“Court Martial”: A Legal Drama That (Mostly) Holds Up—A Plot That Doesn’t

Lawyering has ruined most legal dramas for me.

While I don’t expect Hollywood to mirror legal practice like a documentary, most legal dramas are so unrealistic that my suspension of disbelief files a motion to withdraw.

The need for dramatic flair and snappy pacing can outrank strict legal realism, but push it too far, and the whole courtroom fantasy collapses like a poorly argued motion.

This is true for even Star Trek legal drama, though I have been a Trekkie since I was eight years old. With that in mind, let’s dive into the original series episode “Court Martial.”

I’ll touch on plenty of things along the way, but the spotlight is the core legal drama.

Plot synopsis.

In the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “Court Martial,” the Enterprise returns to Starbase 11 after an ion storm in which Captain Kirk reports the death of Lt. Cmdr. Ben Finney.

A routine inquiry escalates when the ship’s computer logs appear to show that Kirk prematurely jettisoned a research pod—supposedly with Finney still inside—contradicting Kirk’s sworn account that the ship was already at red alert. Kirk is charged with perjury and negligent homicide and is ordered to stand trial before a Starfleet court‑martial panel.

The prosecution is led by Lt. Areel Shaw, an accomplished Starfleet attorney. In a stroke of impeccable ethics, she is (of course) Kirk’s former romantic partner—with red-hot lingering mutual chemistry. Nothing says “zealous advocate” like having a prosecutor—borrowing her own phrasing—slapping down hard her ex she is still hot for.

Spoiler Alert: As the trial unfolds, the defense uncovers that Finney is alive and hiding aboard the Enterprise, having sabotaged the ship’s systems to frame Kirk. Once Finney is found and the sabotage reversed, Kirk is fully exonerated and restored to command.

Legal drama to the tenth power.

No commentary on this episode would be complete without mentioning its comically bad math. During an evidentiary showdown, Kirk attempts to explain how the Enterprise computer can isolate and amplify background noise. In doing so, he proudly notes that the system can magnify white noise “one to the fourth power.”

Of course, mathematically speaking, 14 = 1. So, the supposedly impressive “magnification” he’s describing would… do absolutely nothing.

While the episode’s numerical slipups are amusing, we are focusing on legal drama and   how convincingly Court Martial portrays a functioning judicial system.

Let lawyers do the lawyering.  

Would you hire a navy captain to represent you in court, or an airline pilot write your will? No? How strange.

Yet Star Trek frequently insists that starship officers are also learned and skilled litigators. But, thankfully not in “Court Martial.”

In this episode we learn that Starfleet has made the radical decision to have attorneys (of all people!) staff a dedicated JAG Corp, where prosecutor Lt. Areel Shaw works.

Kirk hires an honest-to-goodness private attorney, who has developed his lawyering skills with decades of actual courtroom experience instead of recalibrating sensors.

Imagine that—letting lawyers do the lawyering. Truly groundbreaking stuff.

This makes far more sense than, say, that Next Generation gem where Starfleet apparently can’t spare two JAG officers for a high‑stakes, widely anticipated legal hearing. Riker ends up prosecuting one of his best friends (but don’t worry, he was ordered to be unbiased, so that fixes everything). Picard meanwhile moonlights as litigation attorney in between saving the galaxy.

That episode is quite popular, but makes me cringe. More on that circus in another post. For now, credit where it’s due: “Court Martial” at least remembers that attorneys exist and should probably be the ones litigating cases.

What a concept!

Stellar conflict of interest.

Would you hire a lawyer who once dated—and still has emotional ties to—the person you’re fighting in court?

Yet, as noted earlier, the prosecutor is one of Captain Kirk’s (many) former flames—and the episode makes it abundantly clear that the sparks are still very much alive.

The writers wanted to raise the emotional stakes, but for me it overshoots the mark. She would have to recuse herself immediately, and if she didn’t, Starfleet’s ethics committee would slap her down hard.

Yes, the tribunal asks Kirk at the outset whether he objects to her serving as prosecutor, which tidies things up a bit, but only a bit.

As the New Hampshire Bar Association put it in a formal ethics opinion, “intimate relationships, current or prospective, including dating—are likely to require disclosure…and perhaps disqualification even if the parties do not object.”

