This article contains information about Ace Attorney media that has been recently released and thus likely contains spoilers! | |
---|---|
The information in this article comes from a game, demo, or other media that has been recently released worldwide. This article may need input from an editor who has personal experience with the media in question. If you have, you can help the Ace Attorney Wiki by expanding this article. Please heed the manual of style when adding information.
Readers of this page should be aware that this article likely contains MAJOR SPOILERS concerning the media in question. You have been warned! |
The Captive Turnabout |
Image Gallery | Transcript |
Verity Gavèlle |
No one is above the rules. That is the spirit of the law. |
Episode 2: The Captive Turnabout is the second case of Ace Attorney Investigations 2: Prosecutor's Gambit. The case takes place in a prison, and follows Miles Edgeworth as he crosses paths with judge Verity Gavèlle and prosecutor Eustace Winner for the first time, and reunites with an old friend of his father's, Eddie Fender.
Intro
In a dark corridor of a prison, a small bell rings as a shadow walks among the cells. The lights flicker. The shadow lingers beside the dead body of Bronco Knight. The lights flickers and the bell rings again. One light is turned on, revealing the figure to be a dog with blood on its mouth.
Acts and chapters
Act | Chapter | Type |
---|---|---|
"Beginning" | "Opening" | / |
"A Body Is Discovered" | Investigation | |
"Fender's Arrival" | Investigation | |
"A Mysterious Resident" | Mind Chess | |
"The Committee for Prosecutorial Excellence" | / | |
Middle | "A Suspect Has been Arrested...?" | / |
"Fender's New Assistants" | / | |
"Confrontation - The One Who Found the Body" | Mind Chess | |
"the Blind Buthcer" | / | |
"Investigating the Holding Cell" | Investigation | |
"A Wolf in Black Saunters By" | / | |
"Confrontation - Eustace Winner" | Argument | |
"Latter" | "The Berry Big Circus" | / |
"An Escape Tunnel is Found" | / | |
"Confrontation - Verity Gavèlle" | Argument | |
"Kanis's Defense" | Argument | |
"Confrontation - Rocco Carcerato" | Argument | |
"Crime Scene Re-Creation" | Investigation | |
"Judge Gavèlle's Theory" | Argument | |
"Confrontation - Fifi Laguarde, Pt. 1" | Argument | |
"Confrontation - Fifi Laguarde, Pt. 2" | Argument |
Timeline
- To edit the information in this table, go to Template:Timeline and edit the information there.
Date | Event type / related incident | Description | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1972 | Birth | Frank Sahwit | Ages three years between The First Turnabout and The Captive Turnabout | |
March 26, 2019 | The Captive Turnabout & Turnabout Legacy |
|
N/A | |
March 27, 2019 | The Captive Turnabout | Bronco Knight is murdered. | N/A |
Beginning
- March 27th, 10:16 AM
Two days after the fake assassination attempt on Di-Jun Wang, Miles Edgeworth, Kay Faraday and Dick Gumshoe came to the detention center to meet with Bronco Knight. His trial for the murder of Bastian Rook was to begin the next day, and Edgeworth had been assigned to prosecute him. After a while, a guard suddenly entered the visitor's room where they were, telling them that Knight had been murdered, and the three rushed toward the holding cells, where detainees awaiting trial were held. However, the guard instead led them to the prison area. They wondered how Knight, who had not been convicted yet, had ended up in the prison area. The crime scene was a prison workshop, Workshop A, and there Knight was, unmistakably dead.
Investigation of Workshop A
- 10:32 AM
Edgeworth obtained a floor plan of the prison, which indicated that Knight should not have been able to get to the prison at all. Edgeworth found a right-handed rubber glove and a portable chessboard near the body, which was covered in a dirty sheet with a rope on top. Upon closer inspection of the rubber glove, Edgeworth found that the backs of the fingers were coated in blood, suggesting that someone had dropped it after the pool of blood had formed. The guard informed them that these rubber gloves were used for prison labor, and their usage was heavily regulated. The underside of the sheet had bloodstains. It appeared that Knight had died instantly from a stab to the neck. Moreover, the body was covered in dirt, and the top of Knight's head had small bruises. Edgeworth also noticed an expensive-looking ring on one of the victim's fingers.
Edgeworth turned his attention to the holding cage in the room. There was a stack of colorful sheets on the floor, with a whip on top of it. The sheets were unmistakably the same kind as the sheets covering the body. It began to worry Edgeworth that the murder weapon had not been found. Before the three of them could mull over it much, however, another visitor arrived. Edgeworth immediately recognized him and introduced the others to Eddie Fender, a defense attorney and an old acquaintance. Fender made some veiled references to Manfred von Karma, as well as Edgeworth's "betrayal" to the "von Karma way". Fender was supposed to be Edgeworth's opponent in Knight's trial.
Fender and Edgeworth had a discussion about the victim and the workshop, though it mostly consisted of the former playfully making a mockery of the other. Edgeworth wondered how the prison was monitored, and the guard replied that all of the inmates wore electronic bracelets, which were activated by sensors on the doors. The guard added that no inmates were scheduled to be in this workshop. With this knowledge, Edgeworth realized that it should not have been possible for the rubber gloves to be at the crime scene. Fender responded that there were "things" other than inmates and guards that could travel through the prison, and he got everyone to follow him outside.
- 11:06 AM
The corridor was now crawling with animals. Fender explained that animal therapy had been introduced to the prison a few years ago. Each prisoner was assigned a pet to take care of in the workshops. The pets also had microchips that caused the door sensors to open the doors for them, allowing them to move anywhere inside the prison. A large, black dog with a bell stood out from the rest. It barked violently at Edgeworth before moving toward the maximum security cell.
Gumshoe then pointed at one of the prisoners to question. The prisoner apparently had a thing for dramatic introductions, and he stayed silent, giving off a menacing vibe, before saying that it was "exercise time". He introduced himself - Rocco Carcerato, a former boxer - and a polar bear cub clinging to his chest - Teddy, his pet. Edgeworth tried questioning him about the case, but Carcerato adamantly refused.
Carcerato's movements
Edgeworth took a tactical approach, noting that he should not push Carcerato while he was agitated and in his fighting stance. Edgeworth questioned Carcerato about his actions that day, but waited until the boxer began calming down. Edgeworth suggested that Carcerato looked tired. Carcerato replied that he had held off on his training, and just stayed quietly in his cell. Edgeworth, however, had difficulty believing this, as not only was Carcerato sweating profusely, but he had repeatedly admitted to being tired.
The time of the incident
Carcerato claimed that he and Teddy had been sleeping at the time of the incident. Edgeworth apologized for waking Carcerato, and the boxer replied by thanking "Mr. Prosecutor" for understanding. Edgeworth jumped on this, saying that he had only introduced himself as a prosecutor when he arrived, which was around the time of the incident, meaning that Carcerato couldn't have possibly been sleeping then.
Edgeworth pressed the attack, asking repeatedly if Carcerato had noticed anything while exercising. Carcerato desperately told him to be quiet to prevent the animals from getting frightened "again". Edgeworth realized that the animals had been frightened before, meaning that Carcerato did know something about the case after all. Carcerato finally admitted that he had heard a piercing scream, frightening the animals. Fender interrupted the conversation to say that he appreciated the opportunity to observe Edgeworth in action, and that he would be reporting these events to a certain person. Edgeworth then asked Carcerato to testify.
About the incident
Carcerato testified that, after the end of recreation time at 10 AM, he had returned to his room and had gone straight to training. Just then, he had heard someone yell, "I've been stabbed!" Carcerato added that he had gotten his exercise equipment from "the fixer". Edgeworth immediately noticed a contradiction: the victim had been stabbed in the throat and died instantly, so he couldn't possibly have screamed.
Carcerato admitted that he had only heard about the scream from the prisoner in the neighboring cell. Said prisoner confirmed that the screamer had said, "Someone! Come quickly! A man's been...", meaning that it belonged to the one who had discovered the body. Edgeworth then wondered why Carcerato had not heard the scream. Sensing that he was becoming suspicious, Carcerato insisted that he had been locked in his cell the whole time. The second prisoner agreed; none of the prisoners could have killed the victim, and he threatened to kill anyone who would suggest otherwise. It seemed as if Edgeworth could no longer get more information out of the prisoners while they were riled up.
The Committee for Prosecutorial Excellence
Just then, a black-robed judge entered the hall and demanded silence. She said that the prisoners should be thankful for being able to live a life without the need of money. The guards told Carcerato that he would be spending the night in the disciplinary room, to which he yelled in protest. The Judge said that he should be thankful for the opportunity to cast off his sins and be reborn anew. The guards dragged him away, still screaming.
The judge, named Verity Gavèlle, had come to meet with Edgeworth personally, as an arm of the Committee for Prosecutorial Excellence. Accompanying her was a younger man who introduced himself as "renowned" prosecutor Eustace Winner. Neither Edgeworth nor Gumshoe had ever heard of him before, but Gavèlle explained that he had become a prosecutor in the past month. Gavèlle further explained that Edgeworth's investigative authority was to be reliquished to Winner. The reason: Edgeworth had boarded President Di-Jun Wang's plane, which was protected by extraterritorial rights, and had even ordered a search of the president's officials. A single mistake would have been disastrous, and Gavèlle said that Edgeworth had overstepped his authority.
Edgeworth agreed that his actions went against regulations, but they allowed him to find the truth. Gavèlle believed that this "the end justifies the means" thinking was dangerous, and Edgeworth replied that he could not accept Gavèlle's sacred treatment of the rules above all else. Nonetheless, Gavèlle had the legal advantage in this debate, and threatened to take away Edgeworth's badge if he defied her. Gumshoe rushed forward in protest as the guards began to escort Edgeworth and Faraday out, but Edgeworth told him to comply and work under Winner. However, he warned Gavèlle that this was not a surrender, and he promised that he would return. Before he left, Fender informed him that he would report the day's events to the person he had mentioned before.
Middle
- March 28, 9:45 AM
Miles Edgeworth and Kay Faraday met the next morning in Room 1202. They discussed the unreasonable, ruthless behavior of Verity Gavèlle and Eustace Winner, and Edgeworth was concerned about what the Committee for Prosecutorial Excellence was thinking. Regardless, he was not planning on giving up on the case. Dick Gumshoe called Edgeworth, telling him that the police had arrested a suspect. Edgeworth and Faraday rushed to the detention center.
- 10:23 AM
Simeon Saint, the suspect, was an easily frightened individual and would not cooperate with Edgeworth, whom he found scary. Faraday introduced herself and, after failing to convince Saint that Edgeworth was not such a scary guy, she at least got him to cooperate for his own good. Saint said that he was a friend of Knight's and that he had met with him and brought him his chessboard. Edgeworth assured Saint that he need not worry if he was indeed innocent, and that he had a personal stake in this case as well.
- 11:22 AM
The two then met Gumshoe outside the visitor's room. While the three were wondering what to do, Fender arrived and mentioned that he had taken on Saint's defense. Seeing this as his only chance to investigate, Edgeworth asked him to become his assistant. Initially, Fender refused, but Faraday and Gumshoe vouched for Edgeworth, saying that he was no longer the ruthless student of von Karma that he had once been. At this, Fender agreed to take them in as assistants, and he formally introduced himself as the head of Edgeworth and Co. Law Offices, the law firm founded by Gregory Edgeworth, Miles's deceased father. Fender emphasized that Edgeworth would still have to prove to him that he had changed. Edgeworth sent Gumshoe back to keep investigating with Winner and to report on their findings, while the other three went into the prison again to question the inmates.
- 11:50 AM
Inside the prison, the trio met Fifi Laguarde, the friendly warden of the prison and the detention center, as she was passing by. When asked about her whereabouts on the previous day, she replied that she had attended an Animal Show in the prison yard, which had taken place from 8 AM to 10 AM. After she left, Edgeworth learned from the prisoner who had heard the scream that the one who had screamed was in Workshop B. The prisoner there introduced himself as Frank Sahwit, who was training to become an animal beautician. He claimed that he was just grooming pets at the time of the murder, but he refused to say anything else, even though Edgeworth had not asked him anything else yet. Edgeworth knew that Sahwit was hiding something, and he aimed to get it out of him.
Feeling out the situation
Edgeworth noticed that Sahwit's expression did not change much, and he would have to rely on Sahwit's words to determine when to strike and when to yield. Sahwit insisted that he was an upright, model citizen who would never be involved in a murder plot. Edgeworth pointed out that an upright, model citizen would not be in prison, but this caused Sahwit to yell that he did not know anything. Sahwit quickly apologized for his outburst and said that Edgeworth should look for the discoverer of the body elsewhere. Edgeworth replied that he had never mentioned who he was looking for. Edgeworth noted that Sahwit was trying very hard to suppress his emotions.
Sahwit's actions during the incident
Edgeworth now wanted to find out about the goings-on on the day of the murder. With Sahwit denying knowing about what the prison had been like, Edgeworth questioned him on his actions during the incident. Sahwit replied that he had been trimming the animals. He did not recall any panic, and he could even hear somebody's voice. Edgeworth suggested that Sahwit had heard a scream.
Edgeworth confronted Sahwit on the scream. Sahwit showed another flash of anger, insisting that he could not remember what he had heard. Edgeworth backed off, asking how his grooming skills were coming along. Sahwit talked about areas he still needed to work on, and mentioned that he could work with the animals even when they were frightened. Edgeworth remembered that the scream had frightened the animals. At this, Sahwit became more visibly agitated, and he insisted that, while he had heard a scream, he was not trying to hide anything from Edgeworth.
About the scream
Edgeworth asked when Sahwit had heard the scream. Sahwit tried to change his story, saying that he had attended the Animal Show. However, he was too agitated to maintain the lie against Edgeworth's further questioning on the matter. Edgeworth then asked who the scream belonged to, having established that Sahwit had not gone to the show. Sahwit insisted that he did not hear the scream of the one who had discovered the body. Edgeworth wondered why Sahwit had not assumed that the scream had belonged to the victim. He then realized that Sahwit was the one who had screamed, having discovered the body. Sahwit buckled and agreed to testify on the incident.
When Sahwit found the body
Sahwit testified that he had been in Workshop B. On a whim, he had decided to go outside and look through the window into Workshop A, which was when he had seen the body. Sahwit also mentioned the roll calls in the prison, which happened at 7 AM, noon and 9 PM, during which the guards also checked the workshops. The body had been discovered after the 7 AM roll call.
Edgeworth told Sahwit that his bracelet would have triggered if he had tried to leave Workshop B. To explain this, Sahwit claimed that he had just leaned out of the room while his right hand, with the bracelet, remained inside the workshop so as not to trigger the alarm. He had taken such a risk because he had heard sounds coming from the other workshop when no one should have been there. After some prodding, Sahwit revealed that he had witnessed a large black dog biting the victim's neck.
Faraday and Fender were horrified, but Edgeworth had Sahwit continue. Sahwit mentioned that he had also seen a ring with a snowflake insignia. Edgeworth remembered seeing this ring on the victim's right hand, and that it had been hidden under the sheet. Thus, Sahwit must have moved the sheets himself. Realizing that he was being cornered, Sahwit lost his temper and threw his toupee at Edgeworth. Startled but unrelenting, Edgeworth further explained that Sahwit had gone inside Workshop A, as evidenced by the rubber glove found at the crime scene.
Fender noticed something odd: Sahwit should have mentioned that he could not have entered Workshop A due to his bracelet, but he had neglected to use this last line of defense. At this, Sahwit admitted that his bracelet was broken. Edgeworth told a nearby guard to replace Sahwit's bracelet, and he kept the broken one. Sahwit insisted, however, that he was not the killer. He had really seen the black dog, and he had entered afterward to search for loot. When the prisoners returned, he had returned to his room and let out a scream to deceive them.
All this still did not explain how the body had gotten into the prison in the first place. Edgeworth had a bad feeling about the black dog, and he confirmed with Sahwit that there was one other prisoner who had not seen the show, and could not even if he wanted to. This prisoner resided in a maximum security cell, where he received special treatment. Edgeworth, Faraday and Fender had their next destination.
The assassin
- 12:41 PM
In the pitch-black maximum security cell, the black dog glared ominously, scaring off Faraday and Fender. Its owner - Bodhidharma Kanis, an assassin - lit candles to illuminate the cell. When asked for his alibi during the Animal Show, Kanis replied that he had been in his cell the whole time, working on chiseling. Edgeworth was shocked to find that the warden had given the assassin as many as five metal chisels. He also noticed a chessboard with an unfamiliar piece on it, which resembled Cerberus. Kanis explained that he had started playing chess by correspondence since his arrest, and that he had carved the Cerberus piece on a whim.
