more likely to be about money or revenge. These mass shootings are an outlier and seemed to be spurred on by envy more than anything else.
     
    Too bad the CDC can't study root causes so something can be done.
    CES
     
        
  2. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Doc Democracy in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Britain didn't encourage the husband to stone his wife for her imperfections which India (or parts of India depending on how you look at it) was doing as recently as ten years ago I think.
    CES
      
  3. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from ScottishFox in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Nostalgia, it's the best drug because it's free.
    CES 
  4. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Cancer in The August 2019 "You're not Doing Star Wars Right" superdraft   
    I would like to option Space Ghost please
    CES
  5. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from ScottishFox in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    A gun is a tool. It's the means like old man said. The problem is the motive. Until motives can be verified before people do things, it doesn't matter what the tool is. A semifamous case here in Clemmons is a woman got fed up with her husband telling her to stop spending money on horses. Something I could relate to at the time. She went after him with a harpoon/spear he had got somewhere and had laying around. There's been two or three cases where a man shot his wife and then himself I'm going to say in the last five-ten years maybe and we're a one horse town so it's not like there's a murder every week.
     
    If a person doesn't have a gun, they will use something else. BTM used cookies.
     
    A gun just makes things easier.
     
    Until someone figures out why people act like they do, and how to solve that so they can deal with modern life, murder and suicide is always going to look better than trying to walk it off and trying to start over.
    CES      
  6. Thanks
    csyphrett got a reaction from Old Man in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Oh wait i found everytown which has some stuff. They list their sources
     
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. While it is broadly considered to be the most comprehensive firearm fatal injury source, two of the intent categories—Shootings by law enforcement and Unintentional Deaths—are estimated to be greatly underreported. This underreporting is largely due to missing information on death certificates, which may result in misclassification of intent. Multiple media sources and nonprofit groups have tracked shootings by law enforcement but no reliable public database captures unintentional shootings. Intent category averages may not total to yearly average due to rounding. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries are the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Intent category averages may not total to the yearly average due to rounding. Loftin C, Wiersema B, McDowall D, Dobrin A. Underreporting of justifiable homicides committed by police officers in the United States, 1976-1998. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1117-1121.See also: Barber C, Azrael D, Cohen A, Miller M, et al. Homicides by police: Comparing counts from the National Violent Death Reporting System, Vital Statistics, and Supplementary Homicide Reports. American Journal of Public Health. 2016; 106(5): 922-927. Fatal Force. The Washington Post. Fatal Force. Data reflects a 4 year average (2015 to 2018) of deaths attributed to police shootings. https://wapo.st/2QlEZOo. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Opoliner A, Azrael D, Barber C, Fitzmaurice G, Miller M. Explaining geographic patterns of suicide in the U.S.: The role of firearms and antidepressants. Injury Epidemiology. 2014; 1(1): 6. Miller M, Azrael D, Barber C. Suicide mortality in the United States: The importance of attending to method in understanding population-level disparities in the burden of suicide. Annual Review of Public Health. 2012; 33: 393-408. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. White men defined as non-Hispanic white. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Homicide includes legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Aufrichtig A, Beckett L, Diehm J, Lartey J. Want to fix gun violence in America? Go local. The Guardian. January 9, 2017. https://bit.ly/2i6kaKw. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries is the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. Ibid. Analysis includes: males of all ages, white defined as non-Hispanic only, and assault including legal intervention. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. Data from 2017. Children and teenagers aged 1 to 19, Black defined as non-Hispanic, number of deaths by known intent (homicide, suicide, unintentional deaths). Age 0 to 1 calculated separately by the CDC because leading causes of death for newborns and infants are specific to the age group. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, and homicide including legal intervention. Fowler KA, Dahlberg LL, Haileyesus T, Gutierrez C, Bacon S. Childhood firearm injuries in the United States. American Academy of Pediatrics. 2017; 140(1): e20163486. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, non-Hispanic only and homicide including legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013 to 2017. Washington, DC: Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. While the FBI SHR does not include data from the state of Florida for the years 2013 to 2017, Everytown obtained data directly from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) and included the reported homicides in the analysis. Whereas SHR includes both current and former partners in its relationship designations, FDLE does not include former partners. As a result, Florida's intimate partner violence data only includes current partners. Sorenson SB, Schut RA. Nonfatal gun use in intimate partner violence: A systematic review of the literature. Trauma, Violence & Abuse. 2016; 1524838016668589. Ibid. See also: Tjaden P, Thoennes T. Full report of the prevalence, incidence, and consequences of violence against women: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. National Institute of Justice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2000. Campbell JC, Webster D, Koziol-McLain J, et al. Risk factors for femicide in abusive relationships: Results from a multisite case control study. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1089-1097. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013-2017. See endnote 26. Analysis includes homicides involving an intimate partner and a firearm, and compares the crude death rates for Black women (0.65 per 100,000) versus white women (0.35 per 100,000) (all ages included; Hispanic and non-Hispanic women included). SurveyUSA Market Research Study. Data collected from December 7, 2018 to December 11, 2018. https://bit.ly/2ExxpyZ. See question 39. Finkelhor D, Turner HA, Shattuck A, Hamby SL. Prevalence of childhood exposure to violence, crime, and abuse: Results from the National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence. The Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics. 2015; 169(8): 746-754. Everytown analysis derives the 3 million number by multiplying the share of children (ages 0-17) who are exposed to shootings per year (4.2%) by the total child population of the U.S. in 2016 (~73.5M).  
  7. Thanks
    csyphrett got a reaction from Pattern Ghost in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Oh wait i found everytown which has some stuff. They list their sources
     
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. While it is broadly considered to be the most comprehensive firearm fatal injury source, two of the intent categories—Shootings by law enforcement and Unintentional Deaths—are estimated to be greatly underreported. This underreporting is largely due to missing information on death certificates, which may result in misclassification of intent. Multiple media sources and nonprofit groups have tracked shootings by law enforcement but no reliable public database captures unintentional shootings. Intent category averages may not total to yearly average due to rounding. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries are the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Intent category averages may not total to the yearly average due to rounding. Loftin C, Wiersema B, McDowall D, Dobrin A. Underreporting of justifiable homicides committed by police officers in the United States, 1976-1998. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1117-1121.See also: Barber C, Azrael D, Cohen A, Miller M, et al. Homicides by police: Comparing counts from the National Violent Death Reporting System, Vital Statistics, and Supplementary Homicide Reports. American Journal of Public Health. 2016; 106(5): 922-927. Fatal Force. The Washington Post. Fatal Force. Data reflects a 4 year average (2015 to 2018) of deaths attributed to police shootings. https://wapo.st/2QlEZOo. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Opoliner A, Azrael D, Barber C, Fitzmaurice G, Miller M. Explaining geographic patterns of suicide in the U.S.: The role of firearms and antidepressants. Injury Epidemiology. 2014; 1(1): 6. Miller M, Azrael D, Barber C. Suicide mortality in the United States: The importance of attending to method in understanding population-level disparities in the burden of suicide. Annual Review of Public Health. 2012; 33: 393-408. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. White men defined as non-Hispanic white. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Homicide includes legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Aufrichtig A, Beckett L, Diehm J, Lartey J. Want to fix gun violence in America? Go local. The Guardian. January 9, 2017. https://bit.ly/2i6kaKw. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries is the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. Ibid. Analysis includes: males of all ages, white defined as non-Hispanic only, and assault including legal intervention. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. Data from 2017. Children and teenagers aged 1 to 19, Black defined as non-Hispanic, number of deaths by known intent (homicide, suicide, unintentional deaths). Age 0 to 1 calculated separately by the CDC because leading causes of death for newborns and infants are specific to the age group. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, and homicide including legal intervention. Fowler KA, Dahlberg LL, Haileyesus T, Gutierrez C, Bacon S. Childhood firearm injuries in the United States. American Academy of Pediatrics. 2017; 140(1): e20163486. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, non-Hispanic only and homicide including legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013 to 2017. Washington, DC: Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. While the FBI SHR does not include data from the state of Florida for the years 2013 to 2017, Everytown obtained data directly from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) and included the reported homicides in the analysis. Whereas SHR includes both current and former partners in its relationship designations, FDLE does not include former partners. As a result, Florida's intimate partner violence data only includes current partners. Sorenson SB, Schut RA. Nonfatal gun use in intimate partner violence: A systematic review of the literature. Trauma, Violence & Abuse. 2016; 1524838016668589. Ibid. See also: Tjaden P, Thoennes T. Full report of the prevalence, incidence, and consequences of violence against women: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. National Institute of Justice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2000. Campbell JC, Webster D, Koziol-McLain J, et al. Risk factors for femicide in abusive relationships: Results from a multisite case control study. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1089-1097. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013-2017. See endnote 26. Analysis includes homicides involving an intimate partner and a firearm, and compares the crude death rates for Black women (0.65 per 100,000) versus white women (0.35 per 100,000) (all ages included; Hispanic and non-Hispanic women included). SurveyUSA Market Research Study. Data collected from December 7, 2018 to December 11, 2018. https://bit.ly/2ExxpyZ. See question 39. Finkelhor D, Turner HA, Shattuck A, Hamby SL. Prevalence of childhood exposure to violence, crime, and abuse: Results from the National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence. The Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics. 2015; 169(8): 746-754. Everytown analysis derives the 3 million number by multiplying the share of children (ages 0-17) who are exposed to shootings per year (4.2%) by the total child population of the U.S. in 2016 (~73.5M).  
  8. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Iuz the Evil in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Oh wait i found everytown which has some stuff. They list their sources
     
    Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. While it is broadly considered to be the most comprehensive firearm fatal injury source, two of the intent categories—Shootings by law enforcement and Unintentional Deaths—are estimated to be greatly underreported. This underreporting is largely due to missing information on death certificates, which may result in misclassification of intent. Multiple media sources and nonprofit groups have tracked shootings by law enforcement but no reliable public database captures unintentional shootings. Intent category averages may not total to yearly average due to rounding. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries are the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Intent category averages may not total to the yearly average due to rounding. Loftin C, Wiersema B, McDowall D, Dobrin A. Underreporting of justifiable homicides committed by police officers in the United States, 1976-1998. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1117-1121.See also: Barber C, Azrael D, Cohen A, Miller M, et al. Homicides by police: Comparing counts from the National Violent Death Reporting System, Vital Statistics, and Supplementary Homicide Reports. American Journal of Public Health. 2016; 106(5): 922-927. Fatal Force. The Washington Post. Fatal Force. Data reflects a 4 year average (2015 to 2018) of deaths attributed to police shootings. https://wapo.st/2QlEZOo. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Opoliner A, Azrael D, Barber C, Fitzmaurice G, Miller M. Explaining geographic patterns of suicide in the U.S.: The role of firearms and antidepressants. Injury Epidemiology. 2014; 1(1): 6. Miller M, Azrael D, Barber C. Suicide mortality in the United States: The importance of attending to method in understanding population-level disparities in the burden of suicide. Annual Review of Public Health. 2012; 33: 393-408. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. White men defined as non-Hispanic white. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Homicide includes legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Anglemyer A, Horvath T, Rutherford G. The accessibility of firearms and risk for suicide and homicide victimization among household members: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2014; 160(2): 101-110. Aufrichtig A, Beckett L, Diehm J, Lartey J. Want to fix gun violence in America? Go local. The Guardian. January 9, 2017. https://bit.ly/2i6kaKw. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. The CDC derives national estimates of nonfatal firearm injuries treated in hospitals from a survey of hospitals known as the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS). According to the CDC, some of these estimates may be unstable. The CDC’s nonfatal injury data has come under scrutiny largely because of increasing error margins in recent years. Nonetheless, data provided by the CDC on nonfatal injuries is the most common data currently used in gun violence prevention research. To account for fluctuations between years, a yearly average was developed using five years of the most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Ibid. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Nonfatal Injury Reports. Ibid. Analysis includes: males of all ages, white defined as non-Hispanic only, and assault including legal intervention. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. Data from 2017. Children and teenagers aged 1 to 19, Black defined as non-Hispanic, number of deaths by known intent (homicide, suicide, unintentional deaths). Age 0 to 1 calculated separately by the CDC because leading causes of death for newborns and infants are specific to the age group. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, and homicide including legal intervention. Fowler KA, Dahlberg LL, Haileyesus T, Gutierrez C, Bacon S. Childhood firearm injuries in the United States. American Academy of Pediatrics. 2017; 140(1): e20163486. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) Fatal Injury Reports. A yearly average was developed using five years of most recent available data: 2013 to 2017. Analysis includes: ages 0 to 19, non-Hispanic only and homicide including legal intervention. Grinshteyn E, Hemenway D. Violent death rates in the US compared to those of the other high-income countries, 2015. Preventive Medicine. 2019; 123: 20-26. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013 to 2017. Washington, DC: Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation. While the FBI SHR does not include data from the state of Florida for the years 2013 to 2017, Everytown obtained data directly from the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) and included the reported homicides in the analysis. Whereas SHR includes both current and former partners in its relationship designations, FDLE does not include former partners. As a result, Florida's intimate partner violence data only includes current partners. Sorenson SB, Schut RA. Nonfatal gun use in intimate partner violence: A systematic review of the literature. Trauma, Violence & Abuse. 2016; 1524838016668589. Ibid. See also: Tjaden P, Thoennes T. Full report of the prevalence, incidence, and consequences of violence against women: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey. National Institute of Justice, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; 2000. Campbell JC, Webster D, Koziol-McLain J, et al. Risk factors for femicide in abusive relationships: Results from a multisite case control study. American Journal of Public Health. 2003; 93(7): 1089-1097. Uniform Crime Reporting Program: Supplementary Homicide Reports (SHR), 2013-2017. See endnote 26. Analysis includes homicides involving an intimate partner and a firearm, and compares the crude death rates for Black women (0.65 per 100,000) versus white women (0.35 per 100,000) (all ages included; Hispanic and non-Hispanic women included). SurveyUSA Market Research Study. Data collected from December 7, 2018 to December 11, 2018. https://bit.ly/2ExxpyZ. See question 39. Finkelhor D, Turner HA, Shattuck A, Hamby SL. Prevalence of childhood exposure to violence, crime, and abuse: Results from the National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence. The Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics. 2015; 169(8): 746-754. Everytown analysis derives the 3 million number by multiplying the share of children (ages 0-17) who are exposed to shootings per year (4.2%) by the total child population of the U.S. in 2016 (~73.5M).  
  9. Thanks
    csyphrett got a reaction from Lord Liaden in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Who knew if you were poor, you were more likely to get shot while being robbed or shoot yourself, or if you were married, you are more likely to get shot by your significant other especially if you are the woman in the relationship, or suicide by gun is more likely to succeed than any other way?
     
     I didn't.
  10. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Old Man in The August 2019 "You're not Doing Star Wars Right" superdraft   
    I would like my big bad to be Thanos
    CES
  11. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Iuz the Evil in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Who knew if you were poor, you were more likely to get shot while being robbed or shoot yourself, or if you were married, you are more likely to get shot by your significant other especially if you are the woman in the relationship, or suicide by gun is more likely to succeed than any other way?
     
     I didn't.
  12. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Iuz the Evil in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    New York's prison system  is not known for its competence. At least they didn't leave him in the shower room with the population. Then we would be hearing about a Dahmer Dive.
    CES 
  13. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Iuz the Evil in Political Discussion Thread (With Rules)   
    Epstein wasn't on watch. They had relieved him after the standard five days. (I'm not saying that wasn't dumb on the part of the prison) And even on watch, there are ways to kill yourself if you want to. A prisoner arrested here and sent to Raleigh killed himself while on watch because he observed the guard rotation and chewed through his arm like a coyote
    CES 
  14. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Quackhell in Create a Hero Theme Team!   
    Both the french teams filled out pretty fast. Only need one each for both of them. Good job guys
    CES 
  15. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from death tribble in Create a Hero Theme Team!   
    France's School of the Gifted teaches potential heroes how to use their powers. Five of their students are among the best in the world. Who are they?
     
    (Five french centric heroes are the call.  They can be related to other french heroes in the thread. Death Tribble should have the international teams on his list.)
     
    CES
     
  16. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from death tribble in Create a Villain Theme Team!   
    France's Roget's Academy is only interested in turning out the best in villains anywhere. Who are the five best students in the school.
     
    (Five french centric villains. They can be related to other french villains done on the thread if so inclined. Death Tribble should have them on his list of characters.)
    CES 
  17. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Amorkca in The Wooden Stranger   
    4
    Logan Major rolled into the paper’s parking area the next day. He had to do some
    preliminary work and research before he turned his attention back to the Razorbacks
    and Aardvarks. He felt he had a solution in their testimony.
     
