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Omni Consumer Products

    In general 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ocp.png
"I say good business is where you find it."

The Big Bad of the franchise and a powerful Megacorp that dabbles in everything.


  • Always Chaotic Evil: Anybody who works for OCP is a ruthless scumbag, especially if they are an executive.
  • Corporate Conspiracy: Omni Consumer Products is not the most ethical of corporations. The original film had a vice-president willing to make a deal with a crime boss to start a crime spree, so that OCP can step in and offer to privatize the police force. And all of this to demolish Detroit and rebuild it as Delta City. By the time of the third movie, they're even hiring a street gang to drive out the locals.
  • Evil, Inc.: OCP is a cutthroat, heartless corporation that will use any cutthroat method it can, especially if it involves cutting corners.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: OCP's incompetence and difficulties in buying out all of Detroit from its citizens results in it gradually losing much of its value. It is completely bankrupted by the revelation of its atrocities in Robocop 3.
  • Incompetence, Inc.: Big time, thanks to a combination of incompetence and greed. They prioritize making showpieces for military contracts rather than actually keeping the streets safe, and further prioritize said showpieces looking cool for the cameras and getting out early over them actually working. Regardless of what their product is, it's all Cool, but Inefficient, focusing entirely on looking flashy with no concern if it actually works, RoboCop being implied to be a fluke. This does eventually come back to bite them, as between the second and third films, they ended up being bought out by a Japanese company.
  • Law Enforcement, Inc.: They've privatised the Detroit Police Department as part of the city's bailout package. This is one of the first steps towards Delta City.
  • MegaCorp: They have divisions in all kinds of diverse fields, such as consumer products, healthcare, prisons, space exploration, law enforcement and military grade weaponry.
  • Karma Houdini Warranty: RoboCop 3 was about OCP's warranty becoming void between Kanemitsu buying the company, the Old Man being implied to have been forced out, the public learning the truth about the Rehabs, the resultant bankruptcy as stocks plummet, their headquarters being blown up by the Otomos, and the CEO getting fired.
  • No Name Given: The Old Man's name was never revealed. The CEO's name is also unstated in RoboCop 3, though if one counts the comic adaptation as All There in the Manual, then it's only his first name that unknown as it's stated there he's Bob Morton's dad (Johnson even calls him "Mr. Morton").
  • Putting on the Reich: Particularly in Robocop 2, OCP is rife with Nazi imagery. Their flag seen in the conference hall when Robocop 2 is unveiled is red with a white circle in the middle with their logo in black in the circle. Their security guards uniforms are modelled after SS uniforms. Then there's the Delta city thing which echoes Hitler's plans to have Berlin destroyed and rebuilt into a concrete city "Welthauptstadt Germania" if he won the war.
  • Visionary Villain: Their plan to transform Detroit into the privately owned Delta City.

    The Old Man 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/oldman_8.jpg
"Sometimes we just have to start over from scratch to make things right, and that's exactly what we're going to do."
Played by Dan O'Herlihy

Head of OCP in the first two movies.


