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The Inspector must be sympathetic, unlike the [[Inspector Javert]]. He's doing exactly what he should be doing, and even doing it fairly well, but never quite as well as the protagonist is doing ''his'' job. As a series goes on, chances are he'll develop a great deal of [[Worthy Opponent|respect]] for his quarry, and may be quite prone to [[Enemy Mine|teaming up]] with the protagonist. He also does not chase [[Wrongly Accused]] criminals. Don't try to fake being a victim of his target; the Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist ''knows'' his quarry, and can often tell right off "That's not his style." Likewise, he can often figure out pretty quickly if an innocent target is being framed by his archnemesis.
 
This sympathy can be played for laughs, and [[Butt Monkey|humiliated left and right]] by the hero. Thus, this character runs a risk of becoming a joke among fans (or even [[Inspector Oblivious|in-series]]) if he never has any on-screen successes, especially if [[Flanderization]] sets in. A common way of preventing this is to have the character be a [[Crouching Moron, Hidden Badass]] against lesser crooks, thus racking up an impressive career record of arrests even if it is primarily cleaning up after his main quarry has defeated them. More likely to be [[Lawful Good]] than [[Inspector Javert]]. Many times, it is also revealed that he is VERY good at his job... but that his elusive quarry [[Overshadowed Byby Awesome|is SO good as to make him look foolish]]. Spotlight episodes might even prove him to be [[The Chessmaster|quite formidable]]. The protagonist himself may even praise him, and usually enjoys getting chased.
 
This character is also always considered an important one in the series, even if he is secondary to the protagonist: the series would just not be as interesting without a foil for the hero. Expect him to have a few episodes dedicated exclusively to him, like showing his point of view for an entire episode or showing his life outside chasing his prey. Can easily become an [[Ensemble Darkhorse]] if he's likable enough (which he usually is).
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== Anime and Manga ==
* The former [[Trope Namer]] is Inspector Zenigata from the ''[[Lupin III]]'' series. He set the standard for a whole host of wacky detectives following in the example of his relentless pursuit of Lupin. By this point, he's come to admit he wouldn't have any idea what to do with himself if he ''did'' catch Lupin. He's also very much in the "good, just not as good as his quarry" column of Zenigatas - he gets closer to catching Lupin than anyone who tries to replace him, he's a one-man police force against any lesser criminal, and in his younger days he could have quite a good time beating up an entire gang of muggers barehanded. It's openly stated that his stellar arrest record i.e. cleaning up after Lupin is what lets him stay on the Lupin case.
** In his younger days?? In ''Dead Or Alive'', which is most certainly in the contemporary timeline, he takes on a gang of armed soldiers by himself while drinking some tea in a cafe without getting a scratch. Much BIGGER, well trained soldiers. [[I Know Karate|With Judo]]. [[Badass|BADASS]].
** Zenigata has also actually been able to catch Lupin clean a few times. In the original series, he caught him with a VERY cleverly laid trap, and kept behind bars FOR A YEAR. It took Lupin a VERY clever [[Batman Gambit]] to escape that time. The bottom line is Zenigata IS capable of catching Lupin from time to time. Lupin STAYING caught? Ah, now ''that's'' the tricky part, ain't it?
*** He's also let Lupin go more than a few times, too. While Lupin is his archenemy, it's a matter of the two being [[Friendly Enemy|on reasonably good terms with each other]], and he'll stop chasing Lupin if there's a worse villain to be caught, even to the point of ignoring Lupin escaping if the badguy is bad enough (sort of a reward for helping stop him).
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** At least until ''[[Gunsmith Cats]]: Burst'', where Percy tries to have him ''assassinated''.
** Percy has never been a ''good'' cop. He'll happily put innocent lives at risk, orders his men to near-suicidal manouvers and lets far more dangerous criminals get away if it brings him closer to catching Bean. Even before the whole assassination-thing in ''Burst'' he frames Bean for a murder so he can squeeze favours from the mobster who actually committed it.
* [[Sherlock Hound|Sherlock Hound's]] portrayal of [[Inspector Lestrade]] has elements of this, when chasing Moriarty. Ironically, [[Hayao Miyazaki]], one of the directors also directed ''[[The Castle of Cagliostro (Anime)|The Castleof Cagliostro]]''.
* ''[[Kaitou Saint Tail]]'' has the [[Amateur Sleuth]] Asuka Jr constantly trying to foil Saint Tail. Of course, complications arise from Meimi's on-off crush on him outside her alter-ego, eventually leading into [[Dating Catwoman]].
* Tadashi from ''[[Astro Boy (Mangamanga)|Astro Boy]]'' started out in this role.
* Hakuba Saguru from ''[[Magic Kaito]]'' can be seen as a serious version of this or, in his worse moments, a genuine [[Inspector Javert]]. However, he does do a fair bit of good despite his attempts to catch the gentleman thief protagonist, and views him as a [[Worthy Opponent]]. Also notable for the huge amount of [[Ho Yay]] his obsessed chase produces.
** Don't forget Inspector Nakamori, who is pretty much exactly [[Lupin III|Zenigata]]. He's an actual cop in charge of an entire division devoted exclusively to catching Kaitou Kid. He's also totally, unhealthily obsessed and does not even approach being smart enough to beat Kid, instead getting taunted and gently humiliated whenever he faces off against the thief. (Though he ''is'' more competent when not dealing with Kid.) And ironically, Nakamori's daughter [[Tsundere|Aoko]] is the closest to Kaitou's [[Dating Catwoman|love]] [[Victorious Childhood Friend|interest]].
** Eventually, he gets ''yet another'' Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist... Conan from ''[[Detective Conan]]''.
* Detective Leon Orcott of ''[[Pet Shop of Horrors]]''. He finds Count D to be a threat to humanity. Count D finds him to be endearingly/irritatingly thick-headed. Both are correct in their assessment. [[Go-Karting Withwith Bowser|This doesn't stop either of them from having tea with one another several times a month]].
** Leon also finds himself disturbingly attracted to D (disturbingly so because D is male - sort of), just as D finds himself disturbingly drawn to Leon (disturbingly so because Leon is human). Eventually, as Leon really begins to trust D, he lets his little brother live in the titular Petshop because he feels it would be ''the safest environment'' for the kid. ... And he still tries to arrest D occasionally after that.
* ''[[Seto no Hanayome]]'' has [[Shout-Out|Zenigata]] Mawari, a policeman's daughter obsessed with enforcing rules with all her might. Comes with a [[Catch Phrase]]: "Must Mawari teach you the rules of..."
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* Inspector Saehara from ''[[D.N.Angel]]'' falls into the comic side of this trope due to Dark already having a rather more competent nemesis. He does realise it would be out of character for Dark to kidnap someone though.
* Captain, later Commodore, Smoker in ''[[One Piece]]''. He's a marine, and catching pirates is his job - not wrongly so, since a lot of Pirates really are terrible criminals in this world. It just so happens our hero is also a pirate, if a really nice one that [[The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything|never pillages or hurts innocents]]. He catches plenty of other, less nice pirates along the way and {{spoiler|actually helps foiling the plans of the [[Big Bad]] in the Alabasta arc}}. Also notable in that Luffy stands no chance against him in a fight and he probably could take the Straw Hat in, but dumb luck, circumstance or help of allies always gets him out of Smoker's grasp.
* L from ''[[Death Note (Manga)|Death Note]]'' would qualify as a more serious and less hands on example. As the worlds greatest detective, he early on (correctly) fingers out the main protagonist as the most likely candidate to be the notorious mass serial killer known as "Kira" and continues to pursue his hunch for the rest of the series, even when circumstances (orchestrated by Light of course) seem to disprove this. {{spoiler|It's also a rare example where the Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist's opponent ends up losing because of his hard work, albeit through his successor}}
** It should probably be noted that, though he does correctly finger Light as Kira ''and'' assert that he's never been more sure of a deduction in his life, he also asserts that he's only seven percent sure that Light is Kira, so he's kind of on the outer fringes of being a [[S Sympathetic]] Inspector Antagonist (most Sympathetic Inspector Antagonists have harder evidence and greater certainty of their convictions).
*** Note that L's tendency to put percentages on everything is at least 50% bullshit. When he says "7% certainty", [[Word of God]] asserts that he's actually ''very'' convinced of Light being Kira.
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{{quote| - '''Near:''' I'm 99.999% sure that Light is Kira. The final 0.001% is just the lack of decisive evidence.}}
* Misaki Kirihara of ''[[Darker Than Black]]'' manages to be one of the most sympathetic characters in the series despite spending most of it working against the (amoral, but generally also sympathetic) main characters. It helps that the series runs on [[Grey and Gray Morality]].
* ''[[Cat's Eye (Manga)|Cat's Eye]]'': Inspector Utsumi will never, ever catch the three [[Classy Cat Burglar|Classy Cat Burglars]]. Because they're the protagonists, and because his girlfriend is [[Dating Catwoman|one of them]].
