Update to the incident on board the Apamea - The marines have successfully boarded, re-powered the trading vessel found drift at the outer edges of Tohoku, and interceptors escorted the transport until it was docked in Kadesh. Jack was found shaken from the ordeal but safe. He has been to medical for a brief check up, and I have been told by the doctors his brain had showed signs of intensive activity, but slowing returning to normal. He has just given been the all clear to return to his quarters for rest, but I will assign a security person to continue keeping track of his movement from distance for a short while longer.
As for the unexpected hitchhiker... It turns out to be a fighter pilot in Xeno uniform, but it was also acting completely out of wacks when the Marines got to one of the Apamea's cargo pods. The Xeno was subsequently stunned and the marines shoved the pilot back into the lifepod under guard. Not only that, when the marines wheeled the lifepod from the docking hanger into customs, it triggered the bio-scanner alarms ... Well at least we know the scanner from The Order works, and we also have an infested person on board the station.
The infectee is now held up in a containment cell in the security wing. Each cell is standalone container unit attached to Kadesh and I have given the guards permission to jettison the unit and let it burn up on Palmyra if it does anything funny or attempted to escape. I will let you decide what to do with him in the meantime.
Furthermore, our data analysis manage to clear up the flight box and confirmed a nomad vessel was in the vicinity during the time Jack was "incapacitated". We could only assume the nomad managed to influence Jack to bring the pod on board the vessel... and I cant believe I am saying this, but In a sense I suppose this was one of the better outcomes and it was lucky Jack had good a mental fortitude. Imagine if the nomad successfully proselytised a captain fully and hauled in a bomb, or attacked another faction under our banner, the consequences would have been much much worse. I think we need to urgently develop some form of psionic inhibitors either on board the ship, or on pilot helmet to ensure our pilots and captains are not put under the same situation again.