Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
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Weyoun; Vorta field supervisor who, in 2372, represented the Dominion during the joint Jem'Hadar-Federation mission to prevent renegade Jem'Hadar warriors from controlling an Iconian gateway on planet Vandros IV. Weyoun was killed by his Jem'Hadar First, Omet'iklan, for questioning their oath of loyalty to the Founders "To the Death".
Prior to his death, Weyoun prepared a report about Captain Benjamin Sisko that was later read by the Vorta field operative Kilana.
Weyoun's clone returned in "Ties of Blood and Water", "The Ship". In keeping with normal Vorta practice, Weyoun was actually a series of clones of the original Weyoun progenitor.
The fourth Weyoun clone was killed in 2372. His successor, the fifth Weyoun, became the chief Dominion liaison to the Cardassian government led by Gul Dukat in 2373. "Ties of Blood and Water".
The fifth Weyoun was killed in a suspicious transporter accident in early 2375.
The sixth Weyoun, possibly a defective clone, felt that the Dominion war was wrong, and he attempted to defect to Odo. When the Dominion learned of this, a new Weyoun was cloned. This seventh Weyoun sent a squadron of Jem'Hadar ships to attack the runabout carrying the sixth Weyoun and Odo. The sixth Weyoun killed himself to prevent harm from befalling Odo. "Treachery, Faith, and the Great River".
The last two Weyoun clones served as aides to the Founder Leader during the final days of the Dominion war, "Strange Bedfellows" carrying out the Founders' campaign of terror against the occupied Cardassian people.
Garak killed the last Weyoun during the final hours of the war. "What You Leave Behind, Parts I and II".
Weyoun also appeared in "In the Cards", "Call to Arms", "A Time to Stand", "Behind the Lines", "Favor the Bold", "Sacrifice of Angels", "Statical Probabilities", "Waltz", "Far Beyond the Stars", "Inquisition", "In the Pale Moonlight", "Tears of the Prophets", "Image In the Sand", "Shadows and Symbols", "Penumbra", "'Til Death Do Us Part", "The Changing Face of Evil", "Tacking Into the Wind", "Dogs of War",