And really, why would Kirk object? Her bias runs in his favor.

The real issue is how she’s supposed to zealously represent her client—Starfleet—when she’s still carrying a torch (and possibly a phaser‑hot crush) for the opposing party.

“What’s the matter? Don’t you like books?”

When I was in law school and through the early years in my career, older attorneys kept a library stacked with hard copy books—case reporters, Shepard’s, and legal encyclopedias like  AmJur and CJS.

I remember hearing older attorneys bemoan that they did not know how to turn on a computer, or that they did not know how to use electronic filing when courts began to require all attorneys to use it.

Decades before Westlaw or LexisNexis, Star Trek writers Don Mankiewicz and Stephen W. Carabatsos offered a remarkably prescient look at this digital divide by introducing Captain Kirk’s eccentric attorney, Samuel T. Cogley.

Cogley’s adamant refusal to use a computer—which he disparaged as "homogenized, pasteurized, synthesized"—mirrors the real-world resistance many veteran practitioners felt during the late 20th and early 21st-century shift from physical law libraries to digital research and filing.

It may seem a bit dated now as the transformation to digital has already occurred and we still have a long wait to see the 23rd century, but it is amusing to hear the debate I witnessed play out in real life. And I admire the writers’ foreseeing it way back in the 1960s.

By filling Kirk’s quarters with plies of physical books, Cogley didn't just provide a visual contrast to the high-tech 23rd century. His stubborn adherence to analogue anachronisms embodies the episode’s warning against blindly trusting technology. This is further underscored by the writers’ foreseeing what we would now call deep fakes.

“But that’s not what happened.”

The episode nails the idea of manufactured electronic evidence decades before it became a real‑world problem.

The chief piece of evidence against Kirk is the ship’s audio/visual computer log that depicts Kirk jettison the pod prematurely, thus apparently dooming Finney. This leads to the charges that Kirk acted with criminal negligence and committed perjury in his official report on the incident.

Upon seeing the computer log Kirk exclaims, “But that’s not what happened.”

Spock beats the ship’s computer at chess, when it should have only been possible to achieve a draw at best. This leads Spock to deduce that someone altered the computer’s programming code, inadvertently corrupting the chess coding, too.

Only three people on board the Enterprise could have altered the computer records in this fashion—Spock, Kirk, and Finney. Spoiler alert—Spock did not frame his captain, and Kirk did not frame himself, so even when watching for the first time, if you don’t guess who the culprit was then I’m afraid you would flunk Starfleet Academy.

This is reminiscent of (and consistent with) dialogue in the episode “Menagerie” where the Enterprise received a phantom message from Starbase 11 ordering it to divert there (the same star base as in “Court Martial”) but no such message was ever sent. Kirk surmises that someone with the right technical expertise could make a message “say anything, or say nothing” but cannot accept that Spock would have created a phantom message.

Again, the original series is good at anticipating the dark possibilities faked computer records present today. We already live in a world where someone can create electronic records purporting to show someone doing or saying anything, or nothing.

A real‑world case underscores how dangerous fabricated digital evidence can be. In one instance, an estranged spouse manufactured computer records to make it appear that her husband possessed child pornography. He did not.

He ultimately cleared his name only after retaining highly specialized—and costly—computer forensics experts. It’s a terrifying reminder that, unlike an affluent person or a ship’s company with a top-notch science officer, not everyone has the resources to mount that kind of defense, even when the truth is on their side.

In an ironic footnote, the forensics firm issued a press release quoting Melvin Belli, a well‑known trial lawyer. Belli appeared as a villain in the original Star Trek episode “And the Children Shall Lead.”

The trial

Starfleet does not call any of its own witnesses. By its own witnesses I mean witnesses not biased for Kirk. While a lawyer might call hostile witnesses, it would be weird for the prosecutor to call no witnesses of her own.

I am pretty forgiving here, though. It would be tedious and distracting to introduce, for example, a computer expert to testify at trial for Starfleet and then vanish from the stage.

Better to give characters we already care about like Spock and McCoy more screen time than to stick rigidly to legal realism. Artistic license must sometimes take the lead over replicating a legit courtroom experience.

