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[[Image:150px-Adeptus Arbites Sigil.jpg|thumb|right|The emblem of the Adeptus Arbites]]
[[Image:Arbites Coat of Arms.png|290px|center]]
[[Image:Arbitrator.jpg|thumb|right|I am the Law!]]
[[Image:Arbitrator.jpg|right|300px|thumb|[https://youtu.be/VM_9NRoGUOg?t=4m5s I am the Law!]]]
{{Topquote|To be just, our law must be cruel.|Motto of the Adeptus Arbites}}
{{Topquote|There is no crueller tyranny than that which is perpetuated under the shield of law and in the name of justice.|Charles de Montesquieu}}
{{Topquote|I AM THE LAW!|[[Judge Dredd]]}}


:''"To be just, our law must be cruel."''
They are basically the FBI of the [[Imperium]]. But they aren't just any ol' cops, they are [[beakie|badass motherfuckers]], think of a combo of [[awesome|RoboCop]] and [[Judge Dredd]]. They usually drag the criminal up to the judge who then ceremonially declares them [[heresy|guilty and being guilty means that you have committed a crime]]. And in the Imperium there is only one crime and it is [[heresy|HERESY]]!!!!!!! On some worlds though, they send criminals to [[Imperial Guard]] [[penal legion|penal legions]] instead of executing them on the spot, thus they may receive the [[God-Emperor of Mankind|Emperor's]] benediction on the glorious field of battle. The Adeptus Arbites have slightly smaller balls of steel than guardsmen from strutting in full-body black [[Carapace Armor]] called [[Hydraphur Judge's Armour]] to deal with the rabble, they are on the other hand made of much more man sauce (do we really have to call it that?) than [[Space Marines|SPESS MEHREENS]] and their sissy power armor.
:--Motto of the Adeptus Arbites.


:''"One who trades freedom for security deserves neither."''
The Adeptus Arbites have shown that social sciences, like the applied, have also been degraded in the 41st millennium while they help power Terra by using the remains of long dead criminologists to drive generators. Excessive brutality is not an effective way of combating crime as it builds resentment between law enforcement and the people they are there to protect from lawlessness. On the other hand, if the alternative is letting over-populated hives become horror fests of the worst sorts of crime, then it might be more cost-effective for the Arbites crack as many skulls as they like. Mind, they are still rife with crime, but it's mostly low-key stuff like drugs and <s>forbidden objects</s> now ''those'' are really dangerous: xenos artefacts and the like are forbidden for a reason. Life is (literally to the Arbites) the Emperor's currency. Are you going to go on a serial killing and thereby waste the Emperor's currency? Not if you value your life.
:--Benjamin Franklin


:''"There are not enough jails, not enough police, not enough courts to enforce a law not supported by the people."''
It says something that the thing keeping violent crime at a minimum (when compared to the sheer size of Imperial cities) is the fact that, if you murder someone, then that someone can't die for the Emperor and you have therefore stolen from the Emperor himself. Which has rather severe consequences (you ''stole'' from the '''Emperor''', you are ''screwed'').
:--Hubert H. Humphrey


:''"There is no crueler tyranny than that which is perpetuated under the shield of law and in the name of justice."''
If you want to include the Adeptus Arbites in a story or game of [[Dark Heresy]], I suggest you read/watch/play/whatever the following for inspiration:
:--Charles de Montesquieu
*[[Judge Dredd]] (The comic)
*Judge Dredd (1995 Movie) for stories set in [[If the Emperor had a Text-to-Speech Device|TTS 40k]]
*Dredd (2012 movie) for more modern Arbites
*RoboCop (The 1987 original, not the 2014 remake)
*Die Hard
*L.A. Noire and/or L.A. Confidential (For that "law enforcement being full of corrupt douchebags" vibe)
*Hot Fuzz
*Patlabor
*Rainbow Six
*Counter-Strike
*Any/all of the 'Dirty Harry' movies
*Police Academy series
 
