[rec.arts.startrek.info] Synopsis, "The Drumhead"

tlynch@nntp-server.caltech.edu (Timothy W. Lynch) (05/02/91)

WARNING:  The following article contains spoiler information on this week's 
TNG episode, "The Drumhead".  So, if you don't want any spoilers, don't read 
it.  

An investigation is underway:  there's been a security breach, followed by an 
explosion in engineering which may well have been the result of sabotage.  A 
Klingon exobiologist, J'Ddan, is under investigation for the security breach, 
and lots of circumstantial evidence points to him.  He denies any involvement. 

Showing up to help the investigation is retired Admiral Nora Satie, who's 
smoked out many a conspiracy in the past.  Her investigations, combined with 
some of Worf's findings, quickly point to obvious guilt for J'Ddan, who 
confesses to his crime.  However, when Sabin, a Betazoid aide to Satie, says 
that he appears to be telling the truth in denying the apparent sabotage, 
Satie concludes that there's a conspiracy on board.

Satie, whose father was a revered judge in the Federation (required reading in 
the Academy, at least in Picard's time) quickly gets to work.  J'Ddan had few 
associates, so the number of people to question is small.  Since he often 
received injections, Dr. Crusher is an obvious choice, but she has nothing 
useful to give.  However, after Simon Tarses, a med-tech, testifies, Sabin 
immediately claims that Tarses is frightened and covering up a huge lie--and 
says "there's your man."  Picard begins to get worried about this chain of 
events, refusing to hound an innocent man--_especially_ when Geordi and Data's 
investigation later turns up strong evidence that the explosion in Engineering 
was a random accident, not sabotage.

Satie, however, will have none of it, and insists that the lack of sabotage 
doesn't imply a lack of conspiracy.  At the second hearing for Tarses (which 
is now open to spectators, incidentally), Sabin ends up using a blatant lie 
about the explosion in Engineering to get Tarses off balance, and accuses him 
of being a known liar about his ancestry (his grandfather was not Vulcan, but 
Romulan).  Tarses refuses to answer Sabin's questions.

Picard becomes more and more upset at the turn of events, and reminds Worf 
that Tarses has committed no crime.  (Worf, however, is by now convinced that 
he "must" seek out the enemies of the Federation.)  When Picard talks to Satie 
and demands an end to the hearings, threatening to go to Starfleet Command, 
Satie informs him that she's been in touch with Command, and the hearings are 
to be *expanded*.  In addition, her old associate Adm. Henry of Starfleet 
Security is now coming on board to observe the hearings.  Picard vows to fight,
and quickly finds himself ordered to testify at the next set of hearings.

At Picard's hearing, Satie shows little mercy.  She questions his devotion to 
the Prime Directive, claiming he's broken it 9 times since taking command of 
the Enterprise.  She asks how he can sleep at night after all the destruction 
and loss of life he caused as part of the Borg.  The final straw, however, 
comes when Picard quotes her father's old warnings of curtailing freedom:  she 
begins to rant that Picard dirties her father's memory by speaking of him, and 
vows to bring down Picard at any cost.  Admiral Henry, in response, merely 
gets up--and walks out without a word.  

Later, the hearings over and the matter settled, Picard tells Worf that 
although Satie is now discredited, others like her will always exist, waiting 
for the right moment to surface.  "Vigilance, Mr. Worf.  That is the price we 
have to continually pay."

NEXT WEEK:

Wait a second.  Did I read this right?  Are they trying to do a Lwaxana Troi 
story STRAIGHT?  Angels and ministers of grace defend us...well, we'll see.

Tim Lynch (Cornell's first Astronomy B.A.; one of many Caltech grad students)
BITNET:  tlynch@citjuliet
INTERNET:  tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
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"With the first link, a chain is forged.  The first speech censured, the first 
thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably."
--
Copyright 1991, Timothy W. Lynch.  All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...