The first witness is Spock. While Vulcans famously cannot lie, they can certainly be loyal. Spock shades his testimony in favor of Kirk, which of course the prosecutor would anticipate and is why in a real trial he is unlikely to be called as the prosecutor’s first witness—assuming he would be called by the prosecutor at all (as opposed to being cross-examined after testifying for Kirk).

The prosecutor scores points with Spock’s testimony. Spock concedes that he found no glitch in the ship’s computer that would explain why the log might be wrong (though that will change later in the plot).

He also admits that he was preoccupied at the moment the pod was jettisoned. His testimony that Kirk could not have acted criminally is therefore mere speculation.

Spock postulates that if “I let go of a hammer on a planet that has a positive gravity, I need not see it fall to know that it has in fact fallen.” Circumstantial evidence is admissible in  court and is just as valid as direct evidence—contrary to common opinion. “The law does not distinguish between direct and circumstantial evidence in terms of their weight or value in finding the facts in this case. One is not necessarily more or less valuable than the other.”—Washington Pattern Jury Instructions 1.03.

Spock’s main argument is essentially: Kirk would never do that; it’s just not who he is—it would be out of character.

Character evidence is usually not admissible. “Evidence of a person’s character or character trait is not admissible to prove that on a particular occasion the person acted in accordance with the character or trait.” Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule 404.

Spock admits that his conclusion is mere opinion, not based on direct observation. Opinion testimony is allowed in some circumstances.

Any witness can give opinion testimony about things within common knowledge that they observed—the estimated speed of a vehicle, the approximate age of someone they saw, the approximate distance between two points or time between two events, etc. But, Spock again is talking about Kirk’s character, not common knowledge.

An expert may give opinion within the scope of their field, but Spock is not talking about the ship’s computer or some scientific principle when saying Kirk would never do it.

Expert testimony and its limits are also at play in McCoy’s testimony.

McCoy is a doctor, damn it, not a psychiatrist. 

McCoy gets pulled into giving a hypothetical opinion about whether humans hold grudges. The prosecutor’s theory is that Kirk secretly hated Finney because Kirk sensed Finney still resented the discipline Kirk imposed on him years earlier.

There are two legal problems with the prosecutor’s questioning of McCoy.

The computer reads into the court record McCoy’s status as ship’s surgeon.  The prosecutor then asks McCoy to admit he is an expert in space psychology. He denies this, and merely states “I know something about it.”

This is no legal foundation for him to testify as an expert in psychology.

McCoy is a medical officer assigned to a spaceship, so it makes sense he would know something about “space psychology.” Having some familiarity with human psychology doesn’t make him an expert in the field. Courts draw these lines all the time.

In Boeing Co. v. Sierracin Corp., for example, the Washington State Supreme Court upheld the exclusion of an engineer’s testimony—not because he wasn’t qualified to testify about engineering topics within his scope, but because he lacked experience with the specific type of “reverse engineering” at issue. Expertise is not a universal passport.

McCoy might in fact be qualified to testify about psychology. This is hinted at in other episodes—“Doomsday Machine”, “The Enemy Within”, “The Conscience of the King”, “Dagger of the Mind”, “The Corbomite Maneuver”, just to name a few.

But, trial is about evidence accepted by the court and forming part of the official record. Here, the foundation of McCoy testifying as an expert in psychology was not established on the record in trial.

Second, the prosecutor is essentially asking McCoy whether people tend to resent someone who resents them. That’s not expert testimony; that’s Tuesday. Evidence rules require expert opinions to be based on “reliable principles and methods” and “sufficient facts or data,” not on everyday common sense.

In Queen City Farms, Inc. v. Central National Ins. Co. the appellate court held that a state trooper shouldn’t have been allowed to give an opinion about whether a defendant tried to elude him. The jury could figure that out on its own, and the trooper’s opinion wandered outside his actual expertise. Even qualified experts can’t testify to matters beyond their lane.

While these cases are from Washington State, they reflect general evidence rules followed by most jurisdictions.

In short: based on the record at this trial, McCoy shouldn’t be offering an expert opinion on something outside his specialty—especially when the “expertise” in question is really just common human experience.

In reality, the parties often simply stipulate to an expert’s resume. The prosecution offers to stipulate to Kirk’s credentials, for good reason.