Edgeworth and Kanis then talked about the victim. As Edgeworth expected, Kanis knew all about the investigation, and he mentioned that it was fortunate that Knight had escaped the charge being levied against him: the attempted assassination of President Wang. This revelation shocked Edgeworth, and he now realized the real reason the Committee for Prosecutorial Excellence had taken him off the case. They sought to cover up the fake assassination plot, and blame Knight for a real assassination attempt that had never happened. Kanis added that Gavèlle and Winner had searched the entire prison for the murder weapon, but they had come up empty. With that, Kanis had his dog, named Helmut, show Edgeworth off.
- 1:12 PM
In the prison corridor, Edgeworth found Faraday cowering on top of a large rock in an animal playground area. Fender had apparently high-tailed it out of the prison entirely. Edgeworth decided to leave Fender to himself and investigate Knight's cell.
- 1:34 PM
In the detention center corridor, Edgeworth and Faraday encountered Fifi Laguarde talking with a guard about an interrogation with Kanis. Laguarde explained that she made sure to have conversations with every prisoner, which would take place in her office. She then left to feed "Ally", an alligator that lived in a pond in the yard. Disappointed that he could not get any information about Kanis, Edgeworth continued to the holding cell.
Investigation of the holding cell
- 1:43 PM
Inside the holding cell were a bed and a desk. Edgeworth discovered that the floor in front of the bed had been wiped clean. On top of the bed was a torn-up newspaper. Edgeworth conjectured that someone had wiped the floor with the newspaper. On the desk was a memo that appeared to depict a chess game in progress. Edgeworth noticed that the positions of the pieces were the same as they were on Kanis's chessboard, minus the Cerberus piece, which meant that Kanis was playing against Knight.
Edgeworth also found a security camera and asked a guard nearby to fetch the footage. The guard did so and found footage of someone being attacked by a black animal in the holding cell at 6:42 AM on the day of the murder. This footage suggested that Knight had been killed in his holding cell rather than in the prison. Edgeworth asked the guard to fetch Gumshoe and have him examine the wiped floor for bloodstains.
- 2:15 PM
Back outside, Edgeworth and Faraday bumped into Shi-Long Lang. Edgeworth wondered what Lang was doing here and why he was alone when he was typically accompanied by a 100-officer squadron, but Lang blew off his questions and continued on his way. Edgeworth then talked to the guards. One of them was looking for one of his uniforms, which had gone missing the day before the murder, and the other confirmed that Helmut had not been seen in the detention center.
Fender then returned with some news. He had heard from the guards about an incident on the day before the murder. While Knight was being escorted to his holding cell, the guard escorting him had been attacked and knocked unconscious. By the time other guards had arrived on the scene, the keys to the holding cell had gone missing. The guards had searched the holding cell and turned up nothing.
Gavèlle and Winner then arrived on the scene. They were surprised that Edgeworth had returned, and Fender explained that Edgeworth was volunteering as an assistant at Edgeworth and Co. Law Offices. Edgeworth asked why Saint had been arrested, and before Gavèlle could refuse, Winner jumped on what he saw as a challenge. He relished the opportunity to show everybody that he was indeed more competent than Edgeworth was, and Edgeworth saw his opportunity to gather more information.
Reasons for arrest
Winner's testimony was initially very vague, but on Edgeworth's insistence and Gavèlle's request, he clarified that Saint's fingerprints had been on the victim's chessboard. Edgeworth told him that this was only natural, as the chessboard had been a gift from Saint. Edgeworth suggested that Winner's arrest had been rash, which the latter apparently had some trouble understanding. Winner began talking about who Saint was, but Gavèlle interrupted and suggested that Winner talk about the murder weapon.
Murder weapon's location
Winner testified that the murder weapon was clearly a sharp metal object, but since such objects were restricted from the prison, the weapon must have come from outside. He reasoned that the weapon had been hidden inside the chessboard. Edgeworth looked inside the chessboard to confirm that there was a hidden compartment that could fit a knife. Edgeworth pointed out that the security gate at the entrance to the detention center would have made it impossible to smuggle a sharp metal object in, but Gavèlle responded that packages went through a simpler check.
Edgeworth asked Winner where he thought the weapon had gone. Winner responded that it must have been hidden somewhere in the prison, apparently having forgotten about his own thorough search of the prison. The younger prosecutor floundered and suggested that the killer must have smuggled the weapon out of the prison. Edgeworth retorted that this was impossible thanks to the security gates. He then gave evidence for his theory on where the murder weapon had gone: the security footage. He gave his theory that Helmut had killed the victim inside the holding cell.
Gavèlle took over from here. She pointed out that Edgeworth had neglected to explain how Helmut could have gone to and from the prison. She also revealed that she had been hiding her true reasons for the arrest her whole time. She stated that Saint was a circus performer working for the Berry Big Circus, and that he had performed in the Animal Show, providing him with the opportunity to kill Knight. Gavèlle pleaded with Edgeworth to quit with his defense attorney act when he did not even know his client's occupation, and she told him that she could still relieve him of his badge if they crossed paths again during the investigation. After she and Winner left, Fender revealed that even he had not known about Saint's occupation, and he wondered why his client would hide such crucial information from him. Edgeworth insisted that he was not going to give up on his investigation.
End, Part 1
- 3:02 PM
The trio returned to the visitor's room to speak with Simeon Saint. The client confirmed that he was employed at the Berry Big Circus, and that he had set up the Animal Show with a supervisor. He introduced them to Money, his pet monkey. Saint explained that he had been moving equipment for the Animal Show into Workshop A, and he had sneaked into the detention center to see Knight. He feared that, had he told Miles Edgeworth about all this, he would have suspected him, too, since that was probably the basis for Eustace Winner's arrest as well.
Saint also explained that he and Knight had both lost their families at a young age, and that each was the only friend that the other had. Both Edgeworth and Kay Faraday could relate to this, and Saint seemed too timid to be capable of murdering his own friend, so Edgeworth assured him again that he believed in him. The three headed to the prison and noticed that the door to the prison yard was open.
- 3:37 PM
At the yard, the team encountered Azea the elephant and Saint's supervisor, Regina Berry. Edgeworth learned that the Animal Show featured a love story between Azea the elephant and Regent the tiger, with a villainous monkey played by Saint. Berry also mentioned that Saint had insisted on making all of the preparations, and that he had spent a considerable amount of time near a well nearby. Edgeworth checked out the well and found some equipment, including a pulley and a 15 kg weight.
Frank Sahwit was also in the area, helping with the cleanup of the Animal Show set. They discussed Bodhidharma Kanis, whom Sahwit revealed was "the fixer" that Rocco Carcerato had mentioned. Kanis was regarded as a sort of ruler of the prison due to his ability to procure items for the other prisoners. Edgeworth learned that Sahwit had been practicing his pet grooming during the Animal Show, around 9 AM, by putting mud packs on all of the animals in the prison, which explained the mud on the rubber gloves that he had dropped in Workshop A.
Fifi Laguarde then strolled in to check up on the cleanup effort. Edgeworth learned from her that the Animal Show happened every month, and that she was a big fan of Berry's. Edgeworth also noted that she apparently thought very highly of Frank Sahwit as a model prisoner, despte the facts about him that had recently been revealed. Laguarde then revealed that there had been three empty seats at the Animal Show, which meant that someone other than Sahwit and Kanis had missed the show. Edgeworth returned inside the prison to investigate this matter.
- 4:02 PM
As the three reentered the prison, Dick Gumshoe returned, saying that forensics had confirmed traces of blood on the wiped floor of the holding cell, and that he had instructed them to find out whose blood it was. He had also brought some of his "Seven Tools of Investigation": a metal detector, the police dog Missile, and a fishing pole. Edgeworth had Missile follow the scent of the body to find out where it had been dragged from. Gumshoe started to notice that the scent of the body had a hint of sweetness to it, like cake.
- 4:24 PM
The trio followed Missile to the maximum security cell, which was uninhabited at the moment. They wondered whether the dog had found something important inside the cell. Instead, Missile had found chocolate cake. Meanwhile, Edgeworth noticed that one of the five chisels in the cell was smaller than the others. Now free of the distraction, Missile followed the body's scent to Rocco Carcerato's cell, which was also empty. Missile barked at a punching bag inside, which turned out to have been hiding a hole. Missile and Faraday went through the hole and came out at the holding cell.
- 5:04 PM
Faraday had just discovered an underground tunnel that ended under the holding cell's bed. This explained why the body was covered in dirt. Faraday had also taken a photo of the tunnel, which showed some spoons and forks, as well as animal tracks of some sort. Edgeworth alerted the prison guards to what had just been found, and a search for Carcerato was conducted. However, he was nowhere to be found.
- 5:34 PM
Edgeworth assured Laguarde that it would be difficult for Carcerato to have escaped the prison, thanks to the security gates. Meanwhile, the results on the blood in the holding cell were back, and it indeed belonged to the victim. They now had all the evidence that they needed to confront Kanis. Laguarde warned Edgeworth that Kanis would be tough to crack. She had failed to get to him even after many interrogations and many pieces of evidence against him.
- 5:55 PM
The team was suprised to find Verity Gavèlle and Eustace Winner near the maximum security cell with Kanis. Gavèlle reminded Edgeworth of her warning, but Edgeworth replied that he had no intention of backing down just because of her threats, and voiced his intention to question the assassin. Gavèlle challenged Edgeworth to criticize the argument that she had formed against Saint, at the risk of his badge. Edgeworth trusted his reasoning and accepted the challenge.
Movement to the prison
Gavèlle argued that the attack on Knight's guard escort was for the victim to steal the prison keys. Saint had smuggled Knight into Workshop A using the holding cage that was now in the workshop. As evidence of this, she revealed a photo of camera footage from 10:14 PM on the night before the murder, which showed the cage covered in a sheet. The cage blocked the camera's view enough that Knight could have unlocked the prison door and entered the cage unseen.
Edgeworth asked why Knight had not just escaped the prison immediately after stealing the keys, rather than wait for his friend. Gavèlle replied that Knight had simply chosen a method that would be the most likely to succeed, and he had hidden the keys on his person until the opportune time. Edgeworth pointed out that this was impossible, since Knight had been searched immediately after the incident. Gavèlle retorted that the victim had simply hidden it inside the chessboard, and that she had never agreed with Winner's claim that the murder weapon had been hidden there.
Gavèlle added that Saint had the opportunity to kill Knight. The Animal Show climaxed when Azea the elephant blew Saint away with the power of her love, and this had given him 15 minutes to commit the murder. Edgeworth then revealed that Knight's blood had been found in the holding cell, negating the opportunity that Gavèlle had argued. He had even uncovered the route that the dog Helmut could have taken after the deed: Carcerato's underground tunnel. However, Gavèlle had an ace up her sleeve: Knight's autopsy report, revealing that the victim had been stabbed in the neck multiple times with a sharp metal object.
Gavèlle said that this was Edgeworth's last chance to yield and keep his badge. However, Edgeworth insisted that he was acting as a defense attorney's assistant, and that his goal was to protect not his badge, but his client. Eddie Fender told Edgeworth that he was sounding more and more like his father. He did not believe until now that Edgeworth had really changed from his ways under Manfred von Karma.
