He enlisted the help of someone in the NYPD's records department.
She, Sylvia Kandrey, went out to lunch with him.
Over a table, they discussed following procedure.

" Don't push me, Shaw - I tend to say no when I'm pushed. "
" I'm sorry if I was - "
Their exiting the restaurant was interrupted by a bag snatcher crossing their path.
Sylvia took off after him.
Mark shot a trashcan lid at the snatcher with his power baton, knocking him off his feet.
" Nice arrest, Sgt. Kandrey. Good thing the mook tripped and lost his balance running. "
Sylvia was left with the credit for the catch, some compliments from her colleagues, and a warning from her boss.
He'd seen her with Manhunter, and didn't particularly care for that.

(She's snacking on an orange slice.)

She tried to retrieve it again, and found that it was completely gone.
Suspicious about Paula's appearance coinciding with the file's disappearance, she looked into that one's records - and found them restricted him.
The suspicion grew further. Looking at Paula's face and Ashley Mavis Powell's, she noticed similarities.
She communicated those similarities to Mark, who snuck over to Paula's empty apartment - and found all the signs of an identity being discarded for another.
" Paula ", meanwhile, visited Sylvia.
Mark inferred that Paula's - Powell's - obvious talent with computers extended to being able to cause the sudden erasure Sylvia'd described to him.
Concluding that she was in danger, he headed over to her apartment - and, with his mask's telescopic vision, saw the signs of a struggle.

(The gun's Sylvia's - she'd gone for it when Paula'd showed up, and had been disarmed.)

Powell flailed at Sylvia.

Sylvia's not having followed procedure in this matter got her put on suspension, pending review by Internal Affairs.

Five issues later, Mark confronted Powell again, this time in New Orleans.

" And here I intend to stay! And this time, I'll withhold none of my power! "
Mark'd come prepared for her power, though - his mask was papier-mâché, and his baton wood.
She pulled a gun.
He sent his baton into her ribs.

She went to work.

(That's some sensitive electromagnetikinesis.)

(They didn't.
Powell was used several years later in " Oracle: Year One ", written by John Ostrander and Kim Yale.
Issue #5 here was written by Yale, pencilled by Mary Mitchell, inked by Romeo Tanghal, lettered by John Costanza, and colored by Julianna Ferriter.
#10 was written by Yale and Ostrander, penciled by Doug Rice, inked by Pablo Marcos, lettered by Albert De Guzman, and colored by Ferriter.
Pagecount's 7 of 22 from the former, and 3 and <3/10ths of 22 from the latter.
After the arc #10's part of, Sylvia showed up in Mark's life again.)
She, Sylvia Kandrey, went out to lunch with him.
Over a table, they discussed following procedure.

" Don't push me, Shaw - I tend to say no when I'm pushed. "
" I'm sorry if I was - "
Their exiting the restaurant was interrupted by a bag snatcher crossing their path.
Sylvia took off after him.
Mark shot a trashcan lid at the snatcher with his power baton, knocking him off his feet.
" Nice arrest, Sgt. Kandrey. Good thing the mook tripped and lost his balance running. "
Sylvia was left with the credit for the catch, some compliments from her colleagues, and a warning from her boss.
He'd seen her with Manhunter, and didn't particularly care for that.

(She's snacking on an orange slice.)

She tried to retrieve it again, and found that it was completely gone.
Suspicious about Paula's appearance coinciding with the file's disappearance, she looked into that one's records - and found them restricted him.
The suspicion grew further. Looking at Paula's face and Ashley Mavis Powell's, she noticed similarities.
She communicated those similarities to Mark, who snuck over to Paula's empty apartment - and found all the signs of an identity being discarded for another.
" Paula ", meanwhile, visited Sylvia.
Mark inferred that Paula's - Powell's - obvious talent with computers extended to being able to cause the sudden erasure Sylvia'd described to him.
Concluding that she was in danger, he headed over to her apartment - and, with his mask's telescopic vision, saw the signs of a struggle.

(The gun's Sylvia's - she'd gone for it when Paula'd showed up, and had been disarmed.)

Powell flailed at Sylvia.

Sylvia's not having followed procedure in this matter got her put on suspension, pending review by Internal Affairs.

Five issues later, Mark confronted Powell again, this time in New Orleans.

" And here I intend to stay! And this time, I'll withhold none of my power! "
Mark'd come prepared for her power, though - his mask was papier-mâché, and his baton wood.
She pulled a gun.
He sent his baton into her ribs.

She went to work.

(That's some sensitive electromagnetikinesis.)

(They didn't.
Powell was used several years later in " Oracle: Year One ", written by John Ostrander and Kim Yale.
Issue #5 here was written by Yale, pencilled by Mary Mitchell, inked by Romeo Tanghal, lettered by John Costanza, and colored by Julianna Ferriter.
#10 was written by Yale and Ostrander, penciled by Doug Rice, inked by Pablo Marcos, lettered by Albert De Guzman, and colored by Ferriter.
Pagecount's 7 of 22 from the former, and 3 and <3/10ths of 22 from the latter.
After the arc #10's part of, Sylvia showed up in Mark's life again.)
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Date: 2019-10-15 09:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-10-16 07:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-10-16 09:14 pm (UTC)