Jones suddenly took note of the lack of a murder weapon, having not noticed that before and recording it in his notebook as they stepped through the glass hallway, Ramirez carefully pushing the body through the revolving door as they stepped through some automatic doors. The glass hallway was in the shape of a horizontal cylinder, with the first part of the hallway being similar to a tunnel that you’d go through after exiting an airplane, before the team took a set of stairs in order to reach the main part of the hallway, which opened into a cylindrical spiral of glass panels, where the team could see the other denizens of the district scattering about underneath them. As they walked through the hallway, Jones turned to Charles, deciding to ask him about the case itself. “Now, here’s an idea that I got when I was looking over the keycard, as I think the killer intended on stealing the victim’s key-card before they used it to enter the stock market,” Jones commented as they walked down the metal flooring. “That’s proof enough that it’s pre-meditated, for sure. As for the chip, I don’t get why stock traders are so addicted to gambling. They play around with their money all day for work and then play around with money all night for fun, wouldn’t you agree? Plus, I did notice something on his body when we passed by him. As far as I know…” he would pause, pulling up one of the pictures on his phone, “I didn’t see any damage on his head, neither did I see any signs of a scuffle on his fists. I suspect that the killer probably took him off-guard when he tried to kill him or injected him with something.” Time and the autopsy would tell if Jones was actually correct in his deductions, as Jones looked out of the tunnel and upon the traffic of the street directly below him.