April May

"Well hello! I didn't expect anyone to visit me in such a dank place as this... It's really quite... moving. Not! You stinking lawyer! I hope you die! Have you come to laugh? Yes, laugh at the fallen Miss May!"

- April May after the trial

April May is a minor villain in the second case of Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney. She was a secretary to the CEO of Bluecorp, Redd White, and an accomplice in the murder of Mia Fey. She originally revealed herself as a witness to the incident, placing the blame on Mia's sister and Wright's client during the case, Maya.

Bluecorp was an information-gathering corporation that often used illegal means to obtain information and would then often use said information to blackmail various important individuals, including those in the legal system, making Bluecorp almost untouchable by the law.

She is an extremely flirtatious woman who uses her charm in order to seduce naive men. The initial ditsy and kind personality she displays to Wright during their first meeting quickly erodes away when the lawyer exposes her crimes in court.

History
White suspected that Mia Fey, a defense attorney, was investigating him and thus had May plant a wire tap in Fey's office to keep an eye on her. It turned out that Fey had spent most of her life gathering evidence to take him down. The wire tap also picked up a phone conversation with her younger sister Maya Fey, telling her to hold on to evidence that was stored in a clock shaped like The Thinker.

On the night of September 5th, both White and May booked a room in the hotel across from Mia's office. A little before 9:00, May ordered some ice coffee for both of them and flirted with the bellboy so that he would remember her and thus create an alibi later. White meanwhile went over to Mia's office to take the evidence and destroy it. He also killed Mia in order to silence her permanently. To guarantee the success of his plan further, he had May call the police and testify that she saw the victim's sister Maya kill her. She was told by the police to stay in her hotel room until she was called to testify.