Jonathan_S wrote:cthia wrote:But, can simply a new design be enough to assert probable cause? I got the feeling that customs inspections can't just be ordered willy nilly. Hauptman was outraged when Honor did it. It is an inconvenience and a potential waste of the time and resources of the freighter who is on a tight schedule.
Reminds me of when I got pulled over while driving a Lamborghini in California. The cop pulled me over simply so he could have a look under the hood. He was very apologetic. "I'm sorry, you weren't speeding or anything. I'm simply curious."
I was certainly speeding after he was done drooling, trying not to be late for work, even though the car belonged to the son of the company's CEO.
At any rate, the superfreighter would only become a Trojan horse after the galaxy has become accustomed to seeing it.
Hauptman was outraged for 2 reasons.
First because in practice Basilisk had not been performing the legally permitted customs inspections; and so his ships (and schedule) had gotten used to not having that delay. So he was a little pissed off that customs inspections spot checking started back up.
But the main thing that pissed him off is that after some smuggling was found on his ships Honor began treating all ships of his shipping line, fairly publicly, as likely smugglers. And as such instead of the randomized spot checks that customs inspections normally entail she ordered the maximum inspections supported by law on every single one of them -- full inspection of all cargo on each ship.
This take far longer than more routine spot inspections (and Basilisk had been unable/unwilling to perform even those).
But a customs inspection doesn't require probably cause. It's not a police search. (though you're still likely to get pushback if the inspections are applied arbitrarily or discriminatorily unless there's good reason to support it. Honor wasn't breaking the law by ordering Hauptman's ships to be searched most thoroughly, while not applying the same to other ships. But if she hadn't had good justification, both from the results of the more routine spot inspection and the additional finds turned up by the deeper scrutiny, then she'd have likely gotten into trouble, through the Admiralty as they bowed to political pressure to reign in someone who would have appears to be following a baseless vendetta.
But like I said, you don't need probable cause. Exactly what ships are subject to customs inspection would be controlled by laws we don't know the full details of. But almost assuredly any ship (other than those covered by diplomatic protections) that picks up or delivers cargo, personnel, passengers, or supplies within a nation's territorial space can be inspected by that system's custom agents. The part we don't know is whether simply using a nation's wormhole legally allows them to perform a customs inspection. (Nor do we know if simply passing through their territorial space without stopping would permit a customs inspection; however this would only apply in n-space, and except for using a wormhole - covered above - there's no legit reason for a freighter to drop out of hyper to drive through someone's system unless they were there for cargo, passengers, or supplies [all of which are accepted reasons for customs inspections]
Basically if a superfreighter was in somebody else's system they're either there for something that itself permits customs to inspect it, or else the fact that they're there without any legitimate business is suspicious enough to justify either the system defense force ordering it to leave, or else stopping and inspecting it as a suspicious vessel.
Another point that was mentioned in the text was that most of the merchies in the Verge were older, smaller ships (Tramps) - simply because a 8.5 Mon ships wasn't profitable (or required) for the verge.
Remember, the Evergeen ship that just got stuck in the Suez is, when fully loaded, a shade smaller than a Warrior CA - and the EverGiven is one of the largest container ships in the world. Now consider that all the ships backed up by the Suez incident might carry the same cargo as 1 or 2 8.5Mton freighters. Even that "normal" ship represents a massive quantity of freight.
So in a lot of systems, where the flow of interstellar goods is low, even a normal 8.5Mton frieghter is going to stand out. A Superfreighter? - Think a C-5 galaxy landing at a small town airport. You'll be lucky if the high school band isn't involved.