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This was the most evil man in history.
In the early 1900s, a lawyer named Otto Matic quietly became one of the most successful attorneys anyone had ever seen. He never lost a case. Not once. Clients paid him fortunes. Judges knew his name. Other lawyers dreaded seeing him on the opposite side of the courtroom.
At first, people chalked it up to talent. Some lawyers are just better than others—until they started comparing notes.
Over the years, a disturbing pattern emerged. Every time a lawyer’s client was scheduled to face Otto in court, something happened. The client didn’t just lose. The client didn’t show up. They vanished. No change of address. No goodbye. No explanation. Just gone. In case after case, Otto won by default because the other side simply disappeared.
Whispers started: he wasn’t winning cases—he was removing obstacles.
The accusations reached the police, but there was no solid evidence. So authorities set a trap: a fake trial, a fake defendant, and 24-hour surveillance on the “client.” The night before court, officers watched as Otto’s car drove slowly back and forth past the decoy’s house. Then Otto spotted something—a face, a parked car that shouldn’t have been there—and sped off into the night. The chase failed. He was gone.
He never appeared in court again.
Later, investigators discovered something chilling in travel records: Otto Matic had purchased a ticket to flee the country on a ship bound for Europe.
The ship’s name was Titanic.The Lawyer Who Never Lost Because His Enemies Disappeared
By Inspector StoryThis was the most evil man in history.
In the early 1900s, a lawyer named Otto Matic quietly became one of the most successful attorneys anyone had ever seen. He never lost a case. Not once. Clients paid him fortunes. Judges knew his name. Other lawyers dreaded seeing him on the opposite side of the courtroom.
At first, people chalked it up to talent. Some lawyers are just better than others—until they started comparing notes.
Over the years, a disturbing pattern emerged. Every time a lawyer’s client was scheduled to face Otto in court, something happened. The client didn’t just lose. The client didn’t show up. They vanished. No change of address. No goodbye. No explanation. Just gone. In case after case, Otto won by default because the other side simply disappeared.
Whispers started: he wasn’t winning cases—he was removing obstacles.
The accusations reached the police, but there was no solid evidence. So authorities set a trap: a fake trial, a fake defendant, and 24-hour surveillance on the “client.” The night before court, officers watched as Otto’s car drove slowly back and forth past the decoy’s house. Then Otto spotted something—a face, a parked car that shouldn’t have been there—and sped off into the night. The chase failed. He was gone.
He never appeared in court again.
Later, investigators discovered something chilling in travel records: Otto Matic had purchased a ticket to flee the country on a ship bound for Europe.
The ship’s name was Titanic.The Lawyer Who Never Lost Because His Enemies Disappeared