Official Case Materials

Evidence Locker

The archive is the record. The Evidence Locker is the remains.

Inside are sealed objects, recovered tapes, photographs, fragments, and physical materials connected to the Rebecca’s Grave case — items collected, boxed away, transferred, damaged, and never meant to surface again.

Nothing here explains the legend cleanly. The objects only make the pattern harder to dismiss.

Case-Room Manifest

Primary Case Materials

Three objects define the room: a transfer that will not end, a field note that was overwritten, and a photograph that changed after duplication.

Sealed Materials

Twenty-four text-only case files. No photographs yet. No spectacle. Just the inventory, the handling notes, and the places where certainty breaks.

Chain of Custody

The locker does not claim certainty. It preserves contact: where an object was recovered, what changed during transfer, and what could not be verified.

Recovered

Objects entered the locker from field notes, damaged media transfers, private storage, and materials connected to the Wallace file.

Transferred

Some labels were applied after damage occurred. Some files were copied more than once. Not every duplicate matches the first inventory.

Unsealed

The moment an item is viewed, the file changes. The locker records the object, but it cannot return it to silence.

The Wallace Materials

Morgan Wallace did not leave behind an explanation. He left fragments: field notes, tape labels, damaged transfers, and a trail of questions that kept pointing back to Rebecca’s Grave.

Tapes, Transfers, Dropouts

The recovered tape files are not shown here yet. The locker holds their descriptions first: transfer damage, repeated frames, reversed audio, and labels applied after the media had already failed.

Notes With Later Marks

The field notes preserve corrections that do not behave like corrections. Locations are marked twice. Words darken after the surrounding handwriting has faded.

Images Not Yet Released

The photographs remain withheld until the visual file system is ready. For now, the locker records what each image changed when it entered the case.

Things With Owners Removed

Receipts, envelopes, prayer cards, buttons, and printed material remain in the index. The names are missing more often than the objects.

Stone, Soil, Contact

The grave materials are the most physical part of the locker: rubbing strips, soil bags, marker notes, and objects that were close enough to carry the site back with them.

Sound Without Context

The audio files are held as transfer notes only: breath under soil, a repeated phrase, and channels that drop out before the speaker can be identified.

Files That Changed Hands

The chain-broken items are not rejected. They are marked. A break in custody does not erase an object; it changes the question the object asks.

The Locker Was Not Empty

The Evidence Locker does not close the case. It makes the absence physical. The archive shows the record. The locker shows what was left behind.

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