Death Faked for You

A Sub-Trope of Faking the Dead, where you don't have to do it yourself. Someone else does it for you.

Reasons and methods can of course vary. One way is if two people are alone, and one is hunted. The other person befriends the hunted person, and then claims that person is dead when other people finally arrive. Another way is a service for this (think extreme Witness Protection). Yet another way could be involuntary (give these people what they want, or it won't be fake anymore).

Doesn't always work, though.

Compare Merciful Minion.

Anime and Manga

 * At the end of Witch Hunter Robin,  are declared dead after an enemy base they were inside self-destructed. Doujima informs her superiors that No One Could Survive That, even though both she, and the rest of the team, knows very well that the both of them almost certainly made it out unscathed. By declaring them dead, they'll be relatively safe from Solomon pursuit.
 * in the Fullmetal Alchemist manga
 * Happens to  in Rurouni Kenshin as part of Enishi's revenge. (The only reason Enishi didn't go all the way was because he was so traumatized by witnessing his sister's death that he gets physically ill at the very idea of harming a young woman.)
 * In Claymore,
 * Done by accident in Tantei Gakuen Q. A businesswoman learns that the meeting she had hoped would save her company was a lost cause, so she didn't bother going on the flight to the meeting site, giving her ticket to someone on the reserve list. The plane crashed, and she the authorities assumed she died on the flight. Because her life insurance policy would yield enough to save the family business, she allowed the report of her death to stand. Unfortunately,.
 * In Baccano!, during his Roaring Rampage of Revenge aboard the Flying Pussyfoot, kills a man with a similar build, hair color, and  by grinding his face off on the tracks. He is later amused to find that the FBI mistook the defaced victim for him—so amused that he allowed himself to be interviewed for his own obituary.

Comic Books

 * A Strontium Dog story ended with Johnny discovering his target was innocent, but faced with the knowledge that if he didn't claim the bounty, someone else would. He shot the perp with a stun beam, thus recording him as dying and allowing him to live free from fear of other hunters.
 * In The Mighty,

Fairy Tales

 * Seen as early as "Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs", along with other Fairy Tales.
 * "The Girl with No Hands"
 * "The Three Languages"
 * "The Water Of Life"

Film

 * The Rock
 * The film Eraser has the main character go around faking deaths for witness protection.
 * La Femme Nikita was an involuntary version.
 * This happened in Pitch Black, with Riddick asking that the others say he died on the planet/moon/hell-forsaken rock. As we see at the beginning of The Chronicles of Riddick, that didn't discourage the mercenaries from hunting him down anyway. Of course, they were clued in by one of the people he rescued. In the novelization, it's made clear people were still looking for him anyway. They just couldn't find him without help.
 * This happens in Assault on Precinct 13. The cop lets Bishop—a murderer and gangster—go because the man earned his trust and respect. He then implies to his fellow officers that Bishop was killed in the deadly raid on their precinct.
 * Extreme Prejudice (1987). The movie opens with the Black Ops unit assembling, stating the fact that every one is listed as having been 'killed' while on military service, in order to aid plausible deniability—a Fridge Logic idea as it would be a lot more plausible to have them be thrown out of the military on fake charges. When the sheriff protagonist realises he's caught several people officially listed as dead, it's obvious that there's some official funny business going on.
 * Miller's Crossing (1990). Bernie Bernbaum begs Tom Reagan to "Look into your heart" before pulling a classic dick move.
 * This is how Edward Scissorhands got saved at the end of the movie.
 * In the first Underworld movie, does this for.
 * In Pirates of the Caribbean On Stranger Tides, Blackbeard needs to get Syrena to shed a tear. After torture doesn't work, he seemingly kills Philip, the only man who's been kind to her, in front of her. It doesn't work. He orders the body disposed of. Then Philip wakes up later, goes back to rescue her - and then she sheds tears of joy, which is what Blackbeard had planned for all along.
 * In The Rescuers The Rescuers Down Under, McLeach fakes Cody's death when kidnapping him in order to both keep the authorities from tailing them should a child be reported missing, and at the same time also interrogate him in regards to where Marahute is.
 * In The Dark Knight Rises, Bane fakes Dr. Peval's death in a plane crash in order to retrieve him. However, its strongly implied that he intends to do worse things to him after retrieving him.

