Criminal Case Wiki
Advertisement

Template:CharacInfobox/MSMember Dr. Trevor Finn was the killer of reality TV star Jimmy Lewis in Shark Attack! (Case #1 of Pacific Bay) and a suspect in the murder investigation of businesswoman Karen Knight in The Sting of Death (Case #58 of Pacific Bay).

Profile

Trevor is a 56-year-old, gray-haired shark expert who served Ocean Shore's Sunny Beach. He wears a sky blue fisherman hat with a sea blue on the bottom half and a shark fin on the left side. He also wears a collared sea blue plaided shirt and sky blue undershirt. On his shirt, he has an ID card on his left side and a pen with a shark cover in his right pocket. Besides that, he is seen wearing a shell necklace, wears glasses, has wrinkles and a goatee.

In his first appearance, he sports a jellyfish sting on his neck and it is known that Trevor is in contact with parrots and eats hot dogs.

In his second appearance, his jellyfish sting has healed. It is discovered that he owns a cat.

Height

5'6"

Age 56
Weight 190 lbs
Eyes blue
Blood A+

Events of Criminal Case

Shark Attack!

Trevor was a shark expert serving in the Ocean Shore of Pacific Bay.

When Amy was told by Chief Marquez to show the player the beaches of Ocean Shore, a shark attack doubling as a murder ringed up without warning and saw Trevor killing the shark. After the team investigated the shores and shipped the victim's body for autopsy, they opted to talk to Trevor. Trevor wanted to introduce himself but Amy countered that a man was murdered in the shore. Trevor enjoyed seeing the shark eat a human but had to kill the shark with the harpoon before the shark finished eating the victim.

The second time the team had to talk to Trevor was after a map was found at the boardwalk market and restored by forensic powder. Trevor thanked the team for finding his map and even described the shark's route but Amy told Trevor that was how the victim was murdered. Trevor even admitted that he had to take care of parrots to supplement his income and go on a hot dog diet since he did not see enough sharks nowadays.

It was later revealed that Trevor was responsible for Ice P's murder. Trevor killed Ice P because he drove the sharks out the shoreline to make his reality TV show safe to film and made Trevor become a parrot-keeper in a zoo in Pacific Bay. This infuriated Trevor because he couldn't be the shark expert he was once before, so he lured Ice P to a secluded spot on a beach, wrapped Ice P's hands with sticky tape, cut his fingers out, and threw him into the waters so that a shark would kill him. Judge Dante sentenced Trevor to life without parole.

The Sting of Death

Trevor became part of another murder investigation after Amy and the player found his hat in Meteor Systems' bunker. She was shocked to hear that Trevor was in The Wastes for whatever reason. Trevor was thankful that the player came, since Meteor Systems captured him and locked him up to take care of their sharks. He was not sure as to what Meteor Systems was planning, but was without a doubt sure that it was evil.

Amy and the player had to interrogate Trevor again after they found a USB stick belonging to him about the sharks he was monitoring. However according to Hannah, Karen hid encrypted information on it and wanted Trevor to warn the team about it. Trevor explained that if he gave them the flash drive, then they would kill him. Amy wondered who 'they' were, but Trevor was too scared to tell them who they were.

Trevor was found innocent for once after the team after they found it was Alden Greene that killed Karen Knight.

Trivia

  • Trevor is modeled and named after Pitchingace88 (real name Trevor),[1]Let's Play commentator on YouTube well known among the Criminal Case fanbase for his playthrough videos of the game.
  • Trevor is one of the characters in Pacific Bay who make physical appearances in two districts.

Case appearances

Gallery

References

  1. Pitchingace88 (March 13, 2014). "Criminal Case Pacific Bay - Case #1 - Shark Attack! - Chapter 1". YouTube. Retrieved July 12, 2014.

Navigation

Advertisement