Kristoph Gavin

"Kristoph Gavin"

- Well, this case certainly has taken a turn... for the interesting!

Kristoph Gavin was a renowned defense attorney with his own law firm, and the former boss and mentor of Apollo Justice. He was often called "the coolest defense in the West", referring to his ability to keep his cool during a trial. He was a special witness for the cases of the murders of Shadi Smith and Drew Misham. His younger brother, Klavier, is a prosecutor and musician.

Forgery

 * Main article: Turnabout Succession

In 2019, renowned magician Magnifi Gramarye was murdered. As Zak Gramarye, one of his students, was to be tried for the murder, Gavin planned to use this opportunity to win the high-profile case. This desire caused him to do whatever it took to implicate the other half of Zak's magic act, Valant Gramarye. To this end, he asked a forger, Vera Misham, to manufacture a page in the victim's handwriting, which he would claim came from his diary.

Gavin acted friendly towards Vera to gain her trust. Noticing that she had a habit of biting her nails whenever she was nervous, he planted atroquinine, an extremely deadly poison, in a bottle of nail polish and gave it to her as a gift, claiming that it was a "good luck charm" to soothe her fear. He told Vera that the magic of the charm would wear off if she told anyone about it. The idea behind this plot was that whenever she went out into the open, she would take and use the nail polish, and if she were to become nervous while out - say, by talking to others about the charm - she would bite her nails, and effectively poison herself. He also laced a commemorative stamp of Troupe Gramarye with the same poison and sent it to Vera along with a letter, confirming the payment for the forgery and telling Drew to mail a receipt for the payment using the stamp. These poisons were planted so that the Mishams would not survive to talk about Gavin's involvement with them. However, Vera kept the stamp for herself, due to being a big fan of Troupe Gramarye, and replied to Gavin's letter with a different stamp. Drew later found out the existence of Vera's secret charm, though he did not know what it was.

Curiously, when Gavin offered his services to Zak Gramarye, the defendant challenged him to a game of poker as a test of trust. Gavin lost the game and Zak rejected him as his attorney. Zak had seen the man behind the cards and concluded that he was untrustworthy. He instead called Phoenix Wright to his cell and, upon losing to him, hired him as his attorney.

Gavin felt cheated out of his quest for glory over a poker game. He decided to plant the diary page that Vera Misham had forged onto Zak's oblivious daughter to give to Wright, to ruin both him and his new defendant. He then told his younger brother Klavier Gavin, who was prosecuting for the case, about the forgery prior to the trial, and Klavier used this information to devise a trap to expose the forgery. When Wright presented the diary page as evidence, Klavier summoned Drew Misham to the stand, who admitted to having forged the diary page. However, Zak vanished from the courtroom before the verdict could be read, ending the trial with no verdict. As a result of this trial, Wright had to forfeit his attorney's badge.

Zak's unexpected disappearance drove Kristoph to stalk everyone involved with the case - the Mishams, Wright, and the journalist Spark Brushel - in fear that Gramarye would reappear to one of them and expose Kristoph's involvement in the forgery and his role as the magician's original attorney. To this end, he befriended Wright in an effort to prevent himself from being suspected, even voting against the decision to disbar Wright, but Wright remained suspicious of him. Despite what had happened to him, Wright took it upon himself to continue his investigations, in hopes for a lead. Meanwhile, Klavier suspected that something was amiss with the trial, and the case haunted him for years to come.

Fall from grace

 * Main article: Turnabout Trump

Seven years later, Zak Gramarye reappeared to Wright under the name "Shadi Smith", and Kristoph saw his chance to kill him. He hid in a secret tunnel behind a cabinet in the basement of the Borscht Bowl Club, where Wright and Zak were playing poker, and waited for an opening during which he fatally attacked the man with a grape juice bottle. Wright was placed on trial for the murder, but when Kristoph called to offer his services, Wright instead requested one of Kristoph's new students, Apollo Justice, having figured out from a slip of the tongue that Kristoph was the killer. Although Kristoph tried to persuade Justice into implicating a witness and then Wright as the killer, Wright made his accusation against Kristoph and replaced him as Justice's impromptu co-counsel. With Wright's help, Justice implicated Kristoph as the true culprit.

Final blow

 * Main article: Turnabout Succession

About six months later, Drew Misham sent a letter to Kristoph Gavin demanding that Kristoph remove the "magic" that he had placed on Vera. Having only the stamp that had been poisoned, he used it to send his letter. He died of atroquinine poisoning 15 minutes later, while Spark Brushel was interviewing him. Drew's daughter Vera was accused of committing the murder.