Edgeworth realized that the killer was human, and that the footage of the black animal merely showed that the animal had leapt at its victim. He posited that Helmut had knocked Knight unconscious and dragged him to Kanis, and the assassin had killed him. He noted that one of the chisels - the smaller, portable one - had disappeared, and he suggested that it was still in the vicinity. Edgeworth then noticed that Helmut had been silent the whole time, unlike the day before. Gavèlle ordered Kanis to make Helmut open his mouth, and indeed, the chisel was there. A blood test confirmed that it was the murder weapon. The assassin merely smiled and commented on how interesting this turn of events was.
Kanis's explanation
Kanis insisted that he had no motive to kill Knight, since he did not even know him. Edgeworth disagreed, showing Knight's memo, which proved that they were playing chess together. The assassin continued to deny any connection, but admitted that the dog had indeed carried Knight to him. However, Knight was already dead, so Kanis had ordered Helmut to carry the body to Workshop A. He added that Helmut's bell was custom-made, and the only other one like it had been attached to his knife, which had been confiscated after his conviction. Because that bell was attached to the chisel, Kanis had realized that someone was trying to frame him, and had told Helmut to hide it to prevent false suspicion from landing on him. Winner had forensics test the chisel for fingerprints, and only Knight's were found.
His theory now disproven, Edgeworth was confused as to what to do next. Faraday and Fender snapped him out of this confusion, saying that he only had to concern himself with finding the truth and saving Saint, not how he arrived at the truth. Edgeworth agreed that he would not give up on his client, as long as there was another way to the truth. He posited that the murder weapon had been hidden in the chessboard, as Winner had originally theorized.
The security footage of the animal attack was still problematic. To remedy this situation, Gumshoe revealed the fourth of his Seven Tools of Investigation: "Li'l Vee", a video analyzing machine. Using Li'l Vee, Edgeworth saw a reflection of the victim in the mirror, showing that he was wearing a cap from a prison guard uniform. After Gumshoe confirmed that there had been no reports of animal attacks against prison guards, Edgeworth remembered the stolen uniform and realized that the victim in the video had stolen the uniform to prepare for his prison break. Edgeworth then examined the animal attacker and found that it was a small bear. Putting two and two together, he deduced that the person in the video was Rocco Carcerato. He also explained that Teddy had been covered in Sahwit's mud packs at the time, which was why it appeared black in the footage.
Edgeworth gave an overview of the events. During the Animal Show, Carcerato left Teddy in Sahwit's care and entered the tunnel that he had dug for his escape. However, Teddy escaped to follow its owner, resulting in the incident captured on the security camera. This was when Sahwit, chasing after the bear, glanced into Workshop A and saw Helmut removing the murder weapon from Knight. If all this were true, then the timestamp of 6:42 shown on the security footage was three hours off. Gumshoe asked the guards about this and found out that the camera's power had been cut for three hours. Being an old model, the clock had stopped when the power did. Considering these events, Gumshoe also revealed that Knight had claimed that he had been knocked out by the same person who had attacked his guard escort.
Edgeworth informed Fifi Laguarde, who had just arrived, of the conclusions concerning Carcerato that had just been reached. Teddy then appeared and latched onto one of the guards accompanying Laguarde, blowing Carcerato's cover. Before Laguarde had Carcerato taken away, Edgeworth asked for permission to interrogate him.
When the body was found
Carcerato lamented that the day that the body was found happened to have been the day he had planned to escape. He elaborated that he had not changed into the stolen uniform until after he had reached the holding cell, and then getting out of that cell was simple. Edgeworth realized that Carcerato had stolen the keys to the holding cell. Although Carcerato had not actually escaped until after the discovery of the body, he had attempted to escape before then, and this showed that he had to have the key. Carcerato had attacked Knight and the guard to steal the keys to the holding cell, as evidenced by the traces of Knight's blood on the floor of the cell. Finally defeated, Carcerato handed over the keys.
Carcerato insisted that he had not killed Knight, and that he had not even seen a body. He also said that he could not have gone into Workshop A. Edgeworth suggested that Bodhidharma Kanis was an accomplice, and he had had Helmut transport the body from Carcerato's cell to Workshop A. However, Carcerato mentioned that he had only dug the latter half of the tunnel, and that there had already been a tunnel connecting his cell to the yard well. He added that the well had a sweet smell, like candy, which Edgeworth connected to the sweet scent that the body had given off. This proved that the body had been transported through the tunnel.
Gavèlle now gave her revised theory as to why Simeon Saint was the killer: Since Knight was also planning to escape the prison, he and Carcerato agreed to share the key. Knight set his escape plan with the killer in motion first, being transported by holding cage to the yard, where he was killed. The body was dropped during the Animal Show, after Carcerato had made his own escape attempt. Helmut then transported the body to Workshop A. The only person who fit with what the killer had done was Saint.
Edgeworth pointed out that there was no proof that the body had been dropped down the well, and he asked to investigate the well. However, Laguarde said that it was getting late, and she insisted that all visitors leave. The investigation would have to wait until the following day.
End, Part 2
Little Thief
- March 29, 10:12 AM
Miles Edgeworth, Kay Faraday, Dick Gumshoe and Eddie Fender returned to the prison yard the next morning. Everything had been cleaned up, but this was not a problem for them, for they had Little Thief. Edgeworth sent Gumshoe to look for Regina Berry while he examined the yard as it was during the previous day's investigation. Through this, he recalled seeing Azea the elephant and the tools and weights beside the well.