  • Alas, Poor Villain: Regardless of how he goes out in Rogue City, RoboCop seems to be genuinely saddened at his death.
  • Anti-Villain: Of the Well-Intentioned variety. The Old Man is involved in a lot of shady activities and he's a Corrupt Corporate Executive without a doubt, but he's genuinely trying to improve Detroit and he's nowhere near as ruthless as most of the other villains.
  • Benevolent Boss: He genuinely wants to use OCP's power and influence to better the city of Detroit, even if nobody else at his company cares about it, and is the only member of the company who shows any kind of conscience.
  • Bus Crash: Seems to have died in the period between RoboCop 2 and RoboCop 3, leaving his company in the much less capable hands of The CEO in RoboCop 3. Johnson implies that he was considered expendable between films. Rogue City (which takes place between the two films) reveals that he attempted to turn himself into a cyborg using the RoboCop2 body, thus becoming the game's Final Boss.
  • Characterization Marches On:
    • In the first movie he shows no serious moral failings, refusing to sell a half-finished, potentially dangerous product and being appalled by his underling's criminal dealings. He's still a Corrupt Corporate Executive, however. He's not at all bothered by poor Kinney's death, he's more concerned that this malfunction will set them back millions in interest payments and the PR nightmare it will be; he's just not overtly evil, unlike Dick. In the sequel, he has seen numerous attempts to recreate RoboCop fail horribly. Yet he utterly ignores all warnings, safety inspections or psych profile of the murder machine he has paid money for before rolling it out to a crowded, televised press conference. Also bringing a can of real street drugs with him, what the hell? Most egregiously, he authorizes a hit on the mayor of Detroit when the desperate mayor tries to make a deal with a crime lord to save the city's finances, which would set back OCP's plans.
    • Rogue City is an inversion: As the end of his life approaches, he talks to Murphy in private about how he grew up in Old Detroit and wants to make the city better place. Later, he shows Murphy a recording of how he understands that Murphy is still a human being and looking forward to the two of them working together to make Detroit a better place. That said, he goes to some very shady means to ensure his conversion, which offends Murphy enough that he might either kill him or leave him to die, depending on the player's decision.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: He may be corrupt, but there are a few lines he draws, most prominently petty treason involving hostage-taking. When Dick Jones crosses that line, his usefulness to OCP ends then and there. He is also angry at Jones trying to downplay ED-209's Disastrous Demonstration (in all of its gory mess) as "only a glitch". Rogue City also shows that he genuinely wants to help the people of Detroit.
  • Even Evil Has Loved Ones: When visiting him in the hospital in Rogue City, you can overhear him talking to his mother, who inspired him to do good for people, and confuses RoboCop for someone named Michael, who he holds in high regard.note 
  • Greater-Scope Villain: Of the original film trilogy. Downplayed in the first movie (even though his employee Dick Jones is the Big Bad with connections to Boddicker, he plays no part in the conspiracy), but played straight in the sequel when Characterization Marches On when he purposely allowed Faxx to have RoboCop decommissioned and then supervise the RoboCop 2 project by using the brain of the Big Bad to control the robot. Even in his absence in the third film with the new head of OCP in his place, his sinister influence still cast its shadow.
  • Karmic Death: Looking at just the movies, we never find out what exactly happened to him, but after ending the second film showing himself to be every bit as corrupt as everybody else in OCP, the third movie shows that he is no longer in charge and Johnson just cryptically says in one scene that the Old Man found out the hard way that "everyone's expendable" to the company. The video game Rogue City, which takes places between the last two movies, shows karma catch up to him when he had himself turned into a cyborg after he died, and the result was that he Came Back Wrong in the RoboCop 2 body, with the project being mismanaged by the executive corruption he neglected to control. He ultimately dies fighting Murphy, someone he admired and hoped to work with, with the OCP skyscraper crumbling down on him. The exact circumstances are up to the player's choice: he is either killed or abandoned by RoboCop, or sacrificing himself to save RoboCop from falling debris.
  • Lack of Empathy: At the end of the second film, he leaves the building by stepping over the corpse of a bystander killed by Cain.
  • Large Ham: He's VERY LOUD and EXPRESSIVE sometimes:
    "YOU CALL THIS A GLITCH!"
    "DICK ... YOU'RE FIRED!"
    "BEHAVE YOURSELVES!"
  • Nice to the Waiter: His attitude towards Murphy in the climax of the first movie truly deserves mention; bear in mind, by this point, Murphy isn't legally a person anymore: he is a product, OCP property. Yet when he barges in unannounced in the conference room, the Old Man politely asks him what his business is. When Murphy replies that Dick Jones is wanted for murder, the Old Man calmly points out that such serious charges need proof, which Murphy provides. And after Jones has been taken care of (which involved taking the Old Man hostage at gunpoint, mind you), the Old Man congratulates Murphy's skills and asks what his name is while casually calling him "son", like a regular old man thanking a normal cop for taking care of a minor inconvenience. Rogue City takes this further with him showing genuine admiration for Murphy, who keeps going despite everything he's suffered.
  • Offscreen Karma: Before Rogue City came out thirty years later to supply a potential version of what happened, the only mention of the Old Man in Robocop 3 is Johnson cryptically mentioning that he is no longer in charge of OCP because "everyone's expendable" to the company.
  • Only Known by Their Nickname: No one ever calls him anything other than "The Old Man."
  • Only Sane Man: In the first movie, he appears to be the only executive at OCP who plans don't involve making money through excessive villainy. It's dropped in the sequel.
  • Reasonable Authority Figure: The Old Man in the first movie is just about the only OCP bigwig with any sort of moral standard, especially if compared to young upstarts. In the sequels, he inexplicably becomes a typical corporate douchebag.
  • Redemption Equals Death: In Rogue City, should RoboCop choose to save him, he pulls a Heroic Sacrifice to save Murphy from falling debris.
  • Skewed Priorities:
    • His response to ED 209 killing a man is to express outrage over the setbacks it would create. He doesn't complain about Dick allowing the machine in with live ammunition for no good reason.
    • When shown the videos of the failed RoboCop 2 prototypes, his reaction is not one of horror towards the candidates going mad and killing themselves, or the deaths and injuries to the OCP scientists, but is instead to complain about cost overruns.
  • Smug Snake: A pretty amiable one, but one nonetheless. Standard OCP board behavior, really.
  • Sudden Sequel Heel Syndrome: He was practically the Token Good Teammate of OCP and even thanked RoboCop and referred him as a human being in the first film. He's suddenly a ruthless corporate asswipe that has people killed and uses improperly tested weapons in the sequel to a point he's nearly an Expy of his actor's past Corrupt Corporate Executive role as Conal Cochran in Halloween III: Season of the Witch, except his motives are out of Greed rather then For the Evulz unlike Cochran. That said, as this video from fan site RoboCop Archive's YouTube channel points out, we only saw the Old Man twice in the original film at board meetings, whereas the Old Man was seen in 2 behind closed doors multiple times.
  • Took a Level in Dumbass: In the first movie, he disproves of ED 209 after seeing it is dangerous and unreliable. In the sequel, he approves of building a successor to RoboCop that is effectivily walking war machine, and putting the brain of a drug addicted crime lord into it.
  • Villainous Valor: In the first film he's the only OCP executive not to panic when ED-209 starts to malfunction, and is able to keep his cool when taken hostage by Dick Jones. In the second film, when RoboCop 2 goes on its inevitable rampage during its public unveiling, the Old Man doesn't cower or freak. Instead, he stands tall, makes sure the woman he's sleeping with is taken to safety, then steps forward and tells the battling RoboCop and RoboCop 2 to "BEHAVE YOURSELVES!", only leaving the scene of the fight when it becomes clear there's nothing else to be done. Might verge on Too Dumb to Live given the circumstances, but he makes it work.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He honestly believes his plans for Detroit are for the good of the city as well as his corporation, even if they involve using giant police robots to wipe out crime before rebuilding it, to say nothing of the ramifications of gentrification.
  • You Have GOT to Be Kidding Me!: Delivers a completely exhausted and weary Facepalm when he sees the horrifying results of the RoboCop 2 prototypes, mostly out of sheer pragmatism of how his people keep completely and utterly fucking it up at the very seams rather than out of genuine concern or worry about the two researchers that got shot, or the test subjects killing themselves at the first opportunity. Johnson shares the sentiment despite having been at ground zero of one of the incidents and narrowly avoiding death himself.
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness:
    • Does this to Dick Jones when he tries to take him hostage.
    • Johnson implies this happened to him between the second and third films. Robo Cop Rogue City details the Old Man's fall from grace.

    The CEO 
Played by Rip Torn

The New head of OCP who is in-charge of the company in RoboCop 3


  • All There in the Manual: The comic adaptation of RoboCop 3 states that he's Bob Morton's father.
  • Big Bad Duumvirate: With Paul McDaggett for RoboCop 3, though he's clearly the lesser evil.
  • Big Bad Wannabe: Quite possibly the most incompetent villain in the series.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: Per the course for the higher-ups of OCP.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Draws the line at killing police officers who were standing up for the rebels.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": He's only referred to by his job title. As noted under "All There In the Manual", he's Bob Morton's dad, though his first name still isn't revealed.
  • Incompetence, Inc.: He isn't as smart as the Old Man, and it's clear OCP hasn't prospered since he was appointed its new head, with the company sinking lower and lower. In another sign of his idiocy, related to the comic adaptation stating he's Bob Morton's dad, he asked whose idea was RoboCop, unaware it was his son's project.
  • Jerkass: He wants OCP to prosper (again because he's run it to the ground). And if going to war with the citizens of Detroit is what it takes, then so be it.
  • Kill the Poor: He has no problem with the Rehabs killing people who resist getting kicked out of their homes as long as it doesn't make the news. The moment he protests is because McDaggett decides to continue the campaign even if it means killing cops.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: The comic reveals he's the father of Bob Morton, who died in the first film.
  • Puppet King: He may be technically in charge at OCP, but Kanemitsu is giving him his orders.
  • Smug Snake: The moment the smug finally goes out of his face is the moment when he discovers that 1) OCP's stock has completely bottomed out (as a response to the public discovering how violent the Rehabs are) and the corporation is now utterly worthless and 2) McDaggett showcases himself to be Eviler than Thou.

