Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Always Murder

 Always Murder
type
FeatureClass
 Always Murder
label
Always Murder
 Always Murder
page
AlwaysMurder
 Always Murder
comment
In nearly any Crime and Punishment Series, by the end of the episode, someone will always be heading to the coroner's office, no matter how things start out.
Generally, the vast majority of episodes will be about a killing straight through, from beginning to end. It'll either be a straight-up murder or perhaps a burglary gone wrong, but by the time our heroes are on the scene, there's a dead body and someone out there to answer for that. But that's not all. In the other episodes, when the show will start out investigate a missing person or a heist or something, someone will inevitably end up dead halfway through, killed by one of the perpetrators of the original crime (or the victim, or the detective, or the witness's twin brother's sister-in-law, etc.). It's a law of nature.
If the main characters are specifically homicide detectives, this trope is justified as long as the series sticks to the first variant. In any other case, however… there may not be honor among thieves, but they don't bump each other off that often.
Note that this trope only requires a crime that is investigated as a murder shows up. In many cases, it's Never Suicide as well, but this trope still applies if what looks like a murder turns out to be suicide or an accident.
Sometimes coupled with Murder Is the Best Solution, if the murders in a series are frequently committed as solutions to minuscule problems. Compare Mystery Magnet, where everywhere someone goes a crime is committed. When real-life news broadcasts show nothing but murders, you have a case of If It Bleeds, It Leads.
Applied, of course, for Rule of Drama. What crime can possibly be more vile (and thus its investigation and the eventual Reveal — more dramatic) than taking a life of someone we care about (the author will make sure of that), the highest asset in human society?
 Always Murder
fetched
2024-02-14T07:29:46Z
 Always Murder
parsed
2024-02-14T07:29:46Z
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to AccidentalMurder: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to AceAttorneyInvestigations: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to AmbiguousSyntax: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to AssholeVictim: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to Averted: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to Castle2009: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to ClearMyName: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to DeadFic: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to HeroAntagonist: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to MercyKill: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to MysteryMagnet: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to MythArc: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to PlayedForLaughs: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to RippedFromTheHeadlines: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to SpecialGuest: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to Subversion: Not an Item - UNKNOWN
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to Subverted: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to SubvertedTrope: Not an Item - CAT
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to TheClash: Not an Item - IGNORE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to WholeEpisodeFlashback: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to fridgehorror: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to justifiedtrope: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingComment
Dropped link to lampshadehanging: Not an Item - FEATURE
 Always Murder
processingUnknown
Averted
 Always Murder
processingUnknown
Subversion
 Always Murder
processingUnknown
Castle (2009)
 Always Murder
processingUnknown
AceAttorneyInvestigations
 Always Murder
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Always Murder / int_1463a028
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_1463a028
comment
In Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, it's Always Rape instead, but often there's a murder too. In fact, there are so many murders on SVU, it's the only show in the franchise to have the Medical Examiner Promoted to Opening Titles. This is achieved by making the obligatory crime a rape-homicide, have it first be a rape and then tack on a homicide later, have the perp be a rapist who then "graduates" to murder, or just have the murder victim be a kid (Special Victims deals with the child homicides, regardless of whether or not molestation is involved).
One of the most forced examples is "Parts", where they find a severed head in a junkyard and call the SVU because they think that it has traces of semen. At the end of the day, they find that the victim died in an accident, there was no sex-related crime and her body was dismembered by an organ trafficking ring. The episode then turns into a Very Special Episode about people who need an organ transplant but can't pay for it.
Another particularly forced example is "Shadow", which features a generic double homicide. SVU is only called in because it looks like it might be a murder-suicide, which being "domestic violence" (the victims are a husband and wife) supposedly falls under SVU jurisdiction. Once it's clear the crime was double homicide SVU is kept on the case anyway, because "the Gillettes were Special Victims". This makes no sense because, even within the universe of the show, the NYPD has Major Case to handle crimes like this, especially once the prime suspect turns out to have been involved in a major fraud she was already under investigation for. The episode even introduced a Special Guest character (Det. Asok Ramsey from Special Frauds, played by Naveen Andrews) rather than feature a Crossover with CI characters (who never crossed over onto any other Law & Order show while it was still running, though Kathryn Erbe did appear as Eames on SVU after it had been cancelled).
 Always Murder / int_1463a028
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_1463a028
featureConfidence
1.0
 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_1463a028
 Always Murder / int_1df8f66b
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_1df8f66b
comment
Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries: The case might start out as locating a missing hat, but someone's going to die soon enough. The title should be something of a clue.
 Always Murder / int_1df8f66b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_1df8f66b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_1df8f66b
 Always Murder / int_1e5cd6e5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_1e5cd6e5
comment
Agaton Sax: This series inverts the trope. Since it's a children's series, there are no murders or even suspected cases of murder.
 Always Murder / int_1e5cd6e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_1e5cd6e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Agaton Sax
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_1e5cd6e5
 Always Murder / int_1face1d7
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_1face1d7
comment
Adam-12, a Dragnet spin-off, also managed to avoid this trope in showing the average working day of two regular cops. Of course, when they didn't avoid it, as in the famous episode "Elegy For A Pig", it really hits home.
 Always Murder / int_1face1d7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_1face1d7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Adam-12
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_1face1d7
 Always Murder / int_22211d68
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_22211d68
comment
Bones:
This is true mainly because half the cast only works with dead people. There's always a corpse, but it isn't always murder-a few deaths have turned out to be accidents.
Recent notable subversion, "The Patriot in Purgatory": Vasiri identified the remains of a homeless vet who had died days after the attack on the Pentagon on 9/11. By the end of the episode, they confirmed that he had died from injuries sustained while pulling people out of the rubble.
A late-season episode "The Lost in the Found" has a prep school student's remains being found in a park. While the initial signs point to a murder, it turns out the girl actually committed suicide in a very complex way that would've made it look like her bullies had killed her, which would've led to their arrests.
 Always Murder / int_22211d68
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_22211d68
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bones
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_22211d68
 Always Murder / int_2221ecbd
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_2221ecbd
comment
CSI: NY, on the other hand, has had a number of deaths ruled as accidents.
 Always Murder / int_2221ecbd
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_2221ecbd
featureConfidence
1.0
 CSI: NY
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_2221ecbd
 Always Murder / int_22e860f4
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_22e860f4
comment
In Psych, there are several mere attempted murders, plus a few times when a death was made to look like an animal attack, though Shawn insisted said attacks were murders and was always proven right.
 Always Murder / int_22e860f4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_22e860f4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Psych
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_22e860f4
 Always Murder / int_22f240e4
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_22f240e4
comment
Cannon was a homicide cop turned private eye. His cases fell into these categories:
Clear My Name cases, where his client was falsely accused of murder;
Cases where a private client hired him to find a loved one’s murderer;
Cases where he was hired (often by an insurance company) to investigate an unusual death that inevitably turned out to be murder; and
Cases that started out with no dead body at all, but someone was sure to be killed by act 2.