It's important to note that NOT all Imperial law enforcement personel are Adeptus Arbites, indeed most of them are not (this point is stressed repeatedly in the Ciaphas Cain novels - many travellers call local civil police forces the Arbites due to varying titles). A lot of earlier Black Library books don't make this distinction, so take such depictions with a pinch of salt. The Arbites are like the FBI (but not Interpol because Interpol isn’t a police force and actually just enables cooperation between police forces) of the 40K universe, they take on the cases with interplanetary criminals or crimes against the Imperial laws instead just the local planetary laws. Some planets have only a single Arbites agent loosely overseeing all the planetary police. Local Law Enforcement are usually not keen on seeing Arbites enter the picture, usually because it means someone fucked up badly or shit is getting serious. Neither of the two want an Arbites to take a case EVEN further up the food chain and call the local Inquisitor for a friendly chat. Planets that are especially important will have the Adeptus Arbites as their entire police force, such as Terra or Hydraphur. Others will have the Arbites as the leadership of the police force. So feel free to write a story or play a game involving plain old police in spess and have the Arbites as an overseer/boss/meddling (and possibly corrupt) dickhead.
 
Just to make things more complicated, the Adeptus Mechanicus have equivalent police divisions ; the Astonoymia - the equivalent of a civil police force on forgeworlds and Mechanicus enclaves on Imperial worlds, and the Collegiate Extremis - the rough equivalent of the Adeptus Arbites. Jurisdiction friction gets complicated.


:''"I AM THE LAW!"''
[[TL;DR]]: Arbites don't give a fuck about regular crime unless it threatens the wider Imperium, i.e. can lead to rebellions, incursions and Imperial Tithe being unpaid, or if it threatens one of their own (so long as they are of a high-ish rank). If a shoplifter robs a street stall in front of them the Arbites won't care unless the shoplifter is using a weapon that is potentially harmful to them or if they deem it detrimental to public order without being tolerable as a light outlet. If an otherwise upstanding man stands in the way of an Administratum cargo truck for more than absolutely necessary, that's a [[Power Weapon#Power Maul|power maul]] to the back and a shove to the side.
:--Judge Dredd


<s>Pronounced Ar-bee-teh-s.</s> <s>Arr-bih-tes.</s> However you fucking want, [[Games_Workshop|GW]] doesn’t own how you say it (yet).


They are basically the FBI of the [[Imperium]]. But they aren't just any ol' cops, they are [[beakie|badass motherfuckers]], think of a combo of [[awesome|RoboCop]] and [[Judge Dredd]]. They usually drag the criminal up to the judge who then ceremonially declares them [[heresy|guilty and being guilty means that you have committed a crime]]. And in the Imperium there is only one crime and it is [[heresy|HERESY]]!!!!!!! On some worlds though, they send criminals to [[Imperial Guard]] penal legions instead of executing them on the spot, thus they may receive the [[God-Emperor of Mankind|Emperor's]] benediction on the glorious field of battle. The Adeptus Arbites have slightly smaller balls of steel than guardsmen, they are on the other hand made of much more man sauce than [[Space Marines|SPESS MEHREENS]] and their sissy power armor.
==What is the Law?==
[[Image:Wot.jpeg|right|300px|thumb|Shira Calpurnia, the protagonist of [[Matthew Farrer]]'s Arbites books]]
<s>I AM THE LAW</s>
{{Topquote|There are not enough jails, not enough police, not enough courts to enforce a law not supported by the people.|Hubert H. Humphrey}}
The Arbites uphold Imperial Law, which is pretty broad. (It has to be, due to the varied nature of the Imperium and its myriad of different people at large.) It can however be very broadly summarized into two main points on a planetary level:


The Adeptus Arbites have shown that social sciences, like the applied, have also been degraded in the 41st millennium while they help power Terra by using the remains of long dead criminologists to drive generators. Excessive brutality is not an effective way of combating crime as it builds resentment between law enforcement and the people they are there to protect from lawlessness. On the other hand, if the alternative is letting over-populated hives become horror fests of the worst sorts of crime, then it might be more cost-effective for the Arbites crack as many skulls as they like.  Mind, they are still rife with crime, but it's mostly low-key stuff like drugs and <s>forbidden objects</s> now ''those'' are really dangerous: xenos artefacts and the like are forbidden for a reason.  Life is (literally to the Arbites) the Emperor's currency.  Are you going to go on a serial killing and thereby waste the Emperor's currency?  Not if you value your life.
* Worship and remain loyal to the [[God-Emperor of Mankind]]
* Deliver the [[Imperial Tithe]] in a timely manner


