Trial of the President’s Murderer
The trial of Leon Czolgosz, the murderer
of President McKinley, was commenced yesterday, at Buffalo, N. Y.
There is, of course, no question that
the defendant was the murderer. He was seen in the act of assassination
by many persons, and was arrested with the smoking pistol in his
hand immediately after he had fired the fatal shot. He employed
no counsel and showed no desire to have any assistance; but the
court, as is the rule in such cases, assigned as counsel for the
defendant two most distinguished lawyers. They accepted the duty
and announced their intention to see that the prisoner has all the
protection the law can give.
The prisoner, on being arraigned before
the bar of the court, pleaded guilty; but the court ignored his
plea and ordered that it should be entered on the record as not
guilty.
The most astonishing feature of the
case was the ease and readiness with which the jury was selected
and impaneled. Within the course of a very few hours twelve men
were found who would undertake to give the defendant a fair trial;
whereas, in a far less important case under the laws of New York,
several weeks of time were consumed in securing a jury, while more
than a thousand talesmen were examined, before twelve jurymen could
be chosen.
A case in point, under the New York
law, was the trial of one Richard Molineaux, who was accused of
having committed murder by poisoning. After many days had been spent,
and tens of hundreds of talesmen had been examined in the process
of securing a jury, the trial consumed three months (92 days), and
yet in a case in which the assassin of the President of the United
States is on trial a jury was secured in four hours, and it was
announced by counsel that the trial would, in all probability, be
concluded inside of two days.
Counsel for the prisoner intimated
that their sole line of defense would be upon the claim that the
prisoner was insane when he committed the act. It should be remembered
that the trial of Guiteau, the murderer of President Garfield, who
was defended under the insanity plea, continued for seventy days
before it resulted in his conviction. He was tried in a United States
court at Washington, while Czolgosz is being tried in a New York
State court. It is worth while to note that the Czolgosz and the
Molineaux trials show the extremes of judicial methods in New York
State.
In all probability, the murderer of
the President will be convicted. The sort of murderous malice which
dogs its victims until the desired opportunity for decisive action
occurs, and then strikes the fatal blow, may be classed as insanity
by those theorists who deem insane every person whose acts are not
wholly commonplace and dictated by the simplest motives, but the
best rule of law declares that deliberate malice and fixed intention
mark the sanity of a criminal act, and in this case such characteristics
are plainly present, and the safety of society requires that they
shall not be excused.
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