Thanks for your insights.
I never liked Julia as much as I wanted to, and I think it has to do with never quite understanding her motivations (or in some cases, what she was talking about). I mean, when she was introduced to me in the Bachelor's scenario as a woman of reason, I thought I'd like her and we'd really get along, but it didn't quite turn out that way. It's strange, because she seems quite morose, and I usually like that in a person. (I know, I'm twisted.

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Perhaps her 'crime' is something to do with her part in bringing the railroad to town(?)
Maybe. There was one conversation I had with the Haruspicus, while I was the Devotress, which implied that he knew her secrets, but he was less talkative about it than I would have liked. There was also a connection to Catherina mentioned, which ties in with what MorlokKate said. I think that may be the answer.
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Lara is not a criminal either. She's just stuck in her memories thus leading a miserable life.
I've also entertained the possibility that the definition of "criminal" might need to be widened a bit. Whether or not she committed a crime, perhaps if she's just come to the point where she feels her fate is to embrace death, for whatever reasons she has, then that's sufficient. I may have been looking at things from too narrow a perspective.
I wasn't too clear on Ospina's "crime", either, although I didn't especially like her attitude throughout the game. But if she feels remorse for the chaos that ensued as a result of leading the uprising (presumably violent) among the Order, then I guess that's sufficient, too. Then again, she does seem all around vindictive (except where Burakh is concerned).
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I haven't played the Devotress scenario yet, though I may break down and play it in the next couple of months.
The translation may be bad, but I personally didn't find it to be significantly worse than the rest of the game - at least the worst parts of the rest of the game, like perhaps a few parts in the Bachelor's scenario (actually, my memory of it may be off, but I thought Catherina was even
less coherent speaking to the Bachelor than to the Devotress - but then, I didn't know some of the things the Devotress knows then either). Frankly, I started to get used to the language of the town, as broken as it may be, and the awkward and sometimes completely nonsensical constructions almost became expected to the point that I stopped questioning them.

But as elsewhere in the game, if you put in a little effort, you can extract the important meaning, if you're not too concerned about all the little nuances and details.
Anyway, I did have fun playing as the Devotress, and getting to see the town from yet another perspective. The scenario was difficult, though, between having to deal with a constantly ruined reputation, and having to make many difficult choices and moral decisions where there didn't seem to be any clear "right" answer. It was a challenge in a much different sense than most games attempt.
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"My tongue is my enemy. A well-thought game comes before."