Does the victim have any other injuries?
Was death instantaneous?
If not how long was he able to move?
Is there any sort of residue inside the victim?
Very Well Done and Yep that is what I was thinking. Murderer uses a device from the outside that holds the inside key and turns it.M.Holmes wrote: Occam's razor then:Spoiler:
Part one does not work because of both being in the room. The murder with both, and it was murderlucky777 wrote: Silly theoryMaybeSpoiler:If not then more questionsSpoiler:
Does the victim have any other injuries?
Was death instantaneous?
If not how long was he able to move?
Is there any sort of residue inside the victim?
That answer doesn't work. You said:sstimson wrote:Very Well Done and Yep that is what I was thinking. Murderer uses a device from the outside that holds the inside key and turns it.M.Holmes wrote: Occam's razor then:Spoiler:
How does the culprit get through the force field to exit the room?sstimson wrote:The room now has a force field that is active as soon as the inside key is placed in the inside lock
- Get your Detective Conan bobbleheads today! - 
I also said that it was active when the key was in the lock, but I did not say that the key needed to be in a certain location.c-square wrote:That answer doesn't work. You said:sstimson wrote:Very Well Done and Yep that is what I was thinking. Murderer uses a device from the outside that holds the inside key and turns it.M.Holmes wrote: Occam's razor then:Spoiler:
How does the culprit get through the force field to exit the room?sstimson wrote:The room now has a force field that is active as soon as the inside key is placed in the inside lock
Of course M.Holmes answer is the correct one. I'm just arguing like sstimson usually does.
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You did not do the math. If each pencil is worth 10 cents and say one pencil size is 1/16 inch by 1/16 in by 1 inch, then how many pencils will fill a area 200 yards by 200 yards by 100 yards?lucky777 wrote: Well to me the case is fine, just the motive is sort of weird to me. I mean killing someone to steal pencils? And man what a job the killer will have moving box crates full of pencils
Not sure how you got trillions... My math, assuming that it's 100 yards in all directions (like you originally said) and the pencils are 8 inches long and 1/16 wide, came out to 86,400,000 pencils which would be $8,640,000 if you filled the warehouse to the brim.sstimson wrote:You did not do the math. If each pencil is worth 10 cents and say one pencil size is 1/16 inch by 1/16 in by 1 inch, then how many pencils will fill a area 200 yards by 200 yards by 100 yards?lucky777 wrote: Well to me the case is fine, just the motive is sort of weird to me. I mean killing someone to steal pencils? And man what a job the killer will have moving box crates full of pencils
Spoiler:
I got trillions like this first to make things a cubic inch has 265 Pencils .Yes I could have used real pencils, but I want to make the problem easier and so make each pencil an inch long so 8 times you numberM.Holmes wrote:Not sure how you got trillions... My math, assuming that it's 100 yards in all directions (like you originally said) and the pencils are 8 inches long and 1/16 wide, came out to 86,400,000 pencils which would be $8,640,000 if you filled the warehouse to the brim.sstimson wrote:You did not do the math. If each pencil is worth 10 cents and say one pencil size is 1/16 inch by 1/16 in by 1 inch, then how many pencils will fill a area 200 yards by 200 yards by 100 yards?lucky777 wrote: Well to me the case is fine, just the motive is sort of weird to me. I mean killing someone to steal pencils? And man what a job the killer will have moving box crates full of pencils
Spoiler:
Although:
A. The logistics of such a robbery would be a nightmare
B. Once you had the pencils, how would you sell them? It's not like you can move them on the streets like drugs or get some retail store to buy from you