The Judicial Charter of Koloth was a document that had a basis in Klingon law which stated that; "An Advocate is entitled to challenge the charges at any point during the tribunal." The Charter was quoted by Advocate Kolos during the trial of Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer in 2152. (ENT episode: "Judgment") Presumably, it was named after Koloth but nothing confirms this in the episode.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| - Judicial Charter of Koloth
|
rdfs:comment
| - The Judicial Charter of Koloth was a document that had a basis in Klingon law which stated that; "An Advocate is entitled to challenge the charges at any point during the tribunal." The Charter was quoted by Advocate Kolos during the trial of Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer in 2152. (ENT episode: "Judgment") Presumably, it was named after Koloth but nothing confirms this in the episode.
- The Judicial Charter of Koloth was a formal ruling in Klingon law, which stated that "an advocate is entitled to challenge the charges at any point during the tribunal." By the 22nd century, this right was considered archaic, and it was accepted form that, when the magistrate began his deliberations, all testimony would be suspended.
|
dcterms:subject
| |
dbkwik:memory-alph...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:memory-beta...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
abstract
| - The Judicial Charter of Koloth was a document that had a basis in Klingon law which stated that; "An Advocate is entitled to challenge the charges at any point during the tribunal." The Charter was quoted by Advocate Kolos during the trial of Earth Starfleet Captain Jonathan Archer in 2152. (ENT episode: "Judgment") Presumably, it was named after Koloth but nothing confirms this in the episode.
- The Judicial Charter of Koloth was a formal ruling in Klingon law, which stated that "an advocate is entitled to challenge the charges at any point during the tribunal." By the 22nd century, this right was considered archaic, and it was accepted form that, when the magistrate began his deliberations, all testimony would be suspended. In 2152, Kolos, Jonathan Archer's advocate, cited this charter when requesting permission to let Archer testify in his own defense, despite the fact that the period for testimony had concluded. When Orak, the prosecutor on the case, objected, Kolos responded that the charter had never been overturned, forcing the magistrate to reluctantly allow the testimony. (ENT: "Judgment")
|