Phoenix Wright convinced the judicial system to use this case to test the Jurist System. With Apollo Justice and Klavier Gavin at the benches, the trial traced the poison to the stamp that Kristoph had poisoned seven years before. When Klavier realized that this case was related to Zak Gramarye's trial, he began to hound Vera for answers, which caused her to bite her nails nervously, finally consuming the atroquinine that Kristoph had planted. The trial was suspended for the day, and Vera was hospitalized.

Meanwhile, Wright visited Kristoph in his cell to find out why Kristoph had killed Zak Gramarye. Kristoph ignored the question. Even Wright's magatama would be of no use, showing Wright five unbreakable black Psyche-Locks. Wright came back later and tried to steal Drew's letter, but Kristoph caught him in the act. However, unbeknownst to Kristoph, Wright had a hidden camera and had already recorded all of their conversations, as well as the contents of the letter and the poisoned stamp. Wright had ESG Studio develop a program called the MASON System to guide the jury and Justice through the investigations he had conducted for the past seven years, which revealed that Kristoph had poisoned the stamp and the nail polish.

The next day, the trial resumed without its defendant. To reveal the truth once and for all, Justice called Kristoph Gavin to the stand as a special witness. Kristoph convinced the judge to reject all of Phoenix Wright's investigative evidence and claims, citing Wright's lack of authority as well as the lack of any solid evidence implicating Kristoph as the killer. Eventually, Kristoph told the court that Zak Gramarye had rejected him as an attorney prior to hiring Wright. However, he denounced Justice's accusations that Kristoph was the client for the forgery and Drew's killer, due to lack of decisive evidence to prove so. To pour salt on the wound, Kristoph pointed out that Justice and Klavier had been the ones to cause Vera to bite her nails, causing her poisoning and probable death. At this, Klavier and Justice informed him about the implementation of the Jurist System, through which the court had the power to declare an innocent verdict regardless of decisive evidence, and which had been designed by none other than Wright.



At this, Kristoph flew into a rage, calling the jurors "ignorant swine" and "emotional [...] riff-raff" unfit for passing judgement in a court of law, which he claimed was absolute. However, the judge and Klavier dismissed his outbursts, citing the continual evolution of law, never being perfect or absolute. Klavier added that the justice system did not need Kristoph anymore. When the trial concluded, the jury unanimously declared an innocent verdict for Vera Misham. Kristoph could do nothing about it but laugh "a laugh louder than any ever heard before... or since. A laugh that echoed in the halls of justice, lingering for what seemed like hours."

Personality
Kristoph Gavin can largely be summed up as a "lawful evil" individual. He made a point of striving for perfection in all areas of life, particularly in court, where he considered the law and evidence to be absolutes upon which all judgments should be made. This gave Kristoph an extreme sense of self-importance and superiority, particularly over "common" citizens not involved in legal studies. This ironically drove him to compromise the law by finding loopholes, and he eventually resorted to forgery for the sake of fame and glory.

In committing the forgery and the crimes that followed, Kristoph showed great cunning and paranoia with almost every move he made. He was very determined in guarding his secrets at all costs, even foiling Phoenix Wright's attempts to find out what Kristoph was hiding using his magatama. In the end, the Jurist System was needed to foil his plans.

Kristoph has a scar on his right hand. When he tenses the muscles in his hand, a skull-like image is formed, with the scar acting as the "mouth". This was the "tell" that Justice's bracelet picked up on during Kristoph Gavin's last trial.

In Dual Destinites, it is revealed that black Psyche-Locks are the desire to protect secrets so utterly key to a person's personality that removing them through brute force may cause permanent damage. Given how his materialize around the question "why did you kill Shadi Enigmar?", this probably indicates that either Kristoph was either unwilling to admit, even to himself, that he comitted murder out of personal pride and spite.

Name

 * "Garyuu" (牙琉) may come from a combination of "self taught man" and "a dragon's fang".


 * When read backwards, his Japanese given name, "Kirihito" (霧人), reads as "hitokiri" (人霧). "Hitokiri" (人斬り) translates as "killer".


 * "Gavin" was chosen to retain the double meaning (surname and name of his band) of his younger brother's "G"-shaped necklace. It is also a medieval variant of "Gawain", the name of an Arthurian knight. It is probably of Celtic origin, coming from the Welsh words "gwalch" ("hawk") and "gwyn" ("white").


 * "Kristoph" seems to be a shortened version of "Kristopher", which is an uncommon spelling variation of "Christopher", which means "Christ-bearing". This could be seem as somewhat at odds with his behavior and Vera referring to him as "The Devil".