 Always Murder / int_22f240e4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_22f240e4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cannon
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_22f240e4
 Always Murder / int_23126dc6
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_23126dc6
comment
Every single case in Criminal Case involves a murder. Sometimes, other lesser crimes (e.g. kidnappings, drug trafficking, theft, illegal trespassing) are involved in the Additional Investigation, but the main chapters is always about the murder.
 Always Murder / int_23126dc6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_23126dc6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Criminal Case (Video Game)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_23126dc6
 Always Murder / int_29516906
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_29516906
comment
Dragnet managed to avoid this trope by rotating Joe Friday and his various partners through all divisions of the LAPD. As a result, they proved it was possible to craft a compelling half-hour of television about a hunt for a shoplifter.
Adam-12, a Dragnet spin-off, also managed to avoid this trope in showing the average working day of two regular cops. Of course, when they didn't avoid it, as in the famous episode "Elegy For A Pig", it really hits home.
 Always Murder / int_29516906
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_29516906
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dragnet (Franchise)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_29516906
 Always Murder / int_31cf184b
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_31cf184b
comment
Below Board tends to zigzag this trope, as while the main characters are technically investigating burglaries, there's always someone who ends up dead by the end of each episode.
 Always Murder / int_31cf184b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_31cf184b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Below Board (Audio Play)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_31cf184b
 Always Murder / int_36f5e759
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_36f5e759
comment
Regardless of what crime Jen and Gabe start investigating in The Maze Agency, it almost always ends up involving a murder.
 Always Murder / int_36f5e759
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_36f5e759
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Maze Agency (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_36f5e759
 Always Murder / int_396d99e5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_396d99e5
comment
In the Mrs. Murphy Mysteries there is always murder, and often other crimes as well.
 Always Murder / int_396d99e5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_396d99e5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Mrs. Murphy Mysteries
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_396d99e5
 Always Murder / int_3d10c6d1
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_3d10c6d1
comment
Parodied in Animal Crackers, when Spaulding is examining the painting John has forged:
 Always Murder / int_3d10c6d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_3d10c6d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Animal Crackers (Theatre)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_3d10c6d1
 Always Murder / int_3d25ba8e
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_3d25ba8e
comment
Sage Adair investigates fraud, theft, kidnapping, and various other crimes, but sooner or later bodies always start turning up.
 Always Murder / int_3d25ba8e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_3d25ba8e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sage Adair
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_3d25ba8e
 Always Murder / int_43576f5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_43576f5
comment
In Supernatural:
Almost every "case" the brothers take on begins with someone dying horribly. Of course, the killer is usually a ghost, demon, or monster of some kind, so whether it's technically murder is open to question (is it still homicide when the perpetrator died before the victim?).
And while the brothers are ghostie and ghoulie magnets even outside of their tendency to be tangled up in the latest Myth Arc and targeted, they also find their jobs and intentionally drive ridiculous distances to them based on accounts of especially suspicious-sounding deaths in newspapers. With this modus operandi, it makes sense that it would usually be murder, given creepy death apparently draws them like bees to honey.
There was at least one time it actually was murder, in that the ghost they thought was their perp was actually trying to give warning about the crooked cop who knifed her and the imminence of his knifing them. Naturally, he arrested the guys for his crime that they thought had been committed by a dead woman.
 Always Murder / int_43576f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_43576f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Supernatural
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_43576f5
 Always Murder / int_46196a4
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_46196a4
comment
The Kindaichi Case Files, which can have even more deaths per case than Case Closed.
 Always Murder / int_46196a4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_46196a4
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Kindaichi Case Files (Manga)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_46196a4
 Always Murder / int_4d6ad22f
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_4d6ad22f
comment
Virtue's Last Reward is so twisty with this that, depending on which timeline and path you play in the game, straight plays can seem like subverts and vice-versa, and entire parts become completely different, and in actual fact, in a sense most of the main murders end up not having murder victims depending on which way you look at it.
This is concerning mainly Alice and Luna's "murders" but can also be applied to the murder of Akane and most of the twisty nature of this trope comes down the way the plot is presented.
Alice is straight out shown to commit suicide in some paths, while in others she's found dead and the characters assume she was murdered. This in itself is subverted in dialogue, by several people who point out they can't assume she was murdered. In one of the paths, you have to use info from another path where you saw her commit suicide to prove to someone that there's no "murderer". In other paths, she is found without a knife in her stomach, which is different to the weapon she used in other timelines to commit suicide, thus throwing more subversion into the works.
Luna never died, due to her being a robot. But you don't learn this until the end of one of the paths, with the other paths treating it like she was murdered. Even the person who "gave her the killing blow" thought she killed her.
Depending on what path you're talking about, Akane's either murdered or she's not. In the case where she's not murdered, she was SUPPOSED to have been murdered. Or at least, that's what it seems like. But it turns out that, due to "future choices affect the past", she actually was STOPPED from being murdered in the past, due to a certain series of choices leading to her death being erased.
 Always Murder / int_4d6ad22f
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_4d6ad22f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Virtue's Last Reward (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_4d6ad22f
 Always Murder / int_4f847312
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_4f847312
comment
The Nero Wolfe mystery novels always feature murder sooner or later, even the ones that don't start out as murder cases. Narrator and aide Archie Goodwin in the books claims that there are many other cases (in one novel, Goodwin ends up on his own and gives a very brief summary of his solo career - it's successful). He only publishes the murder cases. Partially subverted in at least one novel, however: In The League of Frightened Men, only one of the three deaths turns out to be a murder (the other two are an accident and an actual suicide), and even the murder wasn't committed by the person everyone thinks did it.
 Always Murder / int_4f847312
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_4f847312
featureConfidence
1.0
 Nero Wolfe
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_4f847312
 Always Murder / int_5320ab5e
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_5320ab5e
comment
Columbo: Kind of justified since he's a homicide detective, but he's quite often called out to investigate cases that look like accidents or suicides but turn out to be murder (though there was one episode where somebody got kidnapped and Columbo managed to save her from being killed, so there was absolutely no murder in that one).
 Always Murder / int_5320ab5e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_5320ab5e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Columbo
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_5320ab5e
 Always Murder / int_544fb5a2
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_544fb5a2
comment
In the In Death series, protagonist Lt. Eve Dallas is a detective in the Homicide division, making the trope obligatory: she would have very little basis to investigate if there weren't at least some suspicion of murder.
 Always Murder / int_544fb5a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_544fb5a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 In Death
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_544fb5a2
 Always Murder / int_567ff89
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_567ff89
comment
Look to The 6th Day, an action thriller about identity theft due to clones.
 Always Murder / int_567ff89
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_567ff89
featureConfidence
1.0
 The 6th Day
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_567ff89
 Always Murder / int_56b62db5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_56b62db5
comment
Subverted in Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney in the first case: Espella is accused of several crimes, but not murder. You even cross-examine the victim Espella allegedly hit with a pipe. Played straight in every subsequent case, though (as a secondary charge, with witchcraft being the primary concern).
 Always Murder / int_56b62db5
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_56b62db5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney (Video Game)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_56b62db5
 Always Murder / int_5d7f0a07
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_5d7f0a07
comment
Turnabout Storm has Phoenix Wright, a big poster boy of this trope, getting pulled into Equestria. It doesn't take him long to find out that it's because he's needed to defend someone charged for murder. Not even being in a Sugar Bowl can keep him away from this trope. Ultimately subverted though, as the victim suffered a case of Karmic Death.
 Always Murder / int_5d7f0a07
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_5d7f0a07
featureConfidence
1.0
 Turnabout Storm (Web Animation)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_5d7f0a07
 Always Murder / int_60d5ef58
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_60d5ef58
comment
Jonathan and Jennifer Hart, the millionaire couple who were also hobbyist hawkshaws, found themselves mixed up in murder in roughly two-thirds of their (more than 100) adventures.
 Always Murder / int_60d5ef58
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_60d5ef58
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hart to Hart
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_60d5ef58
 Always Murder / int_625e571
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_625e571
comment
Law & Order: Criminal Intent makes a point of taking place in the Major Case Squad at police headquarters rather than the precinct homicide squad of the original show, but the crime is still always murder. In reality, the Major Case Squad investigates kidnapping and theft, not homicide, but apparently that wasn't compelling enough for Dick Wolf.
 Always Murder / int_625e571
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_625e571
featureConfidence
1.0
 Law & Order: Criminal Intent
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_625e571
 Always Murder / int_64494e71
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_64494e71
comment
In Walker, Texas Ranger, most episodes involve murder mysteries, usually because some poor schmuck was in the wrong place at the wrong time and got capped for being nosy. Also, on some occasions, Walker will regularly track down rapists and drug smugglers, but eventually find they killed one of their accomplices to keep him from talking.
 Always Murder / int_64494e71
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_64494e71
featureConfidence
1.0
 Walker, Texas Ranger
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_64494e71
 Always Murder / int_65926abb
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_65926abb
comment
No matter where Bernie Rhodenbarr is or what he's trying to steal he will always discover a body and have to investigate the murder.
 Always Murder / int_65926abb
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_65926abb
featureConfidence
1.0
 Bernie Rhodenbarr
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_65926abb
 Always Murder / int_6825287d
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_6825287d
comment
One of the most forced examples is "Parts", where they find a severed head in a junkyard and call the SVU because they think that it has traces of semen. At the end of the day, they find that the victim died in an accident, there was no sex-related crime and her body was dismembered by an organ trafficking ring. The episode then turns into a Very Special Episode about people who need an organ transplant but can't pay for it.
 Always Murder / int_6825287d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_6825287d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Very Special Episode
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_6825287d
 Always Murder / int_691be369
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_691be369
comment
The X-Files almost always had someone die before they rolled the opening credits, despite the fact that the FBI doesn't usually investigate plain old murder unless it's federal - such as when it occurs in connection to kidnappings across state lines and other things. However, they do consult on serial killings even when they occur within one state, which seems to be like how they get their jurisdiction for the show, called in for unexplained phenomena. Plus, it's not like Mulder ever followed proper procedure anyway. He seemed to just choose cases at random and follow them with or without the FBI's approval.
 Always Murder / int_691be369
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_691be369
featureConfidence
1.0
 The X-Files
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_691be369
 Always Murder / int_6a4c0973
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_6a4c0973
comment
All short stories in Almost Perfect Crimes are murders and a suicide made to look like a murder, even though they're not sold that way in the title or the blurb on the back. The same author wrote another book of mystery short stories called Almost Perfect Murders, which at least made no bones about its content.
 Always Murder / int_6a4c0973
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_6a4c0973
featureConfidence
1.0
 Almost Perfect Crimes
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_6a4c0973
 Always Murder / int_6bcd58c7
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_6bcd58c7
comment
Sin City stories always involve murders… usually a lot of `em.
 Always Murder / int_6bcd58c7
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_6bcd58c7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sin City (Comic Book)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_6bcd58c7
 Always Murder / int_6ce0d19c
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_6ce0d19c
comment
Early on in Quantum Leap, usually the thing that Sam had to put right was, though life-altering, not usually fatal (like winning a baseball game, stopping a girl from marrying the wrong person, or inspiring Buddy Holly to write "Peggy Sue"). However, in later seasons, nearly every episode involved Sam having to take action, or else X...would die!
 Always Murder / int_6ce0d19c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_6ce0d19c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Quantum Leap
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_6ce0d19c
 Always Murder / int_72e68fc6
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_72e68fc6
comment
Spirit of Justice:
Phoenix travels to a far-off land on personal affairs only to find himself defending murder suspects once he's there (though this is in part due to the fact that the country he's visiting has eliminated the concept of defense attorneys in lieu of spirit communication so he's merely trying to prevent unjust verdicts). However, in case 3, the two deaths were caused in self-defense and a suicide, respectively.
Played with during the third case as the "murder" Phoenix is investigating is actually a complicated suicide that was designed to shift blame away from his wife, who would have been tried and convicted of capital murder for a self-defense killing she committed against someone who was very likely going to kill her. The Pool of Souls prevents her from getting a fair trial as she would be instantly portrayed as guilty with no one willing to defend her, so her husband contrived his own suicide in a bid to throw suspicion off her and pin his and the actual victim's deaths on a family friend.
The first part of case 5 is a civil trial, where you play as Apollo Justice against Phoenix Wright. The trial in question is over who claims ownership of a relic that belonged to an archaeologist who died in an accident. Of course, it turns out that he was actually murdered, and the verdict ends up hinging on whether the plaintiff or the defendant was responsible.
 Always Murder / int_72e68fc6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_72e68fc6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Spirit of Justice (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_72e68fc6
 Always Murder / int_73d660e
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_73d660e
comment
This is discussed in an episode of Lucky Star, where Konata wonders why detectives on TV always keep finding murders to investigate. Series lampshaded by this scene includes Case Closed and The Kindaichi Case Files.
 Always Murder / int_73d660e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_73d660e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Lucky Star (Manga)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_73d660e
 Always Murder / int_7dcdbde1
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_7dcdbde1
comment
Subverted in The Great Ace Attorney: Adventures in the second case where the incident was involuntary manslaughter thanks to a set of unfortunate coincidences and misunderstandings. The fourth case averts the trope by having the victim merely stabbed in the back but not dead, as well as revealing that it was just an accident.
Played with in the second case of The Great Ace Attorney 2: Resolve. The victim originally thought to be dead by poisoning, but then revealed to have barely survived the attempt, so the defendant is only prosecuted for attempted murder. However, then it turns out that victim was responsible for one death which originally thought to be an accident.
 Always Murder / int_7dcdbde1
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_7dcdbde1
featureConfidence
1.0
 The Great Ace Attorney (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_7dcdbde1
 Always Murder / int_84809b33
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_84809b33
comment
Generally averted in L.A. Noire. While cases tend to open with murder or attempted murder, several don't, such as when you deal with a rash of car thefts. In the cases that do have murders, the investigation often winds up revealing bigger crimes, such as pornography rings, drug trade, corporate espionage, and a massive real-estate conspiracy.
 Always Murder / int_84809b33
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_84809b33
featureConfidence
1.0
 L.A. Noire (Video Game)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_84809b33
 Always Murder / int_892aa56a
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_892aa56a
comment
Averted in one (and so far only one) Murdoch Mysteries episode: "Raised on Robbery" is about a bank heist, and while the robbers hold one person at gunpoint when they're discovered, they never actually kill anyone. (It's not an Everybody Lives episode, though, because the robbers themselves are killed trying to escape.)
 Always Murder / int_892aa56a
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_892aa56a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Murdoch Mysteries
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_892aa56a
 Always Murder / int_8c05f749
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_8c05f749
comment
Death in Paradise puts their Always Murder status right in the title. The victim dies in the Cold Open, the detectives show up after the opening title music, and they investigate from there. There was one case where whether it was murder depends on the letter of the law. The death was a suicide attempted to seem as if it was a robbery gone wrong (so the life insurance still applied), but was deliberately caused by another person — the victim's doctor, who had lied that the victim had a terminal illness specifically so that he would commit suicide, even helping a bit with the 'make it seem as if it was a robbery gone wrong' part to encourage it further.
 Always Murder / int_8c05f749
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_8c05f749
featureConfidence
1.0
 Death in Paradise
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_8c05f749
 Always Murder / int_8d81bb26
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_8d81bb26
comment
NCIS often averts this as they deal with a lot of kidnappings. As well as the occasional smuggling and espionage.
And they subverted it entirely in at least one episode of season 2, "Black Water." They find the body of a Navy officer who disappeared two years ago because of a car crash, and in the end, it turns out that it really was an accident, and the wreckage was tampered with to make it look like it had been a murder by a private investigator wanting to cash in on a reward for finding the officer's killer.
 Always Murder / int_8d81bb26
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_8d81bb26
featureConfidence
1.0
 NCIS
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_8d81bb26
 Always Murder / int_8d81f086
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_8d81f086
comment
In Monk it is justified in that Monk is both an ex-Homicide detective and private consultant the San Francisco Police Department call in for more… interesting cases.
But, even then, even when Monk ends up investigating/or otherwise wrapped up in something that isn't murder, someone will usually end up dead anyway.
Example: "Mr. Monk and the Bully" starts with Monk and Natalie looking into a simple infidelity case after being hired by Monk's childhood bully. Then the person said bully's wife seems to be seeing turns up dead.
Another good case of this is "Mr. Monk Goes to a Rock Concert". Monk and Natalie accompany Captain Stottlemeyer to a music festival to search for his son. Monk comes along because of a misinterpretation of the words "rock show", leaving him stuck in the middle of a Wild Teen Party in the parking lot. While searching for a payphone, he accidentally walks into a port-a-potty. Natalie finds him when he comes out. Then, as Monk and Natalie are walking away, a roadie's body falls out of another port-a-potty right at their feet.
This is even pointed out by Monk in a few of the episodes.
Natalie said it best: "Everywhere you go, every time you turn around, someone is killing someone else!" It even supplies the Mystery Magnet page quote.
One season finale ends with Monk being told that he will get at least a murder a week for the next few years (a reference to the show getting an extended contract). Though it's Played for Laughs the whole idea is incredibly disturbing once Fridge Logic sets in.
The only Monk episode without a murder was "Mr. Monk and the Missing Granny" where the worst thing done was a kidnapping of the titular granny, and then her captors let her go because they only wanted her chair which was worth a fortune.
There was no murder in "Mr. Monk and the Kid" either.
A subversion happened in the episode "Mr. Monk and the Daredevil" - no murder is committed in the course of the episode, although a person does die in a car accident (someone comes along later and sets his car on fire), and there is an attempted murder.
Same in "Mr. Monk Is Someone Else" - no murder happens on-screen during the episode, though the person Monk impersonates is killed when he is struck by a bus.
Natalie's debut episode, "Mr. Monk and the Red Herring" only has someone killed in self-defense (by Natalie herself!) at the beginning, while no actual murders take place within the episode.
Another one of Natalie's early episodes put an interesting twist where the plot involves an attempted assassination against Natalie by an unknown sniper. The Criminal was actually targeting the photocopier, his plan being to put it out of commission so that it would have to be replaced in order to keep anyone from discovering the jammed paper inside that could convict him for arms dealing. Natalie just happened to be nearby and he wrote a threatening note to throw off the police.
 Always Murder / int_8d81f086
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_8d81f086
featureConfidence
1.0
 Monk
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_8d81f086
 Always Murder / int_8dfbdff2
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_8dfbdff2
comment
Law & Order. Notable is the fact that characters will occasionally be called out for something that isn't murder (being homicide detectives) whether by a mixup or someone thinking something doesn't add up. They will be annoyed until they learn it was a murder, but in other episodes they will investigate crimes that aren't murder (kidnapping seems to be the biggest one) without objections, only to find a body somewhere along the road.
The early episodes of Law & Order notably averted this by mixing up crimes quite often.
Law & Order: Criminal Intent makes a point of taking place in the Major Case Squad at police headquarters rather than the precinct homicide squad of the original show, but the crime is still always murder. In reality, the Major Case Squad investigates kidnapping and theft, not homicide, but apparently that wasn't compelling enough for Dick Wolf.
The precincts or the Chief of Detectives usually bring Major Case in on the case. It's true that Major Case generally investigates theft & kidnapping, but the Chief of Detectives may assign cases to any unit. Sometimes the murders are connected to crimes within the purview of MCS. And the MCS does normally handle cases involving the murder of an NYPD officer. There is no homicide in "Homo Homini Lupus" (unless you count Eames shooting a perp) and in "Folie a Deux" the police investigate an alleged kidnapping that only later turns out to be a homicide (by negligence), so it's not always murder (merely almost always murder).
In Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, it's Always Rape instead, but often there's a murder too. In fact, there are so many murders on SVU, it's the only show in the franchise to have the Medical Examiner Promoted to Opening Titles. This is achieved by making the obligatory crime a rape-homicide, have it first be a rape and then tack on a homicide later, have the perp be a rapist who then "graduates" to murder, or just have the murder victim be a kid (Special Victims deals with the child homicides, regardless of whether or not molestation is involved).
One of the most forced examples is "Parts", where they find a severed head in a junkyard and call the SVU because they think that it has traces of semen. At the end of the day, they find that the victim died in an accident, there was no sex-related crime and her body was dismembered by an organ trafficking ring. The episode then turns into a Very Special Episode about people who need an organ transplant but can't pay for it.
Another particularly forced example is "Shadow", which features a generic double homicide. SVU is only called in because it looks like it might be a murder-suicide, which being "domestic violence" (the victims are a husband and wife) supposedly falls under SVU jurisdiction. Once it's clear the crime was double homicide SVU is kept on the case anyway, because "the Gillettes were Special Victims". This makes no sense because, even within the universe of the show, the NYPD has Major Case to handle crimes like this, especially once the prime suspect turns out to have been involved in a major fraud she was already under investigation for. The episode even introduced a Special Guest character (Det. Asok Ramsey from Special Frauds, played by Naveen Andrews) rather than feature a Crossover with CI characters (who never crossed over onto any other Law & Order show while it was still running, though Kathryn Erbe did appear as Eames on SVU after it had been cancelled).
 Always Murder / int_8dfbdff2
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_8dfbdff2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Law & Order
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_8dfbdff2
 Always Murder / int_91e45f5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_91e45f5
comment
Case 2 of Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney starts off with three seemingly unrelated cases (a hit-and-run, a noodle stand theft, and a panty theft) before they all come together in—you guessed it—a murder.
 Always Murder / int_91e45f5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_91e45f5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_91e45f5
 Always Murder / int_9284ad43
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_9284ad43
comment
Subverted in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies during the DLC case involving defending an Orca and eventually her trainer. It turns out the victim wasn't murdered at all, his death was entirely accidental, and the "culprit" actually tried to save him. The culprit did attempt to kill the orca, however, but then decided framing her for murder was just as good.
 Always Murder / int_9284ad43
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_9284ad43
featureConfidence
1.0
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_9284ad43
 Always Murder / int_998d2bb5
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_998d2bb5
comment
Heartbeat dealt with other kinds of serious crime too - including abortion in one episode (which was still illegal at the time the series was set).
 Always Murder / int_998d2bb5
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_998d2bb5
featureConfidence
1.0
 Heartbeat
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_998d2bb5
 Always Murder / int_9a67b688
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_9a67b688
comment
Because Case Closed suffers from this rather—though there's a suicide or so, and plenty of non-murder episodes with the Shounen Tantei, like in Season One they deal with gold smuggling, a hostage situation, an assassination plot, and a case of mistaken identity—fanfic tends to decide he has a supernatural power to attract murder or be attracted to it, though the supposed methods vary. More common when the writer is engaged in an extensive crossover with Magic Kaitou, which has actual supernatural elements much better attested, even if Kid never uses such things himself.
Fanfic is also prone to having the recurring police or similar characters lampshade the Fridge Horror that is Conan's existence—whatever this effect is, it was operating somewhat already on Shinichi before he shrank, i.e. the show started, but had not kicked in when he was really the age he seems, so it's not quite as awful as it looks...
 Always Murder / int_9a67b688
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_9a67b688
featureConfidence
1.0
 Case Closed (Manga)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_9a67b688
 Always Murder / int_9d7264f
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_9d7264f
comment
Unfortunately for a wife in Miami, Horatio and Co figured out what her husband had done as well.
 Always Murder / int_9d7264f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_9d7264f
featureConfidence
1.0
 CSI: Miami
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_9d7264f
 Always Murder / int_9f78fda3
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_9f78fda3
comment
Murder, She Wrote, appropriately to its title, plays this painfully straight in all but seven episodes; two were suicides made to look like murders, three were cases of self-defense), at least one story turned out to just be a dream, and the murder victim survived the attempt on their life in the Christmas special. Jessica Fletcher was an incidental bystander for twelve seasons and six TV-movies.
 Always Murder / int_9f78fda3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_9f78fda3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Murder, She Wrote
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_9f78fda3
 Always Murder / int_a309575c
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_a309575c
comment
Jonathan Creek played this straight most of the time, though it was occasionally averted in later seasons.
 Always Murder / int_a309575c
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_a309575c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Jonathan Creek
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_a309575c
 Always Murder / int_aefebdec
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_aefebdec
comment
Untraceable is a cybercrime movie that managed to end up being about murders. (Of course, something like identity theft would make a pretty boring thriller.) Whether or not The Net proves the latter point is up to debate.
 Always Murder / int_aefebdec
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_aefebdec
featureConfidence
1.0
 Untraceable
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_aefebdec
 Always Murder / int_b75318e6
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_b75318e6
comment
Small Town Murders: While thefts, raids, kidnappings, illegal drug/animal trafficking, and other crimes are sometimes involved, the main meat of each chapter is always to solve a murder.
 Always Murder / int_b75318e6
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_b75318e6
featureConfidence
1.0
 Small Town Murders (Video Game)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_b75318e6
 Always Murder / int_c7cca04f
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_c7cca04f
comment
Pushing Daisies, by its very nature. The main character's crime-solving usefulness is mainly predicated on his ability to wake the dead, so other kinds of crime are not relevant. Although not all the deaths were murders.
Also, one episode involved Emerson tracking down a missing girl; however, someone was murdered afterwards.
 Always Murder / int_c7cca04f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_c7cca04f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Pushing Daisies
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_c7cca04f
 Always Murder / int_c9d6c480
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_c9d6c480
comment
Most of the Hercule Poirot stories revolve around murder; there is the occasional jewel robbery though.
 Always Murder / int_c9d6c480
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_c9d6c480
featureConfidence
1.0
 HerculePoirot
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_c9d6c480
 Always Murder / int_cac1f772
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_cac1f772
comment
CSI: After 8 seasons and counting, this trope has only been averted a minuscule number of times, mostly in the early seasons; in the episode "Suckers," the Cold Open shows us a dead body in a pool, but we soon find out that it's just a lifeguard training dummy used to distract hotel security from an antique theft (as usual for the series, the B Plot was a straight-up murder). Another early-season episode featured what appeared to be a murder victim found in a dumpster but after several false leads was revealed to be a complete accident.
This trope is so prevalent that when they investigate an elderly couple found dead in their home (including one who had hit his head in the bathroom) the idea of even one of the deaths being an accident isn't even mentioned by the CSIs. It was again a series of accidents - he slipped in the tub and she fell on the knife.
At least one episode has a suicide staged as a murder by a broke guy hoping his life insurance policy will provide for his brother. Unfortunately, the CSIs end up figuring out the truth.
Unfortunately for a wife in Miami, Horatio and Co figured out what her husband had done as well.
Another, involving an elderly woman crashing her car into a cafe, turned out to be murder-suicide on the part of the woman.
An aversion happened on the case of a movie star that turned to be autoerotic asphyxiation (not long after David Carradine died), all for the sake of An Aesop against First World Problems.
The episode "Hitting for the Cycle" had the whole lab bet on whether or not the quartet of a natural death, accident, suicide and murder occuring in the same shift would be completed. Right before the episode ends, the new assistant coroner is found dead by David, having died of an aneurism and thus completing the quartet, as a natural death was all that was still missing at this point.
CSI: NY, on the other hand, has had a number of deaths ruled as accidents.
 Always Murder / int_cac1f772
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_cac1f772
featureConfidence
1.0
 CSI
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_cac1f772
 Always Murder / int_ccf875f7
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_ccf875f7
comment
Averted in Criminal Minds, as even though most of the BAU's cases involve serial killers, they've also dealt with kidnappings, rapists, and non-fatal arsonists in their time.
 Always Murder / int_ccf875f7
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_ccf875f7
featureConfidence
1.0
 Criminal Minds
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_ccf875f7
 Always Murder / int_cdae0b41
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_cdae0b41
comment
Forever (2014):
Lampshaded in "6 A. M." where a character who has been given odds that Henry Morgan will rule a death to be murder says that it's a sucker bet because Henry always says that it's murder.
Subverted in "The Art of Murder" where a suicide unintentionally appears to be a murder after Gloria Carlisle took an overdose, then got dizzy and fell down a flight of stairs before reaching the site she intended to die.
Also subverted in "Best Foot Forward" as the ballerina whose dismembered foot led them to believe a murder had been committed is actually still alive and had in fact masterminded the entire event.
Zig-zagged in the opening of "Look Before You Leap" where the case of a random victim with an ax in his forehead looks like a clear murder but Henry rules it an accidental death (the guy fell off his roof and the ax fell down after him, Henry's Sherlock Scan determines), and the next case is a supposed bridge jumper whose death looks like a suicide but Henry determines she was murdered.
 Always Murder / int_cdae0b41
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_cdae0b41
featureConfidence
1.0
 Forever (2014)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_cdae0b41
 Always Murder / int_ceac0c1d
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_ceac0c1d
comment
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Case 5: Turnabout Substitution provides an interesting example. You know full well before you start playing that someone will end up dead since this is an Ace Attorney fangame. During the first day of the trial, you successfully prove that Judge Chambers did not kill Robert Enlemeyer and that Enlemeyer is still alive. It looks like nobody's dead after all... until Judge Chambers is killed by his own car near his brother's grave. The second day of the trial has you defending a (supposed) serial killer of Chambers's death.
 Always Murder / int_ceac0c1d
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_ceac0c1d
featureConfidence
1.0
 Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Case 5: Turnabout Substitution (Visual Novel)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_ceac0c1d
 Always Murder / int_d0c75992
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_d0c75992
comment
Inspector Morse pretty much does this one straight all the time, which is especially ironic considering that in real life Oxford has had barely any murders in the past 50 years.
One death that appeared to be an accident really was an accident, but Morse's investigation uncovered an art fraud ring.
 Always Murder / int_d0c75992
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_d0c75992
featureConfidence
1.0
 Inspector Morse
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_d0c75992
 Always Murder / int_d6f3a198
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_d6f3a198
comment
On the real-life show Unsolved Mysteries, this happened quite frequently. A large number of the cases would be introduced by host Robert Stack announcing that a body was found and saying often verbatim, "The police say a suicide, but his family says murder.". Though it was often split; sometimes it was obviously a suicide, and the show's producers were simply sympathizing with the family; in others, it was so obviously not a suicide that you wonder who the police thought they were fooling.
 Always Murder / int_d6f3a198
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_d6f3a198
featureConfidence
1.0
 Unsolved Mysteries
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_d6f3a198
 Always Murder / int_daa2340b
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_daa2340b
comment
There are a few of R. Austin Freeman's Dr. Thorndyke stories that do not feature murder, but they are rare. (One example is "The Anthropologist at Large", in John Thorndyke's Cases, which revolves around a robbery of valuable artworks. Every other story in that collection is a murder investigation, except for one that features an attempted murder prevented by Thorndyke's timely intervention.) Freeman noted in his article "The Art of the Detective Story" that murder is so popular a choice because it helps justify a villain desperate to cover his tracks given the consequences if he is caught.
 Always Murder / int_daa2340b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_daa2340b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Dr. Thorndyke
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_daa2340b
 Always Murder / int_db04220f
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_db04220f
comment
All of the Hamish Macbeth books involve a dead body (usually of a really unpleasant newcomer to town); the title formula is actually "Death of a/an (Description of victim)." This does not apply to the TV series, where murders happen, but not in every episode.
 Always Murder / int_db04220f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_db04220f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Hamish Macbeth
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_db04220f
 Always Murder / int_db3b75ff
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_db3b75ff
comment
Generally averted on Barney Miller, where the detectives generally dealt with the full breadth of crimes committed in Manhattan's 12th Precinct. In one two-parter, the Inspector pulls strings to have them assigned to a newly-formed Homicide "specialty squad", and the grind of having to deal with nothing but grisly murders very quickly wears them out.
 Always Murder / int_db3b75ff
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_db3b75ff
featureConfidence
1.0
 Barney Miller
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_db3b75ff
 Always Murder / int_dfee4401
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_dfee4401
comment
Unforgettable so far has had every episode center around a homicide, though sometimes other crimes are discovered over the course of the homicide investigation. Justified in that the main characters are homicide detectives.
 Always Murder / int_dfee4401
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_dfee4401
featureConfidence
1.0
 Unforgettable
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_dfee4401
 Always Murder / int_e0dab750
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e0dab750
comment
San Amaro Investigations: Downplayed. Each book has the main characters investigating a plurality of cases that unravel and connect together over the course of each book. While there is always one murder at least in the middle of the mysteries, they are not, necessarily, the center of the mystery. For example, in book 2 and 3, the murders are relatively out of the central focus of the mystery, with the second one's main mystery being the theft of an artifact, while in the third, it is the mystery of a missing boy; in both cases, the murder is either solved quickly, or solved as an extension of solving other mysteries.
 Always Murder / int_e0dab750
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_e0dab750
featureConfidence
1.0
 San Amaro Investigations
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e0dab750
 Always Murder / int_e293455a
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e293455a
comment
In Buffy the Vampire Slayer, a series where most deaths have supernatural causes, this is averted in "The Body" where Buffy's mother dies from natural causes. Xander suspected Glory was behind it, but this was disregarded because if Glory was behind it she would have made sure they knew it.
