Unofficial Archive

THE SCHOOLGIRL KILLER

A private compilation of clippings, memos, and testimony regarding a girl incorrectly named by newspapers before anyone asked who she was. She did not kill schoolgirls. She wore the uniform because it finally matched the picture inside her head.

Subject

Profile

Alias: "Schoolgirl" (headline name, not self‑chosen)
Legal: ██████ █████████
Gender: Girl (the argument about this came later; she did not wait for permission)
Active: 2012–2016 (witness‑based, incomplete)
Habitats: end of corridors, choir balconies, buses that arrive one stop too early.


Notes

She practiced ordinary in a mirror until the mirror stopped correcting her. The uniform wasn’t disguise; it was a decision. Adults mistook the bow for harmlessness and the cardigan for compliance. They didn’t notice the way her schedule always matched the periods nobody monitored.

Witnesses disagree on her voice: some recall a careful alto reading names over the PA; others, a whisper that made them check their posture. Records from the school district circulate with the same typo: her first name repeats where the last should be, as if duplication could erase her.

Archive Clippings (selected)

2012‑09‑18 • LOCAL — "Uniformed Girl at Non‑Uniform School Raises Questions"

Staff note a new student who appears on attendance sheets no one filed. "She was polite and tidy," says an English teacher, "and I remember thinking she looked correct." Hours later the bell rang off‑schedule. The district called it a test no one ordered.

2013‑11‑07 • CITY • MISSING CASES CONSOLIDATED

Three adult employees — a hall monitor, a contracted custodian, and a substitute — fail to return home on days when a girl in a blazer is logged on multiple cameras yet appears on none when frames are advanced. Police ask for tips. The school responds by repainting the stairwells.

2014‑02‑14 • OP‑ED — "Stop calling her a monster."

"She is a girl and the name you use is wrong. She wore a uniform because she found one in the thrift store and it finally matched. If you are going to hunt anyone, hunt the absence that keeps turning up in your paperwork."

2015‑10‑23 • METRO — Fire Drill Without Weather

Students evacuated under clear skies after alarms sounded at 10:11 a.m., a time that exists on no semester schedule. Headcounts would not divide evenly. A pink ribbon was located in the faculty lot, tied to a cone.

2016‑12‑12 • BULLETIN — "Balcony Door Found Unlatched"

The auditorium balcony door (B‑East) found unlatched after Winter Concert. Program margins recovered with handwriting: practice looking ordinary. Footprints lead to the dark row, then double back, then stop.

Victims & Gaps (non‑procedural)

Listed to acknowledge absence. Details intentionally withheld; this is atmosphere, not instruction.

Families reported identical phone calls: a dial tone followed by a girl reading the day's lunch menu in a steady voice.

Timeline
Sept 2012 — Orientation
A girl in a thrifted blazer attends an assembly that doesn't list her row. Yearbook photo shows only a bow mid‑motion.
Nov 2013 — Consolidation
Separate missing‑adult notices folded into one bulletin. Someone underlines the phrase no students harmed until the paper tears.
Feb 2014 — Letter
Guidance receives an unsigned defense of the girl. The principal writes keep this quiet in the margin.
Oct 2015 — Drill
The alarm invents a new period. Headcounts misbehave. A ribbon, a cone, an apology no one heard.
Dec 2016 — Balcony
The door is open. The footprints double. The row is warm.
Interoffice Memo (excerpt)

To: District Supervision • From: Risk Office • Date: 2016‑12‑13

Re: Press language. Do not repeat the tabloid nickname. Use: Unidentified Female Student. Avoid implying a pattern; we have none that yields instruction. If contacted by federal agencies, surrender footage and the pink planner without comment.

If this were real and you had information, you would go here: Submit a tip to the FBI. This site is fictional.

The Schoolgirl Killer — Unofficial Casefile
Unofficial Archive

THE SCHOOLGIRL KILLER

A private compilation of clippings, memos, and testimony regarding a girl incorrectly named by newspapers before anyone asked who she was. She did not kill schoolgirls. She wore the uniform because it finally matched the picture inside her head.

Subject

Profile

Alias: "Schoolgirl" (headline name, not self‑chosen)
Legal: ██████ █████████
Gender: Girl (the argument about this came later; she did not wait for permission)
Active: 2012–2016 (witness‑based, incomplete)
Habitats: end of corridors, choir balconies, buses that arrive one stop too early.


Notes

She practiced ordinary in a mirror until the mirror stopped correcting her. The uniform wasn’t disguise; it was a decision. Adults mistook the bow for harmlessness and the cardigan for compliance. They didn’t notice the way her schedule always matched the periods nobody monitored.

Witnesses disagree on her voice: some recall a careful alto reading names over the PA; others, a whisper that made them check their posture. Records from the school district circulate with the same typo: her first name repeats where the last should be, as if duplication could erase her.

Archive Clippings (selected)

2012‑09‑18 • LOCAL — "Uniformed Girl at Non‑Uniform School Raises Questions"

Staff note a new student who appears on attendance sheets no one filed. "She was polite and tidy," says an English teacher, "and I remember thinking she looked correct." Hours later the bell rang off‑schedule. The district called it a test no one ordered.

2013‑11‑07 • CITY • MISSING CASES CONSOLIDATED

Three adult employees — a hall monitor, a contracted custodian, and a substitute — fail to return home on days when a girl in a blazer is logged on multiple cameras yet appears on none when frames are advanced. Police ask for tips. The school responds by repainting the stairwells.

2014‑02‑14 • OP‑ED — "Stop calling her a monster."

"She is a girl and the name you use is wrong. She wore a uniform because she found one in the thrift store and it finally matched. If you are going to hunt anyone, hunt the absence that keeps turning up in your paperwork."

2015‑10‑23 • METRO — Fire Drill Without Weather

Students evacuated under clear skies after alarms sounded at 10:11 a.m., a time that exists on no semester schedule. Headcounts would not divide evenly. A pink ribbon was located in the faculty lot, tied to a cone.

2016‑12‑12 • BULLETIN — "Balcony Door Found Unlatched"

The auditorium balcony door (B‑East) found unlatched after Winter Concert. Program margins recovered with handwriting: practice looking ordinary. Footprints lead to the dark row, then double back, then stop.

Victims & Gaps (non‑procedural)

Listed to acknowledge absence. Details intentionally withheld; this is atmosphere, not instruction.

Families reported identical phone calls: a dial tone followed by a girl reading the day's lunch menu in a steady voice.

Timeline
Sept 2012 — Orientation
A girl in a thrifted blazer attends an assembly that doesn't list her row. Yearbook photo shows only a bow mid‑motion.
Nov 2013 — Consolidation
Separate missing‑adult notices folded into one bulletin. Someone underlines the phrase no students harmed until the paper tears.
Feb 2014 — Letter
Guidance receives an unsigned defense of the girl. The principal writes keep this quiet in the margin.
Oct 2015 — Drill
The alarm invents a new period. Headcounts misbehave. A ribbon, a cone, an apology no one heard.
Dec 2016 — Balcony
The door is open. The footprints double. The row is warm.
Interoffice Memo (excerpt)

To: District Supervision • From: Risk Office • Date: 2016‑12‑13

Re: Press language. Do not repeat the tabloid nickname. Use: Unidentified Female Student. Avoid implying a pattern; we have none that yields instruction. If contacted by federal agencies, surrender footage and the pink planner without comment.

If this were real and you had information, you would go here: Submit a tip to the FBI. This site is fictional.