Detective Otis Warren
From Omnictionary
Otis Warren, originally Otis Olliver Warren-Vincent, was born April 17, 1959 in Crieff, Scotland. He was the third child of Emily Vincent and John Scott Warren. Warren currently is a detective on the Orlando Police Department assigned to investigate the mysterious disappearance of Margo Roth Spiegelman
Personal History
Otis' father, John Scott Warren, was a general surgeon and freelance photographer. Otis' mother was diagnosed with Munchausen Syndrome, and committed suicide in 1964. Warren's father suffered from Neill-Dingwall Syndrome for fourteen years and finally succumbed to its effects in 1964, several months after his wife's death.
Warren and his two older sisters were taken in by their aunt and uncle in London, England in 1964, where Warren lived for the rest of his childhood. In his teenage years, Warren suffered from severe abandonment issues and paranoia. He graduated Summa Cum Laude from Cambridge University with a major in mathematics. He received his graduate degree in mathematics from Harvard University. He worked for several years at Yale University as a math professor.
After several years of teaching, Warren retired. He planned to live out the rest of his life on his pension and his aunt and uncle's money, but just as he was setting out to return to England, he received news that his aunt had been murdered. The identity of the murderer was unknown and would not be uncovered for nearly 15 years. Warren set out to become a detective so that he could solve the case himself. After attending the Global School of Investigation, Warren became a certified detective and did eventually uncover his aunt's murderer as her neighbor's jealous and resentful gardener, Mergatroit Sludgecake. The subsequent trial became a landmark case in London.
Following the verdict of the Mergatroit Sludgecake trial, Warren immediately fled the country, citing painful memories as the reason behind his departure, and vowing never to return. However, there is speculation that Warren fled London to avoid answering questions to the rumors of unorthodox methods used to ascertain the identity of his Aunt's murderer.