    Holzgang 
Played by Jeff McCarthy

A lawyer for OCP. Appears in RoboCop 2.


    Dr. Weltman 
Played by James McQueen

A doctor in the OCP Medical Facility. Dr. Juliette Faxx notified him that Cain expired, moments before shutting off Cain's life support.


Security Concepts

The department of OCP responsible for the police cyborg program and the creation of products like RoboCop, ED-209, RoboCop 2, and the UEDs.

    Richard "Dick" Jones 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dick_jones.jpg
"I had to kill Bob Morton because he made a mistake. Now it's time to erase that mistake."

Played by Ronny Cox

The main antagonist of the first movie, next to Clarence. He is the corrupt Senior President of OCP, answering only to the Old Man, and he oversees Security Concepts.


  • Big Bad Duumvirate: With Boddicker, being the Non-Action Big Bad who supplies Boddicker with his equipment and money.
  • Bitch in Sheep's Clothing: Keeps up an air of politeness when doing business, but whenever the chips are down he shows his true colors.
  • The Chessmaster: Turning out to be the Man Behind the Man for Detroit's latest crime spree and managing to smooth-talk Boddicker into staying his lackey by pointing out how much he'll benefit once Delta City brings a lot of suckers for construction work surely fits here.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: This is a pattern with OCP, but Jones took it up to eleven. He doesn't even care that he made a piece of utter crap that killed a board member!
    Richard:I had a guaranteed military sale with ED-209 - renovation program, spare parts for twenty-five years... Who cares if it worked or not!?
  • Cutting Corners: What was done with the design checking of his Enforcement Droid series just so he could rush out a personal win with the Old Man.
  • Destination Defenestration: His attempt to rebel against the Old Man ends up going ... out the window.
  • A Dick in Name: The film loves to go out of its way to remind you that he's as terrible as his namesake by having every character really. emphasize. the. pronunciation of his nickname when they are being angry or sarcastic at him. Conversely, while Boddicker is trying to play nice for him, he pointedly calls him "Richard" instead.
  • Did You Actually Believe...?: Gives this speech to RoboCop when he comes to arrest him
    Richard: "What did you think? That you were an ordinary cop? You're our product! And we can't very well have our products turning against us, can we?"
  • The Dreaded: OCP's other executives are terrified of Dick. They will talk smack about him behind his back, but are quick to run when he shows his face.
  • Establishing Character Moment: After his ED-209 specimen kills a fellow executive by accident, he brushes off the death as a "temporary setback". The Old Man has none of it.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Subverted. It's hinted that one of the reasons Dick opposes the RoboCop project is because the idea of Frankensteining humans into cyborgs creeps him out. However, he doesn't view any humanity within RoboCop and wastes no time trying to destroy him despite him technically being a human.
  • Evil Gloating: When Robo comes to arrest him, unknowingly activating Directive 4, he holds out his arms and sarcastically offers to let Robo bring him in. Then he summons ED-209 to kill him, boasting about how he killed Bob Morton.
  • Evil Old Folks: Not as much as The Old Man, but enough so that Rob Morton saw his advanced years as a sign of weakness... A fatal mistake.
  • Evil Is Hammy: "It's best if you think of it as a game... I'm cashing you out, Bob!"
  • Eviler than Thou: Played straight with the dynamics between him and his rival, Bob Morton. Though Bob Morton might be a Jerkass Corrupt Corporate Executive, he doesn't stoop to the level of villainy like Jones and gets outplayed - Unfortunately for him.
  • Faux Affably Evil: He presents himself as polite and friendly, but he's a ruthless and greedy sociopath who wants to take over OCP at all costs and doesn't care if innocent people die in the process.
  • Hate Sink: OCP executives are mostly scumbags, but Dick's depths of depravity makes him the most loathsome of them all. He buddies with a bloodthirsty crime lord for money, has Bob killed for screwing over his ED-209 project, views RoboCop as his "product" and happily tries to have him killed, and threatens to murder the Old Man when he's exposed.
  • Hypocrite:
    • He tells Bob after hearing the hotshot insult him, that he's made jabs at his bosses too. But unlike Morton, Dick always respected them. In the final scene when he's outed as the Big Bad, he takes the Old Man hostage.
    • He chews out Boddicker for implicating him in his gangs actions because Robo records everything he sees, and those recordings could be used as a evidence in a trial. Come the final scene, Robo reveals Dick's true colors to OCP by playing his recording of Dick's Just Between You and Me.
    • As an executive of OCP, he always builds up the company as being a reliable, strong enterprise, but as he reveals to Bob in their confrontation, he's well aware that ED-209 is total garbage and even has a contingency in place to profit from its malfunction.
    • He criticizes Bob for pulling the rug under him with RoboCop, claiming he didn't go through the proper channels while also insulting the company thanks to how the former ruined his plans for ED 209. This is despite the fact that Dick has shown he will go to any lengths to get what he wants, hiring Boddicker to kill Bob to get him out of the way, using Detroit Police to gun down one of their own and even taking the Old Man hostage as things go south.
    • Jones's spiting Robo as a thing and a "violent, mechanical psychopath." comes off as comical to the point of absurdity. Considering he hires out psychotics & murderous scumbags to do his dirty work, while disregarding his own inhumanity after brushing off a junior exec being killed at the start of the movie.
    • At the latest executive board meeting, Jones's lack of tact in speechifying the very concepts one doubts the company where he works at actually stands for. Courage, Strength, Conviction. His being a coward, a lazy weakling and a shallow overconfident moron with no hindsight contradicts such statements.
  • Irony: He's livid at Clarence for spilling about Dick's involvement to RoboCop because, as a cyborg, RoboCop can record his confession which can then be admitted as evidence. He's fired from OCP (and subsequently dispatched by RoboCop) because of his own careless gloating, which was recorded and played to the board as evidence of his crimes.
  • It's All About Me: He really doesn't care about providing the company with a reliable product, he only cares about his advancement opportunity.
  • Lack of Empathy: Doesn't care about any people who die as a result of his actions, only for his own advancement.
  • Large Ham: His gloating about how he "erased the mistake" that was Morton was only heard by Murphy and nobody else solely because the floor was empty.
  • Lethally Stupid: Jones's whole sales slogan and way of running things practically highlights a pointlessly Suicidal Overconfidence in his hairbrained schemes. See too dumb to live below.
  • Missing Steps Plan: What his ill thought out money making scam with the faulty ED-209 series mobile walker breaks down to. A poorly thought out Get-Rich-Quick Scheme using faulty product for entirely selfish ends, even though he was fully aware just how studded with design flaws said creaking junkpile well & truly was.
  • No Indoor Voice: A common RoboCop villain trait.
  • No Sense of Personal Space: When he's furious with Bob Morton, he comes in close and starts stroking his hair before grabbing a hank of it and threatening him.
  • Non-Action Big Bad: He's not much of a physical threat, leaving that to Boddicker or ED-209 or resorting to Robo's Restraining Bolt to protect himself. His main danger is his influence in OCP as well as his connections providing the likes of Boddicker powerful weaponry.
  • Oh, Crap!: He's as smug as a human can possibly be, convinced he's safe behind Directive 4. Then the Old Man shouts, "DICK, YOU'RE FIRED!" and his entire bearing collapses in his last few seconds of life.
  • Screw the Rules, I Make Them!: Jones brags that he added Directive Four, which essentially renders OCP execs above the law, into Robo's programming.
  • The Sociopath: A classic example: he's charming, manipulative, and completely indifferent to the lives of others.
  • The Starscream: His plan is to wait for the Old Man to die, take over OCP, and run the city of Detroit like his own personal fiefdom.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Oh, On so many levels.
    • Knowing full well how pathetically dilapidated the construction processes that went into manufacturing his Enforcement Droid 209 was, he still thought it was a good idea to bring it into a live board meeting (with no security protocols at all) where any number of things could've gone wrong for the people involved. Which inevitably does. And despite its underwhelming initial performance, Jones insists on rolling out the faulty weapon, convinced that it could contend with the far more successful Robocop initiate. One slip down a flight of stairs and landing on its back with no ability to correct its position quickly proves Jones wrong.
    • Instead of severing ties with Clarence Boddiker the instant he rats on Dick's involvement with the gangs of Detroit (after being pressured by the bionic supercop), he instead doubles down by having his unreliable henchman (in the course of a very public meeting on the premises of OCP headquarters) attempt to destroy the nigh-invulnerable adversary, despite their previous utter lack of success.
    • He builds his entire escape plan at the end on Directive 4 keeping him safe... and then takes as a hostage the one man in the company who can fire him.
  • Villain with Good Publicity: The rest of OCP, including his boss, has no idea about his mob connections and general underhandedness.
  • Villainous Breakdown: All throughout the movie, he's been quite the Smug Snake sleaze, but once Robo plays back his confession, he tries to bargain his way out by holding the Old Man hostage.
  • Visionary Villain: His twisted vision of Delta City (New Detroit), a reboot of the town to enable more corporate and conventional theft.

