Lestrade: Difference between revisions
m (enforcing T:CLEAN CODE) |
m (Robot: Removing from Category:Crossover characters) |
||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
[[Category:19th century individuals]] | [[Category:19th century individuals]] | ||
[[Category:Literary characters]] | [[Category:Literary characters]] | ||
[[Category:Metropolitan Police officers]] | [[Category:Metropolitan Police officers]] | ||
[[Category:Human detectives]] | [[Category:Human detectives]] |
Revision as of 22:15, 25 January 2012
Inspector Lestrade was a detective of Scotland Yard. He came from the old school that was more concerned with making an arrest than amassing evidence.
Biography
In 1883, he was investigating a series of rooftop burglaries. Sherlock Holmes advised him on the case but neglected to inform Lestrade that he had already worked out that Carolina Lopenski had committed the crimes. (FP: Erasing Sherlock)
In 1885, he unsuccessfully dragged a lake looking for Hatty Doran's body. Dr. John Watson's notes on the case were later written as a story by Arthur Conan Doyle and published in The Strand. In 1887, the Seventh Doctor saw him drinking in the Tank. (NA: All-Consuming Fire)
In 1897, he took credit for the apprehension of Professor Janus. (DWA: Bat Attack!)
Behind the scenes
- Inspector Lestrade is best known as a supporting character in Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories but also exists as a real person in the Doctor Who universe.
- Lestrade was normally given credit for solving cases that Holmes actually solved.
- In-story dating of The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor places the murder of Hatty Doran in 1887 or 1888.