![]() ![]() I ran out of picture space, but Shuichi’s deduction (you can kinda see it in the panels in point 1) shows the body gently floating down into the tank, where it doesn’t even make a splash.īuuuut whatever. Granted, the culprit would only be dropping it a meter or so, but when it’s a dense, ninety-pound human body, any amount of distance would wind up causing a big disturbance to the water and, very possibly, the glass pane. Placing it in the tank carefully-“with their own hands,” even, as Ouma had said-wouldn’t be possible. If ‘body’ also includes the culprits arms, the culprit would have no choice but to drop the body in from their place on the windowsill. Standing on the sill is fine, but reaching your body through is an automatic out. Stickin’ your body through the window is an automatic out, but standing on the sill is-” Monosuke: “Last time we were asked that question, we decided it was okay. ![]() Korekiyo Shinguji: “You say the culprit placed their foot on the windowsill? Isn’t that against school rules?” (I ran out of image space so here are some quotes!) ![]() They really stress multiple times throughout the trial that if this trick was to work, the culprit must place the body in the tank carefully to keep the glass pane from shifting.īut according to Monosuke, carefully placing it wasn’t an option. Shuichi skips over this point in closing arguments as well.Īlong the same lines, the ankle cuff that Ryoma always wears is missing from the recovered items. It makes sense-the piranhas wouldn’t be able to get at his flesh without getting through the clothing first.īut during his investigation, his clothes were recovered completely intact? Huh? In the animation depicting him getting eaten by piranhas, Ryoma’s clothes are torn to shreds. It’s funny, because in the trial, they even have a discussion about how “there’s no other rope but the one in the gym.” This point is also not addressed in Shuichi’s closing argument. And also, why would they bother using the wire from the tennis court net if they had extra rope to use in the warehouse? We can only assume the culprit acquired it from the warehouse.īut if the culprit knew that rope was readily available in the warehouse, why would they use the rope that was laying in the gym for their murder plan? It would only draw suspicion to themselves. The small section of rope tied to the inner tube came from nowhere. I guess the culprit could have thrown it through from poolside, but wouldn’t that risk disturbing the body and the scene?… Actually, better question, why would the culprit bother returning the rope to the gym at all? So how exactly does the rope end up backstage? We don’t know for sure. ![]() The culprit can’t throw the rope through from the window if they had already untied the rope and jumped down from it. His conclusion ends here, right after the rope falls into the pool. But this theory contradicts what Shuichi deducts in his closing argument. This is the theory that Kiyo made in the trial-that the rope was thrown in from the pool window-and everyone just sorta goes with it. Angie mentioned that it had moved during the night, so it’s implied that the culprit had used it and moved it, but how exactly it got backstage was never fully addressed. The rope allegedly used to create the ropeway was found backstage at Himiko’s magic show. I’ll take a closer look at other stuff-people’s lies, contradictions, the motive videos, etc.-of Ch. Note: This post is focused only on the physical evidence and deductions of Chapter 2. Chapter 2: Issues with Shuichi’s Reasoning and Other Strange Things (DRV3) ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |