Alibi
noun·Edwardian
A defendant's claim to have been elsewhere when a crime was committed; the central puzzle device of the Golden Age.
A defendant's claim to have been elsewhere when a crime was committed — and, by extension in detective fiction, the detective's central preoccupation: every suspect must be tested against the time and place of the crime. From Latin alibi, “elsewhere.” The alibi puzzle becomes a defining structural device in the Golden Age.