Steam ID:
STEAM_0:1:565921714
Discord name:
Rin2e
For how long have you played on CG SCP:
1 year
Age:
18
In what country are you located?:
Canada
Time zone:
EST
Character name(s):
Bumbalina
Civilian name:
Filly Fill
What server are you applying for? (SCP-RP UK or SCP-RP USA):
USA
Do you have a mic?:
-YES
List all whitelisted, MTF, or CI roles that you hold or have held:
-Holding Special agent and Ci-A, Held E-11 SGT and Nu7 SPC
Have you received any kicks/bans/warning? and why?:
-
What makes you the best candidate for Ethics Committee Assistant?:
- What makes me the best well I have worked beside the DEA Manger in many RP situation such as talking to the GOC about treaties and letting GOC into the base for samples or Site Inspection when they come to talk to DEA. I have show lots of professionalism as a Special agent leading agents and Sr agents when needed or dealing with intruders in the base. When I was a E-11 SGT I would help the other E-11 whenever they needed lower rank or higher rank.
What are the responsibilities of Ethics Committee Assistants in RP?:
- Act as an extension of the Ethics Committee to uphold the Code of Ethics (COE) across the site. Enforce the code of Ethics, represent ethics when no ECM's are on site or are busy, Carry out task for the ECM when needed, AUTH KOS past airlock if needed, AUTH AA during breaches if needed, Manage minor test approvals, Handle D-Class work permits approvals, Evaluates individuals requesting to speak with the Ethics Committee and Ensures minor tasks do not waste the Committee’s time.
Please give some lore about your Ethics Committee Assistant character and what storylines they would be involved in:
STEAM_0:1:565921714
Discord name:
Rin2e
For how long have you played on CG SCP:
1 year
Age:
18
In what country are you located?:
Canada
Time zone:
EST
Character name(s):
Bumbalina
Civilian name:
Filly Fill
What server are you applying for? (SCP-RP UK or SCP-RP USA):
USA
Do you have a mic?:
-YES
List all whitelisted, MTF, or CI roles that you hold or have held:
-Holding Special agent and Ci-A, Held E-11 SGT and Nu7 SPC
Have you received any kicks/bans/warning? and why?:
-

What makes you the best candidate for Ethics Committee Assistant?:
- What makes me the best well I have worked beside the DEA Manger in many RP situation such as talking to the GOC about treaties and letting GOC into the base for samples or Site Inspection when they come to talk to DEA. I have show lots of professionalism as a Special agent leading agents and Sr agents when needed or dealing with intruders in the base. When I was a E-11 SGT I would help the other E-11 whenever they needed lower rank or higher rank.
What are the responsibilities of Ethics Committee Assistants in RP?:
- Act as an extension of the Ethics Committee to uphold the Code of Ethics (COE) across the site. Enforce the code of Ethics, represent ethics when no ECM's are on site or are busy, Carry out task for the ECM when needed, AUTH KOS past airlock if needed, AUTH AA during breaches if needed, Manage minor test approvals, Handle D-Class work permits approvals, Evaluates individuals requesting to speak with the Ethics Committee and Ensures minor tasks do not waste the Committee’s time.
Please give some lore about your Ethics Committee Assistant character and what storylines they would be involved in:
For years, the name Bumbalina was spoken in hushed voices among intelligence circles.
It was a name without a face, a whisper in the dark. A special agent who got things done cleanly, efficiently, and without question.
Bumbalina was the agency’s invisible hand, eliminating threats before they could disrupt the global balance of power. Governments fell, wars were prevented, and people slept soundly in their beds—all because he followed orders.
Until one mission changed everything.
Part I: The Mission That Never Ended
Operation Silent Dawn was supposed to be straightforward.
His target: Dr. Elias Roarke, a scientist accused of leaking classified bio-weapon research. A necessary elimination. A routine job.
But when Bumbalina infiltrated Roarke’s hidden lab, he found no weapons, no grand conspiracy—just data.
Data that proved the agency had been lying.
Roarke hadn’t leaked anything. He had blown the whistle on a project that never should have existed. A program that tested biological weapons on prisoners under the guise of "national security."
Bumbalina had spent his career believing in necessary evils. But this? This was just evil.
For the first time, he hesitated.
And that hesitation cost him everything.
Instead of pulling the trigger, he helped Roarke escape. By dawn, his handlers had labeled him a traitor. The kill order he once followed without hesitation was now on his own head.
Part II: An Offer He Couldn't Refuse
Bumbalina spent a year running. The agency hunted him like an animal, erasing every trace of his existence.
Then, when he had nowhere left to hide, they found him.
Not his former handlers.
The Ethics Committee.
They didn’t come with a gun. They came with a job offer.
"You’ve seen what happens when no one asks questions," they told him. "Now we need someone who will."