    Donald Johnson 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/donald_johnson.jpg
"He's legally dead. We can do pretty much what we want to him."
Played by Felton Perry

An executive at OCP that always manages to stick around no matter what happens.


  • Affably Evil: Out of the film trilogy villains, Johnson is nice to everyone, including Morton, and is generally, a Harmless Villain. Even when he does try and use his OCP clout, it comes off as pitiful.
  • Bizarre Taste in Food: He takes quite a liking to Robo's nutrient paste. He says it tastes like baby food.
  • Comedic Sociopathy: He reacts way too happily when Robo kills Dick, complete with a huge smile and a thumbs-up, though it may be because he just found out Dick had murdered Morton, whom he considered a friend.
  • Even Evil Has Standards: He is horrified by the ED-209 screw-up, dismayed to find that Jones is behind Bob's murder, happy when Jones is killed and is appalled with Faxx's ideas for the RoboCop 2 project.
  • Mauve Shirt: Johnson went through three movies and the closest he ever came to danger was Cain's rampage at the end of 2. He was also promoted several times.
  • Named by the Adaptation: Sort of. In the movies, he's referred to only as Johnson, though his first name is supposed to be Donald. The Marvel Comics adaptation and its series has him named as Daniel.
  • Only Sane Man: While no less amoral than his superiors, he is a lot more level-headed. In 2, he rightly points out how stupid it is to let Dr. Faxx put the mind of a criminal in their new law enforcement death bot, but is forced to go along with it. Later, after the predictable occurs, he convinces the Old Man to paint her as the sole cause of the rampage and is entirely reasonable to do so.
  • Professional Butt-Kisser: Witness him clapping every time the man in charge of OCP makes a mention of the grand goal of creating Delta City at the beginning of each film, even as everybody else in the room gives increasingly less of a crap.
  • Put on the Bus: Despite appearing in all the films in the trilogy, he doesn’t appear or even get mentioned in Rogue City.
  • Rank Up: The CEO in the third film mentions that he made him a vice president.
  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: During the third film, he bails out of OCP headquarters once things go south.
  • Smug Snake: Witness his attempts at strong-arming people, such as Reed in RoboCop 3. His attempt at Shame If Something Happened to Reed's pension got quite the backfire and Johnson can only stand there impotently yelling.
  • Villainous Breakdown: A minor one. When the Detroit cops all resign rather than help the Rehab officers in 3, he starts ranting about how they're jeopardizing their retirement benefits, clearly annoyed that people would act on principle rather than out of self-interest.
  • Villainous Friendship: With Bob Morton. He's genuinely outraged to learn Dick Jones killed him and happy when RoboCop avenges him.

    Bob Morton 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/miguel_ferrer_robocop_20011.jpg
"We're projecting the end of crime in Old Detroit within forty days. There's a new guy in town. His name is RoboCop."
Played by Miguel Ferrer

A young up-and-coming executive at the helm of the 'RoboCop' project.