    Phillips waited by his desk as he made his way through the office. He seemed excited.
     
    “What’s going on?,” asked Logan. He put his case on the desk.
     
    “A lot,” said Phillips. “Things started popping last night.”
     
    “About Teflon Billy?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Some, but not just him,” said Phillips. “I talked with my accountant guy. We have
    things narrowed down to three people stealing from City Hall. I need some way to
    push things out in the open before I can say it’s one of them.”
     
    “I know a guy,” said Logan. He grabbed a pad from the top of his desk. He wrote
    down a name and phone number. “Take whatever evidence you have, and maybe your
    accountant if you can get him to go, and talk to this guy. He works in financial crimes
    for the Feds. He might be able to point you in the right direction.”
     
    “There’s a chance that none of this will lead to anything,” said Phillips.
     
    “If you can prove embezzlement, we can pull this guy out of his office,” said Logan.
    “If we can pull this guy out, maybe we can get a more responsible person in.”
     
    “I can see that,” said Phillips. “Your tip about Billy Burke has stirred the detectives
    into looking for him from what I can tell. Even if he isn’t doing the burglaries, they
    feel he knows who is.”
     
    “He’s a pro,” said Logan. “He won’t make it easy on them. He probably has an alias
    that covers any straight task he has to do between break-ins.”
     
    “They said he wasn’t on their radar at all,” said Phillips. “He’s been inactive for a
    while.”
     
    “I guess get with Ken and see how he wants to handle that end of things,” said Logan.
    “I’ll clear you to chase down the current investigation until we have something solid
    to hook into.”
     
    “This thing that you were asking about, the Garret shooting,” said Phillips.
     
    “The gang shooting,” said Logan. “What about it?”
     
    “Log Man has taken an interest,” said Phillips. “He’s leaning on both gangs from
    what I hear.”
     
    “Anyone willing to come forward?,” asked Logan.
     
    “No way,” said Phillips. “They would rather do their time than turn in their own guys.
    Snitches get more than stitches from these guys.”
     
    “Stay on it,” said Logan. “If we can get a confession, or some solid evidence, we can
    run one of the gangs out of town.”
     
    “Maybe not the whole gang,” said Phillips.
     
    “Anything is better than nothing,” said Logan. “And right now, we have nothing.”
     
    “I’ll keep trying to dig something up,” said Phillips. “No one wants to talk.”
     
    “Do what you can,” said Logan. “But don’t do anything dangerous. We don’t know
    how dangerous this gang is, and I can’t afford the payout if one of my employees gets
    killed in the line of duty.”
     
    “Thanks,” said Phillips.
     
    “Don’t worry,” Logan said. “I think I know how to solve the Garret killing. I just need
    to talk to an expert about some things. There’s only one real problem with the
    scheme.”
     
    “What’s that?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “I’ll need to get the two gangs in the same place while we hash this out,” said Logan.
    “I don’t think they’ll like that.”
     
    “So we are going to invite them to shoot at each other again?,” said Phillips.
     
    “I don’t know,” said Logan. “That’s why I need to think about the plan before I try
    to use it.”
     
    “Let me know when you get the bugs worked out,” said Phillips.
     
    “I’ll see what I can do,” said Logan. “Let me know if you find out anything else. I
    have to talk to some of the editors, and some more money people.”
     
    “Someone wanting to buy the paper?,” said Phillips.
     
    “No, I’m looking at a deal for a paper south of us,” said Logan. “The outlook doesn’t
    look good from my point of view. The others on the board want to at least see what
    the demand is.”
     
    “What is the demand?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “Don’t know, but I’m sure it will be for more than the paper is actually worth,” said
    Logan.
     
    “I’ll let you get to that,” said Phillips. He turned to leave.
     
    “If you have any trouble, let me know,” said Logan. “I’ll try to smooth the way for
    you.”
     
    “Thanks, boss,” said the reporter. He waved as he kept walking to the exit of the car
    lot.
     
    Logan made sure he had everything before heading upstairs to his desk. He had a long
    day of financials ahead, with some research on the side. He would be ready to go back
    out as Log Man when the sun went down.
     
    He wondered if the police could track down Teflon Billy. They had more manpower
    than he had, but that didn’t mean much. He could do things they couldn’t do.
     
    The government could still move in now that a power had been identified as the thief.
    He knew they had a sanctioned operation to take on powers when the local heroes
    couldn’t get things done. The location of their head seemed to be in the Department
    of Defense’s civilian administration but he didn’t know where.
     
    And he didn’t expect them to make it easy for reporters to find them so they could be
    asked how they dealt with things when heroes didn’t show up to do the job.
     
    The rumors of secret prisons and an island full of monsters was already out there but
    no one knew where they were, or how to find them. And he didn’t want to vanish
    when he had so much to do in his own city.
     
    Logan settled in his desk and started reading the comments captured by his reporters
    about the Garret shooting. Billy could hold on until this case was closed. Catching a
    killer outranked a thief any day.
     
    He went over the pictures of the scene and the testimony for hours. He thought he had
    a clear picture of what had happened. How did he get it all together to prove it? And
    he would need the two gangs in the same place. He doubted he could do that without
    some kind of police help.
     
    He could round up everyone himself, but that would take a lot of time. He didn’t want
    to spend that much on getting them together. On the other hand, he didn’t see any way
    he could get them to a central meeting place on their own.
     
    If he had some way to trap them, that would make things go so much easier.
    Logan thought about that as he picked up his phone. He needed to make a
    presentation. He knew some people who could help him do that.
     
    Maybe that would help clear up some of the things about the shooting.
     
    “Hey, Hillary,” said Logan. “This is Logan Major. I was wondering if you could do
    an animation for me.”
     
    He listened quietly.
     
    “I understand, but this is a rush job,” said Logan. “I have some testimony from a
    shooting and I need to know what it looks like to a computer. Do you mind? I need
    to get this done as soon as possible.”
     
    He listened again.
     
    “I’ll be at your office in a few minutes,” said Logan. “I’ll bring the paperwork and
    pictures so you can look at everything first.”
     
    Logan hung up the phone. He gathered the reports and pictures his people had got
    from the police and put them in his case. He looked around. No one had an eye on
    him. He stood, grabbing the case by the handle. He headed for the parking lot and his
    car.
     
    If Hillary’s animatic could explain what happened at the shooting, it would give him
    someone specific to go after instead of pressuring both gangs. Then he could have the
    police take the shooter and whomever else they could prove was there in for the
    murder of the Garret boy.
     
    Then he could concentrate on Teflon Billy and take him down before he committed
    any more burglaries.
     
    Then the city would be quieter so he could concentrate on improvements that didn’t
    need his masked face.
     
    Every garden needed constant weeding and other work. His garden just happened to
    be the city.
     
    Logan drove over to the Hillary Musgrove Animation and Digital Media School, and
    parked in front of the low building. He grabbed his case out of the back and walked
    inside.
     
    A counter kept people from walking back into the school. An office for administrative
    work had been set up behind a glass wall. Hillary Musgrove bent over paperwork on
    his desk. His computer ran some cartoon that Logan didn’t recognize.
     
    Logan knocked on the counter. Hillary looked up. He smiled as he stood. He came out
    of the office with a hand out. They shook.
     
    “You said you were having problems with some testimony,” said Hillary. His hair had
    a red streak among the gray and silver.
     
    “I need an exact showing of where the physical evidence went,” said Logan. “Then
    I need to match up what I can to that. I’ll pay double the usual rate.”
     
    “This won’t hold up in court,” said Hillary. “The animation can be manipulated too
    much to be allowed as evidence.”
     
    “I don’t need it to hold up in court, I just need it make some things clear in my mind
    so I know who I can target better,” said Logan. “I have a bunch of uncooperative
    witnesses with no leverage.”
     
    “All right,” said Hillary. “Let me see what I can do.”
     
    He led the way to the back of the building. They passed several rooms where teams
    of students were working on various projects. They walked into a room set up with
    several computers, and scanners. The illustrator sat at the desk and held his hand out
    for the paperwork and pictures he would need.
     
    Logan handed them over and drew up a chair.
     
    “This might take a while,” said Hillary. “I’m going to have to build some models and
    so forth of the scene before I can put in the animatics.”
     
    “I’ll call Gloria and let her know I’ll be late,” said Logan. “I need something to give
    my reporters. I can wait until you’re done.”
     
