[color=00aeef]"Did you know that there has been a marked drop in thievery?"[/color] [color=fff200]"I did not know that... and how did you accomplish this marked drop in thievery?"[/color] [color=f7941d]"Me and the lands rounded up all the known thieves."[/color] [color=fff200]"...for questioning?"[/color] [color=f7941d]"Uh... no. Now it's just the unknown thieves we need to worry about."[/color] Edit: should probably clarify - I'm not implying Darius would commit thief genocide. Just making a casual GoT reference that has to do with the overall topic of medieval crime solving. Darius actually has really strong principles regarding authority and law. But he isn't exactly by the book either. Like, he wouldn't be lenient towards a noble who broke the law - if he actually had a say in the proceedings, he'd try to give them the same punishment a commoner would have received. At the same time, he would be lenient to someone - commoner or noble - who could prove they had a [i]really[/i] good motive for their crime. This is all based on the hypothetical and extremely unlikely scenario that Darius gets involved in law. Do Lords serve as judges for crimes that occur within their lands?