  • Affably Evil: He was originally written as just another yuppie corporate douchebag, but Miguel Ferrer brought a kind of smarmy charm and manic charisma with genuinely good qualities to the character that, when combined with Morton's almost fatherly pride in RoboCop, made him strangely likeable.
  • All There in the Manual: The comic adaptation of 3 states that the new CEO is, in fact, Bob's dad.
  • Anti-Villain: He's slimy, but compared to the other OCP execs he's relatively nice. His death scene makes him look more pathetic than anything as he begs for his life while Boddicker shoots him and leaves him to die.
  • Asshole Victim: He's killed by Boddicker, though his death is more of a Alas, Poor Villain moment for him.
  • Bathroom Stall of Overheard Insults: How he cements getting put on Dick Jones' bad side. Jones does not appreciate being shown up by one of his subordinates on his own project, and certainly doesn't care to be mocked for it.
  • Big Good: Downplayed. Even for a Smug Snake Jerkass Corrupt Corporate Executive Anti-Villain, he can be considered to be this of the first film as he was responsible for bringing Murphy back to life as the indestructible cybernetic crimefighter to sincerely solve Detroit's crime problem. At the very least he can be considered very competent as even after his death, his legacy still lived on through his successful creation Robo. Plus, given the Old Man's Sudden Sequel Heel Syndrome in the the second film after being depicted as the Token Good Teammate of the first film, Morton is by comparison the true sole Token Good Teammate of OCP as he genuinely wanted his creation to solve the city's problems, even though his creation's sincerity of being the solution made Morton felt it would grant him a promotion above anything else.
  • Character Death: He dies when Boddicker uses a hand grenade to blow him and his house up.
  • Corrupt Corporate Executive: Between this and an Honest Corporate Executive. Like all OCP executives, he did not get where he is by being nice about it, and he deliberately sent police officers to their deaths just to use one of their corpses as wetware for his RoboCop. However, unlike many of his contemporaries, he's actually concerned with turning in a legitimately good product that will benefit the public rather than one that's just marketable.
  • Didn't Think This Through: Although the RoboCop initiative addresses virtually all of the weaknesses in the ED-209 rollout; Morton fails to account for a critical flaw in his own plan: Most soldiers or cops converted into Frankensteinian cyborgs would be driven mad by the loss of their humanity. Morton got lucky with Murphy - his desire for vengeance against the criminals who killed him combined with his strong devotion to the law and generally strong will overall, enabled him to adapt to his new existence. Attempts to create more RoboCops fail spectacularly when the candidates reject the transformation and destroy themselves. Though to be fair, Morton died before any attempt to replicate his work was seriously discussed.
  • Everyone Has Standards:
    • For all his flaws, Bob does take his work seriously and does it well, making sure that RoboCop has the highest level of quality and he's disgusted at Jones wanting to knowingly sell defective or dangerous products.
    • When ED-209 kills Kinney, he's seen shielding a female coworker. And he's the one who calls for a paramedic to be called in right away in case Kinney could still be saved.
  • Evil Is Hammy: Morton is right at home alongside other slimy 80s action villains.
  • Greater-Scope Paragon: Following his death, his mostly redeeming legacy lives on through his creation Robo in the sequels.
  • Hidden Depths: Bob seems like and largely is a typical sleazy exec, focused on his own career and hedonism, but he does take his work very seriously. He oversees almost every aspect of the RoboCop project and makes sure everything is at the highest level and he takes genuine pride in the end result, sincerely believing it can help bring down crime.
  • Honest Corporate Executive: Downplayed, but is between this and Corrupt Corporate Executive, due to being one of the few or even the only one to have any redeeming qualities and acting as a Morality Chain to the Old Man and OCP until his death.
  • Hookers and Blow: What he's doing before Boddicker comes to his house.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: While he is a bit more on the Jerkass side of things and is still looking out for number one, he doesn't cut corners with RoboCop like Jones did with the ED-209 series. Robo is every bit the badass he is intended to be, and during the unveiling Morton makes sure he knows it, indicating Morton genuinely does want his creation to really fight crime with full effect on the streets of Detroit.
    Morton: You are gonna be a bad motherfucker!
  • Jerkass Has a Point: In fairness it would be pointless to let Murphy keep his organic arm when already having removed almost everything else, and it would be weaker than the rest of his cybernetic body to no benefit.
  • Just a Machine: While he does care about RoboCop's quality as a product, ultimately he sees him as just a product and cares nothing about his mental state when Murphy starts remembering his old life since as far as he's concerned Alex Murphy died to give birth to RoboCop.
  • Lack of Empathy: (After a fellow junior executive gets blown to pieces) "Hey, that's life in the big city."
  • Large Ham: No Indoor Voice aside, Ferrer was clearly having a blast playing Morton and it shows.
    To the under-construction Robo) "You're gonna be a bad motherfucker!"
    (Also regarding his creation) "That's good. That's very good. I fuckin' love that guy!!"
  • A Lighter Shade of Black: Even though he's a Jerkass Corrupt Corporate Executive and his ambitions are purely selfish, he still has some redeeming qualities and he's much more likeable compared to the real Big Bad of the story. He comes across even better in the sequel even postmortem with the added context that the RoboCop project could've gone so, so much worse with someone else at the helm.
  • Morality Chain: Even though he's (mostly) just another Corrupt Corporate Executive, due to his somewhat genuine goal of creating a crimefighting cyborg to make sure Old Detroit is safe to walk in the streets again (unlike the first film's sole 100% genuine Corrupt Corporate Executive sociopath Dick Jones), Morton seems to be this to the Old Man (who seems far less corrupt in the first film) and the company OCP (which includes employees like Johnson) in general. This is coupled with his genuine commitment to making an actual high caliber "product", unlike Dick Jones's incompetence and shortcuts. However, after Morton's death in the first film, in the second film, the Old Man becomes as bad as Dick Jones, and OCP itself becomes just another amoral Evil, Inc., unlike the first film where the company only had a few crooked chief executives.
  • One-Steve Limit: Averted; he shares a first name with a minor mook named Bobby, who coincidentally is also murdered by Clarence Boddicker..
  • Smug Snake: "Fuck Jones. He's old, we're young... and that's life."
  • Technician vs. Performer: The performer to Dick's technician surprisingly enough. On the surface it seems the other way around, as Dick's ED-209 was all show and no substance while Bob's idea of a bionic cop seems more feasible and bland. However, Dick's method of creating a "solution" to crime was actually very by the numbers. He went through corporate channels, made a robot (by modern times many industries and sectors are becoming more mechanized), and even followed a corporate line of planned obsolescence or creating a problem to sell a solution for (namely the ED-209's bugs and flaws). Bob on the other hand had a more intricate plan, which involved out of the box thinking like sending the best officers to crime-infested areas to later claim any that died, using a top tier police officer as wet-ware or parts for a bionic law enforcement officer that can be flexible and calculate the solutions to numerous situations and learn more on its own, and Bob made sure that everything worked, the parts were top of the line, and that his peace officer could do everything a normal peace officer could do but better. Jones wanted to make a product. Morton wanted to make a badass super cop.
  • Token Good Teammate: Say what you will about his methods, but when Bob got the job of creating a police robot, he paid close attention to every step of the process — right down to arranging Murphy's death — and insisted on delivering the best product he could. Truly an inspiring — albeit amoral — example of the capabilities of American corporations. Compare Jones, who didn't even care whether or not his robot worked — just if he could sell it! Compared to his colleagues, Morton was of the few or even the only Corrupt Corporate Executive to have any redeeming qualities following Old Man's, Johnson's and the rest of his colleagues' irredeemable Sudden Sequel Heel Syndrome in the sequels after his death, revealing Morton to be their Morality Chain.
  • Uriah Gambit: An odd version, as he didn't even know Murphy, let alone had any kind of animosity towards him. Morton wanted a skilled, experienced police officer to use for his RoboCop project and for said officer to be dead so he could exploit legal loopholes regarding the use of the officer's body, and thus arranged several officers to be sent to the dangerous Metro West section of Detroit. Alex Murphy just had the crappy luck of being one of many selected by Morton, leading to his demise.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: He crosses some very questionable lines but Bob does seem to sincerely believe RoboCop will improve the city.

