‘THE SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN’
“THE SOLID GOLD KIDNAPPING”
A criminal organization, known as "O.S.O.", specializes in kidnapping high ranking U.S. representatives. Although Colonel Steve Austin has already thwarted one of their kidnappings, he is unable to stop them from grabbing William Henry Cameron right from under O.S.I.'s nose.
(For those who have never seen me mention UNReel before, it is an off-shoot of UNIT which concerns itself with providing plausible deniability to people and events which should be kept secret from the public. Through the use of manufactured books, movies, TV shows, etc., it can be asserted that if somebody in the public claimed to have seen one of those operatives at work (U.N.C.L.E. agents or James Bond) or the real cause behind some disaster [the destruction of Big Ben by a spaceship], UNReel leaps into action to convince the rest of the world that the claimant was deluded by something else, like a movie they saw on the late show. It is a technique that may have begun with the writings about Sherlock Holmes in the Strand which led people to believe he was fictional. Sherlock’s brother Mycroft, who was the British government, saw the potential in that concept and created UNReel. It has been used for the aforementioned MI6 agent [whichever one is currently using the alias of “James Bond”], agents from U.N.C.L.E., superheroes, the various moon-bases, and a certain Time Lord from Gallifrey.)
Here in the Real World, we see this utilized as weather balloons and swamp gas to splain away UFOs.
“IDENTITY CRISIS”
Nelson Brenner, a top CIA operative, is really a double agent who finds it necessary to rid himself of a fellow spy and make it look like a mugging. Brenner inadvertently leaves tiny clues in a photo shop at a carnival, on Henderson's corpse at the beach, in a tape recording he makes while in his Agency-approved identity as a speech-writing consultant - the kind of clues that no one would ever pick up on. No one, that is, except the rumpled, redoubtable Lt. Columbo. The indefatigable detective will find himself followed by mysterious agents, visited by the top man himself and entertained with a recording of "Madame Butterfly" in Brenner's own mansion before solving this difficult case.
So by the early 1970s, Ambassador Scott became known as “Phil Corrigan, Agent X-9”, the Director of the Secret Intelligence Agency. He then established a cover identity beyond that, traveling under the alias of “Larry Tate”, an advertising executive from New York City who lived in Westport. It was a trick one of his operators (he never could get the hang of calling them operatives), code-named Geronimo, used as well. He would assume the identity of an insurance agent named AJ Henderson from Westport. (Only “Corrigan” looked more like Tate than Geronimo looked like Henderson.)
The writing was on the wall for X-9 because of the Steinmetz fiasco, and so he submitted his resignation. But before he stepped down from the Directorship, Scott performed one last official bit of business. He sanctioned the assassination of Nelson Brenner before he could go to trial for the murder of “Geronimo”. The only stipulation on the contract killing was that it had to look like an accident or natural causes.
When Selena Kyle, AKA Catwoman, perished by falling into a deep chasm in the caves beneath stately Wayne Manor, Bastet possessed her lifeless corpse, rejuvenating it, and resumed the Catwoman’s larcenous career. Eventually this escalated to becoming a paid assassin. (It would be almost a decade before she was caught, but Bastet simply fled the shell of flesh so that it looked like she died of a heart attack.)
“Eve” carried out that contract killing by making it look as though the vehicle bringing Nelson Brenner to court on the first day of trial had a terrible accident. All in the van were killed along with Brenner – the driver, Brenner’s attorney, and the three detectives assigned to guard him. Director Corrigan pulled a few strings to make certain that Lt. Columbo would not become involved in the investigation of the crash in any way. He had familiarized himself with Columbo’s career and realized that no matter how thorough “Eve” had been in the execution of the hit, the Lieutenant was bound to find one little niggling piece of evidence that could expose the plot.
TV SHOWS CITED:
- 'The Six Million Dollar Man'
- 'Columbo'
- 'The Prisoner'
- 'Danger Man'
- 'Batman'
- 'Hart To Hart'
- 'It Takes A Thief'
- 'Bewitched'
- 'The Man From U.N.C.L.E.'
- 'Climax' ("Casino Royale")
- 'Doctor Who'
BCnU!
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