ANy idea what happened to him? Think he even got a fair trial. or think they were in a lynching mentality towards someone who murdered a celebrated warhero.
^I seem to remember something about the death penalty, either for the exile who fingers Bareil or for the secretary who poses as the Gul.
You mean Kubus Oak? There wasn't any mention of a death sentence for him, just exile. Although in the end, Winn gave him sanctuary on Bajor (though that was probably revoked after Winn's death and he was exiled again). What Gul?
^ Oh, you mean Marritza? I'm sure the Bajoran who killed him was imprisoned but we never found out for sure. That's probably all that happened, though. Especially since (as Odo said in an earlier episode) the Bajoran government tended to take it rather lightly when a Bajoran killed a Cardassian.
Yes, that is correct. After Marritza begs Kira to still be tried as Darheel and punished accordingly, Kira states "What you're asking for is another murder, enough good people have already died. I won't help kill another" Looks like Bajoran law allows for execution of Cardassian war criminals even though I'm not sure about those guilty of serious crimes not associated with the Occupation.
Oh, I get it. If Marritza really had turned out to be Darhe'el, he might have earned a death sentence, I suppose. Darhe'el was a war criminal of the worst kind, so if anyone deserved the death penalty, it'd be somebody like him. But we can only speculate. I think it's likely that for *most* crimes, Bajor doesn't have such a thing. Only for the most extreme cases.
Oh I think Kai winns patsy her and Bareils first episode also feared execution... But even in modern america, we dont give the death penalty for murder commited in fits of rage.
^ Ah, but if you watch the episode, Kainon (the Bajoran who killed Marritza) was clearly not enraged. Smirking, maybe, but not enraged. Kainon simply had a racial prejudice against Cardassians, that's all.
Really Day was trying to shoot Sisko and Li Nalas took the bullet, so there it wasn't his intention. He probably spent life as a pariah and was either murdered by someone who blamed him for killing an icon or committed suicide because he couldn't deal with it.
But wouldn't it be just as much of a crime (under Bajoran law), if not more so, to try to kill the Emissary?
^After having been exposed as an agent of the Cardassians? I suspect that there are limits to Bajoran mercy, and killing a war hero when attempting to assassinate a religious icon crosses them.
Day was an asshole, but he wasn't a Cardassian agent. In fact I think he refused to believe that the Cardassians were the ultimate power behind the Circle. In that regard, Day was in denial more than anything.
Not consciously a Cardassian agent, of course. However, it's possible that such distinctions make little difference when the temperature of Bajoran politics reaches its boiling point, especially given the murder/assassination attempt occurred after Cardassian involvement had been revealed. I agree that execution seems unlikely, but it was an option that the Bajorans seemed to have reserved for at least some of the people they considered to be war criminals, if not traitors.