[hider=DROPPED][center][b]Sex[/b] Male [b]Group[/b] FBI [b]Nationality[/b] American [b]Birth[/b] San Diego, California, USA; April 1, 1978 (40) [/center][hr][u]Appearance[/u] - 5’9” height, 149 lb weight - German, Japanese ethnicity - Dark blonde crew cut - Asian physical features with blue eye color, tan skin - Business casual civvies (prefers blue dress shirts, khakis, tennis shoes) - FBI SWAT uniform, no modifications [u]Experience[/u] First Lieutenant, Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, 4th Marine Expeditionary Brigade (Anti-Terrorism), USMC - Operation Iraqi Freedom, 2003-4 - Ricin Letters Incident B.S. Biochemistry, University of California, San Diego M.S. Biomedical Engineering, John Hopkins University Ph.D. Medicinal Chemistry, Auburn University Instructor, Hazardous Devices School, FBI HAZMAT Officer, Hazardous Materials Response Unit, "" Contractor, REDACTED, Joint Technology Program (Department of Defense), Office of Science and Technology, Department of Justice [u]Profile[/u] Douglas REDACTED Keller was raised in San Diego by a psychologist mother. His Nisei father served the Navy in Vietnam and runs a maritime shipping business. Keller enlisted as a Marine reservist after graduating high school, specializing in CBRN defense. Between 1996 and 2002, Keller obtained his bachelor and master degrees, the latter after completing officer training and transferring to the CBIRF. In 2003, his company was deployed alongside the 4th MEB (AT) to Iraq, and he returned for a second tour of duty in 2004. After his discharge, Keller was hired as an instructor at the FBI Hazardous Devices School in Alabama, where he also worked towards his doctorate for the next 8 years. His doctoral thesis concerned the binding of organophosphate nerve agents by cholinesterase enzymes, which attracted the attention of the US DoD. REDACTED. After the Bartlett University incident, Keller assumed field operations as a HAZMAT officer in FBI CIRG teams responding to future CBRN incidents. He joins Team Rainbow’s CBRN Threat Unit as a reserve operator. His demeanor is mild and measured, carefully choosing words to not overplay himself. Assumed to be a product of his mother’s influence, and habit by his multiple security clearances at the US DoJ. His lack of trust could distance him from other operators and cause unnecessary rifts in the field, so is more suited to remain on standby. Seems to have a morbid curiosity with violent death, though especially disturbed by victims of biochemical attacks. Perhaps his REDACTED had a larger psychological impact than was recorded in archived profiles. The following excerpt is from his interview transcript: [quote] “The most significant event in my personal life? I have none to recall, you can trust me on that. But let me tell you about a story I heard; a boy once received a package. It was from a deceased relative never acknowledged by his family. Regardless he opened it to find an old metal briefcase, already unlocked when wrapped. If the briefcase had been locked, its contents would have then landed in more secure hands.” “But the boy revealed the contents to himself: documents in English and Japanese, letters, notes, and scripts piled as high as they could fit. The boy thought, was this relative a government agent, a spy or a mad scientist? But as he read the very first page it all fell into horror, at experiments conducted unethically darker than any scientist, government secrets exposed. He only raised his eyes to clear himself, when he saw the words scratched into the briefcase lining.” 「我を覚えて。」 “Remember me.” [/quote] [u]Relations[/u] [i]FBI:[/i] Considered the rank of a recruit. Defers to other named operators in field operations. [i]Lera ‘Finka’ Melnikova/Olivier ‘Lion’ Flament:[/i] His superior officers in the CBRN Threat Unit. [i]‘Six’/Mike ‘Thatcher’ Baker:[/i] Knows the level of his security clearances and redacted activities. [hr][u]Loadout[/u] Benelli M4 - Primary Remington R5 RGP - Primary FN 57 - Secondary C4 Block - Defending Frag Grenade - Attacking Stun Grenade - Attacking BChE Injection - Administered before possible hazardous missions - Preventive countermeasure against nerve agents [/hider]