It says something that the thing keeping violent crime at a minimum (when compared to the sheer size of Imperial cities) is the fact that, if you murder someone, then that someone can't die for the Emperor and you have therefore stolen from the Emperor himself. Which has rather severe consequences (you ''stole'' from the '''Emperor''', you are ''screwed''). [[Image:Wot.jpeg|thumb|left|<s>Anyone else notice that the Imperium's police are more well equipped than it's military?</s> Actually, the Arbites aren't really police - Planets have their own police forces, but Arbites can just come in at any time, and do things like take control of an entire planet's police force to assist in something really, really big. So they're more like SWAT.]]
Now, you might think: "that's it?", but the implementation of said points are often one hell of a pain in the behind to deal with and require frequent skull-busting. The first one consists mostly of smoking out and cracking down on [[Chaos]] cults, [[Genestealer]] infestations, separatists, [[Tau|xenophiles]] and plain old power-hungry morons wanting to take over a world, system, or sector through violent and tithe disrupting upheaval; or any other joyous thing that could fuck up a planet from the inside. They don't explicitly handle [[heresy]] though; that's what the [[Sisters of Battle]] and [[Ordo Hereticus]] are for (although they do help when asked). The second point of Imperial Law generally revolves around making sure that everyone and everything that is supposed to get on a ship gets onto ships: soldiers and/or materiel supplied for tithes, psykers in [[Black Ships]], etc. They also keep an eye on [[Rogue Traders]]/Merchantsmen when they come in port (you never know what one of those shady bastards has and/or wants in their hold) and hunt down smugglers.


If you want to include the Adeptus Arbites in a story or game of [[Dark Heresy]], I suggest you read/watch/play/whatever the following for inspiration:
On a more galactic scale, the Arbites ensure that new worlds get used to the routine and older, important worlds give what they should and don't get complacent. They tend to be a little harsh because the step after the law is broken is full-on rebellion. The Arbites also serve as proxies for the High Lords, adjudicating conflicts between the Administratum and the Planetary Governors and [[Commissars|ensuring their loyalty]].
*[[Judge Dredd]]
 
*Robocop (Not the remake. The '80s and '90s knew how to make a dystopia look dystopian, unlike today's [https://archive.is/iQYUr photogenic, scrubbed clean dystopias].)
BUT, if that was all they did there wouldn't be nearly enough opportunities for "I AM THE LAW" jackbooted curb-stomping. So on really, really, really important worlds (ie Terra, segmentum capitals, etc) the Arbites stop being the FBI and become the Mega-City One PD. This is where young, idealistic arbiters straight outta schola go to become the jaded motherfuckers the Arbites needs them to be. After a few years on the toughest beats in the galaxy, they are ready to be shipped off to far-flung worlds where they will often bear sole responsibility for ensuring that their planet's governor follows Imperial law, and that the local enforcers maintain order.
*Die Hard
 
*L.A Noire and/or L.A. Confidential (For that "law enforcement being full of corrupt douchebags" vibe)
== Notable Arbitrators ==
*The Grand Provost Marshal of the Adeptus Arbites: Nominal head of the entire organisation and one of the permanent seats amongst the [[High Lords of Terra]]. Yeah, keeping the Imperium as a whole in something within hailing distance of lawful is just that important.
*Luthir Goreman: Lord Marshal of the Adeptus Arbites in the Calixis Sector, Goreman is a former criminal who saw the light after being sent to assassinate a wandering preacher and was converted to the Imperial faith instead. He holds the common folk of the Imperium in utter disdain, seeing them as a bunch of lazy malcontents who require frequent application of brute force to keep them in line.
*[[Shira Calpurnia]]: The scion of a noble house of Ultramar who became an arbitrator and took postings all across the Ultima Segmentum before ending up on Hydraphur, where she had to maintain the law in the face of a bunch of noble families waging secret wars with each other. Despite being a noble, she's pretty down-to-earth and cares more about getting shit done than waiting on decorum. Notably, her family line includes a 1st Company Ultramarine Terminator.