Literature

 * Narcissa Malfoy with at the end of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
 * Dumbledore offered to do this for Draco in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, but didn't get the chance. Averted with, despite what many fans (and Harry) believed.
 * Dr. Yueh, for Jessica and Paul in Dune.
 * In Isard's Revenge, Rogue Squadron is ambushed by an Imperial warlord's forces; the new Red Shirts get killed, everyone gets damaged to some extent, and two others eject. The damaged but still flying Rogues, fighting against numerically superior foes, get a dramatic rescue from another Imperial sect which politely tells them to go with them before more of the warlord's people show up. They do so. Very soon after the Errant Venture hyperjumps onto the scene, sees the mingled Imperial and New Republic debris, and assumes that the two forces annihilated each other. They recover the two survivors, allow one to pretend to still be dead, and retreat back out of Imperial territory with the horrible news. Meanwhile, the Rogues are in Isard's hands, and she wants them to kill her clone.
 * Moist von Lipwig, in the Discworld novel Going Postal, had his execution faked for him, as the involuntary subtype: Become Vetinari's Boxed Crook, or... well, to everyone else you're already dead, aren't you?
 * In Connie Wilis's "Winter's Tale", "William Shakespeare" is coming home, except that Anne knows he's not her husband. She learns that her husband was lured to a tavern and murdered to pass off the body as Christopher Marlowe, while Marlowe got to pass himself off as Shakespeare. Considering that prior to that, she had thought her self-centered husband had sold his identity, she is able to live with it.
 * In one of the early Sword of Truth books, Zedd fakes Kahlan's execution in a way that requires her to think she's been executed. The way the magic works, everyone involved except the caster must think the execution is genuine when the spell is cast. The result is a reality warping spell that makes everyone think you're dead.
 * In the fourth book of A Song of Ice and Fire, Cersei gets news that is dead. That is all we hear about it until the fifth book, when we see his side of the story.
 * In Mrs. Pollifax, Innocent Tourist, the next-to-last book in the Mrs. Pollifax series of Spy Fiction novels, the Iraqi authorities who had intended to arrest author Dib Assen instead claimed they had killed him when he eluded them thanks to their own overconfidence. Because he had escaped into the desert to make his way to Syria, he wasn't able to contradict their story, and everyone believed it.

Live-Action TV

 * Nikita : The whole plot is based on Nikita's death being faked by division.
 * At the end of Rome, Titus does this with Caesar's son.
 * This was Agent Henricksen's plan in 'Jus in Bello, in Season 3 of Supernatural: to say that Sam and Dean were dead.
 * The cause of some of Daniel Jackson's "deaths". Just as often, it's a Left for Dead situation or All Just a Dream from the start, but there have been a few times, like the Season One episode "Fire and Water", where his death was deliberately faked by someone else because they needed a translator and couldn't wait around to ask politely.
 * McCoy does this for Kirk in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode "Amok Time", during Kirk and Spock's Involuntary Battle to the Death.
 * John Locke tells some mobsters that his father is dead in the Lost episode "Lockdown".
 * Babylon 5: when Vir Cotto becomes ambassador to the Minbari, fakes the deaths of thousands of Narn refugees in order to get them safely to other worlds.

