Cliff Calley Formally Confirms Donna's Deposition Oath
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Cliff Calley formally initiates the deposition, emphasizing the legal gravity of the proceeding and Donna's sworn oath.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Stoically neutral, embodying procedural inevitability
Invoked in voice-over as the officiant who moments ago swore Donna Moss under oath, their prior action now spotlighted to underscore the deposition's binding legal force just before questioning erupts.
- • Enforce oath's transformative power on witness
- • Transition casual encounter to sworn accountability
- • Perjury penalty demands prior ritual completion
- • Official swearing legitimizes all ensuing testimony
Coolly commanding with underlying prosecutorial intent
Delivers precise voice-over narration explaining deposition mechanics, distinguishing House reporter's transcription from notary's oath, confirming Donna's sworn status, and directly querying her understanding to cement procedural gravity.
- • Ensure witness fully grasps legal process and risks
- • Establish unassailable foundation for high-stakes testimony
- • Oath enforces unbreakable truth-telling
- • Clarity prevents procedural challenges or perjury escapes
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The building's austere stone exterior frames Cliff's voice-over prelude to Donna's deposition, its congressional facade radiating unsparing authority and perjury shadows, visually amplifying the voice-over's methodical escalation of legal jeopardy amid leaked secrets' unraveling.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Cliff's formal initiation of Donna's deposition foreshadows her later weaponization of their past intimacy during their confrontation."
Themes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"Cliff: "This proceeding is known as a deposition. The person transcribing a deposition is a House reporter and although she's not a notary public you were just sworn in by a notary public and were placed under oath. Do you understand?""