FEDERAL BUREAU of INVESTIGATION
SPECIAL AGENT RECORD

Name: Mulder, Fox William 
Badge Number: JTT047101111
Height: 6 Feet
Weight: 170 pounds
Hair: Brown
Eyes: Green
Date of Birth: 13 October 1961
Birthplace: Chilmark, MA

Current
Address:
               Apt. 42, 2630 Hegal Place Alexandria, VA 23242
Telephone: (202) 555-9355
Electronic Mail: [email protected] (unconfirmed)

Distinguishing
Marks/Features: Mole on right cheek.

Marital Status: Unmarried
Father's Name: William Mulder (see Classified Folder).
Formerly of the State Department. Assasinated by
Alex Krycek.

Father's
Address: West Tisbury, Martha's Vineyard, MA

Mother's Name: Unkown (Deceased)

Mother's
Address: 2790 Vine Street,
            Chilmark, MA

Siblings: One sister, Samantha Ann Mulder,
born 22 January 1964. Disappeared 27 November 1973.
(X-File No.: X-42053)
Education: Oxford University, A.B. in Psychology, 1982. Quantico
FBI Training Academy, 1984.
Publications: On Serial Killers and the Occult, Monograph, 1988.
(as M. F. Luder) article in Omni magazine, 1993.
Current Rank: Special Agent
Weapon: Smith and Wesson 1056 (9mm rounds)

FBI Career History

1983-1986: Oxford University
1986: Enters Quantico Academy immediately after graduation from Oxford.
Earns nickname "Spooky."
1988: Assigned to the Violent Crimes Unit under the supervision of ASAC Reggie Purdue. On his first case, Agent Mulder distinguished himself in the pursuit of bank robber John Barnett.
June 16, 1989: Agent Mulder undergoes regression hypnoisis with Dr. Heitz Werber, after which Agent Mulder becomes convinced his sister was abducted by extraterrestrials.
1991: Agent Mulder persuades his superiors to transfer him to the X-Files section, where he has operated ever since, reporting first to the head of the VCU, Section Chief Scott Blevins, and later to Assistant Director Walter Skinner.
March 6, 1992: Fears that Agent Mulder's work in the X-Files section is getting out of control lead Chief Blevins to assign Agent Dana K. Scully to the X-Files section as Agent Mulder's partner.
1993: Agent Mulder is called in for a hearing with Section Chief Joseph McGrath of the Office of Professional Responsibility after charges of  trespassing on a crime scene under military jurisdiction, and after accusations of interfering with a military operation and impending an investigation were pressed on him. All charges later dropped.
April 1994: Assistant Director Walter S. Skinner investigates charges brought by Eugene Victor Tooms that Agent Mulder was engaging in harassment of Mr. Tooms, who had been released from incarceration. Tooms was later killed in an industrial accident.
May 1994: AD Skinner shuts down the X-Files section and reassigns Agents Mulder and Scully.
October 1994: Agent Alex Krycek is partnered with Agent Mulder.
November 1994: Following Agent Scully's abduction by fugitive Duane Barry (X-File No.: X-73317), AD Skinner re-opens the section. Agent Krycek fails to report to work after Agent Scully's abduction, and is currently wanted for questioning in her disappearance.
May 1995: AD Walter Skinner requests a hearing with Agent Mulder, Agent Scully, and memebers of the Office of Professional Responsibility after an unprovoked physical assault by Agent Mulder. Agent Mulder does not attend the meeting. The following day, Agent Mulder's father, William Mulder, is shot to death in his house while Agent Mulder is present.
 
 

Personal Notes

Agent Mulder is convinced that his sister was abducted by extraterrestrials while he was paralyzed by an unknown extraterrestrial force, and that his memories of the moment had been altered for some time. He believes that extraterrestrial powers, possibly aided by rogue government agencies, are continually visiting earth and possibly conspiring a planned Armageddon. He does not associate closely with other agents except for Agent Scully (see Classified File: Scully, Dana Katherine), his partner in the X-Files section. Although Agent Mulder is respected professionally, he is personally considered, by many, a maverick agent that plays by "his own rules" in his quest for "the truth." Although he does not fit the description of "the ideal Bureau agent," his record of success in his assigned area places him among the "top" agents working in the Federal system today.
 

Last Updated May 05, 1998

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