Bumbalina laughed. "You want a killer in your ethics department?"
"No," the Chair of the Committee said. "We want a man who knows exactly what happens when ethics fail."
With nowhere else to go—and a lifetime of blood on his hands—Bumbalina accepted.
Part III: The Ethics of Killing
The transition wasn’t easy.
He wasn’t a lawyer. He wasn’t a politician. He didn’t talk in circles or debate morality in theoretical terms.
But he understood what happened when morality was ignored.
When intelligence officers requested "enhanced interrogation clearance", Bumbalina asked: "If this fails, are you willing to be strapped to the chair next?"
When a mission required eliminating a potential threat based on probability, he demanded: "Since when do we execute people for crimes they haven't committed yet?"
When a black-ops team argued "collateral damage is inevitable," he reminded them: "That’s easy to say when it’s not your family in the way."
The Committee was split on him.
Some saw him as a necessary evil—a man who had lived on the other side and could finally pull back the curtain. Others saw him as a hypocrite, a killer pretending to be a judge.
Bumbalina didn’t care what they thought.
He only cared about one thing:
Making sure no one else had to make the choices he did.
Epilogue: The Final Decision
One day, a file landed on his desk.
A new target. A former operative who had gone rogue. A dangerous man who knew too much.
Bumbalina opened it.
It was his own file.
The agency had finally decided it was time to erase him for good. The Committee wanted his recommendation.
He stared at the papers, then at the faces of his colleagues.
Slowly, he closed the file.
"No," he said.
"I think it’s time we stop solving problems with bullets."
For the first time in his life, Bumbalina made a choice that didn’t end in blood.
And in the world of ethics, that was the most dangerous decision of all.
It was a name without a face, a whisper in the dark. A special agent who got things done cleanly, efficiently, and without question.
Bumbalina was the agency’s invisible hand, eliminating threats before they could disrupt the global balance of power. Governments fell, wars were prevented, and people slept soundly in their beds—all because he followed orders.
Until one mission changed everything.
Part I: The Mission That Never Ended
Operation Silent Dawn was supposed to be straightforward.
His target: Dr. Elias Roarke, a scientist accused of leaking classified bio-weapon research. A necessary elimination. A routine job.
But when Bumbalina infiltrated Roarke’s hidden lab, he found no weapons, no grand conspiracy—just data.
Data that proved the agency had been lying.
Roarke hadn’t leaked anything. He had blown the whistle on a project that never should have existed. A program that tested biological weapons on prisoners under the guise of "national security."
Bumbalina had spent his career believing in necessary evils. But this? This was just evil.
For the first time, he hesitated.
And that hesitation cost him everything.
Instead of pulling the trigger, he helped Roarke escape. By dawn, his handlers had labeled him a traitor. The kill order he once followed without hesitation was now on his own head.
Part II: An Offer He Couldn't Refuse
Bumbalina spent a year running. The agency hunted him like an animal, erasing every trace of his existence.
Then, when he had nowhere left to hide, they found him.
Not his former handlers.
The Ethics Committee.
They didn’t come with a gun. They came with a job offer.
"You’ve seen what happens when no one asks questions," they told him. "Now we need someone who will."
Bumbalina laughed. "You want a killer in your ethics department?"
"No," the Chair of the Committee said. "We want a man who knows exactly what happens when ethics fail."
With nowhere else to go—and a lifetime of blood on his hands—Bumbalina accepted.
Part III: The Ethics of Killing
The transition wasn’t easy.
He wasn’t a lawyer. He wasn’t a politician. He didn’t talk in circles or debate morality in theoretical terms.
But he understood what happened when morality was ignored.
When intelligence officers requested "enhanced interrogation clearance", Bumbalina asked: "If this fails, are you willing to be strapped to the chair next?"
When a mission required eliminating a potential threat based on probability, he demanded: "Since when do we execute people for crimes they haven't committed yet?"
When a black-ops team argued "collateral damage is inevitable," he reminded them: "That’s easy to say when it’s not your family in the way."
The Committee was split on him.
Some saw him as a necessary evil—a man who had lived on the other side and could finally pull back the curtain. Others saw him as a hypocrite, a killer pretending to be a judge.
Bumbalina didn’t care what they thought.
He only cared about one thing:
Making sure no one else had to make the choices he did.
Epilogue: The Final Decision
One day, a file landed on his desk.
A new target. A former operative who had gone rogue. A dangerous man who knew too much.
Bumbalina opened it.
It was his own file.
The agency had finally decided it was time to erase him for good. The Committee wanted his recommendation.
He stared at the papers, then at the faces of his colleagues.
Slowly, he closed the file.
"No," he said.
"I think it’s time we stop solving problems with bullets."
For the first time in his life, Bumbalina made a choice that didn’t end in blood.
And in the world of ethics, that was the most dangerous decision of all.