Mosep Binneed/Legends

Mosep Binneed was a Nimbanel accountant who served Jabba Desilijic Tiure. Like most of his species, Binneed entered a bureaucratic profession and worked for the Hutts, eventually ending up on Tatooine during the early Galactic Civil War. Operating out of Mos Eisley spaceport on Tatooine in the Outer Rim, Binneed managed the finances of crime lord Jabba the Hutt to the best of his efforts, along with a number of other accountants, many of whom were also Nimbanese. He was present in Chalmun's Cantina in 0 BBY when Obi-Wan Kenobi attacked Ponda Baba with a lightsaber.

After the death of Binneed's superior, Lhojugg, Binneed took charge of Jabba's financial affairs and was based in the Hutt's town house. He had many informants and contacts in the organizations of Jabba's criminal rivals, and he used their information to disrupt the competitors' flow of funding. However, he knew that Jabba would have no hesitation to end his life if he failed in his tasks, and Binneed was constantly in fear of such a fate. He had many underlings, though some of them wished to work against Jabba, mismanaging his books and seeking to leave his employ. Jabba was killed in 4 ABY, with many of his former slaves and workers attempting to access his finances and steal them for themselves.

Servant to Jabba
Mosep Binneed was a Nimbanel alive during the time of the Galactic Civil War. Nimbanese were known to be adept bureaucrats, and held a particular innate interest in numbers and accounting; they were also known to almost exclusively serve members of the Hutt species as aides and retainers for centuries before Mosep Binneed's birth, with great loyalty. Mosep, as he was commonly referred to as,   was no exception, becoming an account himself. He eventually entered the service of Jabba Desilijic Tiure, a prominent Hutt crimelord who operated primarily out of Tatooine and Nal Hutta. Binneed was based out of Mos Eisley, Tatooine's main spaceport, along with a slew of other accountants, including a number of other Nimbanese. Binneed and the other Nimbanese wore similar, flat red and tan uniforms, which made it difficult for members of most other species to distinguish the difference between them.

Binneed and his comrades served under the Nimbanel Lhojugg, who was in charge of the Desilijic Complex, Jabba's town house. Binneed sometimes frequented Chalmun's Cantina in Mos Eisley; he was there in 0 BBY, sitting with former Force Adept Leesub Sirln, when Jedi Master Obi-Wan Kenobi used a lightsaber to dismember Aqualish thug Ponda Baba. Such weapons being so rare during the Great Jedi Purge, the crowd that had assembled in the cantina was shocked by the commotion and collectively turned to see Kenobi depart the cantina. Binneed later left the cantina, encountering landspeeder trader Wioslea on his travels. The Vuvrian had just bought a X-34 landspeeder, and Binneed spent some time examining it.

Leading accountant
Around the same time, Lhojugg met his demise after failing to retrieve a CZ-3 containing important information of Jabba Desilijic Tiure's; the Hutt fed his head accountant to a number of Kayven whistlers. Binneed took over as his main accountant, and had numerous underling accountants and assistants. Binneed took his duty seriously, unlike many of his peers who worked against Jabba, and he had many inside contacts in rival organizations to Jabba. These contacts helped the Nimbanel disrupt the cash flow of his employer's competitors, but despite this good work Mosep Binneed was constantly fearful for his life; he knew that one, single mistake would be enough to prompt the Hutt &mdash;who was known to dismiss and kill employees for the most trivial of errors &mdash;to ensure the Nimbanel perished in the same vein as his predecessor.

Binneed had a number of other accountants under his command. Loje Nella was a Riorian assistant to the Nimanbel, though he did so very reluctantly and despised Jabba, to the extent that he purposefully mismanaged the Hutt's finances so as to inconvenience him and obstruct his criminal ventures. Another one of Binneed's reluctant assistants was the Ishi Tib Shasa Tiel; a former accountant for SoroSuub, she had been blackmailed into working for Jabba, so hated her job and longed for a means of leaving it. Gailid was also Binneed's assistant, though also acted as a tax collector. He was more content with his work than some of his peers, enjoying spending time with Klatooinian mechanic Barada. Jabba also employed a number of other accountants at the same time, including the competent Harc Seff and the traitorous Tessek.

In 4 ABY, Jabba perished during the Skirmish at Carkoon, along with many of his underlings. His immense desert citadel was taken over by the B'omarr monks who built it, and much of his funds were stolen by the surviving employees, many of whom went on to work for his rivals.

Personality and traits
Mosep Binneed was a hard and loyal worker, like most of his fellow Nimbanese. He had many inside contacts in rival organizations and he used them to further his employer's means. Unlike many of Jabba's accountants&mdash;who either hated their job and wanted to leave, harbored an intense hatred for the Hutt and attempted to disrupt his criminal operations, or helped the authorities work against him &mdash;he did his best, but he was realistic and knew that this wouldn't always be enough. He recognized that if he made a mistake he would not get another opportunity to make a second.

Behind the scenes
The character who eventually became Mosep Binneed was created for Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope in 1977. He resembled a Walrus, and during shooting wore a red uniform similar to that worn by Imperial officers in other scenes of the film. Known during production as either "Walrus," "Ming," or "Mingo," he appears briefly in the background of the Mos Eisley Cantina and in the streets of Mos Eisley.

For A New Hope, the character of Jabba was going to feature in a scene where Han Solo confronts him in Docking Bay 94. Jabba was to be a "large, repulsive" creature, and in the original shoot of the scene, Declan Mulholland portrayed Jabba as a large human wearing furs. Because of the constraints of realizing Jabba's desired appearance at the time, the scene was never released in the final version of the film. In the Marvel adaptation of the film, Star Wars 2: Six Against the Galaxy, the scene was included, but the likeness of the "Walrus" character was used instead of Jabba. This portrayal of Jabba was later used in Star Wars 28: What Ever Happened to Jabba the Hut? [sic] and Star Wars 37: In Mortal Combat.

In 1983, Return of the Jedi established that Hutts were large, sluglike creatures, making the "Walrus" character depiction incorrect. Later, in 1995, his alien design was identified in Galaxy Guide 12: Aliens — Enemies and Allies as a Nimbanel. A character by the name of "Mosep" was also introduced; since the Nimbanel design had previously been used for Hutts, it was decided to make Mosep Jabba's henchman, and the Nimbanese a species of Hutt servants. In 1998, Decipher, Inc. released a Star Wars Customizable Card Game card of Mosep, establishing that the Nimbanel in A New Hope was the same one as described in Galaxy Guide 12. Ultimate Alien Anthology later provided him with a surname, "Binneed."

There is much fan speculation about Jabba's Nimbanel appearance in What Ever Happened to Jabba the Hut? [sic] and In Mortal Combat. A popular fan theory is that the Jabba in these issues was in fact Mosep masquerading as his master; considering the active physical role "Jabba" plays in issue 28, the story would, according to the theorists, make more sense with Mosep rather than the relatively immobile Jabba. Some fans also suggest that Mosep used the alias of "Jabba the Hut" (Hutt was originally spelled with a single T until 1980), and that other mentions of Jabba using the "Hut" spelling are actually references to Mosep. Star Wars author Abel G. Peña has acknowledged the theory on the StarWars.com message boards, stating that it makes sense and will surely be made an official retcon in time. However, to date it hasn't been made official in canon; the official Star Wars Databank is the only source to address the issue, stating that the events in What Ever Happened to Jabba the Hut? [sic] may have happened in some shape or form, but not how they are presented in the comic.

Appearances

 * A Hunter's Fate: Greedo's Tale webstrip
 * Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope