Following the lead from one of our probes, the Khonsu's moved deep into the Kielfeld in order to begin analysis of the Von Albrecht. The liner's disappearance during the blackout crisis was concerning for local authorities, however the state of her wreckage reveals a worse fate than a mere hijacking. Analysis is still ongoing. The away team has reported the discovery of only one body, a single crewman, who was discovered sealed in auxiliary cargo C. His knife is being brought back for analysis. The absence of the passengers and crew's bodies is another matter entirely. Given the location, it's likely the ship went dark under the same circumstances as the Trier. Or, the Trier was directly responsible for the fate of the Von Albrecht. Neither possibility puts my mind at ease.
Chief Forbes has expressed some concerns with the inert dark matter cloud the wreckage had been moved to. The ability of the cloud to absorb and refract our sensor sweeps means we can't see anything coming our way. However this field varies from the ones seen in the likes of Galileo and Alberta. It's energy levels are practically null on our sensors, and the fog itself seems to block almost all radiation from passing through after approximately twenty two hundred meters of material. Thankfully, this also means that so long as we're within, we're effectively hidden during our work. Lieutenant Cooper has taken a second team into the ship to conduct a thorough forensics analysis. A report will be forwarded to Overwatch with any conclusive results. I've given their teams another twenty four hours to secure scans and samples before we move on. I fear we may have pinged the Rheinland sensor networks on our way through Berlin, and I don't intend to stay in one spot for longer than necessary.