It's important to note that NOT all Imperial lawmen are Adeptus Arbites (this point is stressed repeatedly in the Ciaphas Cain novels - many planets call their civil police force the Arbites out of convention).  The Arbites are like the FBI and Interpol of the 40K universe, they take on the cases with interplanetary criminals or crimes against the Imperial laws instead just the local planetary laws.  Some planets have only a single Arbites agent loosely overseeing all the planetary police.  So feel free to write a story or play a game involving plain old police in spess and have the Arbites as an overseer/boss/meddling (and possibly corrupt) dickhead.
==In Tabletop 40k==


TL:DR: Arbitres don't give a fuck about regular crime unless it threatens the wider Imperium, i.e. can lead to rebellions, incursions and Imperial Tithe being unpaid.
Until the early 2000's the Adeptus Arbites featured a very small range of metal miniatures for 40k and Necromunda, and in these earlier editions they were typically (but infrequently) taken as allies by other Imperial armies. Arbites were well equipped with [[Hydraphur Judge's Armour]] and the ability to use different ammunition types for their shotguns, although they could take a decent variety of other weaponry as well. Unsurprisingly, Arbites filled approximately the same role of elite baseline-human infantry that Storm Troopers do currently. Although they are one of the last major Adeptus organizations that have yet to be given the full [[Repressor|army treatment]], it is uncertain when or if GW will ever grant them attention again (considering copyright). Thankfully you can convert Palanite Enforcers with a simple head swap, as third party heads are a dime a dozen.


==What is the Law?==
=== 9th Edition Return ===
The Arbites uphold Imperial Law, which is pretty broad. It has to be, due to the varied nature of the Imperium at large.  They also don't explicitly handle [[heresy]]; that's what the [[Sisters of Battle]] and [[Ordo Hereticus]] are for (although they do help when asked).  Imperial Law generally revolves around making sure that everyone who is supposed to get on ship gets onto ships. Soldiers supplied for tithes, psykers in [[Black Ships]], etc.  The Arbites ensure that new worlds get used to the routine and older, important worlds give what they should and don't get complacent. They tend to be a little harsh because the step after the law is broken is full-on rebellion.  The Arbites also serve as proxies for the High Lords, adjudicating conflicts between the Administrum and the Planetary Governors and [[Commissars|ensuring their loyalty]].
On January 3rd, 2023, [https://www.warhammer-community.com/2023/01/03/arks-of-omen-how-to-build-boarding-actions-army-lists/ GW released a PDF] detailing rules changes for playing Boarding Action missions. In the section on Agents of the Imperium, it is mentioned you can choose to give either '''[[Imperial Navy Breachers|NAVIS]] [[Voidsmen-at-Arms|IMPERIALIS]]''' Troops, '''[[Acolyte|ACOLYTES]]''', or '''ADEPTUS ARBITES''' Troops in your army Objective Secured.


[[Image:Mavel.jpg|thumb|800px|Marvel Superheroes of the 3rd Millenium Imperium.]]
[https://www.warhammer-community.com/2023/01/27/lvo-2023-play-the-ultimate-game-of-cops-and-robbers-with-kill-team-soulshackle/ As was revealed on January 27th,] we're getting an Arbites Kill-Team in the same vein as the Imperial Navy Breachers. They feature a more copyright-friendly redesign of the buckethelmet, so Geedubs can safely say they're "Judge Dredd inspired" without 2000 AD bringing out the belt.


== See Also ==
== See Also ==
*[[Campaign:Arbites]]
*[[Dark Heresy]] and [[Dark Heresy 2nd Edition|its second edition]], which both have rules for playing as an arbitrator. The first edition even has a [[splatbook]] called Book of Judgement which is all about the Arbites.
*[[Arbitrator Kazymanderas ]]
*[[Codex - Adeptus Arbites]] - An [[Warhammer 40,000 8th edition|8th edition]] [[homebrew]] codex for Adeptus Arbites, complete with unique units, Precinct tactics, Strategems, and more!
*Good fan codex for the Arbites [http://www.warseer.com/forums/showthread.php?346646-Codex-Adeptus-Arbites-for-6th-Edition]
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qolk_rDA9xU What Imperial propaganda portrays the Arbites like]
 
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IQJH-zUYOoc What they're actually like]
*[http://www.warseer.com/forums/showthread.php?346646-Codex-Adeptus-Arbites-for-6th-Edition A 6th edition fan codex for Adeptus Arbites] - As of [[Warhammer 40,000 8th edition|8th edition]], these rules are no longer usable.
*[[Palanite Enforcers]] - A separate faction in the fluff, but in terms of models, they're basically [[ChapterHouse Studios|trademark friendly]] Arbites.
*[[Legion Consul]]
*[[Judiciar]]
{{Arbites}}
{{Template:Imperium}}
{{Template:Imperium}}
[[Category: Warhammer 40,000]][[Category: Imperial]]
[[Category: Warhammer 40,000]][[Category: Imperial]][[Category: Adeptus Arbites]]

Latest revision as of 11:16, 17 June 2023

I am the Law!

"To be just, our law must be cruel."

– Motto of the Adeptus Arbites

"There is no crueller tyranny than that which is perpetuated under the shield of law and in the name of justice."

– Charles de Montesquieu

"I AM THE LAW!"

Judge Dredd

They are basically the FBI of the Imperium. But they aren't just any ol' cops, they are badass motherfuckers, think of a combo of RoboCop and Judge Dredd. They usually drag the criminal up to the judge who then ceremonially declares them guilty and being guilty means that you have committed a crime. And in the Imperium there is only one crime and it is HERESY!!!!!!! On some worlds though, they send criminals to Imperial Guard penal legions instead of executing them on the spot, thus they may receive the Emperor's benediction on the glorious field of battle. The Adeptus Arbites have slightly smaller balls of steel than guardsmen from strutting in full-body black Carapace Armor called Hydraphur Judge's Armour to deal with the rabble, they are on the other hand made of much more man sauce (do we really have to call it that?) than SPESS MEHREENS and their sissy power armor.

The Adeptus Arbites have shown that social sciences, like the applied, have also been degraded in the 41st millennium while they help power Terra by using the remains of long dead criminologists to drive generators. Excessive brutality is not an effective way of combating crime as it builds resentment between law enforcement and the people they are there to protect from lawlessness. On the other hand, if the alternative is letting over-populated hives become horror fests of the worst sorts of crime, then it might be more cost-effective for the Arbites crack as many skulls as they like. Mind, they are still rife with crime, but it's mostly low-key stuff like drugs and forbidden objects now those are really dangerous: xenos artefacts and the like are forbidden for a reason. Life is (literally to the Arbites) the Emperor's currency. Are you going to go on a serial killing and thereby waste the Emperor's currency? Not if you value your life.

It says something that the thing keeping violent crime at a minimum (when compared to the sheer size of Imperial cities) is the fact that, if you murder someone, then that someone can't die for the Emperor and you have therefore stolen from the Emperor himself. Which has rather severe consequences (you stole from the Emperor, you are screwed).

If you want to include the Adeptus Arbites in a story or game of Dark Heresy, I suggest you read/watch/play/whatever the following for inspiration:

  • Judge Dredd (The comic)
  • Judge Dredd (1995 Movie) for stories set in TTS 40k
  • Dredd (2012 movie) for more modern Arbites
  • RoboCop (The 1987 original, not the 2014 remake)
  • Die Hard
  • L.A. Noire and/or L.A. Confidential (For that "law enforcement being full of corrupt douchebags" vibe)
  • Hot Fuzz
  • Patlabor
  • Rainbow Six
  • Counter-Strike
  • Any/all of the 'Dirty Harry' movies
  • Police Academy series

It's important to note that NOT all Imperial law enforcement personel are Adeptus Arbites, indeed most of them are not (this point is stressed repeatedly in the Ciaphas Cain novels - many travellers call local civil police forces the Arbites due to varying titles). A lot of earlier Black Library books don't make this distinction, so take such depictions with a pinch of salt. The Arbites are like the FBI (but not Interpol because Interpol isn’t a police force and actually just enables cooperation between police forces) of the 40K universe, they take on the cases with interplanetary criminals or crimes against the Imperial laws instead just the local planetary laws. Some planets have only a single Arbites agent loosely overseeing all the planetary police. Local Law Enforcement are usually not keen on seeing Arbites enter the picture, usually because it means someone fucked up badly or shit is getting serious. Neither of the two want an Arbites to take a case EVEN further up the food chain and call the local Inquisitor for a friendly chat. Planets that are especially important will have the Adeptus Arbites as their entire police force, such as Terra or Hydraphur. Others will have the Arbites as the leadership of the police force. So feel free to write a story or play a game involving plain old police in spess and have the Arbites as an overseer/boss/meddling (and possibly corrupt) dickhead.

Just to make things more complicated, the Adeptus Mechanicus have equivalent police divisions ; the Astonoymia - the equivalent of a civil police force on forgeworlds and Mechanicus enclaves on Imperial worlds, and the Collegiate Extremis - the rough equivalent of the Adeptus Arbites. Jurisdiction friction gets complicated.

TL;DR: Arbites don't give a fuck about regular crime unless it threatens the wider Imperium, i.e. can lead to rebellions, incursions and Imperial Tithe being unpaid, or if it threatens one of their own (so long as they are of a high-ish rank). If a shoplifter robs a street stall in front of them the Arbites won't care unless the shoplifter is using a weapon that is potentially harmful to them or if they deem it detrimental to public order without being tolerable as a light outlet. If an otherwise upstanding man stands in the way of an Administratum cargo truck for more than absolutely necessary, that's a power maul to the back and a shove to the side.

Pronounced Ar-bee-teh-s. Arr-bih-tes. However you fucking want, GW doesn’t own how you say it (yet).

What is the Law?[edit]

Shira Calpurnia, the protagonist of Matthew Farrer's Arbites books

I AM THE LAW "There are not enough jails, not enough police, not enough courts to enforce a law not supported by the people."

– Hubert H. Humphrey

The Arbites uphold Imperial Law, which is pretty broad. (It has to be, due to the varied nature of the Imperium and its myriad of different people at large.) It can however be very broadly summarized into two main points on a planetary level:

Now, you might think: "that's it?", but the implementation of said points are often one hell of a pain in the behind to deal with and require frequent skull-busting. The first one consists mostly of smoking out and cracking down on Chaos cults, Genestealer infestations, separatists, xenophiles and plain old power-hungry morons wanting to take over a world, system, or sector through violent and tithe disrupting upheaval; or any other joyous thing that could fuck up a planet from the inside. They don't explicitly handle heresy though; that's what the Sisters of Battle and Ordo Hereticus are for (although they do help when asked). The second point of Imperial Law generally revolves around making sure that everyone and everything that is supposed to get on a ship gets onto ships: soldiers and/or materiel supplied for tithes, psykers in Black Ships, etc. They also keep an eye on Rogue Traders/Merchantsmen when they come in port (you never know what one of those shady bastards has and/or wants in their hold) and hunt down smugglers.

On a more galactic scale, the Arbites ensure that new worlds get used to the routine and older, important worlds give what they should and don't get complacent. They tend to be a little harsh because the step after the law is broken is full-on rebellion. The Arbites also serve as proxies for the High Lords, adjudicating conflicts between the Administratum and the Planetary Governors and ensuring their loyalty.

BUT, if that was all they did there wouldn't be nearly enough opportunities for "I AM THE LAW" jackbooted curb-stomping. So on really, really, really important worlds (ie Terra, segmentum capitals, etc) the Arbites stop being the FBI and become the Mega-City One PD. This is where young, idealistic arbiters straight outta schola go to become the jaded motherfuckers the Arbites needs them to be. After a few years on the toughest beats in the galaxy, they are ready to be shipped off to far-flung worlds where they will often bear sole responsibility for ensuring that their planet's governor follows Imperial law, and that the local enforcers maintain order.

Notable Arbitrators[edit]

  • The Grand Provost Marshal of the Adeptus Arbites: Nominal head of the entire organisation and one of the permanent seats amongst the High Lords of Terra. Yeah, keeping the Imperium as a whole in something within hailing distance of lawful is just that important.
  • Luthir Goreman: Lord Marshal of the Adeptus Arbites in the Calixis Sector, Goreman is a former criminal who saw the light after being sent to assassinate a wandering preacher and was converted to the Imperial faith instead. He holds the common folk of the Imperium in utter disdain, seeing them as a bunch of lazy malcontents who require frequent application of brute force to keep them in line.
  • Shira Calpurnia: The scion of a noble house of Ultramar who became an arbitrator and took postings all across the Ultima Segmentum before ending up on Hydraphur, where she had to maintain the law in the face of a bunch of noble families waging secret wars with each other. Despite being a noble, she's pretty down-to-earth and cares more about getting shit done than waiting on decorum. Notably, her family line includes a 1st Company Ultramarine Terminator.

