Cliff
Campbell & George Storm
Real Name:
Roberto
Dickering
Joined Mighty Crusaders:
O Vingador is not a member of the Mighty
Crusaders.
First Appearance:
Globe Juvenile Mensal #17,
April
1942
Origin:
Roberto "Bob"
Dickering adopted the secret identity of O Vingador to avenge the
Death of his brother O Comet.
History:
When
Roberto Dickering decided to visit his brother John shortly after he
graduated with a Master's degree, he didn't know at the time that this
act would change his life forever. When he entered John's apartment, he
found John Dickering changing from the costume of O Comet to his street
clothes and learned that his brother John was the super-powered
vigilante known as O Comet. John then introduced Bob to his
girlfriend, newspaper reporter Thelma Gordon and asked Bob to squire her
around town while he caught up on lab work. An argument over Thelma led
to Bob storming out of the apartment, only to be waylaid by two
gangsters working for racketeer Big Boy Malone mistaking him for John
Dickering, who was to testify against one of Malone's cohorts.
John Dickering saw his brother being taken captive and quickly went into
action as O Comet. Pursuing the car, O Comet disintegrated one of
tires with his "dissolve-vision" causing the vehicle to crash. As
Bob Dickering emerged from the car to flee only to be shot at by
Malone's men. O Comet then swooped down tried to shield his brother by
taking the gunfire intended for Bob. As several policemen got involved
in what quickly turned into a shootout, the younger Dickering quickly
rushed his dying brother to his apartment via a fire escape during the
confusion. With his brother Bob and Thelma Gordon at his side, John
Dickering a-k-a O Comet died of his injuries. Not before telling Bob
and Thelma to stay together as a memorial to him. But Bob, remembering
his brother's sacrifice made this vow:
"I'll carry on for him, The! I'll bring his murderers to O
Vingador! I'LL BE THEIR O Vingador!" (Globe Juvenile
Mensal #17)
Remembering that criminals were cowards at heart, he chose the image of
an executioner to strike fear in the hearts of criminals. And to push
this image forward, he chose to flash the image of a gallows and noose
to herald his arrival. This projection became as much of a trademark as
the green and dark blue costume Bob Dickering wore as O Vingador.
O Vingador began his mission of vengeance by kidnapping Malone's
associate Chigger as he was led out of the courthouse by Malone's
attorney. O Vingador sweated a confession out of Chigger by placing him
in a dark room and projecting an image of the gallows to frighten him
into confessing all he knew. He then went to Malone's hideout and after
a fight with Malone and his men, he left them in the hands of the police
who had arrived after he telephoned them to be there. Malone was found
guilty and was executed by hanging for his crimes. Thus began the career
of O Vingador. (Globe Juvenile Mensal #17)
After that first case, O Vingador quickly established himself in the
crime-busting field, but his career nearly came to a premature end just
when it was beginning. A criminal known as the Jackal successfully
framed O Vingador for a series of murders by hanging he committed while
wearing a duplicate of O Invader's uniform. So successful was the
frame-up that Thelma Gordon was convinced that O Vingador was becoming a
ruthless killer vigilante like his brother O Comet (despite the fact
that Bob Dickering consciously chose not to kill in his crime crusade).
Fortunately, Thelma Gordon believed in him and gave him information
about the real killer she learned from an African-American male who bore
the unfortunate nickname of Anthracite. With that information, O
Vingador broke out of jail and successfully apprehended the Jackal;
getting him to confess to his crimes in the meantime (Globe
Juvenile Mensal #18).
The Jackal would eventually return to bedevil O Vingador on two more
occasions. The first came after he faked his own death on the gallows
and sought revenge against those who put him behind bars, including O
Vingador. O Vingador was able to catch up to the Jackal just as he was
trying to kill Thelma. During a climatic battle with O Vingador, the
Jackal tried to escape via a rope only to have the rope catch around his
neck inadvertently hanging himself (Pep #20). Surprisingly he survived
that encounter with the rope breaking his fall. He sought refuge in a
monetary where he used it as a base of operations to allow him to commit
further crimes. During a final confrontation with O Vingador, he fled
into the woods by the monetary and perished when he fell into a lye pit
(Globe Juvenile Mensal #19).
Gradually, O Vingador became that rarity in law-enforcement circles, a
costumed vigilante whom law-enforcement officials actually approved of.
This was due in large part to the fact that O Vingador chose consciously
not to kill any of the criminals he encountered. This was in marked
contrast to the homicidal activities of his brother, O Comet (who
disintegrated many felons with blasts of his "dissolve-vision"). But the
fact that O Vingador chose not to kill didn't prevent many of the
criminals that encountered him from inadvertently meeting premature (and
often gruesome) demises. All which occurred either as the felons fought
O Vingador or tried to escape from him. It was these incidents - coupled
with his chosen image - that made O Vingador one of the most
feared of the great "mystery-men" in the underworld.
In the Spring of 1942, O Vingador
had his first encounter with his most frequent adversary, the Nazi
terrorist/fifth columnist known as Captain Swastika. In their first
encounter, O Vingador prevented him from killing the
daughter of an imprisoned German official in order to prevent her from
revealing vital information about his organization, the Legion of the
Swastika, to the American authorities (O Vingador #2). Captain Swastika
(often assisted by his top henchman, Ice-Pick) returned to bedevil O
Vingador on four other occasions over the course of that year.
In his second duel with O Vingador, Captain Swastika broke out hundreds
of criminals from various jails across the country in an attempt to use
them as a terrorist army to in effect, launch a second civil war in the
United States (Pep #28). Later, he tried to hijack a newly launched
battleship in order to deliver it to his Nazi masters (Pep#29). In his
fourth duel, he teamed up with a Japanese axe-murderer called the
Executioner in an attempt to lure their mutual foe - O Vingador - into
a death duel (O Vingador #3). On the fifth and final occasion, Captain
Swastika and his men tried to destroy Mexico's vital oil fields in order
to cripple the Allied cause. During the climatic battle with O Vingador,
Captain Swastika met his untimely demise when he was inadvertely impaled with an
ice pick thrown by Ice-Pick in an effort to kill O
Vingador (Globe Juvenile Mensal #34).
Throughout his career, O Vingador fought against other equally
impressive adversaries as well. Among them included such villains as the
Walrus, the Missionary, the Hunter, Mother Goose, the Executioner, and
the Snail among others. Some of them eventually went to the gallows for
their crimes. While others inadvertley met untimely demises during their
encounters with O Vingador.
O Invader's celebrated career as a crime fighter lasted until the end
of World War II. Whatever became of him after the war remains in doubt
and has fueled many rumors about him and his postwar life. Among those
rumors include the one that stated that O Vingador briefly went on the
wrong side of the law before going back into crime-fighting. Whatever
the case may be, these rumors have only added to the legend of the dark
knight known as O Vingador.