Kirk’s resume

At the 2002 PGA Tour Championship the emcee introduced Tiger Woods. “Winner of thirty-four PGA tour events, including” this event and that event and another and another— “All right, all right” Phil Mkelson cut in to uproarious laughter from everyone, including Tiger Woods.

In “Court Martial”, as the computer drones out Kirk’s resume, the prosecutor wisely offers to stipulate to Kirk’s qualifications. Kirk’s attorney objects, because he wants to bolster Kirk’s credentials and prestige, and thus his credibility. The tribunal allows Kirk’s attorney to formally qualify his witness.

This mirrors real world trials. Consider this exchange from an actual trial:

Defense Attorney: Judge, I would stipulate to his expertise.

THE COURT: I'm sure you will.

Defense Attorney: We will. We've heard it, Your Honor.

THE COURT: So have I, but the jury has not.

Hunt v. State, 474 Md. 89, 252 A.3d 946 at 964 (Md. App. 2021).

Qualifying a witness can bolster their credibility. But don’t overdo it.

“It is a mistake, however, to think that more qualifications are necessarily more persuasive. And endless repetition of degrees, publications, and awards, and appointments may easily overload a judge or juror’s ability, not to mention desire, to pay careful attention to the witness.” Lubet, Steven. Modern Trial Advocacy Analysis & Practice (4th ed.). National Institute for Trial Advocacy, 2009.

Cogley declines the offer to stipulate, but before the litany of Kirk’s accolades reaches overload, he cuts it off. “I think that’s enough. I wouldn’t want to slow things up too much.”

“[E]xpert qualifications are notoriously boring, and most judges will jump at the chance to move things along by allowing the introduction of a resume” instead of droning testimony. “For the same reason, it is common for counsel to stipulate to the introduction of the resumes of all expert witnesses.” Lubet, Steven. Modern Trial Advocacy Analysis & Practice (4th ed.). National Institute for Trial Advocacy, 2009.

Counsel introducing the expert witness will try to strict the right balance. “The expert’s resume should rarely be used as a complete substitute for examination on qualifications since this would deprive counsel of the opportunity to emphasize the witness’s most compelling virtues.” Lubet, Steven. Modern Trial Advocacy Analysis & Practice (4th ed.). National Institute for Trial Advocacy, 2009.

While in the real world this would likely have mostly—if not entirely—all been worked out in advance, “Court Martial” captures the essence here. A-plus grade on depicting qualifying Kirk as an expert on operations of a starship.

Whether the best witness for these points would be the defendant giving self-serving testimony is another matter—but leeway must be given in a one-hour drama.

Not the Code of Hammurabi Again.

Somewhere over the years I came across a cartoon of a lawyer droning endlessly to a jury while the judge, eyes skyward, thinks, “Oh no, not the Code of Hammurabi again!”

That image came rushing back to me watching Kirk’s attorney in “Court Martial” reach for maximum gravitas by citing—of course—the Code of Hammurabi. And not just that. He rattles off the Bible, the Code of Justinian, Magna Carta, the U.S. Constitution, and even future legal milestones like the Fundamental Declarations of the Martian Colonies and the Statutes of Alpha Three.

It’s a grand tour of legal history but trial practice treatises argue that even “closing argument is not the time for flowery speeches festooned with quotations from famous people or books and intended to demonstrate the skill of the advocate at making a memorable speech.” Hon. Herbert Jay Stern, Trying Cases to Win, American Bar Association (1985).

After his dramatic monologue, Cogley doesn’t simply ask the judge to grant his request—he bellows, “I demand it. I DEMAND IT!!” In reality, if a judge denies your request, you don’t shout louder. You file an appeal like everyone else.

Hollywood loves fiery fist-pounding theatrics. Judges do not.

Years ago, I was waiting my turn in a crowded courtroom when two lawyers argued a motion.

One spoke so quietly I could barely hear him from the back. No theatrics, no arm-waving—just calm, clear reasoning.

The other lawyer performed like he was auditioning for a courtroom drama, complete with sweeping gestures and histrionics. The people sitting near me loved the show and whispered praise.

The quiet lawyer won. The showman lost. Yet as they left the courtroom, the spectators asked the showman for his business card.

