In 2008, two sixth-grade boys were actually arrested when their shared Death Note, which contained names of school faculty and classmates, was found and deemed by authorities to be “terrorist threats.” The boys cited the anime Death Note as inspiration for the “joke.” Eventually, though, officials agreed that a threat was “not intended.”Īmusingly, the NBC affiliate that reported on the incident calls Death Note “a Cartoon Network show,” which is a heinous offense to anime fans. ![]() After she lost it at school, it was found and read, and whoever found it brought it to school officials. In 2016, a student at Lakewood Middle School was questioned and suspended for owning a replica Death Note, which she used to do some accounting for a fundraiser. I’m frightened for her,” a parent told a local news outlet. “My daughter’s name was on the note and she is absolutely frightened and I don’t blame her. Also, come on, this was an elementary school. Although it wasn’t a full-fledged notebook, it did have “Death Note” written at the top. At the time, the owner had just finished serving their third suspension. In 2014, in Sycamore Elementary in Tennessee, a “hit list” belonging to a student was discovered by a fellow classmate. One of the parents to a “victim” told local news station WMUR9: “I pray with every ounce of my being that it’s never something that would turn into a tragedy … But how do you know it wouldn’t? How do you know this isn’t the beginning of a tragic situation?” 2) Collierville, Tennessee Still, paranoia sweeped the school during the incident. “We did not find any evidence that the student had intended to harm students or that there were any plans beyond simply placing the students’ names on the list,” Superintendent Mark Conrad told a local news outlet. Naturally, the students were shaken, though the authorities acted rationally here. L would then be killed by the Shinigami everyone knew about and not by Kira and it would also kill Rem having intervened in Misa's death.In 2015, “appropriate action” was taken when authorities discovered a 15-year-old girl’s Death Note, complete with the names of 17 of her classmates, as well as the specific dates and circumstances of their deaths. Of course Light knew L well enough that L would still pursue Misa and seeking her execution by proving she was the Second Kira, forcing Rem's hand to then kill L. Now it was important for Rem to be the Shinigami of this Death Note that L recovered because if Rem didn't play along Misa's life would be in danger as such the fake rules wouldn't be exposed. get rid of ownership and erasing his memories). his new one he can give up ownership when he wanted to "get rid of this pride" while in imprisoned (ie. ![]() To do this Light had to have a second Death Note on him as he gives up ownership of his in order to retain his memories and claim ownership of the new Death Note when it's ownership is given up by one of the Shinigami. Ownership of this Death Note had to go to one of the Shinigami to then go to one of the Yotsuba Group (or any big company) and trusting L's detective work he would find the new Kira and recover the Death Note. If a person makes this notebook unusable by tearing it up or burning it, all the humans who have touched the Death Note will die. If the user of the Death Note fails to consecutively write names within 13 days of each other, then the user will die. ![]() These rules ultimately lead to his downfall. The Fake Death Note Rules are two rules that Light Yagami persuades the Shinigami Ryuk to write into the Death Note as part of a plan to clear him of suspicion. Only Light's Death Note had the rules written in English (see comments) and he added the fake rules in the back about needing to write a name very 13 days and if you destroy the Death note all those who touched it will die. If I recall correctly it was a part of Light's grand scheme to fully exonerate him as being Kira in the eyes of the task force and to kill L.
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