    “This might take some days,” said Hillary. “I could maybe rope in some of my
    students to help out, but I don’t see it going faster than the day after tomorrow.”
     
    “All right,” said Logan. “I hadn’t realized it would take that long.”
     
    “Don’t worry,” said Hillary. “It will be as accurate as I can make it if the reports are
    accurate.”
     
    “They’re copies,” said Logan. “I’ll leave them with you, but try not to let them leave
    the building. The police will frown on this stuff getting out in the wild.”
     
    “Don’t worry,” said Hillary. “I’ll call you when I get done.”
     
    “I guess I have to go back to leaning on people to see if I can get one of them to
    crack,” said Logan.
     
    “If you can do that before I get done, I will still want to be paid,” said Hillary.
     
    “It won’t be doubled then,” said Logan. He smiled as he waved and walked out of the
    office.
     
    Logan walked out to his Datsun. He had hoped that Hillary would get him answers
    sooner, but he had to live with what he could get.
     
    He decided to head back to the paper and check in before thinking about what he
    could do after work. Dinner with Gloria and Brady would be nice for a change, maybe
    a movie. He could go back to the grindstone tomorrow.
     
    If everything remained quiet, he might be able to let things fester while Hillary put
    his cartoon together. Once he had that, he could work out how to get the two gangs,
    or at least their leaders, together.
     
    He hoped Teflon Billy would take the next few days off while he tried to deal with
    the other mess.
     
    He had a feeling he was hoping for too much.
     
     
  18. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Quackhell in Create a Villain Theme Team!   
    Kenny Briggs was the best kid in shop. When he stumbled over the ship's fabricators, he knew he had the means to make anything he wanted. As the Fabrikid, he sits back and uses his arsenal to help the others out on their schemes while testing new builds to add to his standbys.
    CES   
  19. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Old Man in The August 2019 "You're not Doing Star Wars Right" superdraft   
    I would like to pick Coruscant as my planet
    CES
  20. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Quackhell in Create a Villain Theme Team!   
    Otis Hampton discovered that the ship had portable forcefield projectors. He took them and the hologram creators and joined the technology to become Flash Mob.
    CES
  21. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from Hermit in The August 2019 "You're not Doing Star Wars Right" superdraft   
    I would like to pick Coruscant as my planet
    CES
  22. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from eepjr24 in The Wooden Stranger   
    1
    Logan Major studied the regional papers at his dining room table. He owned an
    interest in most of them. He leaned back in his chair.
     
    The front pages covered a series of thefts in Wisconsin. No one had seen anything,
    no one knew anything.
     
    What could he do about it?
     
    “I’m going now, Dad,” said Brady Major. “Will you need me after school?”
     
    “I don’t know, Brady,” said Logan. He looked out the window of the dining room. “These thefts are something new. Someone with a power is out there. We’re going to  have to look into things but not until we know more.”
     
    “All right, Dad,” said Brady. “Let me know when you’re ready.”
     
    “Thanks,” said Logan. “Have a good day, son.”
     
    Brady smiled as he walked to the front door. He vanished out the door to catch his
    bus to school.
     
    Logan stood. There had to be more information than what he saw in the articles. He
    needed to talk to his investigators and find out if they knew anything more than what
    was printed.
     
    There had to be something there he could use.
     
    He stacked the papers together and placed them on the table. He pulled his phone. He
    checked the time on the face. His editors wouldn’t be in the office for another two
    hours.
     
    Logan put the phone away. He headed for his room. He needed to get his suit and
    head into the office. He should get in at the same time as some of the staff.
     
    Once he had a better picture of things, he could decide what to do about the thefts.
     
    Logan dressed and went to the garage. He climbed into his old Datsun and pulled
    down his driveway. He paused at the motorized gate so it could open for him to drive
    out.
     
    He turned and headed into the city. The paper sat in the middle of Walton Pond,
    opposite the city hall and police center. That saved time for when the crime reporters
    needed to follow up a story.
     
    He pulled into a slot in the public parking lot that serviced several of the businesses
    around the paper. He got out of the car and headed into the office.
     
    He waved at some of the writers and editors as he went to his work space in the
    middle of the staff area. He put his suit jacket over his chair as he sat down. He
    checked the paperwork in his in box before he called over to the editor.
     
    “Hey, Ken,” said Logan. “Who’s covering the Mercury Diamond theft?”
     
    “Phillips,” said Ken Hanson, the city editor. “He’s covering all those strange
    robberies.”
     
    “I would like to talk to him,” said Logan. “I want to know more about these thefts.”
     
    “I’ll tell him to come up and talk to you,” said Hanson. “What’s your interest?”
     
    “I want to pressure the police into stopping these thefts,” said Logan. “Maybe we can
    get mileage out of the scenes of the crimes.”
     
    “They won’t like that,” said Hanson.
     
    “We’re not here to make the police happy,” said Logan.
     
    “I’ll tell Phillips to talk to you,” said Hanson.
     
    “I’m going over financials at my desk,” said Logan. “I’ll be here for a while.”
     
    “All right,” said Hanson. “Do you need anything else?”
     
    “Not right now,” said Logan. “I may need more later.”
     
    “See you later, Logan,” said Hanson.
     
    Logan hung up. He leaned back in his chair. He checked his calender. He had
    meetings with the board, financial advisors, and had to look into buying into another
    radio station in Minnesota.
     
    He could put some of that off if Phillips could give him some lead to the thief.
    There had to be something everyone was missing that he could use.
     
    He went through his paperwork, sat through his first meeting, and then went over how
    much money he had flowing through his holdings with his advisors. Phillips arrived
    while he was ushering his hedge fund manager out of the conference room.
     
    “You wanted to see me?,” said Phillips.
     
    “Come in,” said Logan. He gestured at the conference room. “You are just in the
    knick of time.”
     
    “I got held up,” said Phillips. He wore a jacket and tie with jeans. He settled at the
    table and pulled out a small tablet from its carrying case. He set the tablet on the table
    so he could reference it. “I was in court when Ken called.”
     
    “I want to know how much you know about these unsolved thefts that are going on,”
    said Logan. He sat down at his place at the table. He had paperwork to fill out. He put
    that aside in a small stack.
     
    “The police have some forensics details they aren’t sharing,” said Phillips. “The gist
    is our guy can take locks and protective measures apart and then escape.”
     
    “How is he getting in?,” asked Logan.
     
    “I think the police think he can fly, or he has some kind of swing line he uses,” said
    Phillips. “Some of those thefts took place in high rises with cut out windows.”
     
    “Do you have pictures?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Some,” said Phillips. He opened a file on his tablet. He showed Logan the illegal
    entries he had taken pictures of with his phone. “I couldn’t get pictures of some of
    them. The police had cordoned off the scenes and the victims fixed the damage as fast
    as they could.”
     
    “I want you to go around and take pictures of the scenes,” said Logan. “Leave them
    on my desk.”
     
    “What’s going on?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “I’m interested in how these thefts are being done,” said Logan. “I can’t ask the
    police to give me a tour of everything. You, on the other hand, can go in and look
    around and ask more questions. Eventually the government will take an interest.
    There will be problems, and conflicts of interest. If we can identify this thief, and how
    he’s operating, maybe we can stop things from escalating.”
     
    “The government will want to take over the investigation,” said Phillips.
     
    “And they will tell us less than the police,” said Logan. “I don’t want to verify a press
    release from some suit.”
     
    “Do you want the pictures I already have?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “Yes,” said Logan. “Print them out and put them on my desk. I’ll tell Ken that I want
    you to examine the scenes of the crime before I have to get to this other meeting.”
     
    “All right,” said Phillips. “I have some other stories that I am working on.”
     
    “Are they life and death?,” asked Logan.
     
    “I don’t know,” said Phillips. “I’m trying to verify that someone in city hall is
    embezzling money for one. Then there is the Garret murder. I’m still trying to find
    someone who will talk to me about it.”
     
    “The kid on Thirteenth Street,” said Logan. “He took a stray bullet. No one wants to
    come forward to say which gang fired the shot.”
     
    “Exactly,” said Phillips.
     
    “They’ll stonewall you too,” said Logan. “Go ahead and get those pictures for me.
    It’ll give your embezzler time to steal more money, and Buddy Garret isn’t going
    anywhere at the moment. If someone comes forward, go back to it and cover it.”
     
    “You don’t think I can find anyone who will?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “You aren’t threatening enough,” said Logan. “People fear the shooter more than they
    fear you. If you haven’t dug up anything by now, you never will.”
     
