Department of Extranormal Operations | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | DC Comics |
First appearance | Batman #550 (1998) |
Created by | Dan Curtis Johnson and J. H. Williams III |
In-story information | |
Type of organization | Federal Law Enforcement Agency |
Leader(s) | |
Agent(s) |
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The Department of Extranormal Operations (DEO) is a government agency in the DC Universe appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. It was co-created by Dan Curtis Johnson and J. H. Williams III and first appeared in Batman #550 (1998). [3] The agency was the focus of the Chase series. It is featured in the Supergirl television series. [4] The agency has a complicated relationship with the depiction of law and constitutional rights in the DC Universe. [5]
The role of the DEO is to monitor those with extranormal superpowers and to prevent any threat to the general public.[ citation needed ] However, in Action Comics #775 there are a couple of rogue agents[ original research? ] defeated by Superman. Manchester Black, the leader of The Elite, suggests they are responsible for the creation of fellow team member Menagerie, saying that "These guys run a triple black alien immigration service that takes the galaxies' cast-offs an' turns them into weapons for the highest bidder. The West Nile glop in New York is one of theirs from the Microbio Division."[ citation needed ]
The DEO was responsible for the "orphanage" seen in Young Justice in which Secret was kept,[ citation needed ] although a later conversation between Director Bones and Agent Chase suggested the conditions in which she was kept were not official policy.[ citation needed ] Another such orphanage was seen in the 1999 Titans series.[ citation needed ]
The DEO has protected important aspects of Washington, D.C., from telepathic intrusion. [6]
A rogue department of the DEO manages to convince Green Lantern to scan various heroes, presumably to detect a body-hopping supervillain. Instead, the data is used to create a new version of Amazo. Chase, Mr. Bones, Green Lantern and other heroes shut down the division. Amazo is destroyed and Green Lantern deletes the relevant information. [7]
Batwoman becomes a reluctant agent of the DEO after the agency learns her identity. Mister Bones, director of the DEO, believes himself to be the illegitimate son of Col. Jacob Kane, Batwoman's father. [8] [9] DEO agents discover that Beth Kane, Batwoman's identical twin sister, is alive and capture her. Bones blackmails Batwoman into helping the DEO uncover the secret identity of Batman in exchange for Beth. [10] Batwoman and her allies are unable to rescue Beth and Bones attempts to kill her. Agent Asaf, suborned by Batwoman, shoots Bones in the head and frees Beth. Asaf then claims that Bones was mentally unbalanced (Bones is brain-damaged but survives) [9]
It was revealed in the Peacemaker episode "Better Goff Dead" that Emilia Harcourt was a DEO agent before joining A.R.G.U.S. as an agent.
The DEO appears in several series set in the Arrowverse, mainly Supergirl .
In the 2011 film Green Lantern , the DEO appears as an agency under the secret support of Sen. Robert Hammond. His son, Hector Hammond, is given the assignment of doing the autopsy of Abin Sur by one of the main heads Amanda Waller.
Supergirl is the name of several fictional superheroines appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. The original, current, and most well known Supergirl is Kara Zor-El, the cousin of superhero Superman. The character made her first appearance in Action Comics #252 and was created by Otto Binder and Al Plastino.
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Mister Bones is a character in the DC Comics Universe, created by Roy Thomas, Dann Thomas, and Todd McFarlane, in Infinity, Inc. #16. A former low-level supervillain and member of Helix, he reformed and joined the Infinity Inc. team, then later the Department of Extranormal Operations as a bureaucrat, eventually rising to the rank of Regional Director for the Eastern Seaboard. Thus, he now wears a suit and tie instead of a costume, and is also known as Director Bones. A chain-smoker, he had a habit of speaking in rhyme in early appearances, but he no longer does so.
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"Elseworlds" is the fifth Arrowverse crossover event that features episodes of the television series The Flash, Arrow, and Supergirl on The CW. The crossover event began on December 9, 2018, with The Flash, continued on Arrow on December 10, and concluded on Supergirl on December 11. "Elseworlds" introduces the characters Batwoman and Lois Lane, and the fictional Gotham City, to the universe. In the crossover, Green Arrow, Flash, and Supergirl, the former two having had their powers and lives switched, are drawn to Gotham City to confront Dr. John Deegan over his work at Arkham Asylum.
Clark Joseph Kent, also known by his birth name Kal-El or superhero alias Superman, is a fictional character and a superhero in the 2021 The CW television series Superman & Lois; originally developed as a part of the Arrowverse franchise of television series, first mentioned in the 2015 pilot of Supergirl, based on the character of the same name created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, and adapted for television by Glen Winter, Greg Berlanti and Todd Helbing from the previous Arrowverse adaptation of the character by Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg, and Jessica Queller. Clark Kent had been portrayed by Tyler Hoechlin in the Arrowverse since 2016 prior to the development of Superman & Lois as a spin-off of Supergirl, in which Hoechlin reprised his role as co-headliner, initially said to be playing the same incarnation of Superman he had played in Supergirl, before the series was retroactively established to be set in its own continuity, on an Earth other from Earth-Prime, in its second season finale.