Picard Frames the Hearing — Vowing to Defend Data
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The bridge holds its positions while Data moves from the turbolift into the Ready Room and Picard sits at his desk with the reader on—an ordinary cadence that frames the conversation to come.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Concerned and quietly hopeful; emotionally affected by Data's predicament and the adult response to it.
Wesley stands at his bridge station, watching and listening with concerned curiosity, absorbing the tone and implications of Picard's promise to fight on Data's behalf.
- • To learn how senior officers handle weighty moral dilemmas
- • To emotionally support Data in whatever small ways are available
- • To understand the ship's response to institutional pressure
- • Data is deserving of compassion and fair treatment
- • Captain-level intervention is significant and meaningful
- • Legal fights are consequential for individuals aboard the ship
Resolved and controlled on the surface, with a thin undercurrent of personal discomfort and moral urgency when offering representation.
Picard sits at his desk with the reader, reads Louvois's ruling aloud with measured formality, paces, then reclaims the moment as a legal fight and awkwardly offers to represent Data personally.
- • To publicly reject the ruling's dehumanizing framing and initiate a formal legal response
- • To protect Data and preserve his dignity and rights
- • To assert command responsibility and shape the legal strategy
- • Law must be interpreted with its spirit, not only its letter
- • Personal advocacy from command can influence institutional outcomes
- • Data's status is not merely administrative but a moral question
Bleak and resigned in content but composed and intellectually engaged; irony masks vulnerability and a faint hope in institutional remedy.
Data crosses from the turbolift, listens to Picard read the ruling, replies with dry, precise irony about the collapse of his options, and calmly accepts Picard's offer of representation.
- • To register the legal fact and its personal consequence with precision
- • To preserve agency by accepting a defender who understands his interests
- • To probe for any remaining hope (Maddox's competence) while remaining stoic
- • Starfleet's apparatus currently treats him as property
- • Formal legal processes are the appropriate venue to resolve status
- • Picard's involvement will materially affect the outcome
Calm, watchful, and mildly disapproving of the institutional reduction of a comrade to property; ready to back the captain's decision.
Worf remains at his station, stoic and observant, registering the formal ruling and Picard's resolve; his presence adds ceremonial gravity and quiet support for Picard and Data.
- • To protect the honor of the crew and its members
- • To support Picard's leadership and the ship's unity
- • To maintain readiness for orders that may follow the hearing
- • Honor and loyalty to one's comrades are paramount
- • Formal rulings must be resisted if they violate dignity
- • Command decisions should be met with disciplined support
Alert, attentive, quietly troubled — balancing duty and personal loyalty as a potential future participant in the institutional struggle.
Riker remains at his main bridge station, listening to the Ready Room exchange, absorbing the consequences; his posture and silence register professional attention and private unease about the looming conflict.
- • To stay informed of command decisions that will affect the crew
- • To prepare to reconcile his duties with his friendship should conflict arise
- • To maintain readiness to carry out orders
- • Chain of command and procedural correctness are important
- • Personal relationships complicate professional obligations
- • Picard will act in the best legal and moral interests of the crew
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Picard's mahogany desk anchors the Ready Room physically and symbolically; the reader and ruling rest upon it, and Picard uses its edge as a platform for pacing and the delivery of counsel and command.
The printed formal ruling is the catalytic document whose contents are read aloud; it functions narratively as the cause of the conflict, transforming an administrative decision into a personal crisis for Data and a legal case for Picard.
Louvois's Ruling Reader sits on Picard's desk and functions as the mechanized mouthpiece of Starfleet authority; Picard uses it to deliver the ruling's contents aloud, giving bureaucratic pronouncement ritual weight and emotional force.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Main Bridge functions as the operational backdrop where Riker, Wesley, and Worf remain at their stations, listening and absorbing the Ready Room's developments remotely — their silence amplifies the isolation of the formal pronouncement.
The Captain's Ready Room is the intimate, formal stage for this exchange — a private office transformed into a crucible where institutional decree is read and a personal legal defense is promised, concentrating moral weight and command authority.
The Enterprise Turbolift functions as Data's point of entry into the Ready Room; its brief transit marks the physical transition from corridor to confrontation and emphasizes the formality of his arrival for a legal pronouncement.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"PICARD: Captain Louvois has issued a ruling that you are the property of Starfleet Command. You can't resign."
"DATA: I see... from limitless options I am reduced to none, or rather one. I can only hope that Commander Maddox is more capable than it would appear."
"PICARD: No, you're not going to submit. We're going to fight this. Captain Louvois may be overly attached to the letter of the law, but she has not forgotten its spirit. She's convening a hearing and we are going to lay the question of your legal status to rest once and for all."