Agent Peters was waiting for Detectives Holmes and Smith as they came into the Seattle Field Office for the FBI. The fact that the suspect in question, a man by the name Dymixious Drake, didn't live in Seattle, but yet had murdered a man in Seattle was enough to get both the city police and the highest law enforcement agency in the country looking for him was more than enough make the case and hunt for him serious.
"Any sign of him in Seattle?" Agent Peters asked the two detectives.
"No," Detective Smith grumbled, "We're getting flyers put out... but so far no one's seen him in any way that would lead us to him."
"I figured as much," Agent Peters grumbled, "He wasn't at his home/compound when we searched it... though what we've found there is disturbing to say the least... I'd figured there would be some hope to find him here in Seattle... since crooks can disappear here more easily."
Both detectives nodded. They had searched the compound in which Dymixious Drake supposedly lived based on what very little evidence there was, and most of it only accessible to the FBI. What they found only confirmed to them that Dymixious was not one to stay on the right side of the law between large barrels carrying what they'd figured had to be poison while he had a wall in the same building in the compound covered with faces, mostly taken from newspapers, and nearly all of them had a big X drawn through them. They only thing that they could draw from this was that either Dymixious or his father were involved in a massive poisoning operation that seemed to be targeting people around the globe.
"So... did your facial recognition software get anything on the pictures?" Detective Watson Holmes asked as he looked to Agent Peters.
She sighed and lead them toward her office in the FBI's regional office building where they could then try to coordinate their next move. The detectives served that sigh and figured that something was up or was frustrating the FBI Agent that was assisting them in the investigation into the murder of Lionel Ulysses. Neither detective knew for sure what it was, and so they quietly followed her. Eventually they came the door to Agent Peters' office and they were let in. They took seats in a pair of chairs in front of the FBI agent's desk and waited for the answer.
"We got some things back," Agent Peters answered with a sigh, "but not all of them. The one thing we've gotten out of the pictures of those we did have records for were that they were all involved in some major criminal activity of some kind, ranging from low level street crime to mob activity to murder... And to make things even more odd is that the cities where these guys had been living had been going through investigating various murders
"So, this guy has been going around killing criminals or those he thinks are criminals?" Detective Smith asked.
"With the men we can identify from the pictures with or facial recognition software," Agent Peters answered, "The rest we don't know on... and that will have to wait until we actually catch Dymixious."
"But we can assume that they're all dead?" Detective Holmes asked, to which Agent Peters nodded.
"Yes," Agent Peters nodded, "so it would appear that our Dymixious is a serial vigilante... of an extreme variety."
Both detectives sighed heavily as they nodded
"How did your lab handle the poison substances?" Detective Smith asked, "Our lab cam back this morning and said the stuff was toxic but couldn't identify the poison concoction."
"Ours is still analyzing it, but it would appear to have Hemlock, Lead, Mercury, and what looks like a couple of powerful nerve poisons in it as well," Agent Peters said slowly, "definitely lethal and in quantities that I doubt he's dealing with a rat infestation in his house."
"Have you gotten any autopsy reports on those in those photos that you could identify?" Detective Holmes wondered.
"Not yet," Agent Peters spoke, "but with what we're finding... I'd say we're getting compelling proof that Dymixious was involved... or at least enough to question him on it."
"Now... if only we could find him," Detective Watson Holmes commented.