Theatre

 * Oedipus Rex. It didn't end well.
 * Subverted with in The Yeomen of the Guard: The plot's something of a Gambit Pileup, but, very briefly, Point claiming Fairfax was dead actually forced the disguised Fairfax to set up Point's Tear Jerker ending. A little less briefly *deep breath*:
 * And that's the simplified version. What's so great about Yeomen is it manages to have a plot that complex, but keeps it all understandable, natural, manages to invoke tragedy without having any actual villains - everyone acts out of sensible, human motivations, and noone is all that unsympathetic (even if modern productions tend to play up Fairfax's flaws a bit more, thanks to the Values Dissonance of the Tudor attitudes about marriage. Oh, and it has all sorts of Crowning Music of Awesome - it's considered by many to be Gilbert and Sullivan's best work.
 * A simpler version of the tragic type: Rigoletto, in which Rigoletto discovers too late that the body in the sack isn't the Duke he hired an assassin to kill to protect his daughter... but his daughter herself, having decided on the Heroic Sacrifice approach to love.
 * Tragic example in Aida: When the Egyptian soldiers come looking for Aida, Nehebka sacrifices herself while the other Nubians restrain and hide Aida.
 * And that's the simplified version. What's so great about Yeomen is it manages to have a plot that complex, but keeps it all understandable, natural, manages to invoke tragedy without having any actual villains - everyone acts out of sensible, human motivations, and noone is all that unsympathetic (even if modern productions tend to play up Fairfax's flaws a bit more, thanks to the Values Dissonance of the Tudor attitudes about marriage. Oh, and it has all sorts of Crowning Music of Awesome - it's considered by many to be Gilbert and Sullivan's best work.
 * A simpler version of the tragic type: Rigoletto, in which Rigoletto discovers too late that the body in the sack isn't the Duke he hired an assassin to kill to protect his daughter... but his daughter herself, having decided on the Heroic Sacrifice approach to love.
 * Tragic example in Aida: When the Egyptian soldiers come looking for Aida, Nehebka sacrifices herself while the other Nubians restrain and hide Aida.

Video Games

 * At the end of Resident Evil Zero
 * In Knights of the Old Republic, when you are running around looking for bounties on Taris you may run into Matrix, a guy who ratted out on the interstellar crime syndicate because of a guilty conscience. There is, of course, a bounty on his head, but if you refrain from attacking him he may mention that he wouldn't be holed up hiding if he could fake his death. You can then go out and buy plot-exclusive explosives too complex for your party to use, allowing Matrix to rig his room with them. Believed dead, he disappears, and if you go to the bounty office the Hutt there tells you that his people saw you buy the explosives and next time he'd prefer you didn't do it like that. But you still get the bounty.
 * Revan would have died had Bastila and the Jedi not saved him; they let the galaxy at large – including the amnesiac Revan himself – believe he did die.
 * A heart-wrenching example occurs in Dragon Quest IV:
 * In Mass Effect 2, after you recruit Archangel, the 3 mercenary groups, who teamed up just to kill him, all decide to spread the rumor that he's dead. The fact that the mercs managed to hit Archangel the face with a gunship rocket lends credibility to the story, and as nobody knows Archangel's real identity, no one questions it when they see him in your party.
 * In Back to The Future: The Game, Marty needs to convince Trixie that Arthur has been killed by Kid Tannen... but, for fear of the Grandfather Paradox, can't actually let Arthur get killed. How convenient that

Web Comics

 * Girl Genius has Doctor Zardeliv, whom everyone wanted to either recruit or assassinate. But the corpse was found a little too soon, and by another Smoke Knight who knew him personally at that, so this didn't quite work.

Western Animation
"Joe: Yep, he's dead. I can tell, I'm a cop."
 * Iroh of Avatar: The Last Airbender.
 * In the premiere episodes of Justice League,
 * In Family Guy, Quagmire fakes his death to get out of a marriage. Joe covers for him.


 * According to the Saturday Night Live TV Funhouse short "Journey To The Disney Vault", this was apparently what Disney did to Jim Henson after he refused to sell them his company in 1990.

Real Life

 * In Real Life poet and writer Fernando Pessoa assisted famous Aleister Crowely in faking his own suicide.
 * Emperor Nero's mother was going to be killed, but a friend of hers pretended to be her. Since it was nighttime, it worked. Some versions state that she told said friend to pretend to be her in order to make sure she'd be rescued however.