* Several police persons appear in [[Hana Nokono Ko Lunlun]], ranging from this trope to [[Inspector Javert]]. The most archetypical Sympathetic Inspector Antagonists are the policeman who chased after Sayid and Scharo in the first part of the Morocco miniarc, and the inspector form the Egypt episode who pursues a [[Gentleman Thief]] that Lunlun has befriended {{spoiler|and actually ''succeeds'' in catching his target. Poor Lunlun never knew she was aiding an outlaw, tho.}}
* The wearin a shirt called "Checkmate" from [[Tenjho Tenge]]
* Bright Honda in ''[[Shadow Lady (Manga)|Shadow Lady]]'' is a skilled detective and a wizard with gadgets, but he's trying to take down a supernatural cat burglar.
* Meguro from ''[[MW (Manga)|MW]]''. Like [[Death Note (Manga)|L]], he guessed right who the bad guy is but lacks evidence.
 
 
== Comic Books ==
* Lt. Kellaway from ''[[The Mask (Comic Bookcomics)|The Mask]]''.
* Inspector Ginko in the Italian series ''[[Diabolik]]''.
* Finch in ''[[V for Vendetta]]'' is an effective and honorable detective, it's just that V, his opponent, is a master of [[Batman Gambit|Batman gambits]]. You could argue that this trope is subverted in the end, as Finch {{spoiler|manages to find and kill V}}, but the comic strongly implies that {{spoiler|V wanted this to happen}}, making it his ultimate [[Batman Gambit]].
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* Kenneth William's characters in the ''[[Carry On]]'' movies with Sid James as an outlaw (''Carry On Dick'' and ''Carry On Don't Lose Your Head''). Fits this trope rather amusingly, with Sid James as the [[Gentleman Thief]].
* Inspector Jacques Clouseau of ''[[The Pink Panther]]'' fame started out as this in the very first film pursuing [[Gentleman Thief|the Phantom]], who was the original protagonist. Clouseau became the [[Ensemble Darkhorse]] the subsequent films focused on, and he never gave up his determination to capture villains. This, combined with his chronic ineptitude, is what drove [[Da Chief|his superior]] Chief Inspector Dreyfus to madness. On the other hand, in ''Trail of the Pink Panther'', Charles Lytton (the Phantom himself) saw that determination as the secret to what success Clouseau had.
* Sheriff Beaufort T. Justice in the ''[[Smokey and Thethe Bandit]]'' movies.
* [[Tom Hanks]]'s character Carl Hanratty in ''[[Catch Me If You Can]]''.
* Det. Prendergast in ''[[Falling Down]]''.
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* Most of the police officers who pursue ''[[The Saint]]'' fall into this category, especially Chief Inspector Claud Eustace Teal of Scotland yard and Inspector John Henry Fernack of the NYPD.
** Teal was so important to Simon Templar's early adventures that two collections were named after him. He also saved the Saint's life at least once.
* Porfiry Petrovich from ''[[Crime and Punishment (Literature)|Crime and Punishment]]'' is probably this; subverted in that he [[It Was His Sled|succeeds]], [[Exactly What It Says Onon the Tin|hence the second part of the title]].
** What's so impressive about Porfiry is that the protagonist, while guilty, just manages through a combination of luck and [[Xanatos Speed Chess]] to make it so that there is very little evidence against him; the only way he could be convicted is if he confesses. Porfiry, knowing that the protagonist is guilty but not possessing enough evidence to convict, ''[[Crowning Moment of Awesome|manages to hound and mess with him enough to convince him to confess.]]''
** Interestingly, even while he was messing with the protagonist with such ideas as reduction of sentence and suicide, he seemed genuinely concerned for the protagonist's moral welfare. (Only after, however, he is utterly certain that the protagonist will confess. Knowing he's caught the right guy and clinched the case, he takes some time out to feel sorry for him.)
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* Ben Price in the short story ''A Retrieved Reformation''
* [[Jakub Wedrowycz]]'s wannabe nemesis, officer Birski, who rarely succeeds in arresting him, and even then only manages to do so on charges of producing moonshine (as opposed to [[Heroic Sociopath|a whole lot of other outrageous things]] [[Crazy Awesome|Jakub tends to do]]).
* Captain Quarterblood in the ''[[Roadside Picnic (Literature)|Roadside Picnic]]'' by the [[Strugatsky Brothers]].
 
 
== [[Live Action TV]] ==
* The various Army commanders (of which there were five or six) who pursued the ''[[The A-Team (TV)|The A-Team]]'' flip-flopped between this and [[Inspector Javert]] depending on the script & characterizations.
** [[Colonel Badass|Colonel Decker]] managed to embody both tropes, being a [[Well-Intentioned Extremist]].
* Paul Ballard on ''[[Dollhouse]]'' spends most of the first season trying to uncover the titular operation.
