Darkstars

Ferrin Colos
Donna Troy
John Stewart
Merayn
Carla White

Our universe's first society grew and prospered on the planet Maltus. Eons later one group of Maltusians, the Controllers broke from their brothers, the Guardians of the Universe, and colonized a more-distant part of the universe. Like the Guardians, they too realized eventually that they needed a law enforcement organization. They thus formed the Nemo organization in order to protect their own interests. After 1000 years, however, they realized that they needed a more proactive approach; they needed to attack chaos at its roots. The Darkstars were then created to actively patrol predefined sectors of space. (Darkstars #0)

The first Darkstar was named Druu, and he inspired many like him, including Radz. Radz's sector included the world of Zamba, home of Ferrin Colos. Zamba's inhabitants were religiously self-contained, but when they were attacked by the alien Qinorri, Radz inspired Colos to follow the path of a Darkstar. Colos left his homeworld an exile and had many successes. His career brought him to Earth, where his assignment became permanent. There he deputized John Flint and Mo Douglas and fought the likes of Evil Star. Soon, Flint was fired for insubordination and was replaced by Carla White.

Earth's Darkstars soon met Green Lantern Hal Jordan and the L.E.G.I.O.N. Ancient Maltusian gods called the Triarch (Quarra, Archor & Tzodar) had begun causing chaos on different worlds. The L.E.G.I.O.N. and Green Lantern clashed over the protectorship of Maltus as the Triarch began transforming the ground around them. Matters were further complicated when the Darkstars' commander, Huvan Jeddigar ordered they not interfere. Colos disobeyed this, and together, the three groups found a way to stop the Triarch. (#11)

Vril Dox learned the Triach's secret and awakened the Controller who originally created the them. The mad Controller ordered the universe's destruction, but the Triarch learned the truth of their origins and turned on him. They restored Maltus and disappeared. Dox then brokered a deal: The Green Lantern Corps would patrol the spaceways and aid with internal planetary affairs; the Darkstars would attend as planetary champions; and the L.E.G.I.O.N. would serve as the first-line defense for its client worlds. When jurisdictions overlapped, the three agreed to cooperate. Afterwards, the Controllers offered Dox a position administering the Darkstars, which he refused... for the time being. ("DCU Universe: Trinity" crossover)

Very soon after this, the Green Lantern Corps was decimated by Hal Jordan and the Darkstars were left to police much of the universe themselves. On Earth, a renegade Darkstar, Merayn Dethalis appeared, claiming she was framed by Jeddigar. When Colos tried to investigate, he was stripped of his star and replaced on Earth by Donna Troy. When Jeddigar was finally exposed, the Controllers tapped former Green Lantern John Stewart to administer the organization. Stewart rose to the challenge; he and Merayn soon became romantically involved. (Darkstars #21-23)

Carla eventually resigned and Mo became full-time operative (Darkstars #29), working with refugees from the battle with Psimon. Though the Darkstars remain active, the Controllers have expressed concerns about their effectiveness. More specifically, they are troubled that Darkstar agents look more after their own agendas than the Controllers'. (Darkstars #38)

Many Darkstars were killed (including MO) or lost their battlesuits in combat against Grayven on the planet Rann. Grayven, who claimed to be son of Darkseid, struck John Stewart, jeopardizing his ability to walk. Green Lantern ended the battle, but the Darkstars were decimated by the losses. Donna and Merayn resigned and returned with John to Earth. In the end, only four Darkstars remained to help rebuild Ranagar: Colos, Chaser Bron, Munchuk and Galius Zed. (Green Lantern #74-75) Later, Galius Zed was also killed by Fatality. (Green Lantern v.3 #82)

The last of the Darkstars (Colos, Chaser Bron & Munchuk) gave their life saving the universe from the energy vampire called Starbreaker. They siphoned off a considerable amount of power from him, which helped save the day, but their suits ruptured and all three were killed. (Adam Strange #8)

Notable Members

1st Darkstars app.

Status/Notes

Ferrin Colos of Zamba Darkstars #1 Active as a Darkstar
John Flint of Earth Darkstars #1 Was "fired" Darkstars #7
Mo Douglas of Earth Darkstars #1 Deceased Green Lantern v.3 #75
Chaser Bron of Baaltar IV Valor #9 Active as a Darkstar
Carla White of Earth Darkstars #9 Retired, Darkstars #29.
Merayn Dethalis of Bavacqua Seven Darkstars #18 Retired, Green Lantern #75; John Stewart's girlfriend
Donna Troy (Wonder Girl, Troia) Darkstars #23 Retired, Green Lantern #75; active in adventuring
John Stewart (Green Lantern III) Darkstars #23 Retired, Green Lantern #75; active as a Green Lantern
G'nort Esplanade Gneesmacher Formerly Known as the Justice League #5 Retired, roaming Earth

Darkstars #1 (October 1992)

SERIESDarkstars, 38 issues (1992-96)

Adam Strange #8 • Damage #16 • DC Universe: Trinity #1-2 • Deathstroke #48-49 • Green Lantern v.3 #44-45, 65, 74-75, 82-83 • L.E.G.I.O.N. #57-58 • New Titans #124-125 • Showcase '95 #10

Green Lantern Corps Web Page

 

Deep Six

Created by Jack Kirby

The Deep Six first left their mark when they killed the ocean-loving New God known as Seagrin. (New Gods #4) Eventually they drew the attention of the New God, Orion, who battled and ultimately killed Slig, whose touch could alternately mutate or disintegrate a victim. (#4-5) His compatriots surfaced in revenge: Jaffar (also in possession of a death-touch and also slain by Orion), Gole, Pyron, the axe-wielding Trok and the winged Shaligo. (#6) This remainder of the Deep Six was destroyed in a fiery conflagration. There were two others named Kurin and the Flying Finback.

Gole
Jaffar
Kurin
Shaligo
Slig
Trok

A resurrected Jaffar and Slig returned later and, once more, Slig died at Orion's hands. (#13)

The group was not seen again until much later, when they encountered Aquaman. During this battle, Trok revealed that the Deep Six could perpetuate themselves by ejecting "spawns" from themselves. They acknowledged that their forebears were slaughtered by Orion, but not before they were spawned into a birthing chamber. This Deep Six grew to maturity on Earth, so they are more attuned to it. (Aquaman v.5 #6-8)

The new sextet subsequently appeared in Metropolis where they clashed with the Supermen of America. Here, Shaligo did not appear but Kurin did. (Supermen of America #2)

Like all the New Gods, the Deep Six met their ends at the hands of the Source's "god killer," Himon. Only Slig survived to make it to the surface of Earth's waters, where he encounterd Mary Marvel. To protect himself, Slig began transforming humans into mer-people. Soon the deadly force found him and a death beam passed through Mary and struck Slig down. (Countdown #38)

NOTE: In the Deep Six entry in Who's Who #6, Pyron was misidentified as Kurin.

New Gods v.1 #2 (April-May 1971)

Countdown #38 • New Gods v.1 #2, 4-6, 13 • New Gods v.2 #17 • Supermen of America #2 •  Unlimited Access #2-4

Delta Chi Delta

Created by Benjamin Raab & Justiniano

Delphi
Nymph
Sensei
Ulysses

In the Fourth Century, the last oracle at Delphi, in Greece, saw a vision of the future in which humankind had become monsters. To prevent that, she founded a secret order called Delta Chi Delta. This order operated in secret for centuries, on the lookout for an extinction-level threat. The threat, it seems arrived at some time in the latter 20th century when an extraterrestrial race carried an an alien virus onto the Earth. This parasite is capable of completely resequencing a human's genetic makeup, creating a totally new being. Though the virus spread quickly enough, the transformations were usually fatal.

The Deltas mission was further complicated when one of their own, Paracelsus (Dr. Damien Masters) stole a sample of the virus and began to experiment. But like most victims of the virus, his subjects all died. As a side project, he also created an army of "bio-borgs" and named his own organization the Omega Concern. The key to Paracelsus' success and perhaps to the Deltas' deliverance lay in the possibility that the virus would successfully transform a human.

Fate "shined" that day on young Ulysses Adams, who was transformed into a human/alien hybrid on the day of his high school graduation. Ulysses underwent radical physical change and fled home. Both Delta Chi Delta and the Omega Concern sensed his transformation and moved to intercept the boy. The Delta's were first; he was intercepted by the girl called Nymph, who helped him dodge a bio-borg attack. Soon Ulysses met the Delta's other members, Delphi and Sensei who explained the whole situation. (Human Race #1)

Delta Chi Delta quickly moved Ulysses onto their ship, Pythia. This ship is built with bio-technical construction, complete with a vascular system and a brain. Soon, Ulysses began to show more advanced signs of mutation and lashed out in unpredictable fits of rage. Delta could wait no longer: they planned an attack on Paracelsus' headquarters in Reykjavik, hoping to acquire knowledge that would help them save Ulysses and stop the virus from spreading. Using Pythia's considerable technology (beyond even that of the JLA's), Nymph and Sensei infiltrated the Omega Concern's base. But Ulysses went into another rage and accidentally uncloaked the ship , revealing their presence. (#2)

  • Delphi, a woman with great strength and intelligence. She has had an artificial intelligence uploaded into her brain; it is now 100% digital nanotechnology.
  • Sensei is a 300-year-old martial arts master in the body of a 21-year-old. He can manifest his own "Qi," or immortal soul as a spirit and use it to heal.
  • Nymph is a young woman with great telepathic abilities. She has already grown quite fond of Ulysses.
  • For now, Ulysses possesses great strength, but his metamorphosis may not yet be complete.

Paracelsus was inducted because of a prophesy, not because they felt he was going to be their greatest ally. Sensei uses Qi to heal. He's a 300 year old in a 21-year-old body. Nymph steals a sample that could help cure Ulysses and perhaps be a vaccine for others. They're found and captured by Paracelsus. Delphi attacked by the Gestalt entity & short circuits her intelligence. She spirits Ulysses away and fights on but is disabled. Ulysses meets Mito(chondria), the alien telepath that is the living engine for the Pythia. They found it decades ago and granted it asylum. The Gestalt entity reveals it can split into 5 individuals who have no name. They capture him. Para begins a process to accelerate Ulysses's transformation. (#3)

In his mind, Ulysses battles the transformation. Paracelsus hopes to quicken the extinction of homo sapiens. Sensei's Qi form contacts Mito for help, which disrupts Paracelsus's systems and frees Sensei. The Gestalt entity (one with stealth and sharp talons, a girl with a solar staff, a boy with electromagnetic spheres, a boy with telekinesis & telepathy, & a boy who produces concussive telekinetic force) fail to stop them then from freeing Ulysses. For this, Paracelsus kills the telepath and the other four are left shell shocked. If they had not been bioengineered in the womb, their mothers would have died in childbirth. They ally with the Deltas and strike at Paracelsus. Paracelsus starts an auto-destruct sequence and teleports away. As they shield themselves from the blast, Paracelsus's bio-borgs are decimated, and Ulysses dies. (#4)

Nymph is determined to find some trace of life inside Ulysses's mind. Delphi doubt that her efforts will succeed, while Sensei remains optimistic. She instead encounters Ryan, Ulysses's ex-girlfriend. She says that they had been addicted to heroin, but that Ulysses was able to turn his life around. Inside Ulysses's mind, Ryan attacks Nymph. The Gestalt children fight among themselves, doubting their past actions, and vowing vengeance on Paracelsus. They agree to stay with Delta and train with Sensei. He challenges them to learn how to reform one being with only four. The girl decides to leave but convinces her to stay. Delphi locates a genetic match to Ulysses in Ipiales, Colombia and heads to check it out. She believes it is the host of the alien virus. In a church there, she encounters three nuns and is taken down b a new adversary, the Eagle Scout. He reveals her origin as Sophia Domingo, who was diagnosed with acute paranoid schizophrenia and sever mental retardation and was admitted to Arkham Asylum . She disappeared in 1903. (#5)

Delphi recovers easily, she had used a decoy. She is saved by the Pythia and the Scout retreats to his masters at the Pentagon, alien DNA sample in hand. Paracelsus has gone to them preaching doom and a way to stop it. He's convinced them to quarantine everyone in Shuster's Glen. Nymph discovers that she is actually battling an alien in Ulysses' mind; she defeats its influence and awakens himi. Sensei trains the new recruits, who take the name Gabriel, Uriel and Remiel, names of the ancient archangels. Sensei killed his father 300 years ago. He served the Tokugawa Shogunate in Japan. The father dishonorably fled Japan after an incident, which left the burden of suicide to Sensei's older brother. Sensei eventually slew his father in revenge. He claims that he is now a Bodhisattva — a Tibetan Buddhist term describing one who is motivated by compassion and seeks enlightenment for himself and others. (#6)

With xenovirus in hand, Paracelsus seeks to breed new aliens. The Eagle Scout captures Delphi by surprise, but she shows him that he's been duped by his superiors. Paracelsus tells him he's eradicated all traces of the xenovirus then kills him. Nymph stopes Ulysses from committing suicide. He is using Ulyssys' biomatter to infect new "mothers." Delphi is saved by the last of the recruits, who takes the name Sariel. She believes she has slain Paracelsus, but it is a clone. Ulysses frees his sister Diana and his mother, but does not reveal his identity to them. Delta Chi Delta allow the JLA to take credit for cleaning up the mess (#7)

The Human Race #1 (May 2005)

SERIESThe Human Race, 7-issue limited series (2005)

Interview with Ben Raab

The D.E.O. (Department of Extranormal Operations)

Director Bones
Cameran Chase

The D.E.O. (Department of Extranormal Operations) is a U.S. government agency which investigates and processes metahuman activities and persons. It's origins remain a mystery, but it is headed by former Infinity, Inc. member, Mister Bones. Most D.E.O. accounts focus on Bones and his chief agent, Cameron Chase. Its headquarters is New York and they report to the US Secretary of Metahuman Affairs, which was originally Amanda Waller. The origins of Bones' involvement remain a mystery. It is clear, however, that he owes a powerful someone a favor for having obtained this position. (JSA Secret Files #2)

Chase was driven to this line of work by the death of her father, a former mystery man. Her father was the Acro-Bat, a member of the Justice Experience. He was killed in his own home by Dr. Trap, and found dead by the young Cameron. Dr. Trap slayed the remaining members as well and was captured by the Justice Society. (Chase #6)

The D.E.O. first came to light in Gotham City when a Dr. Peter Malley merged with a sample from the son of Clayfaces III & IV to form the Clay Thing. As it happened, Cameron Chase, on her way to visit her sister in Gotham before her very first D.E.O. assignment. Chase was contacted by an Agent Barrett and given the assignment of tracking Malley down. Naturally she crossed paths with the Batman, and the two (with Chase's unintentional use of her own metahuman powers), captured him. (Batman #550)

Chase has been called upon to complete a variety of challenging assignments, including leading a Suicide Squad mission to Peru. (Chase #2-3) Perhaps her most challenging mission, though was that of uncovering the identity of the Batman. During an investigation in Gotham city, Agent Chase met Bruce Wayne, Dick Grayson and Alan Scott at a society function. Little did she know, however that the hunter had become the hunted: Batman had orchestrated this meeting and her subsequent encounter with the Batman. After chasing Batman over Gotham's rooftops, she had the opportunity to unmask him when she believed him unconscious. She chose not, but was nonetheless convinced that it was Alan Scott under the mask! (Note: Alan Scott was recruited for this ruse by Batman and the story makes it clear that Scott does not know Batman is Bruce Wayne). She did not reveal these findings in her official report. (#8)

The D.E.O. also runs various facilities designed to house, train and study metahumans. When one of their specimens escaped, they called upon the newly formed Young Justice to recapture her. The team eventually learned that the girl had been mistreated while in their possession and they let her go free. (Young Justice: The Secret #1) She eventually joined their group as the Secret and led them back to the D.E.O. "orphanage" to free others like her. (Young Justice Secret Files #1)

The agency's next major target was the Martian Manhunter (who perhaps brought his fate upon him). In one outing, the Manhunter accompanied Chase on a spy mission in the guise of Sarge Steel. (DCU Heroes Secret Files #1) Following the death of John Jones' partner Karen Smith, Chase found J'onn's diary, which he had left for Smith before her death as a gesture of trust. The diary contained information on all J'onn's identities including the Martian Manhunter. Bones then set Chase on a witch hunt to discover the Martian's other identities; she was thorough, and uncovered them all, even interviewing Fire. (Martian Manhunter #10) The D.E.O. attempted to blackmail the hero with this information; if J'onn would reveal the JLA's identities, they would spare revealing his own I.D.s. J'onzz also revealed to Chase that, as the Bronze Wraith, he'd once saved her father's life. Chase was ordered to reveal his identities to the world, which she reluctantly did. In gratitude for her father, she withheld revealing his John Jones identity to the public. Afterwards, the D.E.O. denied all involvement to the incident. (#17)

Chase eventually got her closure when Dr. Trap escaped from prison. The villain set out to finish what he had started and ambushed Chase in her home. J'onn intervened, stopping both from killing each other. Trap was again imprisoned. (#36)

When President Lex Luthor's appointed his cabinet, Amanda Waller (former head of the Suicide Squad) was charged with overseeing Bones and the D.E.O.  Bones eventually came to odds with his former colleagues in the JSA when the D.E.O. requested the team's aid in eliminating Kobra from Blackhawk Island. (JSA #11) Following the mission, the JSA discovered that Blackhawk Express operation on the island was owned by the D.E.O. The JSA felt as thought they were duped into doing the agency's dirty work, and left in anger. (#12) Bones has again been ordered to enlist the JSA's help by an unrevealed superior (not Waller). He demonstrated reluctance to further betray his former colleagues, but is indebted to the D.E.O. (JSA Secret Files #1)

Sasha Bordeaux once told the Huntress that a "Jokerized" woman they had been chasing down was not really a break-out from the Slab, but an undercover agent for the DEO disguised as an inmate named Cucilla. (Detective Comics #763)

Director Bones recently agreed to take on a new kind of operative: Kate Spencer, Manhunter. Her exact role is not known, but she uses her influence as a crime-fighter and as an attorney to further the agency's ends. In exchange, she receives an undisclosed benefit from the D.E.O. (Manhunter #16) Spencer is also a longtime friend of Cameron Chase.

Kate worked with Bones on a detestable assignment, as defense attorney for Dr. Psycho. (#20) Before Psycho's verdict could be read, the Society freed his restraints. Manhunter managed to subdue Dr. Psycho and reads the jury's verdict: "not guilty." Director Bones was elated; now every super-villain would want Kate Spencer as their defender. (#24)

Batman #550 (January 1998)

SERIESChase, 10 issues (1998)

DCU Heroes Secret Files #1 • JSA #11-12, Secret Files #2 •  Manhunter v.3 #16-30 • Martian Manhunter v.3 #6-10, 17, 31, 36 • Young Justice: The Secret #1 • Young Justice Secret Files #1

Department of Extranormal Operations

 

The Dingbats of Danger Street

See Obscure Characters

The Doom Patrol!

This team of misfits originally debuted in 196 and underwent many changes. Their history, however, was retroactively eliminated by John Byrne's "reboot," which began with JLA #94 (May 2004).

The Chief
Elasti-Girl
Robotman
Negative Man
Beast Boy

The Doom Patrol was assembled by Niles Caulder (the Chief) whose intent was to study the effects of traumatic events on individuals; this was a part of his greater ambition to invent an immortality serum. These heroes were different, outsiders and victims of tragedy: Robotman (Cliff Steele), Elasti-Girl (Rita Farr) and Negative Man (Larry Traynor). The team originally operated from Midway City and debuted in the Silver Age of heroes, about the same time as the Justice League. The two teams met once, early on. (JLA: Year One #5-7) And later, the JLA attended the wedding of Mento and Elasti-Girl. (Doom Patrol v.1 #104) The original team ended tragically when they agreed to sacrifice themselves to save an entire town. (#121) All but Elasti-Girl survived. Years later, the deranged Chief revealed that he could have saved Rita's life, but chose not to (D.P. v.2 #57); Robotman's brain was discovered by Dr. Will Magnus (creator of the Metal Men), and revived in a new body. Negative survived but remained comatose for years.

Beast Boy (Garfield Logan), later joined the Teen Titans, and changed his name to Changeling (DC Comics Presents #26). Recently, he changed it back (Beast Boy #1), and still participates in the Titans. Beast Boy also associated with Thayer Jost and the current Doom Patrol, but did not rejoin them permanently.

The second Doom Patrol was headed by Caulder's supposed widow, Arani (Celsius). Caulder had married Celsius as a test subject in his quest for the immortality serum. When they were ultimately reunited, the Chief denied ever having married her. (D.P. v.2 #??) Arani recruited the revived Robotman, Tempest, and Negative Woman (Showcase #94), and later added some teenaged freaks: Lodestone, Karma (D.P. v.2 #4), and Scott Fischer (#6). Negative Man and the Chief also returned from the dead at this time. Both Arani and Scott died in battle when the Earth was invaded by an alien alliance. (#17-18) Karma also died soon, on a Suicide Squad mission. (SS #58)

Celsius
Tempest
Robotman
Negative Woman
Karma
Lodestone
Scott Fisher
Rebis

Things then got freakier (when Grant Morrison took over with #19) with the addition of Crazy Jane, Rebis, Dorothy Spinner and Danny the Street. Ultimately, Niles Caulder revealed his true colors as a cold-hearted manipulator. The team learned this truth just after Caulder killed Tempest. The Chief was decapitated, but not before setting off another mad scheme. (#55-57) During this time, Will Magnus pitched in again, rebuilding Robotman, helping Dorothy deal with her period, etc. This team ended when Danny the Street became Danny the World, an entire dimension which encompasses all fictional worlds, such as Oz, Wonderland, Never Never Land, and Slumberland. Rebis and Crazy Jane decided to stay with Danny, and Jane was "cured" of her mental condition. Dorothy and Cliff decided to return to Earth by floating on a magic balloon. (#62) Other allies during this period included Willoughby Kipling and Flex Mentallo.

The Chief decided to make amends for his past. As penance, he tore his head off from his new body and continued to lead the team in this fashion. (#64) Cliff, Dorothy and Magnus were joined by the Bandage People, George and Marion. (#67) George and Marion had been transformed into energy beings and could manipulate the bandages which covered them. (#76) Later, they also met Kate Godwin (Coagula). (#71) This team effectively ended after the Chief entered a spiritual anomaly, the Tree of Life. The others returned to Earth. (#87)

Eventually, Robotman began to grow weary of adventuring and contemplated retirement. He decided it would be best if Dorothy met her birth-mother. He and Kate took a camping trip to break the news to Dorothy, but she panicked at the idea and her reality-distorting powers kicked into overdrive. The resulting blast killed Kate and destroyed Cliff's body. (D.P. v.3 #9) Dorothy herself went into a coma and her unconscious mind created a new Robotman to look after her. This duplicate sold the Doom Patrol name to the eccentric Thayer Jost.

Jost founded the fourth incarnation of the team, corporatized heroes including Negative Man II, Fever, Freak and Kid Slick. Led by "Cliff," the team soon split with Jost for ethical reasons and began work on their own. Briefly, Jost hired four heroes — Metamorpho, Dr. Light IV, and Elongated Man led by Beast Boy — to oppose Robotman's team. They too quickly split from Jost. (D.P. v.3 #4) Ultimately, the imaginary Robotman vanished and the Patrol's investigation discovered his inert brain under a mountain. They revived him in a new body, designed by the Russian engineer Kolodenko. This team was also, indeed, doomed. Incessant infighting fractured their sense of unity and Robotman left them again. He was drawn back briefly by a villain named Tycho, who killed Kolodenko. (#21) After this, Jost evicted the young heroes from their headquarters. Separately, they and Cliff were again set adrift. In the end, Cliff also okayed the decision to remove Dorothy Spinner from life support. (#22)

Crawling from the Cosmic Wreckage

In events yet untold, the Chief returned to Earth and restored his original Doom Patrol. As always, Cliff Steele joined him. He also somehow restored Larry Trainor as the sole Negative Man. Most astoundingly, he returned Rita Farr to life! For years, he kept her brain from suffering true death by treating it with special proteins. He regrew her entire body, but she now had trouble thinking propertly becasue of the elastic nature of her brain.

Mento also returned to the fold. He too admitted his past faillings and apologized to Beast Boy for his villainous actions against the Titans (as the Crimelord). Mento's mental powers are in full force, making him hyperproductive, but not able to focus on mundane tasks. True to form, the Chief kept Mento in tow by convincing him that Rita would only love him if he wears the Mento helmet.

The Patrol's members forgave the Chief for his past treachery and agreed to work together, in hopes for a better future.

After the Crisis perpetuated by Alexander Luthor and Superboy Prime, the Teen Titans were left in ruins. Beast Boy had lost several of his friends in the Titans, and he decided to return to the Doom Patrol to help look after his parents. When Alexander Luthor's cosmic rift closed, a great wave washed over Donna Troy's band of heroes in space, which included former Titans, Bumblebee and Mal Duncan. These heroes were retrieved and treated immediately by Dr. Mid-Nite and Steel. After being stabilized, the Chief stepped in to offer further help for Bumblebee and Mal.

Beast Boy
Bumblebee
Vox

Karen had shrunk to the size of an insect and grown real wings. The Chief invented a drug for Karen that would keep her tiny physiology functioning. Mal was hit by shrapnel from the Red Tornado and from his sonic horn. When the horn exploded, Mal lost his vocal chords. The Chief fitted Mal with a device derived from the horn that gave him sonic powers. As Vox, he now also spoke via the Red Tornado's old speaking apparatus. (52 #4-5)

Beast Boy took up a campaign to take down the Patrol's old enemies: the Brotherhood of Evil, who were still wanted for destroying the city of Blüdhaven. His former colleague Wonder Girl undertook this same mission, which resulted in a confrontation between the Titans and the Doom Patrol. (Teen Titans v.3 #34) In battle, Plasmus burned a hole in Kid Devil's chest. (#35) The Chief repaired him, and attempted to use this as leverage to keep Kid Devil with the Doom Patrol. But more pressing matters prevailed; the two teams united in a common goal —  to prevent the Brotherhood's leader, the Brain from acquiring a new host body. (#36)

The Doom Patrol learned that The Brain was also the result of one of Caulder's experiments. Weeks before Cliff Steele's accident, Caulder caused an explosion affecting one of his peers, a man renown for his work in animal evolution. Caulder took his colleague's brain for use inside the original copper Robotman body. The man's companion, Mallah, rescued him before he became bonded to the body. This unnamed scientist also claimed that there were other failed experiments: Human Cannon, Negative Girl and Electric Blu. The Brain and Mallah escaped this clash, but the rest of the Brotherhood was rounded up.

Afterwards, the Doom Patrol went to confront the Chief, and found him attempting to brainwash Kid Devil. Mento came to his senses; he and the Patrol took control of the group and proclaimed that Caulder would not be their leader, per se. (#37)

 Original: My Greatest Adventure #80 (1963). Second team: Showcase #94 (August 1977). Third team: Doom Patrol v.3 #1 (December 2001)

 Brave & the Bold #65 • Brave & the Bold v.3 #8 • Challengers of the Unknown #48 • DC Comics Presents #52 • Doom Patrol/Suicide Squad Special #1 (1988) • JLA: Year One #5-7 • Showcase #94-96 • Secret Origins Annual #1 • Superman v.2 #20 • Teen Titans v.1 #6 • Teen Titans v.3 #32-37

SERIES
My Greatest Adventure #80-85 (1963); becomes ...
Doom Patrol v.1, #86-124 (1964-1973)
Doom Patrol v.2, 87 issues + 2 annuals (1987-1995)
Flex Mentallo, 4-issue mini-series (1996)
Doom Patrol v.3, 22 issues (2001-03)

The Doom Patrol!Monkeys vs. RobotsFanzing #23 articleThe Doom Patrol Review

Member (Real Name[s])

Joined

Status

1. The Chief (Niles Caulder) My Greatest Adventure #80 Active in adventuring
1. Elasti-Girl (Rita Farr) My Greatest Adventure #80 Deceased Doom Patrol #121; resurrected by the Chief Teen Titans v.3 #34
1. Negative Man (Larry Trainor) My Greatest Adventure #80 Active in adventuring
1. Robotman II (Cliff Steele) My Greatest Adventure #80 Active in adventuring
5. Mento (Steve Dayton, Crimelord) Doom Patrol #91 Active in adventuring
6. Beast Boy (Garfield Logan, Changeling) Doom Patrol #99 Active in adventuring
ALL-NEW DOOM PATROL
7. Celsius (Arani Desai-Caulder) Showcase #94 Deceased Doom Patrol, v.2 #17
7. Negative Woman (Valentina Vostok) Showcase #94 Active with Checkmate! Resigned from the D.P. in v.2 #18. No longer metahuman.
7. Tempest (Joshua Clay) Showcase #94 Killed in Doom Patrol v.2 #55 by Niles Caulder.
10. Lodestone (Rhea Jones) Doom Patrol, v.2 #4 Left for deep space in Doom Patrol #41
10. Karma (Wayne Hawkins) Doom Patrol, v.2 #4 Killed Suicide Squad #58 by agents of Circe
12. Scott Fischer Doom Patrol, v.2 #6 Deceased Doom Patrol, v.2 #18 / Invasion! #2
CRAWLING FROM THE WRECKAGE: VERTIGO BEGINS
13. Rebis (Larry Trainor/Eleanor Poole) Doom Patrol, v.2 #20 Living on Danny the World; last seen Doom Patrol v.2 #63
13. Crazy Jane (Kay Challis) Doom Patrol, v.2 #20 Living on Danny the World; last seen Doom Patrol v.2 #63
15. Dorothy Spinner Doom Patrol, v.2 #23 Life support terminated Doom Patrol v.3 #22
16. Danny the World (Danny the Street) Doom Patrol, v.2 #42 Existing! Last seen Doom Patrol v.2 #63
17. Dr. William Magnus Doom Patrol, v.2 #64 Active with the Metal Men
18. The Bandage People (George and Marion) Doom Patrol, v.2 #67 Presumed active in adventuring; last app. Doom Patrol v.3 #9
19. Coagula (Kate Godwin) Doom Patrol, v.2 #71 Deceased, revealed in Doom Patrol v.3 #9
VOLUME 3
20. Negative Man II (Ted Bruder, Fast Forward) Doom Patrol, v.3 #1 Active in adventuring
20. Fever (Shyleen Lao) Killed Terror Titans #1 12.08
20. Freak (Ava) Active in adventuring
20. Kid Slick (Vig Darge) Active in adventuring
—. Thayer Jost Former financier
—. Dr. Light IV, Elongated Man, Metamorpho Doom Patrol, v.3 #4 Operatives of Thayer Jost using the Doom Patrol name; Active in adventuring
—. Kolodenko Doom Patrol, v.3 #4 Former ally. Deceased Doom Patrol v.3 #21
INFINITE CRISIS
24. Bumblebee (Karen Beecher-Duncan) prior to Teen Titans v.3 #34 Active in adventuring
24. Vox (Mal Duncan, Guardian, Herald) Active in adventuring

The Inter-Crisis Doom Patrol

Created by John Byrne

When the Superboy of Earth-Prime begain railing against his other-dimensional prison, its power reverberated throughout the timestream. In essence, each blow supposedly "corrected" a wrinkle left by the original Crisis. One of these reality-altering blows erased the original Doom Patrol's history, and replaced them with a completely different team. Apparently this Doom Patrol's existence was an even bigger "wrinkle" in time, because their existence was erased in favor of the original's return.

As before, they were led by the mysterious Niles Caulder (The Chief), and they made their home in an old Confederate prison built in 1861 on Key Mordaz, Florida. Caulder was a notorious tycoon and technological genius who's been capable of hiding his activities even from Oracle. He faked his own death, something he shared in common with his first three recruits: Rita Farr (Elasti-Girl), Larry Traynor (Negative Man) and Cliff Steele (Robotman II).

The Chief
Elasti-Girl
Robotman
Negative Man
Nudge
Vortex

Farr was involved with Caulder in some capacity before their false demises. As Elasti-Girl, she was capable of both increasing and decreasing her body's size. Negative Man could, for short times, release a skeletal energy being from his body. During this time, his body remained lifeless and vulnerable.

Before becoming Robotman, Cliff Steele was a topnotch formula one racer. His armor housed his human brain and was made of a "flexi-metal" which protected against a broad array of projectile and energy weapons. The mechanical musculature increased his strength a thousandfold. His senses were also heightened by the technology.

After this, the Chief set his sights on a "mega-hominid" called Grunt. What they did not expect, was to encounter Grunt's companion, the young girl known as Nudge. Nudge was a gifted telepath (she could even boast having enthralled Superman). Before finding her way to Grunt, she was a drifter. She came upon a circus, where Grunt lived as a barely-tamed animal. When the circus owner discovered that Nudge could calm him, he hired her as well. One day, they were visited by Elasti-Girl and Negative Man, who took the pair to Key Mordaz. But Nudge and Grunt were unhappy with the Doom Patrol and once Nudge was finally able to assert enough control, they escaped — right into the waiting arms of Crucifer, the vampire. (But actually, Caulder had orchestrated the whole thing and knowingly set the pair up as bait for the vampire in order to infiltrate his organization.)

After this, it became the Patrol's mission to "reacquire" their lost members from Crucifer. The vampire's kidnappings drew the attention of the Justice League. And so the team went public, and Elasti-Girl and Negative Man encountered Green Lantern John Stewart. They convinced him to leave matters to them. That worked for a while until the Batman was able to track them down. The two teams soon allied and set about stopping Crucifer's grand scheme. The vampire had hoped to use his legion of metahuman subjects as hosts for his vampire brethren. They were able to stop the transfer and Superman delivered the fatal blow to Crucifer himself.

After this case, Nudge and Grunt decided to return to the Doom Patrol. They were also joined by the JLA's Faith, who agreed to become Nudge's tutor, and by Vortex, Crucifer's young servant who allied with Nudge to help defeat the monster. (JLA #94-99)

Vortex's life before Crucifer's service was a mystery. He could project a powerful wave of disruptive energy from his mouth, was resistant to mental control, and could open interspace portals. To look upon Vortex's face without his mask can caused incurable insanity.

Their victory was incomplete. Upon returning to Key Mordaz, the new team discovered that the place had been overrun by more vampires and that the Chief was in grave danger...

NOTES: Nudge and Grunt appear to have been Byrne's mainstream DCU version of Angel and the Ape.

JLA #94 (Early May 2004)

 JLA #94-99

SERIESDoom Patrol v.4, 18 issues (2004-06)

Member (Real Name)

1st app.

Joined

Status

1.

The Chief (Niles Caulder)

JLA #94

prior to JLA #94

Active in adventuring

1.

Elasti-Girl (Rita Farr)

Active in adventuring

1.

Negative Man (Larry Trainor)

Active in adventuring

1.

Robotman II (Cliff Steele)

Active in adventuring

5.

Grunt (unrevealed)

JLA #99

Active in adventuring

5.

Nudge (unrevealed)

Active in adventuring

5.

Vortex (unrevealed)

Active in adventuring

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Appendix