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The assassination of President McKinley
has forced upon the consideration of the country questions of the
most serious import—questions which have arisen heretofore, but
have been permitted to smolder and to remain unanswered.
The act which resulted in the death
of the President is, of course, murder and punishable by death,
but the motives which prompted the assassin are important. It was
a blow directed, not against Mr. McKinley, but against the President
of the United States; it was prompted not by anger or spite against
the man, but a deep seated prejudice against the office and the
authority it represented. It was executed, not out of hope of any
mere personal advantage, but under a settled conviction that the
success of certain principles of government, called “anarchy,” were
necessary to release the world from an imagined tyranny, and that
the death of those high in authority were the legitimate and nearest
means of its attainment. The assassin, therefore, in this case,
as in every such case, poses as a martyr to principle, and the death
penalty does not call him to repentance. Herein lies the exceeding
seriousness of this question. These principles have other votaries,
and a propaganda which seeks to obtain the same awful and controlling
influence over others. What is the remedy.
The criminal liability of those who
directly incite others to deeds of violence or combine with them
to overthrow the government is one of the first questions which
suggest themselves, and was clearly decided in the cases which arose
out of the anarchist uprising in Chicago in 1886, known as the Haymarket
Cases. In one of these cases the editor of the Arbeiter Zeitung,
who had incited the anarchists to violence together with a number
of their leaders were convicted of murder and executed. Chief Justice
Magruder, of the Supreme Court of Illinois, in passing upon the
case, declared the law to be as follows: “If men combine together
as conspirators to accomplish an unlawful purpose, as the overthrow
of society and government and law, called by them a ‘social revolution,’
and seek, as a means to an end, to print and speak, in order to
incite others to tumult and riot and murder, those who advise or
instigate the others to violence will be held responsible for the
murder that may result from their aid and encouragement.” Spies
v. People, 122 Ill. 1. Further on, in speaking of the liability
of editors and orators who spread the pernicious doctrine of anarchy,
the court advances this bold statement of the law so appropriate
to the present crisis and its lessons: “He who inflames people’s
minds and induces them by violent means to accomplish an illegal
object, is himself a rioter, though he takes no part in the riot.
If he wakes into action an indiscriminate power, he is responsible.
If he gives directions vaguely and incautiously, and the person
receiving them acts according to what he might have foreseen would
be the understanding, he is responsible. It can make no difference
whether the mind is affected by inflammatory words addressed to
the reader through the newspaper organ of a society to which he
belongs, or to the hearer through the spoken words of an orator
whom he looks up to as a representative of his own peculiar class.”
This rule does not deny the right of free speech or of the liberty
of the press, but holds both the orator and the editor liable for
the results which flow from the expression of his sentiments.
The proper limitations on the liberty
of the press and their criminal responsibility for creating a feeling
of discontent among the unthinking masses, and of disrespect for
law and authority, or for instigating to crime and immorality, is
a very difficult problem and one which has never been definitely
or satisfactorily determined. The late case of Re Banks,
56 Kan. 242, goes very far in applying a remedy. In that case a
statute of Kansas providing for punishment for publishing a newspaper
devoted largely to the publication of scandals and accounts of lecherous
and immoral conduct was held not in violation of the constitutional
right of all persons freely to “speak, write, or publish their sentiments
on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of such right.”
The court said: “We entertain no doubt that the legislature has
power to sup- [241][242] press this
class of publications without in any manner violating the constitutional
liberties of the press.” Most authorities, however, are not willing
as yet to go to the extent of this case, and deny the right of the
legislature to prohibit the publication of a newspaper for any reason,
holding that the only proper remedy is against the newspaper and
its publisher, either criminally or civilly, for any abuse of his
privileges. Exparte Neill, 32 Tex Cr. Rep. 275.
Where a newspaper, however, attempts
to ridicule and abuse the judiciary they are treading on very dangerous
ground. A most commendable and wholesome tendency is to be observed
of late years on the part of courts all over the country to hold
newspapers to a strict accountability for all publications derogatory
of the court or its decisions. The rule in this regard was well
stated by the court in the case of State v. Morrill, 16 Ark. 388,
as follows: “Any citizen has the right to publish the proceedings
and decisions of a court, and if he deems it necessary for the public
good, to comment upon them freely, and discuss the fitness or unfitness
of the judges for their stations, but he has no right to attempt
by defamatory publications to degrade the tribunal, destroy public
confidence in it, and dispose the community to disregard and set
at naught its orders, judgments and decrees. Such publications are
an abuse of the liberty of the press, and tend to sap the very foundation
of good order and well-being in society. The liberty of the press
is one thing, and licentious scandal is another.”
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