Edgeworth then examined the yard as it was during the Animal Show using Little Thief, based on information obtained from Berry. He noticed a crate of apples. Berry said that she had been mistaken in this detail, as the apples had gone missing before the Animal Show. Edgeworth deduced that somebody had moved the crate on the night before the show, in such a way that Azea could reach it and eat all of the apples.
After examining the stage, Berry told them about the Animal Show scene where Saint is blown away by Azea. She told them that Saint used a device to help himself be blown away. Edgeworth determined that the tools around the well had been used for the device during the show's climax. Faraday asked Saint about this and learned that the device used a pulley system attaching his body to the weights, which were held over the well by a stopper. The stopper was attached to Saint by a second rope, so that he could remove the stopper at the right time, causing the weights to fall and send him flying. Edgeworth realized that the weights in the simulation did not exceed Saint's weight, so some of them must have gone missing. Gumshoe used his metal detector to find the missing weights, finding them in the grass around Ally's pond. Ally then emerged from the pond, and the metal detector reacted to her as well. Berry said that Ally was feeling sick, and perhaps she had ingested something metallic.
Edgeworth also noticed that only the rope with the stopper was present. He realized that the rope on the victim's body was the pulley rope. He concluded that the killer had replaced some of the weights with the body and dropped it down the well via Saint's mechanism, while hiding the extra weights so that nobody was the wiser. The killer had wrapped the body in the sheet to prevent the body from leaving a blood trail. This had to have been set up on the night before the Animal Show, after Saint and Berry had left. Edgeworth remembered the apple crate and posited that whoever had set up the body had also pushed the apple crate out of the way to enter a door that it was blocking.
Faraday asked a nearby guard to get the keys to the door in question, which they found out belonged to the warden. Inside was a circuit breaker panel. Someone had entered the room to cut the power to the security cameras. This placed suspicion on Fifi Laguarde. Edgeworth was now prepared to confront Verity Gavèlle when she finally arrived at the scene with a completed autopsy report.
Judge Gavèlle's reasoning
Armed with his new information, Edgeworth refuted Gavèlle's argument concerning who had dropped the body down the well. He explained Saint's contraption and his finding that the killer had switched the weights with the body. As for how the body had been transported, Edgeworth pointed out that the power had been cut to the security cameras, which provided the real killer to roam free without being detected. Edgeworth suggested that somebody had intentionally cut off the power using the circuit breaker. With this, he was about to reveal his suspect when she suddenly entered the yard. Edgeworth noticed that Missile had detected a sweet scent on Laguarde, the same one that was on the body. Gavèlle was now beginning to realize that Edgeworth might be correct.
Laguarde's story
Laguarde claimed that she had not entered the prison at all between the night before the Animal Show and the Animal Show itself, citing that there was no record of her entering the prison. Edgeworth responded that she could have just gone through her garden and across the barbed-wire fence. However, she could not get across the fence without accessing the breaker room. This meant that she had an accomplice who had cut the power to the cameras and the fence. Frank Sahwit fit the bill, since his bracelet was broken.
At this, Laguarde confessed to being an accomplice to the fixer. Bodhidharma Kanis apparently had henchmen, and he had threatened Laguarde and her family to get her to give him whatever he wanted, becoming the fixer. Laguarde had taken Sahwit on as a partner in crime after he broke his bracelet, in exchange for her silence on the broken bracelet as well as special privileges. Once a week, Sahwit would cut the power to the cameras and the fence, allowing Laguarde to go into the prison undetected with the goods that Kanis demanded. She would drop them down the well and spray perfume into it to signal Helmut to deliver the goods to Kanis. Laguarde would then correct the timestamps on the cameras after Sahwit restored the power.
Laguarde also claimed that, although the day of the murder was a delivery day, she had not had anything to deliver. Sahwit had apparently cut the power anyway, which was why the timestamps had not been corrected this time. However, Fender asked her to testify on her opinions on the culprit, since this would be important information for Saint's trial. This lure worked, and Fender told Edgeworth that it was now his turn to show that a defense attorney never gives up.
Laguarde's argument
Laguarde claimed that she suspected Kanis of committing the murder. She did not know much about Knight, but he would have been an easy target, and she suggested that Kanis had used the chisel hidden in the chessboard to kill him. When asked how she knew that the murder weapon had been inside the chessboard, she replied that she had interrogated Knight and learned about the chessboard's secret. She claimed that the interrogation was just a routine chat of the kind that she had with all new inmates, and that Knight had returned to his cell afterward.
Edgeworth wondered whether the victim had made it back to his cell, but Laguarde claimed that she had no motive to kill Knight, since Kanis was who she was after. Edgeworth disagreed with this as well, pointing out the chess game that the two had been playing. He said that Laguarde must have figured out that there was a connection between Knight and Kanis, but she had taken it further and believed that Knight was one of Kanis's henchmen. After finding the chisel inside the chessboard, she had panicked and killed Knight.
Laguarde then pointed to the autopsy report, which stated that the fatal wound was four inches deep. This meant that the chisel was not the murder weapon after all. Edgeworth rethought his logic and realized that it had been misled from the beginning. The false murder weapon had been planted to get Kanis expelled from the prison. Edgeworth realized that the real murder weapon was Kanis's knife, which had been delivered to Laguarde along with other evidence related to the assassin. Laguarde had detached the bell from the knife and attached it to the chisel.
Laguarde refused to permit a reinvestigation of the prison. Edgeworth stalled for time by saying that he knew the location of the murder weapon. He eventually realized the meaning of the metal detector's reaction to Ally the alligator: she had swallowed the murder weapon. Regina Berry had the alligator open her mouth, and the knife was indeed inside. Now caught, Fifi Laguarde despaired at how Bodhidharma Kanis had ruined the paradise that she had created.