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* In the ''[[Doctor Who]]'' episode "Planet of the Dead", the detective pursuing [[Classy Cat Burglar|Lady Christina]] is mostly played for laughs, ignored by UNIT and other authorities, and in the end, the Doctor helps her escape as he watches in futility.
* Detective Carter in ''[[Person of Interest]]'' is a serious version, pursuing the vigilante protagonist. She does occasionally team up with Finch and Reese, {{spoiler|the frequency of such team ups increasing up until the season finale, where for the second time, she (along with her partner, Lionel Fusco, who was initially blackmailed into assisting them unbeknownst to Carter until she tracked him down) helped Reese evade the CIA.}} Finch will occasionally contact Carter for information that the NYPD may have on a POI.
* Chief Inspector Teal in ''[[The Saint (TV series)|The Saint]]''.
 
 
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** Although for fun, {{spoiler|once you get the Gray Fox cowl, you can put it on in front of him and have him sputter in disbelief at finally catching him}}.
*** So many layers of irony were in that 'reassignment'. {{spoiler|On one hand, Lex is now unwittingly working for the Gray Fox. On the other hand, it was the Gray Fox who, after so many years of cat-n-mouse evasion between them, hand-picked him to be his head of security. This actually reveals a huge respect for the man.}}
* Officer Denise Marmalade in ''[[Mega Man Legends (Video Game)|The Misadventures of Tron Bonne]]''.
* The captain of the Schwann Brigade In ''[[Tales of Vesperia]]''. In a final side quest with him before the final dungeon, after Yuri escapes from him one final time, he even laughs and says "I wouldn't have it any other way".
* Luke Atmey plays the Sympathetic Inspector Antagonist to [[Gentleman Thief]] Mask*DeMasque in ''[[Ace Attorney]]: Trials and Tribulations.'' {{spoiler|1=By which we mean he's blackmailing DeMasque into committing the thefts to make money and get attention.}}
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== Western Animation ==
* ''[[Invader Zim (Animation)|Invader Zim]]'' DIB! DIB! DIB!
* Robin in the ''[[Teen Titans (Animationanimation)|Teen Titans]]'' cartoon is a more serious version of this, with his obsession with finding Slade.
** In ''[[Teen Titans: Trouble in Tokyo]]'', Commander Daizo appears to be another serious form of this, sternly chasing Robin once he "kills" one of Brushogun's ink constructs. He even ''looks'' like [[Lupin III|Zenigata]]. However: {{spoiler|He's actually the villain of the piece, using Brushogun as a slave to create criminals for him to capture.}}
* Commander Ulysses Feral will not stop before he's caught those ''[[Swat Kats (Animation)|Swat Kats]]'' for the destruction they inflict on the city! ... Usually. His real sympathetic part is that more than once a bad guy he's captured will try to use his mutual hatred of the SWAT Kats to get favorable treatment, only to be promptly reminded that Feral does ''not'' make deals with criminal scum.
* Ganimard from ''[[Night Hood]]''.
* Ranger Smith from ''[[Yogi Bear (Animation)|Yogi Bear]]''. Charged with the duty of keeping people's picnic baskets from being stolen.
* Maximus from ''[[Tangled (Disney)|Tangled]]'', a royal mount that got seperated from his rider but still kept trying to bring Flynn in. {{spoiler|He eventually warms up to him.}}
* The Sheriff from the Bunny and Claude ''[[Looney Tunes in Thethe Sixties|Looney Tunes]]'' cartoons.
* Agent Li in ''[[The Zeta Project (Animation)|The Zeta Project]]'', which frequently brings her into conflict with her boss, [[Inspector Javert|Agent Bennett]]. Eventually, {{spoiler|she seeks reassignment due to her belief that Zeta is not a threat to anyone.}}
* [[Fat Bastard|Rancid]] [[Fat Idiot|Rabbit]] from [[Cat Dog]].
* [[Stupid Boss|Principal Pixiefrog]] from ''[[My Gym Partner's a Monkey (Animation)|My Gym Partners a Monkey]]''.
* Mr. Wilter and Principal Stringet from ''[[Chalk Zone]]''.
* Ranger Stu from ''[[Squirrel Boy]]''.
* The Angry Cop from ''[[The Goode Family]]'' episode "Gerald's Way or The Highway".
* Benson from ''[[Regular Show (Animation)|Regular Show]]''.
* Gobsmack from ''[[Pearlie (Animation)|Pearlie]]''.
* Candace certainly ''thinks'' she is this to [[Phineas and Ferb (Animation)|Phineas and Ferb]].
 
{{reflist}}
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