[from
here]
When the group charge through the locked door and into the room, Ema stumbled forward a few extra feet (a combination of a lack of grace and the science of inertia). Once she managed to steady herself, she looked around the room to try and determine the scale of the information gold mine they had just broken into. Even with her limited eyesight, she could tell that the room was fairly large--larger than she had expected it to be. That was a promising sign; maybe Morgan and Lana were right. Maybe this was where Dr. Landel (or General Aguilar, now) stored all of his data. It seemed a bit sloppy to her, storing all of this information in a room that was easily broken into, but Ema wasn't about to look a gift horse in the mouth. They needed data. This place seemed to provide plenty of it for them to work with.
Hopefully, the data would actually prove useful. Ema wasn't quite so naive as to believe that the three of them were the first to break into this room, not with men like Mr. Javert or Mr. Edgeworth on the case. The best she could hope for was that a few fresh sets of eyes would catch something different. Lana was a detective as well as a prosecutor, Ema a scientist, and Morgan surely had his own perspective. They could come up with something amongst them, right?
Turning back to her sister and Morgan, Ema stated, "Agatha's fake name was Marie Clay. I never learned Kay's." Morgan likely wouldn't care, but Lana would know why the names were important to her. After a pause, she added, "If there's released patient data in here. If there's not, we should learn what data is in here." Scientifically speaking, it was better not to assume anything before Lana or Morgan could confirm it. Ema would go investigating herself, of course, but she was pretty certain that she'd be little help.