
Choice Made Simple!
Too many options?Click below to purchase an online gift card that can be used at participating retailers in Village Green Shopping Centre and continue your shopping IN CENTRE!Purchase HereHome
Episode 15: The Elevator and the Tank: Last Seen Casefile Anomalies, #15
Coles
Loading Inventory...
Episode 15: The Elevator and the Tank: Last Seen Casefile Anomalies, #15 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $4.99

Coles
Episode 15: The Elevator and the Tank: Last Seen Casefile Anomalies, #15 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $4.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Los Angeles, 2013.
A young traveler checks into a downtown hotel and begins documenting her trip.
Days later, she disappears.
The search begins inside the building. Her room shows no signs of struggle. Staff confirm routine interactions. Surveillance footage captures her entering an elevator, pressing multiple buttons, and behaving in a way that raises concern—but not certainty.
Then the building itself begins to signal a problem.
Guests report water pressure issues. Discoloration. An unusual taste.
Maintenance is sent to the roof.
What they find shifts the case entirely.
A rooftop water tank—normally sealed and rarely accessed—becomes the center of the investigation. Detectives begin reconstructing how a person could reach it, examining fire escapes, stairwells, alarm systems, and structural access points.
Each answer leads to another constraint.
Each constraint leads to another question.
The Elevator and the Tank reconstructs the case through building layout, security systems, surveillance timelines, forensic findings, and behavioral context. It separates confirmed facts from speculation, focusing on physical access, sequence, and environmental reality.
The result is not a mystery built on unknown forces.
It is a case defined by how a person reached a place they should not have been able to reach—and what happened once they did.
Los Angeles, 2013.
A young traveler checks into a downtown hotel and begins documenting her trip.
Days later, she disappears.
The search begins inside the building. Her room shows no signs of struggle. Staff confirm routine interactions. Surveillance footage captures her entering an elevator, pressing multiple buttons, and behaving in a way that raises concern—but not certainty.
Then the building itself begins to signal a problem.
Guests report water pressure issues. Discoloration. An unusual taste.
Maintenance is sent to the roof.
What they find shifts the case entirely.
A rooftop water tank—normally sealed and rarely accessed—becomes the center of the investigation. Detectives begin reconstructing how a person could reach it, examining fire escapes, stairwells, alarm systems, and structural access points.
Each answer leads to another constraint.
Each constraint leads to another question.
The Elevator and the Tank reconstructs the case through building layout, security systems, surveillance timelines, forensic findings, and behavioral context. It separates confirmed facts from speculation, focusing on physical access, sequence, and environmental reality.
The result is not a mystery built on unknown forces.
It is a case defined by how a person reached a place they should not have been able to reach—and what happened once they did.


