Call me crazy, but I would have asked for the card of the attorney who won.

Hearing reconvened on the Enterprise bridge.

After Spock determines through his chess experiment that someone has tampered with the computer, Kirk’s attorney requests the trial reconvene on the Enterprise. In the events that follow, both the Enterprise and the legal drama nearly crash.

On the Enterprise an experiment is conducted to discover if Finney is alive and still hiding onboard. Both are large assumptions.

There are a lot of problems here, both in terms of legal drama and general storytelling.

It is axiomatic that a good lawyer asks only questions that he already knows the answers to.  Yet Kirk’s attorney has Kirk, Spock, and McCoy use technology on just a hunch that Finney is alive, and that he is still aboard the Enterprise.

A trial is not the place for gumshoe detective work. It feels rather forced to test the theory that Finney is still alive (and still hiding aboard ship—another huge assumption) for the first time on the record in trial.

The more sensible approach would be to ask for a continuance to investigate further given the late discovered evidence—evidence that Kirk and his legal counsel could not have known about or discovered earlier.

Moreover, what was Finney’s plan? Was he planning to live there forever, surviving on replicator rations and spite like an interstellar Phantom of the Opera?

Finney was hiding in engineering for days without anyone noticing. Does he not need to come out to find food? Use the bathroom?

Why had he not already snuck off the ship? Or, when Kirk orders everyone off the ship, why not stealthily slip away with the crowd?

Would it not make more sense for Kirk to issue a strict orders that no one is to leave the ship? To order everyone on the ship to be on the lookout for Finney and to send out a large-scale red-shirted search party?

As any drama builds to a climax, the pace accelerates and often realism must give a little. In legal drama I can be much more forgiving near the end of the story if lines are blurred for pacing and flare. Still, taken too far it all breaks down, which I am afraid happens in “Court Martial” once trial reconvenes aboard the Enterprise.

Backing up a bit, kudos on something they got very right earlier in the trial that almost all legal dramas get wrong.

Direct your comments to the bench.

One thing the writers got very right was the reaction of the bench when the lawyers started bickering directly with each other.

Most legal dramas treat attorney‑to‑attorney sniping like it’s mandatory—two lawyers circling each other like Klingons in a Bat’leth tournament while the judge just shrugs. In reality, no judge is letting counsel turn the well into a barroom. The moment lawyers start addressing each other instead of the court, the bench steps in with the subtlety of a red alert.

That’s why “Court Martial” feels refreshingly accurate. The second the attorneys start trading personal jabs, the judge cuts them off with a crisp “Direct your comments to the bench,” which is exactly what a real judge would do—minus the Starfleet uniform and the dramatic lighting. It’s a tiny moment, but it shows the writers actually understood courtroom procedure.

And honestly, it makes the scene better. Real courtroom tension isn’t two lawyers yelling at each other like they’re about to reenact the Kirk‑Spock fight from “Amok Time.” It’s two lawyers trying not to yell at each other while the judge watches them like a Vulcan evaluating their logic. The lawyering chess match is the drama. And for once, a TV courtroom remembered that.

Final Report Card

“Court Martial” earns a B+ as legal drama.

Actual lawyers do the lawyering. Judges cut off lawyers who bicker with each other. While compromise is made to get main characters screen time and for pacing, that is expected. This is legal drama, not legal documentary.

Even the ongoing conflict‑of‑interest problem (which the script blithely ignores from start to finish) can’t fully sink the strong courtroom beats. Someone in the writers’ room clearly cared about getting the vibe of the legal ecosystem right.

But then we reach the final act and the Enterprise losing orbit is a perfect metaphor for the sinking quality of the episode. The realistic legal framework that felt so grounded earlier suddenly evaporates, plot gymnastics strain credulity, and we even get farcical math to the tenth power.

So overall, it lands at a C. Not because it’s unwatchable—far from it—but because the final act loses both courtroom and real-world credibility entirely and sprints into a wall with its shoelaces untied.

Still, for a 1967 attempt at a starship legal thriller, it’s earnest, ambitious, and occasionally brilliant. When it works, it really works. When it doesn’t… well, let’s just say the structural‑integrity fields were not at 100 percent.

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