Lisa Hexler (Tara Westwood) was a villainess from "Game On", episode 4.10 of Unforgettable (airdate January 22, 2016). She was the president of Hexler Gaming, a video game company specializing in horror-themed video games, including the Satan's Palace series. She was also a notoriously ruthless businesswoman, having a habit of stealing programmers and designers from other companies and hiring them for herself.
Lisa was questioned by Jay Lee and Denny Padilla during the investigation into the murder of Jason Rios, a programmer who was found dead in the VIP room of the haunted house set up to promote the latest Satan's Palace game. Lisa revealed that she had met with Jason to talk about offering him work, contesting that she hadn't been involved in his death and shrewdly brushing off the mention of her underhanded business practices.
Lisa was considered a suspect in Jason's murder, however,once it was discovered that Hexler Gaming was facing financial troubles after having their last three games underperform in sales, leading the detectives to believe she killed Jason to gain access to one of his projects. But when Denny and Al Burns went to question Lisa again, Denny found her murdered outside her company. Posthumously, Lisa was cleared for Jason's murder, as he had been killed by his half-brother Chris Houston (son of William Houston, the CEO of softward company Sistex).
After learning that Jason, an employee of Sistex, was his father's child and his half-brother, Chris killed him out of jealousy of his programming talent and tried to sell his latest creation to Lisa: a new brand of long-lasting battery. But upon meeting with Jason, Lisa connected the dots and figured out that Chris had killed Jason and stolen the battery. But rather than report him to the police, the evil Lisa gave Chris a deal: she wouldn't report him to the police if he gave the battery to her. But rather than do that, Chris killed Lisa by bludgeoning her to death.
Trivia[]
- Tara Westwood also appeared on Blue Bloods as the evil Margaret Olson.