Aftermath
- 12:34 PM
Forensics confirmed the presence of traces of the victim's blood on Kanis's knife. However, whether Knight really was a subordinate of Kanis had yet to be seen. Eustace Winner set off to investigate this matter. Before Gavèlle left as well, she warned Edgeworth that the truth was not as important to the world as he believed it to be, and that the law was not meant to bend to the will of an individual.
Meanwhile, Saint had been released, though he still seemed frightened by Edgeworth. He wondered whether Knight had trusted him, since he had harbored enough hate toward somebody else to kill him. Edgeworth reassured Saint that Knight had trusted him enough to request a chisel hidden inside a chessboard to attempt a prison escape. Saint was glad to hear this, and he vowed to be a great animal tamer for Knight's sake. He and Berry gave Edgeworth a Berry Big Circus promotional poster and invited the gang to the next show before leaving for practice.
Edgeworth thanked Fender for allowing him a way to investigate the case. Fender asked Edgeworth whether he would like to be a defense attorney for real. Edgeworth, Gumshoe and Faraday all found this rather preposterous, since Edgeworth was a prosecutor, but Fender insisted that he was being serious before leaving for the day. Edgeworth pondered whether he should really try to fulfill his original dream of becoming a defense attorney like his father.
Development
- This episode was made first in order to establish a good grasp on Verity Gavèlle, Eustace Winner, and Eddie Fender, all of whom would be introduced here.[1]
- In the Japanese version of the game, Eddie Fender gives California rolls to the prison inmates after returning from his travels abroad. The intended joke here was Fender bringing home food that seemed Japanese to foreigners but is rarely sold in the home country. In order to maintain this joke in the official English localization, Fender is now seen carrying weenies made to look like an octopus. This is a nod to the tako sausages, which were created in Japan. Thus maintaining the joke of Fender carrying food that seems American but not actually made in the country.[2]
Continuity
- Frank Sahwit's first and only previous appearance was in the first case of the first game in the series: Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney. He was put in the game to signify the tenth anniversary of the Ace Attorney series.
- A parrot similar in appearance to Yanni Yogi's Polly can be seen in one of the cells.
- When Edgeworth asks Frank Sahwit how he knew for sure that Bronco Knight was dead upon first seeing his body, Sahwit answers that it was because it wasn't the first time for him to have seen a dead body. He also states that it was his first time seeing a body that someone else had killed, having been responsible for the previous murder that he had witnessed.
- The Berry Big Circus was the setting of Turnabout Big Top. The poster that can be seen in The Captive Turnabout prominently features Max Galactica, who was the defendant in the aforementioned case.
- After talking to Simeon Saint, Edgeworth states that his options are limited due to lacking prosecutorial authority. Gumshoe recommends borrowing an attorney’s badge, which is something Edgeworth had already done previously.
- Fender refers to Gumshoe as "Detective Flatfoot Sholmes", acting as a reference to Herlock Sholmes from The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles.
Cultural references
- One of the cats in the prison is called Wagahai, which is a reference to the novel I Am a Cat (Wagahai wa Neko de Aru in the original Japanese) by Natsume Sōseki. A cat named Wagahai also appears in The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles as Soseki Natsume's pet cat.
- Simeon first recalls Eustace Winner's name as "DeWinner", which may in fact be a subtle reference to the unofficial fan translation, with Winner's name in the fan translation being "Sebastian Debeste".
- Eddie Fender directly quotes the title of defense lawyer F. Lee Bailey's book The Defense Never Rests.[citation needed]
- When Kay asks Simeon about the types of animals he works with, he responds with "Lions? Tigers? BEARS?! Oh my!", an iconic line from The Wizard of Oz.
- Kay introduces herself to Regina as a "Great Thief extraordinaire and Mr. Associate Defense Attorney's Great Associate", prompting Edgeworth to think to himself, "This self-introduction brought to you by the word 'convoluted'." This may be a reference to Sesame Street, in which each episode ends with a declaration of sponsorship by the Letter and Number of the Day.
In the unofficial translation
- The cat mentioned above is named Nermal, a reference to a fictional cat from the Garfield franchise; the prison cat is orange, resembling the titular protagonist.
- In the same conversation as the Nermal reference, Edgeworth says the line, "what we have here is a failure to communicate," an oft-misquoted line from the film Cool Hand Luke.
- Frank Sahwit refers to himself as "your friendly neighbourhood witness." This is a reference to the fictional comic book super hero Spider-Man, who often refers to himself as "your friendly neighbourhood Spider-Man."
- Carcerato's polar bear is named Rocky, a reference to the Rocky franchise.
- The book titles in the holding cell are spoofs of titles of existing popular books, such as The Great Escape in 80 Days and Crime and Establishment: How to Make Money in Prison.
- At one point during Fifi Laguarde's testimony at the end of the case, Kay will try to encourage Edgeworth by saying Laguarde's attack was "just a flesh wound," a possible reference to the film Monty Python and the Holy Grail.
Typos
- In the aftermath of Fender pointing out Sahwit's Bracelet, Fender says "That's weird. He should be clining onto that bracelet...", instead of "clinging onto".
- When examining the Security Camera Footage with Li'l Vee, specifically the black figure, the resulting dialogue begins with Edgeworth saying "Sir... Look!", a dialogue that should be instead belong to Gumshoe.
References
- ↑ Ash (2016-08-01). "Portraying Mitsurugi Reiji's Conflict and Various Parents & Children (2011)". Gyakuten Saiban Library. Retrieved 2022-11-17.
- ↑ Kate Gray (2024-08-09). "Hands On: 'Ace Attorney Investigations Collection' Devs Discuss California Rolls, Chibi Sprites & Puns". Nintendo Life. Retrieved 2024-08-12.