Remember: If it's RUST, you can TRUST. Rust (orange-brown) text reflects real world information. Otherwise, this wiki contains FICTION from the worlds of author R.L. Akers. Click here for details.

Gray Gaynes: Difference between revisions

From WikiRLA
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 24: Line 24:


<blockquote>''"Grayson Gaynes" redirects here.''</blockquote>'''Grayson Alan "Gray" Gaynes''' (born June 14, 1987) is an American retired [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_Police_Department New York City Police Department] detective, best known for his controversial involvement in the hunt for [[the Mad Batter]] serial killer. On March 1, 2016, during that investigation, Gaynes was recorded beating a handcuffed suspect on livestream video. The footage went viral, with millions of views by the end of that week.
<blockquote>''"Grayson Gaynes" redirects here.''</blockquote>'''Grayson Alan "Gray" Gaynes''' (born June 14, 1987) is an American retired [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_City_Police_Department New York City Police Department] detective, best known for his controversial involvement in the hunt for [[the Mad Batter]] serial killer. On March 1, 2016, during that investigation, Gaynes was recorded beating a handcuffed suspect on livestream video. The footage went viral, with millions of views by the end of that week.
== Early life ==
TBD
== Career ==
TBD
== Medical conditions ==
TBD
== Life after the NYPD ==
TBD
== Behind the scenes ==
<div style="color:#a35a00;">
Graynes Gaynes' NYPD murder investigations are retold in the first six books of the series bearing his name (From the Files of Gray Gaynes).
As with many story ideas, the Gray books began as a single short narrative (some of the details actually adapted from a strange dream the author had). Naming the character "Gray" was, of course, intentionally on the nose. As Gray's tale quickly developed into a longer series, author R.L. Akers faced the unexpected question of whether Gray himself should ever acknowledge the aptness of his own name. This might be just a little ''too'' meta, however.
</div>