In Tabletop 40k[edit]

Until the early 2000's the Adeptus Arbites featured a very small range of metal miniatures for 40k and Necromunda, and in these earlier editions they were typically (but infrequently) taken as allies by other Imperial armies. Arbites were well equipped with Hydraphur Judge's Armour and the ability to use different ammunition types for their shotguns, although they could take a decent variety of other weaponry as well. Unsurprisingly, Arbites filled approximately the same role of elite baseline-human infantry that Storm Troopers do currently. Although they are one of the last major Adeptus organizations that have yet to be given the full army treatment, it is uncertain when or if GW will ever grant them attention again (considering copyright). Thankfully you can convert Palanite Enforcers with a simple head swap, as third party heads are a dime a dozen.

9th Edition Return[edit]

On January 3rd, 2023, GW released a PDF detailing rules changes for playing Boarding Action missions. In the section on Agents of the Imperium, it is mentioned you can choose to give either NAVIS IMPERIALIS Troops, ACOLYTES, or ADEPTUS ARBITES Troops in your army Objective Secured.

As was revealed on January 27th, we're getting an Arbites Kill-Team in the same vein as the Imperial Navy Breachers. They feature a more copyright-friendly redesign of the buckethelmet, so Geedubs can safely say they're "Judge Dredd inspired" without 2000 AD bringing out the belt.

See Also[edit]

Forces of the Adeptus Arbites
Command: Arbites Judge
Troops: Arbites Enforcer - Arbites Exaction Squad
Chastener - Cult-Stalker - Cyber-Mastiff
Malifixer - Mortiurge - Slate-Agent
Suffering Marshal - Verispex
Walkers: Sentinel
Vehicles: Chimera - Leman Russ Battle Tank
Repressor - Rhino
Flyers: Nuncio-Aquila - Valkyrie
Spacecraft: Punisher-class Strike Cruiser
Allies: Enforcer Security Force
Institutes within the Imperium of Man
Adeptus Terra: Adeptus Administratum - Adeptus Astra Telepathica
Adeptus Astronomica - Senatorum Imperialis
Adeptus Mechanicus: Adeptus Titanicus - Explorator Fleet - Legio Cybernetica - Skitarii
Armed Forces: Adeptus Arbites - Adeptus Custodes - Planetary Defense Force - Sisters of Silence
Imperial Army: Afriel Strain - Adeptus Astartes - Gland War Veteran
Imperial Guard - Imperial Navy - Imperial Knights - Militarum Tempestus
Imperial Cult: Adeptus Ministorum - Adepta Sororitas - Death Cults - Schola Progenium
Inquisition: Ordo Astartes - Ordo Astra - Ordo Calixis - Ordo Chronos - Ordo Hereticus
Ordo Machinum - Ordo Malleus - Ordo Militarum - Ordo Necros - Ordo Sepulturum
Ordo Sicarius - Ordo Xenos
Officio Assassinorum: Adamus - Callidus - Culexus - Eversor - Maerorus - Vanus - Venenum - Vindicare
Great Crusade: Corps of Iterators - Legiones Astartes - Remembrancer Order - Solar Auxilia
Unification Wars: Legio Cataegis
Other: League of Black Ships - Logos Historica Verita
Navis Nobilite - Rogue Traders - Ambassador Imperialis
Abhumans & Denizens: Beastmen - Caryatids - Felinids - Humans - Nightsiders - Troths - Neandors
Ogryns - Ratlings - Scalies - Scavvies - Squats - Subs - Pelagers - Longshanks
Shadowkiths
Notable Members: God-Emperor of Mankind - Malcador the Sigillite
The Perpetuals - The Primarchs - Sebastian Thor
Erda - Ollanius Pius