    Enforcement Droid series 209 (ED-209) 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/list_2_140_20101210_031619_430_th.jpg
"I am now authorized to use physical force."
Voiced by Jon Davison
"Please put down your weapon. You have twenty seconds to comply."

A battle droid created by Dick Jones. Very much fashion over function when it comes to performance.


  • Achilles' Heel: Never let it go near a staircase. Or a manhole. Or let a child hack into its AI.
  • Adaptation Name Change: For some reason, the cartoon and toyline featured the ED-260 (possibly justified, as that may have been intended to be a successor model to the movie robot).
  • Adaptational Badass:
    • In one of the RoboCop vs. Terminator comics, an ED-209 fights a T-800 and wins. Being ED-209, its flawed logic immediately ruins its crowning moment of awesome, as it opts to finish off the downed opponent by shooting it with a rocket while the damaged T-800 is at ED-209's feet, blowing himself up.
    • ED-209 acts as an Assist Character for RoboCop in Mortal Kombat 11. Given that it only shows up for Fatal Blows and a Fatality, 209's very much not played for laughs and its weaponry devastates Robo's opponents.
  • A.I. Is a Crapshoot: The infamous demonstration shows problems with its ability to recognise that a suspect has complied with its orders. In addition, it's stupidly easy for someone to hack into and take control of.
  • All Crimes Are Equal: ED-209 advances dangerously on RoboCop for being illegally parked on private property at the end of the film, possibly having been deliberately programmed to be more aggressive than usual to protect the building due to the police strike.
  • Awesome, but Impractical: ED-209's design is just straight-up awesome looking and its firepower is something to be reckoned with, but as a rushed-out product, its numerous design flaws give him essentially zero practical applications. Except, oddly enough, as a children's toy in Real Life.
  • Breakout Villain: ED-209 is possibly the most renowned "villain" in the whole franchise, and is about as iconic as RoboCop himself.
  • The Brute: It is this to Dick Jones. ED-209 is the first thing that manages to do any kind of damage to RoboCop.
  • Butt-Monkey: ED-209 becomes the butt of jokes in the RoboCop franchise due to its dumb AI and tendency towards clumsy failures.
  • Can't Use Stairs: Ostensibly built for urban policing, it was designed without the ability to navigate a simple staircase. Justified in-story, as it was intentionally written as a poorly-conceived design in several ways (spotty AI, major weak points, seriously overarmed), which is why the project was abandoned in favor of RoboCop.
  • Character Catch Phrase: "You are [doing whatever the ED-209 is programmed to consider unlawful]. Please [stop doing said thing]/put down your weapon. You have 20 seconds to comply," and once the countdown ends "I am now authorized to use physical force."
  • Chicken Walker: Its leg design, which is a design flaw. ED-209 is too slow and clunky to navigate urban terrain, as shown when it gets stuck in a manhole or when it tumbles down a flight of stairs. Yet nobody at OCP bothers to fix this flaw.
  • Cool, but Inefficient: In its "intended" role as a police robot, one really has to imagine what advantages ED-209 would have. It's very cool, but its weapons and tactics are insanely overkill for any police purpose, it's too clunky to navigate urban terrain, and its AI is too cumbersome to resolve anything a cop would be expected to manage. Much of its makes a little more sense from the perspective of a military conflict, where it could put those guns to good use, but it's still likely to be a liability.
  • Crippling Overspecialization: It has enough firepower to damage RoboCop and could very likely kill him in a straight long-range fight. The problem is that its design and programming has so many flaws Robo can easily outmaneuver it and put it down long before it can make that happen. Dick Jones bluntly admits ED-209's primary purpose was to sell defense contracts rather than actually work.
  • Disastrous Demonstration: The ED-209's product demo results in one of OCP's lesser executives becoming Ludicrous Gibs. Exactly what moron would use live ammo or test it in front of the higher-ups?
  • Disproportionate Retribution: One charges Robo with illegal parking, then readies its machine guns.
  • The Ditz: While ED-209 is much larger, more cumbersome, and less maneuverable than a humanoid, its greatest weakness is its dumb AI, which is prone to errors and flaws of logic, nicely illustrating the huge difference between a programmed machine and a human mind like Robo's.
  • Dumb Muscle: ED-209's firepower is capable of dealing more damage to RoboCop with a single burst from its arm cannons than an entire factory full of goons with automatic weapons could manage in an extended firefight. It's also strong enough to sock RoboCop with a punch to send him flying a couple dozen feet, despite its short stubby arms clearly not being intended for anything other than shooting stuff. And yet because of its dumb AI, ED-209 is incredibly ineffectual.
  • Epic Fail: ED-209 attempts to descend a set of stairs in the OCP building even when its feet are too big to go down the steps.
  • Eyeless Face: Designer Craig Davies deliberately avoided giving the ED-209 anything resembling eyes, seeing as eyes "convey too much emotion" and robot eyes had already become cliché by then.
  • Flawed Prototype: Its initial presentation to the OCP board is a complete disaster after it is unable to register that Kinney has complied with its order to put down his weapon with fatal consequences. During Murphy's first encounter with it, he damages it by turning on of its own guns against it and disables it entirely by simply fleeing down a flight of stairs. As the second and third films show, these flaws go uncorrected, as a news report in the second film shows one trapped by an open manhole and OCP receiving complaints from various police departments about the machine's clumsiness. In the third film, its AI is easily hacked into by a child. None of this matters to Jones, because he was trying to sell the service contracts and spare parts it would require precisely because it was awful.
  • Gone Horribly Wrong: ED-209's first demonstration not only fails to register a "hostile" surrendering, it can't be stopped from firing unless its plug is pulled. This is why the Old Man is so eager to hear about the RoboCop program.
  • Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: ED-209 suffers an embarrassing failure once per movie, from falling down the stairs in RoboCop, getting its foot stuck in an open manhole in RoboCop 2, and being hacked and made to declare itself a puppy dog in RoboCop 3. Dick Jones outright admits ED-209 was built by the lowest bidder and it's primary purpose was to sell defense contracts rather to actually work.
  • Mecha-Mook: One serves as Dick Jones' personal bodyguard.
  • Mighty Glacier: Much like its cyborg competition, it's not the fastest robot, but it sure packs a lot of firepower and is hard to destroy.
  • More Dakka: It has plenty of firepower, including repeating guns and rocket launchers. Despite this, it's unable to take on the smaller but more clever RoboCop.
  • Short-Range Long-Range Weapon: At one point the ED-209 walks up to RoboCop and uppercuts him with its arm. Its arm is a short and stubby Arm Cannon and clearly designed for long range use only. ED-209 also spends the entire fight walking up to RoboCop to shoot him at point-blank range; this just gives RoboCop the opportunity to grab ED's arm and force it to shoot itself. ED-209 really isn't the brightest bulb in the room.
  • Staircase Tumble: It tumbles down a flight of stairs while trying to chase Robo.
  • Take That!: ED-209's design was partially meant as a jab at then-contemporary American car design. Designer Craig Davies claimed he envisioned futuristic designers making the robot look good in order to make it marketable before they made it work well, "just like an American car." This led to stuff like the over-designed hydraulics system and the vulnerable radiator grill at the front.
  • There Is No Kill Like Overkill: As much of an Urban Hellscape Detroit (and the average city in America, if not the world) has become, 20mm auto-cannons and rocket launchers are excessive pieces of hardware to outfit on a law enforcement unit (even with the justification of Dick Jones wishing to sell it to the military at a later date).
  • Throw the Dog a Bone: ED-209 acts as an Assist Character for RoboCop in Mortal Kombat 11. Given that it only shows up for Fatal Blows and a Fatality, 209's very much not played for laughs and its weaponry devastates Robo's opponents.
  • Too Dumb to Live: Widely recognized to be one of the stupidest robots in pop culture, ED-209 has a habit of not thinking about what it's doing, and often destroys itself trying to do something it was very much not designed to.
  • Unskilled, but Strong: Its AI is largely ineffective and it has all the wit of a rock. Unfortunately for RoboCop, ED-209 is still a hulking war-machine that puts its twin-cannons and massive size to lethal use when they first meet.
  • Villainous Breakdown: After falling down the stairs and landing on its back, it thrashes around for a bit and making whining sounds. It's strangely amusing.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: ED-209's main flaw is that it can't easily maneuver around tight urban terrain, what with far too broad legs to manage the narrow and steep steps of a stairwell. One is also shown flailing about uselessly after it gets its foot caught in a manhole. Its AI is also rudimentary, as a child manages to hack into it very easily. Apparently, OCP didn't care about fixing these flaws even when it was obvious.
  • When All You Have Is a Hammer…: It's only capable of extreme firepower as a standard response to all threats and lawbreaking, even something as minor as illegal parking.

