Henry van Statten

Henry van Statten was the CEO of the American corporation GeoComTex and a collector and exploiter of alien technology. He was the billionaire owner of the Internet in 2012. As head of GeoComTex, Henry van Statten had enough influence to sway the course of the next presidential elections.

Early life
Van Statten was the son of Edward Van Statten, the billionaire owner of the Van Statten Corporation, a wealthy business dealing in oil and armaments during the later 20th century. Henry felt isolated from his father, who was endlessly away on business trips throughout most of his childhood while Henry was left to live in isolation in a housing complex within the Utah desert. Henry found comfort in Otto von Donitz, one of Edward's personel assistants charged with educating and caring for Henry in his father's absence. On his seventh, Otto gifted Henry a telescope, claiming his father bought it him as a gift to look out at the stars and aspire to one day reach them, and demonstrate ambition. However, when Edward returned home and learned Otto had gifted Henry the telescope, Edward fired Otto and had two henchmen destroy the telescope six weeks later.

Embittered by his father's action, when Edward neared death and gifted Henry inherited one million dollars from his father on his fifteenth birthday, he used the knowledge of Keynesian and Friedmanite economic models Otto taught him to invest the money into the telecommunications business and the internet, a decision which infuriated his father, who wanted the money to be cycled back into arms dealing. Henry refused and insisted his father sign the Van Statten Corporation to him rather than his lawyers on the assurance his skill in investing would ensure his father's name survived beyond him. Reluctantly, Edward conceded and Henry took over the company, eventually renaming it Geocomtex.

When Edward eventually died from his illness, Henry had all his workers mourn the man's death for ten minutes before firing them all and redesigning the entire corporation to achieve his childhood dream of exploring the concept of space and alien life. (PROSE: Dalek)

By the time he was forty-five, Van Statten had been collecting extraterrestrial artifacts on the grey market for years, buying bits and pieces of alien technology at auctions and then reverse engineering them to create "new" technologies, which he would then exploit commercially. He claimed that broadband was derived from technology scavenged from the Roswell crash. He kept these artifacts in a private collection, inside a bunker called the Vault more than fifty floors below ground in Utah near Salt Lake City. Henry also now owned the Internet, and influenced American elections to favour his desires. (TV: Dalek)

Acquiring the Metaltron
On his forty-fifth birthday, Henry decided he wanted to finally purchase a living alien creature rather parts of now deceased ones. Using his influence, he learned one such creature was in the hands of a private collector Hiram Duchesne, a middle-aged businessman in the ice cream industry. Henry offered the man twenty-five million dollars for the creature, but Duchesne refused. Angered, Henry bought out the man's company and left him bankrupt but Duchesne still refused to sell despite needing the money. (PROSE: Dalek) By 2006, (PROSE: Operation London) Duchesne was ill with cancer and, having heard rumours Henry's scientists had used alien technology to create a cure, he finally agreed to sell the creature to Henry. By now Henry was fifty-three years old. (PROSE: Dalek)

That same year, UNIT noticed that something called "the Object" was sold at an auction, and, while UNIT couldn't afford the Object at the auction, they tried to identify the seller and buyer; (PROSE: Object Auction) the buyer was van Statten, who was invited to the auction, which had a $1000000 entry fee; according to this account, the Object was already called "the Metaltron". (PROSE: The Secret Lives of Monsters) UNIT had been tracking the Dalek for years, but they lost track of it in Utah. (PROSE: Object Auction. AUDIO: The Dalek Transaction) Sven tidied the museum in preparation of van Statten's purchase. (WC: Sven and the Scarf) Van Statten tried to make the Metaltron talk through torture, but all it did was scream. (TV: Dalek)

In 2007, while the Tenth Doctor was researching H.C. Clements, several websites relating to van Statten were seen, including his GEOCOMTEX website and his interview on the Defending the Earth! website. (TV: The Runaway Bride)

Henry's immoral influence on the world stage using his wealth had concerned personnel working within the FBI. The organisation implanted Diana Goddard and Owen Bywater into Henry's security personnel within the Vault to spy on him. (PROSE: Dalek)

Downfall
In 2012, the Ninth Doctor and Rose Tyler arrived in the Vault in response to a distress signal, unaware that the signal came from a Dalek. They were quickly captured by van Statten's guards. At this time, Diana Goddard, van Statten's personal assistant, and Adam Mitchell, a scientist, worked for him. Learning the Doctor was alien, van Statten examined his Gallifreyan physiology. He had plans to make use of his binary vascular system in a marketing venture, branding it as his own creation through a patent. When the Dalek freed itself, he gave the Doctor free rein to deal with it. By the time events came to a conclusion, two hundred GeoComTex personnel had died and the Dalek had self-destructed. Goddard took charge at this point and van Statten got a taste of his own medicine: she ordered van Statten to be taken away, mind-wiped and dumped on the streets, "somewhere beginning with an 'S'," due to him causing the death of 200 personnel. (TV: Dalek) According to another account, however, he willingly wiped his own memory, mentally regressing himself to an infant, after being shown a nightmarish vision of brutally killing everyone he had ever harmed. (PROSE: Dalek)

To the public, Statten mysteriously disappeared. (PROSE: The Whoniverse)

Personality
Intelligent, arrogant and selfish, van Statten treated his employees as though they were expendable human livestock, to the point of mind-wiping them when they left his employ so they could not betray his secrets. He also displayed no concern for their safety and even when there was a deadly Dalek on the loose, he ordered them not to cause any damage to it and was willing to let them die just to keep the Dalek in one piece. Eventually he decided to help the Doctor stop the Dalek but only did so to protect himself, telling the Doctor that the only reason he was helping was because he didn't want to get killed. Van Statten had a wry, dark sense of humour and treated other humans, and aliens especially, as things he could use to amuse himself or turn to his advantage. The Doctor mentioned Davros, the Dalek creator, to him and secretly compared them, calling Davros "a genius, a man who was king of his own little world" and telling van Statten, "You'd like him". However van Statten was not entirely heartless and apologised to the Doctor when they thought that Rose Tyler had been killed. He claimed that he wanted to touch the stars, unaware of how detrimental his treatment of alien life and artefacts had really been so far. (TV: Dalek)

Behind the scenes

 * In an early draft script for Dalek, van Statten's character was called "Will Fences", as a parody of Bill Gates.
 * According to Russell T Davies' The Writer's Tale, the original script for The End of Time had Henry van Statten name-dropped as a billionaire like Bill Gates and Joshua Naismith.
 * In the online game The Last Dalek, which presents an alternate version of the events of Dalek, van Statten does not appear, but he has an entry in the Dalek's memory files. He is described as; "Male subject. Age 40. American. Effortlessly powerful. Always with a glint in his eye. The sort of man that won't allow himself to be bored for a single second. Consider potentially dangerous."
 * According to The Doctor: His Lives and Times, van Statten was dumped on the streets of Sacramento.
 * Henry shares some similarities with Nigel Rochester from Jubilee, which Dalek was adapted from: Both of them are collectors of alien technology, both of them own a Dalek which they torture in an attempt to get it to talk, and both are betrayed by a woman whom they hold in their confidence.