    “All right,” said Phillips. His expression said he didn’t agree, but he wasn’t going to
    argue with his boss.
     
    “Did you dig up anything about the shooting?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Not much,” said Phillips. “The police think the Ardvarks and the Razorbacks started
    squabbling for turf. Guns were pulled and fired, and one bullet hit Buddy Garret in
    his chest. He died at the scene.”
     
    “Do you know who the shot callers are in either gang?,” asked Logan.
     
    “My source said they think a Deshawn Barden runs the Razorbacks,” said Phillips.
    “The other name they gave me was a Buck Clinton for the Ardvarks.”
     
    “Did they give you street addresses?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Sure,” said Phillips. He wrote down the addresses and handed over the sheet from
    his notebook.
     
    “I’m going to give this to someone and hopefully he will be able to do something
    about one of these gangs,” said Logan. “Don’t tell anyone I did this. I don’t want the
    police thinking we’re interfering in their investigation.”
     
    “I understand,” said Phillips. “Do you think he can get someone to talk?”
     
    “I don’t know,” said Logan. “If he can’t, at least we tried to crack this.”
     
    “All right,” said Phillips. “Is there anything else?”
     
    “I might need to talk to you when you have the pictures to get your opinion on
    things,” said Logan. “Let me know if you dig up enough to identify the embezzler.”
     
    “I thought you just published the paper,” said Phillips.
     
    “My grandfather and father helped build the city,” said Logan. “I try to help protect
    it now that they are both gone.”
     
    “I can see that,” said Phillips. “You thought about going into politics?”
     
    “Politicians have to answer to someone else, generally a lot of someones depending
    on where they got their money,” said Logan. “I only have to answer to myself and
    whomever owns part of the papers. And since I publish the paper, I don’t really have
    to answer to anyone else unless someone buys enough of the others’ holdings to
    have me removed.”
     
    “How likely is that to happen?,” said Phillips.
     
    “I don’t know,” said Logan. “But I have some things that I am trying to get done and
    this thief is stirring up trouble. So he has to go. Then I can try to get the money I need
    for my projects.”
     
    “What projects?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “I’ll let you know when I have them in the bag,” said Logan. “Go get the pictures. I
    have to make my meeting.”
     
    “All right,” said Phillips. He packed up his tablet. “Why the concentration on the
    entry points?”
     
    “No one knows who this thief is,” said Logan. “We all suspect he is powered up. If
    we can match the power to a known villain, we can identify the thief and help the
    police with their manhunt.”
     
    “And if we can’t,” said Phillips.
     
    “Then he’s someone who’s never been caught, or totally new,” said Logan. “Let’s see
    what we can find out before worry about that.”
     
  23. Like
    csyphrett got a reaction from eepjr24 in The Wooden Stranger   
    2
    Logan thought about the two gangs. He would not be able to pressure any information
    out of them as himself. No one wanted to talk about a shooting to a newsman unless
    they were stupid.
     
    How did he crack them?
     
    He decided the only thing to do was put on his other face and see if he could do
    something to get some information. If he could get the name of the shooter, he could
    call that in as a tip and let the police focus on that person. He would also give the
    name to Phillips to follow up on after he was done checking out the burglary scenes.
     
    The city didn’t need his other face all that often, but sometimes it was the only way
    to deal with things that balked normal methods used by the law.
     
    He doubted that becoming a vigilante would get his father’s approval, but it helped
    protect the city.
     
    The answers he got sometimes led to the exposure of rot in the system. Cutting that
    rot away allowed the city to operate better.
     
    He knew it was an ongoing process. Like any gardener, he knew that pests and weeds
    had to be removed to let the flowers bloom.
     
    Logan decided to leave his battered Datsun in the parking lot for the paper. He didn’t
    want anyone to see it and connect it to his two lives. He had one more thing to do
    before he started asking questions.
     
    He pulled his phone from his holder and dialed his home. He had to let his wife know
    what was going on.
     
    Gloria and Brady was the only ones who knew what he did some nights. They needed
    to know what he was doing so they could cover up his extracurricular activities from
    his own papers and radio stations.
     
    “Hey, Log,” said Gloria. “How are things at the paper?”
     
    “I have to talk to some people before I come home,” said Logan. “Do you want me
    to bring in anything?”
     
    “You’re not taking Brady?,” said Gloria.
     
    “I’m just swinging by to talk,” said Logan. “I will be glad to take him when I need
    something blown up.”
     
    “All right,” said Gloria. She laughed lightly. “He loves the sidekick life.”
     
    “One day he will be protecting the city,” said Logan. “I hope that I have shown him
    some basic skills and a good outlook on life.”
     
    “I’m sure,” said Gloria. “Bring home some pizzas. That will make up for you not
    being home on time.”
     
    “Will do,” said Logan. “I love you.”
     
    “I love you too,” said Gloria. “Don’t do anything reckless.”
     
    “I’m just having a talk with a man about his friends,” said Logan. “You couldn’t get
    more boring.”
     
    “And how dangerous is this source?,” asked Gloria.
     
    “Not as dangerous as me,” said Logan. “I will be home in a bit.” 
     
    Logan hung up the phone. He put it back on its holder. Night drifted outside the
    window. He put the photos from Phillips in a folder as he looked around the nearly
    empty room. He walked out of the room and headed for the roof.
     
    He stepped through the rigged roof door. It only rang when someone else tried to go
    out on the roof. He looked over the city with the file of pictures in hand. He
    concentrated to call on his other face.
     
    A wooden sheathe covered his body, masking his face with another appearance. A
    cape of leaves dropped from his shoulders. He stood like a statue for a moment before
    he walked to the edge of the roof.
     
    Logan slid the folder inside his wooden body before he leaped from the roof of the
    paper. He extended a pole to the ground and used that to land on the roof across the
    street from the paper. He shrank the pole and ran across the roof and pole vaulted to
    a building across that street.
     
    The address for Clinton was just off Downtown in a neighborhood slated for
    gentrification which would drive the residents out. Clinton might have enough money
    flowing in from the Aardvarks not to have to move when richer people moved in.
     
    The Aardvarks were prominent on the local scene, but he couldn’t recall any mention
    of them in national reports. They might not have a longer reach than the city.
     
    Logan dropped down to the street when he ran out of roofs. He used the shadows as
    much as possible as he walked through the neighborhood. He paused when he
    reached the address he wanted.
     
    How should he do this? Should he knock on the door? Should he break in? Should
    he wait outside until someone showed? He decided the direct approach was the best
    approach.
     
    Logan walked across the yard, stepping around a small tree. He climbed the three low
    porch steps to stand at the front door. He knocked on the door with a wooden hand.
    The door opened to reveal a sixty year old woman in a hairnet and bathrobe. She
    frowned at the apparition knocking on her door.
     
    “What do you want?,” she asked in a shaking voice. A tremor ran through her body.
     
    “I’m looking for Buck Clinton,” said Logan. “Does he live here?”
     
    “He’s not home right now,” said the woman. “He’s hanging out with his useless
    friends.”
     
    “Would you know where that would be, ma’am?,” asked Logan.
     
    “No,” said the old lady. “Sometimes they hang around that burger place on Barlow.”
     
    “Thank you very much, ma’am,” said Logan. “I’ll let you get back to your bed. I’m
    sorry to have bothered you.”
     
    “Night,” said the woman. Her shaking hand closed the door on Logan.
     
    Logan turned and walked through the yards toward the end of the block. He turned
    again and headed away from Downtown toward Caskill and Barlow. A huge amount
    of strip malls, stand alone stores, and restaurants lined those two streets. One end of
    the street went toward Downtown. The other vanished out in the county on the way
    to the next county and the little towns between Walton Pond and the next city over.
     
    He vaulted to the roof of a strip mall and worked his way down Barlow until he found
    a Bowzer’s with a bunch of young men standing around in the parking lot. He
    decided to ask which one was Clinton so he could ask his questions.
     
    Logan dropped down in the parking lot. He looked at the group. Someone would do
    something. They all had that look. It was easy to believe that one of them had shot a
    little boy by accident because he didn’t have the proper training with a weapon.
     
    “Who’re you supposed to be?,” said one of the gangsters. His totem animal, the
    aardvark, was a tattoo on his hand.
     
    “I’m looking for Buck Clinton,” said Logan. “I heard he was a coward and a
    blowhard that needs to be put in his place.”
     
    “I’m Clinton,” said one of the men. “What do you want?”
     