     Dr McNamara 

An OCP scientist in charge of developing the ED-209 and its upgraded version the ED-260 in the animated series.


  • Arch-Enemy: In the animated series, he loathes the fact that the Robocop project has siphoned OCP funds away from his ED-260 project and is hell-bent on destroying and humiliating Robocop to force the corporation's leadership to rectify this.
  • Artistic License – Gun Safety: Heaven only knows how big a chain of people are responsible for loading the ED-209 with live ammunition for its Disastrous Demonstration to the Old Man, but he definitely is one of the links.
  • Ascended Extra: Appears in one scene in the first film and becomes a recurring character in the animated series.
  • Big Bad Duumvirate: In the animated series he is not above handing an experimental combat helicopter to Clarence Boddickernote  to terrorize Detroit and humiliate Robocop.
  • Composite Character: Aside from being an Ascended Extra, the animated series give him elements from Dick Jones as the most recurring OCP executive who has an issue with Robocop screwing over his own projects.
  • Disabled in the Adaptation: A normal guy in the first film, the animated series gave him Artificial Limbs and implied artificial eyes.
  • Mad Scientist: The animated series makes him a bit too obsessed with getting the ED-260 into mass production.
  • Named After Somebody Famous: After Robert McNamara, the technocratic Secretary of State during the Vietnam war.
  • Oh, Crap!: He is desperately working on the controls trying to make the ED-209 shut down when it malfunctions and continues carrying its command to shoot Kinney after Kinney surrenders, and rips off the power cord feeding ED-209 far too late.
  • Sinister Shades: Wears what seems to be pair of high-tech piece-nez (or legless wrap-around) shades in the animated series. Constantly.
  • Sunglasses at Night: He never takes off his Sinister Shades in the animated adaptation. It's implied that he has cybernetic eyes.

    Mr. Kinney 
Played by Ken Page

A young executive within the Security Concepts division of the OCP. He gets selected for the demonstration of the ED-209’s capabilities, which ends horribly for him.


  • Artistic License – Gun Safety: During the demonstration of ED-209, Kinney proceeds to recklessly point the weapon at Dick Jones, who should be far more outraged than he was.
  • Ludicrous Gibs: The end result of being shot by ED-209.
  • Multiple Gunshot Death: Mr. Kinney is completely annihilated on this fashion via the three mounted high-caliber auto-cannons of the ED-209. Made even more gruesome on the extended cut, where the ED-209 keeps on going for about half a minute after he's down and tears a gigantic hole that exposes the ribs on his torso (among other miscellaneous Gorn).
  • Oh, Crap!: Understandably reacts this way when the ED-209 keeps counting down despite him having already dropped the gun for demonstration purposes until it proceeds to use physical force on him.
  • There Is No Kill Like Overkill: Kinney's death at the demonstration. Poor guy was more lead than flesh by the time they shut ED-209 down. In the director's cut, ED-209 continually blasts Kenney's lifeless corpse as it lies on the table.
  • We Hardly Knew Ye: The first onscreen death of the first film.

    Bill Walker 
Played by Rick Lieberman

A senior executive at Omni Consumer Products.


  • Screw This, I'm Outta Here: At the urinals, he and Bob Morton spoke candidly about Dick Jones. However, after learning Jones was present, Walker hurriedly left the lounge before he had finished relieving himself.

    Dr. Tyler 
Played by Sage Parker

A woman who was involved in transforming Alex Murphy into Robocop and considered Chief Technician of the Robocop program.


  • Ascended Extra: Appears in a few scenes in the first film and becomes a recurring character in the animated series.
  • Gender Flip: Sort of, the novelization describes Robo Cop seeing an unidentified drunken woman during his development. Although this description matches Dr. Tyler in the film, the novelization later describes Tyler as a "bearded fellow."

    Dr. Roosevelt 
Played by Stephen Berrier

Another scientist who worked on the Robocop program.


    Barbara Clegg 
Played by Joan Pirkle

The secretary of Dick Jones.


