In a scandoc outlining mercenary tactics that was released around that time, the former New Republic military colonel Andrephan Stormcaller mentioned that a mercenary using proper forged documentation, especially one produced by an ID processor, could impersonate anyone, from an Imperial customs inspector to the Grand Magnus from Xerton Nine.
Xerton Nine was first mentioned in "Blasters for Hire," a 1994 Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game source article written by Anthony P. Russo and published in Star Wars Adventure Journal 3. The 2009 reference book The Essential Atlas placed the Xerton system, and therefore Xerton Nine, in grid square J-3.
Xerton Nine was first mentioned in "Blasters for Hire," a 1994 Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game source article written by Anthony P. Russo and published in Star Wars Adventure Journal 3. The 2009 reference book The Essential Atlas placed the Xerton system, and therefore Xerton Nine, in grid square J-3.