    “I want to know which one of your gang shot the little boy last week,” said Logan.
     
    “Why should I tell you, freak?,” said Clinton. He pulled his pistol in one move.
     
    Logan extended his hand. A log leapt from it. The piece of wood spun in the air until
    it crashed into Clinton’s face. The gang leader went down. He still kept a grip on his
    pistol. 
     
    The wooden hero swept his arm in a circle. A wooden stick beat on the gang members
    within striking distance as he advanced on Clinton. The gang leader tried to raise his
    pistol to shoot his nemesis. The end of the staff came down and disarmed him. It
    reversed back and struck him in the face.
     
    Logan picked up the pistol and absorbed it into his wooden shell to take with him.
     
    Maybe the police could match the gun with other crimes in the area, even if it wasn’t
    for the dead boy.
     
    “Anybody want to talk to me?,” asked Logan. “One of you must know who shot the
    little boy when you had your fight. Why don’t you say something?”
     
    They all glared at him. Some of them had their hands close to their weapons. They
    were ready to fight if pushed, but in close quarters, most knew they would probably
    shoot themselves trying to shoot the wooden target in front of them.
     
    “I want you to leave the city,” said Logan. “If I see you again, I will hurt you. You
    want to live here, I want to know who killed the boy. Until I do, any of you I see, I
    am going to hurt. That’s what’s going to happen. I’m giving you until sundown to
    leave town and not come back.”
     
    “You can’t do that,” said one of the gang.
     
    “Either I get the shooter, or I make examples,” said Logan. “That’s the deal. Sundown
    tomorrow is all the time I am giving you. After that, expect a stay in the hospital.”
     
    Logan backed away from the mob. If they went for their guns, he would have start
    throwing logs at them.
     
    He had one trick that he didn’t use very much that could wreck a car. He had no doubt
    it would put a man in the hospital, or the morgue.
     
    Logan walked around the burger joint. He climbed up to the roof and sat down. He
    listened as the gang got themselves together.
     
    Most of them didn’t like his disrespect. Some didn’t like his reputation as a meddler.
    And Clinton didn’t like the fact that he had lost his sidearm. He shouted for everyone
    to load up so they could find him and shoot his tree butt.
     
    Logan wondered if this was how the gunfight with the Razorbacks had started. Words
    had been exchanged, then everybody had started shooting.
     
    He had to look them up. He couldn’t put pressure on one gang, and let the other one
    slide. Maybe the hogs would be more cooperative.
     
    Someone had shot the boy. He wanted to know who. Once he knew, he could turn the
    guy in and help settle the city. Clearing the gangs out had to be done on principle. He
    should have had a talking with them before this.
     
    He regretted not doing something about them sooner. He had spent too much time
    chasing other bad guys the ones he hadn’t kept his eyes on had multiplied.
     
    He called up the address for Deshawn Barden. It was across town, heading for the
    North Point. He wondered how they would take his demands.
     
    He supposed that they would say that no caped freak was running them out of town.
    He might have to use a little more force on them.
     
    They were going if they couldn’t tell him who had shot the boy. He had already made
    up his mind about that. He couldn’t stop all crime in the city limits. He could make
    two groups of lowlifes miserable.
     
    He could even take time out of his schedule with the paper to keep making them
    miserable until he had an answer.
     
    Logan crossed the city using a bus passing his way, then an eighteen wheeler heading
    north. He dropped down into the North Point and walked through to where his
    suspect lived.
     
    He was rewarded with a party with too much booze, too many people, and too loud
    music. No one would call the police to shut this down. The Razorbacks would make
    them miserable if they did.
     
    He decided to walk in. You can’t make people afraid of you if you were afraid of
    them.
     
    Logan crossed the porch, saying excuse me as he pushed through the crowd. One guy
    tried to punch him. He blocked, then jammed his staff into the guy’s gut, then he
    pushed the guy over the railing. The onlookers never saw the staff appear and
    disappear.
     
    He asked for Barden. One of the women pointed to a shirtless man with five
    necklaces and a bandana tied around his head. He thanked her and walked into the
    house.
     
    “What do you want?,” asked Barden. The music still played but all eyes were on the
    two of them facing off.
     
    “I would like to know who killed the Garret boy when you faced off with the
    Aardvarks,” said Logan.
     
    “I don’t have nothing to say to you,” said Barden.
     
    “I have something to say to you,” said Logan. “It’s the same thing I said to the
    Aardvarks. Either I get the name, or you all get out of town and don’t come back by
    sundown.”
     
    “You think you can make us,” said Barden. He grinned at the demand.
     
    Logan pointed at the stereo. A cascade of wooden missiles flew across the room like
    a stream of hammers. The thing fell to the floor with dents and broken parts
    everywhere.
     
    “The name or sundown,” said Logan. “Otherwise I will make you miserable until I
    get what I want.”
     
    Logan made a small salute like he was tipping a hat and walked out of the house.
  24. Like
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    3
    Logan sipped his coffee as he sat at his kitchen table. He checked paperwork for his
    holdings before he headed into the paper. He wondered how the Aardvarks and the
    Razorbacks were taking his demand and warning.
     
    They were probably not going to get out of town.
     
    “Hey, Dad!,” said Brady. “I’m heading out.”
     
    “I need you to be ready tonight,” said Logan. “We’re going to have to talk to
    someone.”
     
    “I’m always ready,” said Brady. “What’s going on?”
     
    “I’ll have to talk to some malefactors,” said Logan. “I might need a backup.”
     
    “I can do that,” said Brady. “What are we going to do?”
     
    “I have asked some gangs to leave town,” said Logan. “I don’t think they will.”
     
    “All right,” said Brady. “I’ll get ready as soon as I get home.”
     
    “All right,” said Logan. “I’ll call your mother to let her know.”
     
    “Thanks, Dad,” said Brady. He ran out of the house with his back pack slung over his
    shoulder.
     
    Logan finished his coffee. He put the paperwork in his bag. He could work on it later
    at the office. He walked into the garage and got behind the wheel of his Datsun. He
    triggered the door and backed out on the driveway.
     
    He drove into town and parked in a slot at the paper. He went inside and settled at his
    desk. He found an envelope on his desk. He put his bag on the floor. He opened the
    envelope and dumped out photos on the wooden top.
     
    Logan spread the photos out. He opened his desk and pulled out a magnifying glass.
    He looked the photos over.
     
    He scratched his eyebrow as he went over the pictures.
     
    He sat back in his chair when he was done. He had seen this stuff before. He had
    thought the user dead. Did he have the old guy getting back into business, or a new
    guy with old equipment? How did he find out?
     
    A relative taking on the family business seemed to be the best option in his opinion.
    Logan decided to start with a search. Maybe putting in slick villain thief would
    prompt a memory to bob to the surface. Then he could narrow down his search,
    maybe use the electronic morgue to search for stories.
     
    The first few answers gave him the name of Teflon Billy Burke. He leaned back in
    his chair. Billy Burke was a name he hadn’t heard in a long time.
     
    He looked up the number for Phillips. Maybe he could point his reporter at Burke. A
    little digging might turn up something.
     
    “Hello,” said Phillips.
     
    “This is Major,” said Logan. “I think Teflon Billy is our thief from the pictures you
    left me.”
     
    “Teflon Billy?,” said Phillips. “I don’t know that name.”
     
    “He’s a low level villain that can control friction,” Logan said. “See if you can get
    some background on him. Maybe you can turn up something we can turn over to the
    police.”
     
    “What made you think of this guy?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “The pictures you took,” said Logan. “I did a search for frictionless thieves.”
     
    “Really?,” said Phillips. “I’ll look into this Teflon Billy. Maybe there is something
    there.”
     
    “Did you narrow the embezzler down?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Not yet,” said Phillips. “I got a lot of public paperwork together and asked an
    accountant to look things over for me.”
     
    “Thanks, Phillips,” said Logan.
     
    “I heard Log Man threatened the Razorbacks and Aardvarks,” said Phillips.
     
    “Good,” said Logan. “Has anyone come forward to tell the cops what happened?”
     
    “Not yet,” said the reporter. “They don’t think Log Man can run them off.”
     
    “All right,” said Logan. “Let me know. I want to keep the pressure on so we have
    something to report.”
     
    “Clinton is reported as wanting to kill Log Man,” said Phillips.
     
    “I wish him the best of luck as long as we can cover the story,” said Logan. “Let me
    know what you find out.”
     