    Juliette Faxx 
Played by Belinda Bauer

The OCP psychologist who proposes putting the mind of a criminal into RoboCop 2.


  • Break the Badass: She inflicts this upon Cain. Once she has Cain in the hospital, she makes a phone call to report that Cain is "dead" and he starts panicking nonverbally when he realizes that he's about to become an experiment in cybernetics. Once inside of his new mecha body, Cain goes further downhill in his sanity.
  • Contrasting Sequel Antagonist: She fills the roles of Bob Morton and Richard Jones and contrasts both of them. While Morton's method of placing Officer Alex Murphy in the line of fire was very sketchy ethically but enabled the heroic RoboCop I to be made, Faxx blatantly uses a criminal drug lord for her RoboCop II project and uses his drug addiction to force him to do her bidding, having little care about the true loyalty of the human pilot. Also, while Jones is very proactive about climbing the corporate ladder, doesn't directly help make his flawed but controllable ED-209, and cares more about his robotics than cyborgs, Faxx uses a more subtle approach of Sleeping Their Way to the Top, and oversees Cain's cyborg conversion with the glee of a Mad Doctor. Faxx also ends up becomming The Scapegoat unlike Jones who died before he could be prosecuted.
  • Did Not Think This Through: After everything is said and done and her crazy theory leads to about fifty people getting killed, she is a pretty good example of "being so driven about whether she could that she didn't stopped to think if she should".
  • Even Evil Has Standards: Subverted. While she does look on in shock as Robo Cop 2 massacres people in the climax, she seems to be in awe of the deaths she has caused rather than showing any remorse, later stepping over dead bodies with absolute indifference.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: The whole franchise demonstrates what she says to the Old Man and Johnson when they wonder why the other Robocop candidates have been Driven to Suicide: that Alex Murphy is a man with a tremendous amount of Heroic Willpower and a sense of duty stronger than the directives installed in him, and is a Super Prototype as a result.
  • Mad Doctor: She shows absolutely no remorse for what she does throughout the movie, driving RoboCop half mad with nonsense directives, and taking Cain, a sociopathic drug lord with delusions of godhood, and giving him an indestructible armed-to-the-teeth cyborg body. Not only that but it seems that when she was put on the RoboCop 2 project she started looking at death row inmates as candidates straight away, with no indication that she looked elsewhere. She also seems to relish prolonging Cain's suffering when she cuts his life support.
  • Psycho Psychologist: Puts a drug-dealing cult leader's brain into a Mini-Mecha body. Her reasoning for doing so is that only people who are crazy enough to not care about the bad part of becoming a full-body cyborg and instead focus on the "cool" things of their transformation would be acceptable subjects - the events of the film demonstrate the obvious outcome: people that crazy to begin with are only useful as "kill-'em-all-and-let-God-sort-'em-out" attack dogs (definitely worthless as law enforcers), and that is if they can be controlled at all.
  • The Scapegoat: In the end, OCP used her as this to save the company from fallout over the RoboCop 2 fiasco, even if it had to create some evidence to do so. It's even more satisfying considering that Faxx is a Smug Snake who won't see what's going to happen to her until it's too late. It doesn't do much if any good as by Robocop 3, OCP has to be bought out to be saved from bankruptcy.
  • Sleeping Their Way to the Top: Implied to be doing this with the Old Man.
  • Smug Smiler: She tends to shoot annoyingly smug smiles at the other OCP executives whenever the Old Man takes her suggestions over theirs. Because of this, the executives happily use her to save their company from the disaster she herself started.
  • Smug Snake: Although she is a clever scientist, she has trouble anticipating the consequences of her own poor choices. Faxx didn't foresee that putting the brain of a drug-addled psychopath into a fully-armed cybernetic nightmare would lead to many casualties and deaths at her own workplace. She also didn't foresee that the Old Man would ultimately put his own welfare before hers, thinking she could just charm her way out of the consequences of her own actions by seducing the Old Man.
  • Villainous Legacy: Her take on RoboCop II wouldn't be forgotten, and is part of the story in Robo Cop Rogue City.

    Robo Cop Technician/Linda Garcia 
Played by Patricia Charbonneau

A technician at the police station who's in charge of doing maintenance on RoboCop.


    Tak Akita 
Played by Tzi Ma

A technician who assisted Linda Garcia in maintaining RoboCop.


    Dr. Schenk 
Played by John Doolittle

The OCP scientist that designed the robot body and inner mechanics of the RoboCop 2 .


     Dr. Marie Lazarus 
Played by Jill Hennessey

An OCP scientist who helped create RoboCop. She gets fired for refusing to erase Murphy's emotions and joins the Rebellion.


     Jeff Fleck 
Played by Bradley Whitford

An executive at Omni Consumer Products, the head of the Security Concepts division in RoboCop 3.


  • Ate His Gun: Thankfully we don't get to see the mess.
  • Driven to Suicide: Blows his brains out after the CEO fires him and technically dissolves OCP Security Concepts because of Murphy's rebellion.
  • Face Death with Despair: The last we see of him before he walks out of the OCP control room and blows his brains out on the corridor is him getting a "trying not to cry" look on his face from the CEO firing him.
  • Going Postal: Subverted. After he shows Johnson that he carries a gun on him to blow his brains out if fired and the CEO fires him, it looks for a couple of seconds like he is going to shoot the CEO, but he decides to walk out of the room and do exactly what he said he was going to do with that gun right outside.
  • Jerkass: His treatment of nearly everybody, especially Dr. Lazarus, is smarmy. He also is angry about Robocop prioritizing saving fellow cops from being murdered by Splatterheads over chasing the Rebels and orders Lazarus to add a chip to Murphy's brain to make him obedient (which she decides not to do). He also sneers about the rise in suicides among the company's executives and calls them cowards for doing it in such ways as jumping out the window before he gets his own dose of karma and is fired.
  • Tempting Fate: Fleck calls the executives committing suicide because OCP is on the outs cowards by doing it through methods like jumping off the building and shows Johnson the gun he is carrying in a shoulder holster to "leave less of a mess" about two minutes before he gets a dose of what they were feeling by being fired and he immediately follows them.

    Max Becker 

An OCP employee who acts as Murphy's overseer during the events of Rogue City.


See RoboCop: Rogue City

Rehabs

A paramilitary force made of Amazon War veterans that appeared in RoboCop 3. The group was commissioned by OCP to evict citizens of Old Detroit to pave the way for Delta City, a process they defined as "urban rehabilitation."

    Paul McDagget 
Played by John Castle

Commander of the Rehabs, mercenaries hired by OCP.


    Seltz 
Played by Judson Vaughn

The right-hand man of Paul Mc Daggett.



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