[untitled]
We have learned with gratification
of the conviction of the assassin of President McKinley on the eighteenth
day after the assault. The impaneling of the jury was attended with
nothing of the delay which marked the opening of the Molineux case
(tried some eighteen months ago, and at this writing still pending
in the Court of Appeals of New York), though the entire country
had of course both formed and expressed an opinion touching the
guilt of innocence of Czolgosz. Neither was there anything of the
badgering of talesman with all manner of irrelevant questions, which
the press of New York, with practically one voice, now demands shall
be by statute rendered impossible in future in the criminal practice
of that State. The trial was conducted by Justice White with dignity
and dispatch, and the solemn lesson taught to all of Czolgosz’s
way of thinking that they may expect nothing more of the American
people than a short shrift and a tight rope, [432][433]
or a sufficient electric voltage, as the lex loci may provide.
We rejoice that Justice in this case has struck with an iron hand,
without traveling with its traditional leaden heel.
The arguments of counsel in the case
are, however, proper subject for professional comment. That for
the defense, if such it could be called, impresses us as absolutely
unique. We have read it carefully, and, but for the newspaper headlines
classifying it as a defense, we might easily have mistaken it—certainly
five-sixths of it—for the argument for the prosecution. It has throughout
a perfunctory and personally apologetic tone, as utterly foreign
to the ideal defense as it was uncalled for by the facts. The world
knew the circumstances of the connection of counsel with the cause,
and respected the learned counsel for their recognition of their
duty as sworn officers of the court. They were not upon trial,
yet several paragraphs of the “plea” as published are consumed in
an explanation to the jury and the country, which country they were,
of why counsel for the defense were doing their duty.“Good sirs,”
they seem to say, “do not include us in the verdict of guilty which
you will of course render.”
A portion of the speech is devoted
to a congratulation of the community and nation that the prisoner
had not been promptly lynched. The speaker referred to a case of
lynching in the South which he “had read of in a newspaper,” though
he might have taken near-at-hand illustrations of mob violence from
his sister States of Ohio, Indiana and Illinois; and if he had wished
to lay especial emphasis upon his “point” he might have instanced
the recent burning at the stake of a negro in the town of Leavenworth,
Kansas. But of course these cases did not occur to him.
The remainder of his “argument” consisted
of an anecdote of how William H. Seward once saved a negro from
being lynched in the State of New York, and of a vivid statement
of the enormity of his client’s crime. In the comparatively short
time in which he addressed himself to anything resembling a defense
of the prisoner, he took square issue with the court. He said: “We
start with the assumption that the defendant was not mentally responsible
for the crime which he committed,” though the court charged the
jury that “the law presumes the defendant in this case sane.”
Upon the whole case, and after all
proper allowances made for the difficulties of preparing a defence
entirely without the aid or suggestion of the accused, we think
that the attorney making the argument would have done well to follow
the course of his two associates, and to [433][434]
have submitted the case without argument. All must agree that his
remarks benefited the prisoner in no degree whatever, while his
panegyric upon “the orderly conduct of the people of the city of
Buffalo,” when all men know that it was only prompt police action
and the actual secretion of the prisoner which saved him from the
summary vengeance of the same people, was as devoid of fact as his
unkindly mention of the South—a section of the country than which
none deplored more sincerely the tragedy of September sixth or gave
more fitting expression to its grief—was devoid of taste. If, in
the judgment of the learned counsel, the occasion was one for congratulation
of any kind, it should have been in the direction of the efficiency
of the police department of Buffalo.
We cannot conscientiously even pay
the argument the always-doubtful compliment of calling it “a model
of its kind.”
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