One of the classic exchanges in ST3 after the main battle is over:
Maltz: "Wait! You said you would kill me!"
Kirk: "I lied. Take him below."
I wonder, should they have killed Maltz after all? All the other crew was dead by then (including the six who had died during the self-destruct boarding party -- Kruge himself was killed by Kirk directly. Only a few were killed by randomly exploding Genesis bits, plus the one poor guy who Kruge killed for shooting up Grissom too efficiently.)
But Maltz, apparently, not only survived uninjured but was apparently able to assist in beaming up Kirk and the shell of Spock (Kirk addressed Maltz by name even if he wasn't aware he was doing so.)
Granted, killing a prisoner after the fight is over goes against Federation principles (add a tenth violation to the list of StarFleet regulations.) But on the other hand, it might be seen as a token of respect for Maltz to meet his end the way he wanted -- killed by his enemy rather than being captured. The Ambassador at the beginning of ST4:TVH might have been proportionally less pissed off. (Or maybe not. He was already complaining about the murder of a Klingon crew. Their manner of death in battle-versus-otherwise didn't seem to matter much to him.)
Not to mention, whatever happened to Maltz anyway? They left Genesis and went directly to Vulcan -- landed at Mount Selaya -- and we saw everybody *except* Maltz leaving the ship to go witness (or participate in) what turned out to be the Fal-Tor-Pan. It's not a place where a rogue Klingon prisoner would really be welcome; and they couldn't have left him alone on the ship either (being the first officer he could easily have had access to the ship's security codes and escaped from wherever it was they were holding him.)
My best guess: as they were approaching Vulcan, they commed directly: "hey Sarek, we're here and we have Spock's living body, plus his Katra in McCoy's head. Plus we have a spare Klingon prisoner, what should we do with him?" Sarek then could have arranged for Maltz to be beamed off the ship into some kind of Federation- or Vulcan-sponsored holding cell until his status could be determined.
Maltz: "Wait! You said you would kill me!"
Kirk: "I lied. Take him below."
I wonder, should they have killed Maltz after all? All the other crew was dead by then (including the six who had died during the self-destruct boarding party -- Kruge himself was killed by Kirk directly. Only a few were killed by randomly exploding Genesis bits, plus the one poor guy who Kruge killed for shooting up Grissom too efficiently.)
But Maltz, apparently, not only survived uninjured but was apparently able to assist in beaming up Kirk and the shell of Spock (Kirk addressed Maltz by name even if he wasn't aware he was doing so.)
Granted, killing a prisoner after the fight is over goes against Federation principles (add a tenth violation to the list of StarFleet regulations.) But on the other hand, it might be seen as a token of respect for Maltz to meet his end the way he wanted -- killed by his enemy rather than being captured. The Ambassador at the beginning of ST4:TVH might have been proportionally less pissed off. (Or maybe not. He was already complaining about the murder of a Klingon crew. Their manner of death in battle-versus-otherwise didn't seem to matter much to him.)
Not to mention, whatever happened to Maltz anyway? They left Genesis and went directly to Vulcan -- landed at Mount Selaya -- and we saw everybody *except* Maltz leaving the ship to go witness (or participate in) what turned out to be the Fal-Tor-Pan. It's not a place where a rogue Klingon prisoner would really be welcome; and they couldn't have left him alone on the ship either (being the first officer he could easily have had access to the ship's security codes and escaped from wherever it was they were holding him.)
My best guess: as they were approaching Vulcan, they commed directly: "hey Sarek, we're here and we have Spock's living body, plus his Katra in McCoy's head. Plus we have a spare Klingon prisoner, what should we do with him?" Sarek then could have arranged for Maltz to be beamed off the ship into some kind of Federation- or Vulcan-sponsored holding cell until his status could be determined.