[B]Name:[/b] Asper Hansen [b]Age:[/b] Unknown, reportedly between the ages of 22 and 33. [b]Appearance:[/b] While glimpses of Asper Hansen are fleeting, it is apparent that he has every intention of rubbing the system the wrong way. Eye witness accounts of his appearance seem to indicate a tall, lanky man with shoulder length hair and a penchant for facial jewelry. With the Mors usually sticking to the lower levels of the sixteenth District, it is widely assumed that Aspen is of a naturally pale countenance. His fingers are adorned with eight stylized metallic rings and his clothing seems partial to some theme of maroon, the official color of the Mors. [b]Personal Details:[/b] Asper Hansen was not born to wealth nor to poverty, but rather to the mischance of poor fortune. When his parents were suddenly (and perhaps rather suspiciously, in some circles of discussion), killed on their way home, Asper was sent from District 2 to live with his aunt in the lower edges of District 16. His aunt, while not apathetic to young Asper, was certainly not appreciative of his rather immediate intrusion into her life and pharmaceutical drug habits. When she failed to pay up on a loan edged against a rather disciplined group of gangsters that called themselves the Greasers, nine year old Asper came home to a disembodied aunt and a ransacked housing unit. In and out of the local Ancoran adoption homes until his late teenage years saw Asper continually picked on and bullied. He did not learn to wistfully escape or defy his attackers with an immense cerebral intellect, but instead sought revenge in the most devious methods possible. His last charade saw him expunged to the streets for allegedly forcing one of the more provocative bullies to gargle down motor oil. The details, even for the remarkable computing systems of District Zero become hazy here, as Asper moved to and fro the societal hierarchy of Ancora, eventually sinking deep enough to become less a person and more a fragment. He has supposedly returned to his roots in District 16, where he is inching his own influence onto the seedier dissidents of the anarchy that is District 16. [b]District:[/b] District Sixteen. [b]Additional:[/b] Asper is the leader of a gang called the [i]Mors[/i]. They are numerous and well known, but considered a relative non-threat to the people of District 16. They are no friends to law enforcement and the more wily of members have been known to jump isolated law enforcement officers. There is more glory than guts here, as most of these incidents end in arrests for the [i]Mors[/i] members, but rumor has it that it's some obscure right of passage. They deal primarily in high grade pharmaceutical drugs and small time prostitution within District 16. Most of the members of this outfit are drop outs, teenagers are prevalent and women can often be seen wearing the maroon imbued handprint of the [i]Mors[/i]. The [i]Mors[/i] are the primary handlers and dealers of a well known deliriant called [i]Fuzz[/i], which is an active psychopharmacological drug that inhibits the production of glutamate, which carries neurons to the hippocampus and stores information, such as memories. While a bottle of whiskey might wash away your problems for a night, the residual and euphoric (often referred to as a [i]fuzzy feeling[/i]) feeling is replicated on a much more immediate level without the post bottle hangover or the debilitating physical effects of natural intoxication. The drug must be administrated via neural injection and common signs of use are needle marks at the base of the neck. Long term use is errant memory loss and possible damage to the central nervous system. Short time use includes forgetting targeted and commonly induced memories and thoughts and a slight feeling of euphoria across the temporal lobes and across the epidermis. Law enforcement often identifies citizens on the drug by asking them easily identified but rather obscure questions like what they ate for lunch, or who the last person they talked to on the phone was -- while not a surefire way, minor events are often not recorded at all by the brain under the effects of [i]Fuzz[/i] and missing one or two key questions can lead to incarceration. Current charges brought for use, possession or intent to sell are unknown.