No, why would you do that? Rolling introduces a random element that doesn't exist in investigation, if I want to examine the body then I don't roll to see if I can.
[Come on, John, get with the program.]
You find the body of a man in his mid to late thirties dressed in a tailored suit, his shirt is rumpled as if he has been redressed, and there are bruises covering his face and throat. A wallet beside the body identifies him as William Holmes, there are scuff marks on the floor indicating the body may have been dragged.
no subject
[Come on, John, get with the program.]
You find the body of a man in his mid to late thirties dressed in a tailored suit, his shirt is rumpled as if he has been redressed, and there are bruises covering his face and throat. A wallet beside the body identifies him as William Holmes, there are scuff marks on the floor indicating the body may have been dragged.