A transfer sheet changes the board—but not the truth. Here’s what the evidence actually does, who it heats up, and why the case just got harder.

The PCPD examined items from Drew’s safe and a $1,000,000 transfer to Judge Heran came to light. ADA Turner didn’t blink—legal pressure is the play. That single document doesn’t name a shooter, but it does redraw motive lines in thick ink.
Why it matters: Money is motive, but paper is proof only when it connects. This transfer could indicate bribery, a frame, or a red herring. What it certainly does is give Turner leverage to challenge the current legal guardrails and push the investigation back into motion.
What’s confirmed: Turner pressed the case; the injunction is in her sights. The investigative focus moved through suspects and associates, but nothing in the hour confirmed the gunman. Jason, meanwhile, kept his updates tight, separating what he knows from what fans want him to say. The board is dynamic—but still unsolved.
Reading the frame: The PCPD desk shots lingered on manila edges and pen tips—classic GH when process matters. A sheet with neat columns, a file partially open, a name glimpsed then denied legibility to the lens—visual grammar for “we’re not done.”
Changed vs Didn’t:
• Changed — The narrative now includes a high-dollar transfer with legal implications.
• Didn’t — Forensics naming a shooter; any clean chain from money to bullet.
Clues to watch next: Who could author a transfer of that size without tripping alarms? Who benefits if Drew looks dirty? And who suddenly acts too helpful?
[Speculation] Clean tease: If Turner succeeds in court, interviews widen and alibis loosen. Expect one person to get louder on principle—and another to go quiet on purpose.
Gut check—who’s your top suspect after the $1M reveal, and why? Receipts & Timestamps