    “Right,” said Phillips.
     
    Logan cut the connection as he considered what he should do to bend the gangs to his
    will. He wanted one of them to confess. If he had that, he could axe part of the gangs
    and send them to prison.
     
    Logan worked through the day, going over the finances and anything else that
    required his attention. He felt that the newspaper would be able to ride out any
    economic downturn at least for a while.
     
    He checked the time. He had to get home to pick up Brady. They had to talk to the
    gang members. Once he had a handle on that, he could try to force a confession.
    He hoped Brady would be able to help him with that. He wanted to get them together
    to force something out of them.
     
    Logan reclaimed his Datsun. He took the expressway home. He wasn’t going to beat
    his son’s bus.
     
    He pulled up to his gate. He opened the gate and drove in. He parked his car and went
    inside the garage.
     
    He went into the house and put his case inside his office.
     
    “Hey, Brady!,” he called. “Are you home?”
     
    “I’m here, Dad,” called Brady. “I ready to go when you are.”
     
    “We have some time before sundown,” said Logan.
     
    “That’s cool,” said Brady.
     
    “Let’s get a snack,” said Logan. “We don’t know how long we’ll be chasing these
    guys tonight.”
     
    “I have school tomorrow,” said Brady.
     
    “We’ll try to get them all before ten,” said Logan. “If we can’t, we’ll work on it
    tomorrow night.”
     
    “Don’t forget you and Mom have to go to that event the day after,” said Brady.
     
    “The Charity Ball,” said Logan. “I forgot.”
     
    “Don’t tell Mom that,” said Brady. “She will skin you alive.”
     
    The two had walked into the kitchen while they were talking. Logan got ingredients
    out of the refrigerator so they could make sandwiches before they left on their rounds.
     
    “How much effort do you think this will take?,” asked Brady. He chowed down on
    his sandwiches after getting a can of Coke from the pantry.
     
    “I don’t know,” said Logan. “I want to make them so miserable, they would rather
    leave than conduct business here.”
     
    “We might be following these guys around for months,” said Brady. “There’s no way
    they are going to just let us interfere in their gangbanging.”
     
    “Until I get a name, they will not work in my town,” said Logan. “And they might not
    work in my town if they do give me a name.”
     
    “We would have to stop doing our patrols to harass these guys,” said Brady. “We
    wouldn’t be able to help other people if we did that.”
     
    “Good point,” said Logan. “Let’s see what happens when we have our visit.”
     
    They finished their meal, watching for the sun to go down. They didn’t want either
    of the rival gangs seeing them when they moved in.
     
    “Looks like it’s time for us to go,” said Logan. “Let’s get the Log Mobile and get to
    work.”
     
    “Right, Dad,” said Brady.
     
    The Majors walked into the garage. Wood covered their bodies as they moved.
    Leaves formed capes. Logan pressed a hidden lever. A wooden car dropped down on
    a cradle from the ceiling.
     
    Logan climbed behind the wooden wheel. He extended his will and the car rolled off
    the cradle. He backed out of the garage and down the driveway to the gate. He pulled
    out on the street and headed into town.
     
    “Someone is going to see us doing that one day,” said Brady.
     
    “I hope not,” said Logan. “It would be really embarrassing.”
     
    He drove to the fast food place Clinton favored. He doubted the gang leader had
    stayed home in the face of a threat. He would want to show that he wasn’t scared even
    when he should be.
     
    “There they are,” said Logan. He drove to the back of the fast food place. “You
    ready?”
     
    “Yep,” said Brady. “Pinecone, the boy exploder, is always ready.”
     
    They got out of the Log Mobile and walked around the restaurant. Clinton’s gang saw
    them coming. Some of them reached for weapons.
     
    Pinecone exploded into a shower of thin disks that flew right at the gang. The
    suspected criminals dove for cover as their vehicles captured the flying missiles.
    Log Man darted forward. Logs flew in a shower of wooden pain at the cars. The
    sounds of smashing glass and bending metal filled the parking lot.
     
    Clinton looked at the destruction. He turned to glare at the Log Man. A fist put him
    on his back.
     
    “I told you to get out of town,” said Logan. “Why are you still here?”
     
    “You don’t tell me what to do, you freak,” said Clinton. “I do what I want.”
     
    “That’s fine,” said Log Man. “I can keep coming back until you have nothing left.”
     
    “Isn’t this illegal?,” asked one of the other members of the gang. “You wrecked
    our stuff.”
     
    “I guess you’re right,” said Log Man. “Don’t be in town tomorrow, and I won’t wreck
    your stuff.”
     
    “You can’t do this,” said Clinton. “I’ll kill you first.”
     
    “I will start putting people in the hospital until I hear something,” said Log Man.
    “Your best bet is to sit down with the police and figure out who shot the little
    boy. I won’t have a reason to come around then.”
     
    “None of us did that,” said Clinton. “We were shooting at Bardem’s guys. They were
    shooting at us. They must have shot him.”
     
    “How do I prove that?,” asked Log Man. He smiled at a sudden idea. “I’ll see you
    tomorrow.”
     
    “You can’t keep coming back,” said Clinton.
     
    “I’m going to talk to Barden,” said Log Man. “Then I have some things to do. I’ll be
    back to talk to you this time tomorrow.”
     
    “I hope he kills you,” said Clinton.
     
    “I hope you get a little smarter,” said Log Man. “This is my city, not yours, not
    Barden’s. I make the rules, I call the plays. If I don’t get what I want, there will be no
    room for Aardvarks, or Razorbacks. And no one will miss you.”
     
    “I’ll find a way to get rid of you,” declared Clinton.
     
    “I already have a way to get rid of you,” said Log Man. “Let’s go, Pinecone.”
     
    The wooden duo retreated to the Log Mobile. Log Man drove away from the burger
    place with a wave for the gang as he went.
     
    “So we’re going to talk to this Barden?,” asked Brady.
     
    “I have to be an equal opportunity villain beater,” said Logan. “It’s in my contract.”
     
    “You know how to prove what happened,” said Brady. “I could see it when you
    paused.”
     
    “It’s not definite proof,” said Logan. “It’s a possible thing that we can use to crack
    the case.”
     
    “Do we let them off the hook?,” asked Brady.
     
    “No,” said Logan. “They’re not giving us anything. We’re taking it from them.”
     
    “All right,” said Brady. “What are you going to do?”
     
    “We’re going to check on our other suspects, then we’re going to do a patrol to see
    if anyone needs us,” said Logan. “Then we’re headed home unless we have an
    emergency to deal with first.”
     
    “Sounds good to me,” said Brady. “What are you going to do to crack this?”
     
    “I’m going to think about what I’ve read,” said Logan. “Then I am going to do some
    research.”
     
    The Log Mobile rolled into the night, lights made of plant chemicals glowing from
    it.
     
  25. Like
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    4
    Logan Major rolled into the paper’s parking area the next day. He had to do some
    preliminary work and research before he turned his attention back to the Razorbacks
    and Aardvarks. He felt he had a solution in their testimony.
     
    Phillips waited by his desk as he made his way through the office. He seemed excited.
     
    “What’s going on?,” asked Logan. He put his case on the desk.
     
    “A lot,” said Phillips. “Things started popping last night.”
     
    “About Teflon Billy?,” asked Logan.
     
    “Some, but not just him,” said Phillips. “I talked with my accountant guy. We have
    things narrowed down to three people stealing from City Hall. I need some way to
    push things out in the open before I can say it’s one of them.”
     
    “I know a guy,” said Logan. He grabbed a pad from the top of his desk. He wrote
    down a name and phone number. “Take whatever evidence you have, and maybe your
    accountant if you can get him to go, and talk to this guy. He works in financial crimes
    for the Feds. He might be able to point you in the right direction.”
     
    “There’s a chance that none of this will lead to anything,” said Phillips.
     
    “If you can prove embezzlement, we can pull this guy out of his office,” said Logan.
    “If we can pull this guy out, maybe we can get a more responsible person in.”
     
    “I can see that,” said Phillips. “Your tip about Billy Burke has stirred the detectives
    into looking for him from what I can tell. Even if he isn’t doing the burglaries, they
    feel he knows who is.”
     
    “He’s a pro,” said Logan. “He won’t make it easy on them. He probably has an alias
    that covers any straight task he has to do between break-ins.”
     
    “They said he wasn’t on their radar at all,” said Phillips. “He’s been inactive for a
    while.”
     
