[untitled]
The assassination of the President
was avowedly an attack upon the Government of the United States.
It was an attack upon the ruler and not the man, and the purpose
professed by the anarchists whom the assassin represents is to destroy
governments by striking at their heads. No wonder, therefore, that
there is an urgent popular demand that the government of the United
States should defend itself against such attacks and punish the
man or the society by whom they are made. As a matter of fact the
assassin is held in custody by the officers of the state where the
crime was committed and will be tried under the laws of New York
for the murder of William McKinley, and not for the killing of the
President. If the assault had not proved fatal there could have
been no other punishment than that which the laws of the state provided
for an attempt upon the life of any person within its borders, and
it might well happen that in time of political excitement justice
could not be done to an assailant of the President by the authorities
of the place where the attack was made, and in such a case under
existing laws the government of the United States would be powerless
to prevent an assault upon its chief executive.
There are statutes against the obstruction
of an officer in the discharge of his duty, and the Supreme court
held in the NEAGLE case, 135 U. S. 1, that there is such a thing
as “the peace of the United States” which is invaded by an attack
upon a justice of the Supreme court, but in that case the protection
of the United States court was given to the officer who killed the
assailant of Justice Field, and it must be admitted, as was suggested
in the dissenting opinion, that if Justice Field had been killed
the murder of a Justice of the Supreme court could not have been
prosecuted by the United States in its own courts.
There is no need for the United States
to give its courts jurisdiction over assaults upon all persons holding
official position, but an attack upon the President is an attack
upon the government. It affects the country profoundly in every
relation and the prevention and punishment of such attacks should
not be left to local authorities. It is naturally suggested that
the crime be punished as treason, but the very fact that it is regarded
as treason suggests a doubt that it may be punished at all as an
offense against the government under the Constitution of the United
States.
“To compass or imagine the death of
the king” was one of the four things named as treason in the statute
in force in England when the constitution was adopted. 24 Edw. III,
Ch. 2. The constitution declared that treason should consist only
of two of these and this one relating to [641][642]
the death of the king was omitted. It is suggested that to make
an attack upon the life of the president in fact is to make it treason
and an evasion of the constitution, but such a conclusion is not
warranted. It cannot be implied that the United States may not punish
an assault upon its president because the constitution does not
allow it to be included under the vague and dangerous term treason.
There is no king and no king’s wife, and the two provisions relating
to them were left out, but it does not follow that the United States
cannot protect its president and punish those who assail him.
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The protection that is really required
against such attacks as this which has now struck down the President
is protection of the country against the presence of men who are
proclaimed enemies of all government. We have gone far enough in
our welcome to the refugees of all countries, and, while we should
remain an asylum for the oppressed of other nations so long as such
asylum is required, we may, a [sic] least, insist that they shall
accept the country as a refuge and abide by the government as they
find it, or else that they discover a continent or an island for
themselves. A statute excluding persons who are professed enemies
of government, or who are found on investigation to belong to societies
organized for the purpose of conspiracy and sedition, may be enforced
to some extent at least by the machinery of our immigration laws
and will afford us some protection. We must go further than that,
however, and punish by the state, as well as the Federal authorities,
the attempts of newspapers, as well as of professed anarchists,
to incite the people against the persons intrusted [sic] with the
administration of the government. Reckless attacks upon the characters
of public officers are demoralizing and dangerous to public safety,
and no exaggerated regard for liberty of the press ought to stand
in the way of indictment and punishment of libelous and seditious
publications.
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