 Always Murder / int_e293455a
featureApplicability
-1.0
 Always Murder / int_e293455a
featureConfidence
1.0
 Buffy the Vampire Slayer
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e293455a
 Always Murder / int_e32f044b
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e32f044b
comment
Every novel in the Sister Fidelma series has at least three murders.
 Always Murder / int_e32f044b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_e32f044b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sister Fidelma
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e32f044b
 Always Murder / int_e4854c84
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e4854c84
comment
Happily subverted in Q.E.D. where there are other cases which are generally interesting enough not to need it.
The author happily continues this trend with C.M.B., in which is more about investigation work in archeology.
 Always Murder / int_e4854c84
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_e4854c84
featureConfidence
1.0
 Q.E.D. (Manga)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e4854c84
 Always Murder / int_e5feb1e
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e5feb1e
comment
All of the cases in Ace Attorney seem to involve a murder of some kind:
Phoenix Wright, a novice attorney with zero in-court experience, takes the murder trial of his friend as his first case. Everyone from his boss to the judge is astonished that he would jump in feet-first when there are so many other kinds of cases that he could work on before accepting such a high-stakes case.
If you present Mia's autopsy report to Gumshoe, Phoenix says how unusual it is for a newbie lawyer to take on two murders in a row. Though in Phoenix's defense, he tried to have a more experienced lawyer take the case... it's just that the guy Phoenix asked refused because Mia's real murderer was a highly influential blackmailer. It was either Phoenix take the case, or an overworked public defender who'd probably do the bare minimum.
In "Rise from the Ashes", Gumshoe ponders why there seem to be no other crime reports apart from murder in this district.
The one case Phoenix takes that isn't a murder (theft of a Fey Clan heirloom) turns out to be a cover for a murder across town. Maya lampshades it:
Case 2 of Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney starts off with three seemingly unrelated cases (a hit-and-run, a noodle stand theft, and a panty theft) before they all come together in—you guessed it—a murder.
Ace Attorney Investigations:
The third case starts out as a kidnapping, until someone ends up dead. He turns out to be a kidnapper. Sort of.
The whole game is Always Murder incarnate. With the exception of a flashback case that also had a double murder, the game takes place over three days and Edgeworth solves four murder cases in that timeframe (including two murders in a single day, one of which happens in his own office, no less).
Gyakuten Kenji 2/Ace Attorney Investigations 2 has a case where Edgeworth and a friend go to a location to discuss a murder case that took place there 18 years prior. They wind up getting caught in a poison gas attack (that doesn't kill anyone) and then discover the body from the past case during the resulting investigation (it had been lost at the time). This results in Edgeworth solving both the poison gas case and the 18-year old murder case simultaneously (because everyone still alive from the past case is also at the site that day, including the person who really killed the victim).
The case that ends up causing Phoenix to lose his attorney's badge was actually suicide.
1-3 has a death of a man that seems like a homicide but was actually manslaughter in self-defense.
In "Rise from the Ashes", The backstory case is one really convoluted example. What seems like a straightforward case of Joe Darke killing Neil Marshall is actually discovered to be a frame-up because Lana didn't want it known that her sister Ema committed manslaughter (shoved Marshall into a sharp object in a panicked attempt to break up a brawl), but Phoenix later uncovers that Ema was also framed by Damon Gant, who murdered Neil Marshall and framed Ema so that Lana would frame Darke. So it was a murder, made to look like a manslaughter, that was made to look like a different murder.
Subverted in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies during the DLC case involving defending an Orca and eventually her trainer. It turns out the victim wasn't murdered at all, his death was entirely accidental, and the "culprit" actually tried to save him. The culprit did attempt to kill the orca, however, but then decided framing her for murder was just as good.
Subverted in Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney in the first case: Espella is accused of several crimes, but not murder. You even cross-examine the victim Espella allegedly hit with a pipe. Played straight in every subsequent case, though (as a secondary charge, with witchcraft being the primary concern).
Spirit of Justice:
Phoenix travels to a far-off land on personal affairs only to find himself defending murder suspects once he's there (though this is in part due to the fact that the country he's visiting has eliminated the concept of defense attorneys in lieu of spirit communication so he's merely trying to prevent unjust verdicts). However, in case 3, the two deaths were caused in self-defense and a suicide, respectively.
Played with during the third case as the "murder" Phoenix is investigating is actually a complicated suicide that was designed to shift blame away from his wife, who would have been tried and convicted of capital murder for a self-defense killing she committed against someone who was very likely going to kill her. The Pool of Souls prevents her from getting a fair trial as she would be instantly portrayed as guilty with no one willing to defend her, so her husband contrived his own suicide in a bid to throw suspicion off her and pin his and the actual victim's deaths on a family friend.
The first part of case 5 is a civil trial, where you play as Apollo Justice against Phoenix Wright. The trial in question is over who claims ownership of a relic that belonged to an archaeologist who died in an accident. Of course, it turns out that he was actually murdered, and the verdict ends up hinging on whether the plaintiff or the defendant was responsible.
Subverted in The Great Ace Attorney: Adventures in the second case where the incident was involuntary manslaughter thanks to a set of unfortunate coincidences and misunderstandings. The fourth case averts the trope by having the victim merely stabbed in the back but not dead, as well as revealing that it was just an accident.
Played with in the second case of The Great Ace Attorney 2: Resolve. The victim originally thought to be dead by poisoning, but then revealed to have barely survived the attempt, so the defendant is only prosecuted for attempted murder. However, then it turns out that victim was responsible for one death which originally thought to be an accident.
 Always Murder / int_e5feb1e
featureApplicability
-0.3
 Always Murder / int_e5feb1e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Ace Attorney (Franchise)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e5feb1e
 Always Murder / int_e6318baf
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_e6318baf
comment
Goes without saying in Midsomer Murders: although a few episodes open with Barnaby investigating less serious crimes, it always ends up in a murder investigation. Also very old deaths that were put down to accidents or suicide almost always turn out to be murders as well.
The murder rate in the (fictional) county of Midsomer should have left it a ghost town (well, county).
One episode opens with Barnaby preparing to arrest a low life criminal; when the police swoop to make the arrest they find the criminal lying dead on the ground with a pitchfork sticking out of his back. Barnaby takes one look and utters "Oh for goodness sake!"
Highly downplayed in the episode Blue Herrings. Given the show, you are primed to expect the deaths to be murders despite the setting being a retirement home, somewhere where death of natural causes is not uncommon… but in the end, only one of the deaths in the episode was murder in a legal sense, and it was so heavily slanted as a Mercy Kill that it doesn't exactly feel like a murder.