    “I guess get with Ken and see how he wants to handle that end of things,” said Logan.
    “I’ll clear you to chase down the current investigation until we have something solid
    to hook into.”
     
    “This thing that you were asking about, the Garret shooting,” said Phillips.
     
    “The gang shooting,” said Logan. “What about it?”
     
    “Log Man has taken an interest,” said Phillips. “He’s leaning on both gangs from
    what I hear.”
     
    “Anyone willing to come forward?,” asked Logan.
     
    “No way,” said Phillips. “They would rather do their time than turn in their own guys.
    Snitches get more than stitches from these guys.”
     
    “Stay on it,” said Logan. “If we can get a confession, or some solid evidence, we can
    run one of the gangs out of town.”
     
    “Maybe not the whole gang,” said Phillips.
     
    “Anything is better than nothing,” said Logan. “And right now, we have nothing.”
     
    “I’ll keep trying to dig something up,” said Phillips. “No one wants to talk.”
     
    “Do what you can,” said Logan. “But don’t do anything dangerous. We don’t know
    how dangerous this gang is, and I can’t afford the payout if one of my employees gets
    killed in the line of duty.”
     
    “Thanks,” said Phillips.
     
    “Don’t worry,” Logan said. “I think I know how to solve the Garret killing. I just need
    to talk to an expert about some things. There’s only one real problem with the
    scheme.”
     
    “What’s that?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “I’ll need to get the two gangs in the same place while we hash this out,” said Logan.
    “I don’t think they’ll like that.”
     
    “So we are going to invite them to shoot at each other again?,” said Phillips.
     
    “I don’t know,” said Logan. “That’s why I need to think about the plan before I try
    to use it.”
     
    “Let me know when you get the bugs worked out,” said Phillips.
     
    “I’ll see what I can do,” said Logan. “Let me know if you find out anything else. I
    have to talk to some of the editors, and some more money people.”
     
    “Someone wanting to buy the paper?,” said Phillips.
     
    “No, I’m looking at a deal for a paper south of us,” said Logan. “The outlook doesn’t
    look good from my point of view. The others on the board want to at least see what
    the demand is.”
     
    “What is the demand?,” asked Phillips.
     
    “Don’t know, but I’m sure it will be for more than the paper is actually worth,” said
    Logan.
     
    “I’ll let you get to that,” said Phillips. He turned to leave.
     
    “If you have any trouble, let me know,” said Logan. “I’ll try to smooth the way for
    you.”
     
    “Thanks, boss,” said the reporter. He waved as he kept walking to the exit of the car
    lot.
     
    Logan made sure he had everything before heading upstairs to his desk. He had a long
    day of financials ahead, with some research on the side. He would be ready to go back
    out as Log Man when the sun went down.
     
    He wondered if the police could track down Teflon Billy. They had more manpower
    than he had, but that didn’t mean much. He could do things they couldn’t do.
     
    The government could still move in now that a power had been identified as the thief.
    He knew they had a sanctioned operation to take on powers when the local heroes
    couldn’t get things done. The location of their head seemed to be in the Department
    of Defense’s civilian administration but he didn’t know where.
     
    And he didn’t expect them to make it easy for reporters to find them so they could be
    asked how they dealt with things when heroes didn’t show up to do the job.
     
    The rumors of secret prisons and an island full of monsters was already out there but
    no one knew where they were, or how to find them. And he didn’t want to vanish
    when he had so much to do in his own city.
     
    Logan settled in his desk and started reading the comments captured by his reporters
    about the Garret shooting. Billy could hold on until this case was closed. Catching a
    killer outranked a thief any day.
     
    He went over the pictures of the scene and the testimony for hours. He thought he had
    a clear picture of what had happened. How did he get it all together to prove it? And
    he would need the two gangs in the same place. He doubted he could do that without
    some kind of police help.
     
    He could round up everyone himself, but that would take a lot of time. He didn’t want
    to spend that much on getting them together. On the other hand, he didn’t see any way
    he could get them to a central meeting place on their own.
     
    If he had some way to trap them, that would make things go so much easier.
    Logan thought about that as he picked up his phone. He needed to make a
    presentation. He knew some people who could help him do that.
     
    Maybe that would help clear up some of the things about the shooting.
     
    “Hey, Hillary,” said Logan. “This is Logan Major. I was wondering if you could do
    an animation for me.”
     
    He listened quietly.
     
    “I understand, but this is a rush job,” said Logan. “I have some testimony from a
    shooting and I need to know what it looks like to a computer. Do you mind? I need
    to get this done as soon as possible.”
     
    He listened again.
     
    “I’ll be at your office in a few minutes,” said Logan. “I’ll bring the paperwork and
    pictures so you can look at everything first.”
     
    Logan hung up the phone. He gathered the reports and pictures his people had got
    from the police and put them in his case. He looked around. No one had an eye on
    him. He stood, grabbing the case by the handle. He headed for the parking lot and his
    car.
     
    If Hillary’s animatic could explain what happened at the shooting, it would give him
    someone specific to go after instead of pressuring both gangs. Then he could have the
    police take the shooter and whomever else they could prove was there in for the
    murder of the Garret boy.
     
    Then he could concentrate on Teflon Billy and take him down before he committed
    any more burglaries.
     
    Then the city would be quieter so he could concentrate on improvements that didn’t
    need his masked face.
     
    Every garden needed constant weeding and other work. His garden just happened to
    be the city.
     
    Logan drove over to the Hillary Musgrove Animation and Digital Media School, and
    parked in front of the low building. He grabbed his case out of the back and walked
    inside.
     
    A counter kept people from walking back into the school. An office for administrative
    work had been set up behind a glass wall. Hillary Musgrove bent over paperwork on
    his desk. His computer ran some cartoon that Logan didn’t recognize.
     
    Logan knocked on the counter. Hillary looked up. He smiled as he stood. He came out
    of the office with a hand out. They shook.
     
    “You said you were having problems with some testimony,” said Hillary. His hair had
    a red streak among the gray and silver.
     
    “I need an exact showing of where the physical evidence went,” said Logan. “Then
    I need to match up what I can to that. I’ll pay double the usual rate.”
     
    “This won’t hold up in court,” said Hillary. “The animation can be manipulated too
    much to be allowed as evidence.”
     
    “I don’t need it to hold up in court, I just need it make some things clear in my mind
    so I know who I can target better,” said Logan. “I have a bunch of uncooperative
    witnesses with no leverage.”
     
    “All right,” said Hillary. “Let me see what I can do.”
     
    He led the way to the back of the building. They passed several rooms where teams
    of students were working on various projects. They walked into a room set up with
    several computers, and scanners. The illustrator sat at the desk and held his hand out
    for the paperwork and pictures he would need.
     
    Logan handed them over and drew up a chair.
     
    “This might take a while,” said Hillary. “I’m going to have to build some models and
    so forth of the scene before I can put in the animatics.”
     
    “I’ll call Gloria and let her know I’ll be late,” said Logan. “I need something to give
    my reporters. I can wait until you’re done.”
     
    “This might take some days,” said Hillary. “I could maybe rope in some of my
    students to help out, but I don’t see it going faster than the day after tomorrow.”
     
    “All right,” said Logan. “I hadn’t realized it would take that long.”
     
    “Don’t worry,” said Hillary. “It will be as accurate as I can make it if the reports are
    accurate.”
     
    “They’re copies,” said Logan. “I’ll leave them with you, but try not to let them leave
    the building. The police will frown on this stuff getting out in the wild.”
     
    “Don’t worry,” said Hillary. “I’ll call you when I get done.”
     
    “I guess I have to go back to leaning on people to see if I can get one of them to
    crack,” said Logan.
     
    “If you can do that before I get done, I will still want to be paid,” said Hillary.
     
    “It won’t be doubled then,” said Logan. He smiled as he waved and walked out of the
    office.
     
    Logan walked out to his Datsun. He had hoped that Hillary would get him answers
    sooner, but he had to live with what he could get.
     
    He decided to head back to the paper and check in before thinking about what he
    could do after work. Dinner with Gloria and Brady would be nice for a change, maybe
    a movie. He could go back to the grindstone tomorrow.
     
    If everything remained quiet, he might be able to let things fester while Hillary put
    his cartoon together. Once he had that, he could work out how to get the two gangs,
    or at least their leaders, together.
     
    He hoped Teflon Billy would take the next few days off while he tried to deal with
    the other mess.
     
    He had a feeling he was hoping for too much.
     
     
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