The last phase of Mission 70 goes above and beyond the difficulty of "Advanced-level" missions.
After successfully manipulating Albert Weis of the Bundschuh my identity was still uncompromised. He still thought I was a corporate employee seeking his help and offering valuable intel. So I contacted him again on 20th of May to schedule a new meeting. He agreed but he insisted on scheduling this time in Frankfurt out of fear for the Lane Hackers. This system is outside our operational zones and he knows it. I had no choice but to accept.
The next day I met Geoff Enfield, Director of BDM. I was seeking the tools necessary to break Albert's mind, to force him to admit and reveal anything I wanted. I needed controversial information on DWR which would work as an angle, a leverage, during my interrogation. However the BDM proved once again their inefficiency when their Director had nothing to offer.
On the 26th of May I contacted Albert Weis who was in Texas witnessing the Attack on Sugarland. He was more confident this time because according to him "The Lane Hackers were busy with the attack so they wouldn't come to get him". How little he knew... I masterfully convinced him to come to Bremen system and take the same controversial cargo like last time.
When he saw my ship and my true affiliation, he was in awe for several seconds. He couldn't believe his eyes, he couldn't accept reality. Then I mania-interrogated the target however I was unable to complete all three ways which would qualify as a successful mania-interrogation because the target somehow held the belief that his life was not in danger. I was still selling him a story so I was carrying human cargo who were supposedly the former owners of my Pilgrim Liner. In the end, after intense pressure the target broke and started a delirium with symptoms similar to the Planet Harris syndrome. Further attempts to shake him up and bring him to reality were unsuccessful as he stopped responding altogether despite me jettisoning dozens of humans in-space and shooting them. Suddenly he didn't care for them, he only cared for his life proving once again his fake morality and double standards, both common traits among the Bundschuh.
Albert Weis met his end when the Rheinland Military discovered our location and attacked him. I first left the scene as I carrying Albert's human organs. His already heavily damaged transport was obliterated in a sub-atomic level when an angry Bismarck captain fired a Heavy Mortar. It is highly unlikely that he survived. Here is the collected evidence: [①②③④⑤⑥⑦]