Besides the aforementioned death of Stephanie Brown, many other side effects came about from this event. The biggest of these included Black Mask becoming the single crime boss in Gotham, something that would remain until his death at the hands of
Catwoman. Another would be Commissioner Akins effectively making all vigilantes criminals, a move that would stay in place for over a year until the return of
Commissioner Gordon to the Gotham City Police Department. The more controversial effect, not seen until the follow-up story
War Crimes, was turning
Leslie Thompkins against Batman, when she allows Stephanie Brown to die from her wounds as Batman's "punishment" for including children in his war on crime.
Jason Todd, a former
Robin who was killed years prior, was confirmed to be alive on
Batman: Under the Hood and operating as a violent vigilante called the Red Hood, who waged a one-man war against Black Mask and successfully crippled his criminal operation in the city before seeking revenge against Batman and the
Joker. Finally, the citizens of Gotham City no longer consider Batman to be an
urban legend (which has been in place since
Zero Hour), as he was caught on camera trying to save the life of a wounded student at the end of Act One. Stephanie's death was
retconned by writer
Chuck Dixon, revealing that Thompkins switched her body with a deceased victim who had a similar body type and treated her in secret. ==Planned death of Stephanie==