 Always Murder / int_e6318baf
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_e6318baf
featureConfidence
1.0
 Midsomer Murders
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_e6318baf
 Always Murder / int_eb0d248e
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_eb0d248e
comment
In the Laura Bow games, various people commit various crimes that always end in murder.
 Always Murder / int_eb0d248e
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_eb0d248e
featureConfidence
1.0
 Laura Bow (Video Game)
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_eb0d248e
 Always Murder / int_f41aa707
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_f41aa707
comment
Sugawara Akitada: Some of the Sugawara novels have premises where the crime Akitada needs to solve is bad, but still minor, such as disappearing taxes or blackmail. These minor crimes will always lead to a reveal someone had been murdered, someone being murdered during the course of the novel, or both.
 Always Murder / int_f41aa707
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_f41aa707
featureConfidence
1.0
 Sugawara Akitada
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_f41aa707
 Always Murder / int_f43b3a51
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_f43b3a51
comment
Diagnosis: Murder, fitting its title. Though there are a few episodes where characters only think a murder happened.
 Always Murder / int_f43b3a51
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_f43b3a51
featureConfidence
1.0
 Diagnosis: Murder
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_f43b3a51
 Always Murder / int_ff2165b
type
Always Murder
 Always Murder / int_ff2165b
comment
Cold Case usually plays this trope straight. However, there were at least four deaths ruled as accident ("Fly Away", "The Boy in the Box", "Yo, Adrian", and "Roller Girl") and at least three others ruled as suicides or as a result of suicides ("Daniella", "Best Friends", and "Two Weddings"), at least one ruled as self-defense/justifiable homicide ("Justice"). Heck, one case even had the presumed victim still be alive ("Fireflies").
 Always Murder / int_ff2165b
featureApplicability
1.0
 Always Murder / int_ff2165b
featureConfidence
1.0
 Cold Case
hasFeature
Always Murder / int_ff2165b

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Always Murder
processingCategory2
Drama Tropes
 Always Murder
processingCategory2
Murder Tropes
 Mickey Mouse Comic Universe (Comic Book) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Sandman Mystery Theatre (Comic Book) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Maze Agency (Comic Book) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Badge & O'Possum: Ace Attorneys (Fanfic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Brendan Namron: Ace Attorney (Fanfic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Check-in at the Turnabout (Fanfic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 SMPRonpa (Fanfic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Flight of the Alicorn (Fanfic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Secret Agent Super Dragon / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Ex-Mrs. Bradford / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Flying Ace / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The International / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Rebel Set / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Ace Attorney (Franchise) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Danganronpa (Franchise) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Dragnet (Franchise) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hercule Poirot (Franchise) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Perry Mason (Franchise) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 CSI
seeAlso
Always Murder
 Gosick / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Agaton Sax / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Destination Unknown / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Dr. Thorndyke / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Gosick / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hannah Swensen / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 In Death / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 John Putnam Thatcher / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Lord Darcy / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Lucy Stone Mysteries / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Magic for Liars / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder in the Mews / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder Most Unladylike / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder Mysteries / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Nero Wolfe / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Philo Vance / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Sister Fidelma / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Sugawara Akitada / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Big Sleep / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Great Merlini / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The League of Frightened Men / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Robots of Dawn / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Singing Bone / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 FunctionalGenreSavvy
seeAlso
Always Murder
 Rebus
seeAlso
Always Murder
 TheDigimonEpicsDracocide
seeAlso
Always Murder
 TheFatherLukeWolfeTrilogy
seeAlso
Always Murder
 TheHeatherWellsMysteries
seeAlso
Always Murder
 C.M.B. (Manga) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Case Closed (Manga) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Kurokochi (Manga) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Q.E.D. (Manga) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Kindaichi Case Files (Manga) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Dragnet (Radio) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Les 2 Minutes du Peuple (Radio) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Dangan Ronpa GOLD! (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Deep Blue Sea Verse (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 FatalFrenzy
seeAlso
Always Murder
 FaulteringFloors
seeAlso
Always Murder
 Fifteen Strangers (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 HHStudios
seeAlso
Always Murder
 Murderat Midnight (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Museum Despair (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Royal Roulette (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Super Dangan Ronpa Zero (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Tasty Treats Despair (Roleplay) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Digimon Epics Dracocide (Roleplay)
seeAlso
Always Murder
 Baantjer / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Beyond Paradise (2023) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Burke's Law / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Cadfael / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Cannon / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Cold Case / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Criminal Minds: Beyond Borders / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Criminal Minds: Suspect Behavior / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Death in Paradise / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Diagnosis: Murder / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Elementary / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Endeavour / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Eureka / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Eyewitness (2016) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Father Brown / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Forever / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Forever (2014) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Foyle's War / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Furuhata Ninzaburo / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Galileo / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Harlots / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hetty Wainthropp Investigates / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hill Street Blues / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hunter (1984) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 iZombie / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Il Commissario Montalbano / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Inspector George Gently / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Inspector Lynley / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Inspector Morse / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Jonathan Creek / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Law & Order / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Law & Order: Criminal Intent / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Life on Mars (2006) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Longmire / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Luther / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Miss Marple (1984) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder Most Horrid / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder One / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder, She Wrote / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murdoch Mysteries / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 NCIS: New Orleans / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Peter Gunn / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Quincy, M.E. / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Recht Op Recht / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Remington Steele / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Rizzoli & Isles / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Rookie Blue / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Rosemary & Thyme / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Rumpole of the Bailey / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Silent Witness / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Cleaner (UK) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Glades / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Method / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Streets of San Francisco / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Tokusou Sentai Dekaranger / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Upload / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Walker, Texas Ranger / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Who's The Murderer / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Witse / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Zen / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Animal Crackers (Theatre) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Ace Attorney Truth And Consequences (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Adventure Escape (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Criminal Case (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Digimon Survive (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Ghost Trick (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Hexepta: Mayor Attack (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 L.A. Noire (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Laura Bow (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Layton Brothers: Mystery Room (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Master Detective Archives: Rain Code (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Murder! (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Conflict of Interest (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: The Contempt of Court (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Professor Layton vs. Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Sherlock Holmes: Crimes and Punishments (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Small Town Murders (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Trouble in Terrorist Town (Video Game) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Deadly Premonition / Videogame / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney Case 5: Turnabout Substitution (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Dai Gyakuten Saiban: Naruhodou Ryuunosuke no Bouken (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Famicom Detective Club (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Gyakuten Kenji 2 (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 My Little Investigations (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Spirit of Justice (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Trials and Tribulations (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Devil on G-String (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 The Great Ace Attorney (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Turnabout Storm (Web Animation) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Random Encounters (Web Video) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Where the Bears Are (Web Video) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Paradox Space (Webcomic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Shadows In The Library (Webcomic) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder
 Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney – Dual Destinies (Visual Novel) / int_518de95b
type
Always Murder