Yet there
is CCTV coverage of the bridge, not only for the
Enterprises but for the Romulan cloakship of "Balance of Terror"! And Spock demonstrates that the enemy can indeed tap into that and gain access to important secrets. So it appears that Starfleet is not overtly worried about such things....
Whenever there are visual recordings in TOS, they are made by some futuristic means that do not correspond to any observed or even imaginable optical recording devices. And when we do see optical recording devices akin to today's cameras, they work very differently from ours: the "camera" set up to record the wedding in the aforementioned episode has its "lens" pointed in the wrong direction altogether, say, and when Kirk gets his hands on an actual camera in "Patterns of Force", he uses it all wrong in terms of laws of optics.
We might well deduce that anything and everything can be visually recorded from all angles at any time, as long as the ship has working internal sensors or perhaps just one working tricorder somewhere. We also know that Starfleet has faith in its visual recordings, as per "Court Martial" (where we also learn that the faith is misplaced and somebody like Finney can falsify the recordings at will; Spock does the same thing with audio recordings in "The Menagerie", again establishing both significant faith and the fact that high-level experts can misuse it). So recordings can be made; are made; and are trusted. The only odd thing here is that they
are not made proper use of.
But let's think about it: which episodes would end differently if the heroes went through their CCTV material? There are two conditions there: one, that the perp gets caught in camera and is not a superentity capable of avoiding that somehow; and two, that watching CCTV would be a faster means of catching the perp than the method actually used.
TOS whodunnits are quickly listed. Well, not. But I have all night.
1) "Man Trap" has the Salt Vampire roam across the ship with impunity for a good reason: CCTV would be too slow to track all the shapeshifting, which apparently influences the observer across a distance anyway and would probably fool the person doing the records reviewing.
2) "Charlie X" is a superbeing. Nuff said.
3) "Enemy Within" might in theory end up differently if visuals were carefully studied. But the Evil Kirk wreaks most of his havoc at a quick pace, and the Good Kirk is such a wuss that there's no hope of him organizing a CCTV review anyway.
4) "Mudd's Women" has Mudd conspire. But this is not suspected until it's too late, so no help from CCTV surveillance there. Had Kirk not posted a (surprisingly deaf) live guard next to the con man, he might have paid more attention to recordings, but alas...
5) "Dagger of the Mind" involves van Gelder moving through the ship at too fast a pace for CCTV reviewing to help. Conventional monitoring is about to catch him when he reaches the bridge anyway.
6) "The Menagerie" features two superentities forging records. CCTV would be no match for the combined powers of Spock and the Talosians. Kirk or Mendez may have checked up the recordings to see whether Spock lies about the message from Pike, but that would have changed nothing.
7) "Conscience of the King" in no way indicates that Lenore Karidian could falsify starship visual records. There is plenty of time to wonder who set the bomb in Kirk's quarters or poisoned Riley; the heroes also know exactly which CCTV snippets to review, as they have the place and the time down pat.
8) "Tomorrow is Yesterday" wouldn't change much even if Christopher were kept under CCTV surveillance. And hey, something
does alert our heroes to the fact that he's trying to shoot or threaten his way out.
9) "Court Martial" has been discussed already. Finney apparently had all the angles covered, literally.
10) "Space Seed" probably did feature CCTV surveillance of Khan. But Khan moved
fast. End of story.
11) "The Alternative Factor" would only have become more mysterious if our heroes followed Lazarus through CCTV and saw his personality suddenly change when his twin took his place... That Lazarus so effortlessly wanders about is a mystery to being with, but retroactive CCTV review would not help.
12) "Amok Time" CCTV investigation into Spock's odd behavior would certainly run into privacy issues.
13) "Mirror, Mirror" has CCTV wired into a transporter set to kill!
14) "The Doomsday Machine" works from the assumption that Decker's account of the last moments of the
Constellation crew was true. It's too unlikely to be that, but records probably did not survive.
15) "I, Mudd" leaves no time to stalk Norman through CCTV.
16) "Journey to Babel" is a full-fledged whodunnit for the center part, but strangely decides not to be! No real investigation is made into the Tellarite's death. Diplomatic immunity? This might not prevent reviewing of CCTV material, but might require shutting down cameras in many areas, including the crime scene.
17) "The Trouble with Tribbles" might be resolved more quickly if K-7 had proper CCTV. But everybody thinks that the danger comes from the Klingons, not from Darvin, who knows his way around the security measures anyway.
18) "And the Childen Shall Lead" concludes a stretch of episodes where superentities in total control of the ship are the one onboard threat. CCTV is irrelevant in those.
19) "No Beauty" involves a murder mystery of sorts. But who would dare review the CCTV tapes and risk going mad?
20) "The Day of the Dove" negates the advantages of CCTV intelligence gathering in several ways: the Klingons (think they) control parts of the ship, and the * entity makes everybody stupid anyway.
21) "The Tholian Web" might move along faster if visual recordings of Kirk's appearances were studied. Again, the time and the place would be known in detail, so reviewing ought to be easy. But perhaps the heroes know that ghosts won't show up on film (and this holds true for phased people, too)?
22) "Wink of an Eye" has the heroes running out of time to begin with. But they do spend much of it studying visual records!
23) "Elaan of Troyius" features little mystery. Wrongdoers are immediately captured through conventional security measures.
24) "The Way to Eden" is the next time onboard nastiness is not the work of an invincible superpower. But Dr. Sevrin is lampshaded as an expert in a field well suited for avoiding CCTV.
25) "Turnabout Intruder" might indeed end differently if somebody suggested reviewing the tapes: Lester would definitely start killing people in panic!
...Any comments or ideas?
Timo Saloniemi