TV-Series
Description
Chuck Glay, alias Peekaboo (frequently misspelled as "Peeca Boo"), was born November 4, 1990, in Arizona. He operated Marco Polo, a dark web black market facilitating illegal transactions in drugs, weapons, and forged documents. UK judicial authorities pursued him for large-scale money laundering and fraud alongside associates Kunal Robinson (alias Chap Tip) and Sonia Boutella (alias MooMoo).

His criminal reach extended beyond Marco Polo, including ties to a gang kidnapping children for inhumane conditions—initially forcing them into child pornography before shifting to more profitable black market ventures. Glay also engaged in drug dealing. Approximately five years before Part 5’s events, he leased "The Twin Towers" building, coercing young hacker Ami Enan under threat of violence to develop and maintain Marco Polo’s payment system.

Glay displayed overconfidence and aggression, particularly during setbacks. He communicated exclusively in English with frequent typos, misspelling "Marco Polo" as "MALCO POLO" and his own alias. His downfall began when Lupin III infiltrated Marco Polo with Ami’s aid, stealing 3.5 million bitmoney from Glay’s offshore account. The loss triggered furious coordination with Robinson and Boutella via group chat, punctuated by vehement swearing.

In retaliation, Glay launched the "Lupin Game," a crowdsourced social media hunt for Lupin. He later retreated to an abandoned mall, funding and monitoring "Happy Death Day"—a betting site predicting Lupin’s death date. Glay believed its untraceable currency and private browsing features provided legal immunity, dismissing concerns about its lethality. During livestreams of assassins pursuing Lupin and Ami, he expressed schadenfreude, taunting Lupin as a "sore loser" and asserting his imminent capture or death despite associates’ warnings about Lupin’s resilience.

After Marco Polo resumed revenue-generating operations, Glay received a "game of chicken" proposal from "UNDERWORLD" (later revealed as Ami). Ignoring Boutella’s cautions and Robinson’s reluctance, he met her at the mall. There, he trapped Ami in a chair, handcuffed her, and flooded the room—a method he cited as film-inspired. He dismissed her passion for computing, demanding Lupin’s secrets and the stolen Lupin Collection. When she refused, he threatened her life but appeared unsettled by her defiance.

Glay’s situation deteriorated when "Death Day" listed him, Robinson, and Boutella as targets with bounties matching the stolen bitcoins. Panicked, he tried leveraging Ami to remove his name but was ambushed by Lupin, who faked death via augmented reality filters. Inspector Zenigata intervened during the confrontation; Lupin offered Glay imprisonment or death. Glay chose incarceration, with Lupin suggesting cooperation might yield a decade-long sentence.

Imprisoned alongside his Marco Polo associates, Glay monitored news of a new Lupin-related event involving facial recognition technology during the series’ final arc, speculating on its potential effectiveness.