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89 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
89 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
From a standard reference:
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"Treason, a crime against the state to which allegiance is owed,
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consists of attempting to overthrow the government or betraying
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it into the hands of enemies intent on overthrowing it. Under
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English law high treason was once so broad a term that it was
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used until the 19th century to justify punishing all sorts of
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persons who were judged as enemies of the monarch.
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The U.S. Constitution narrowly defines treason and specifically
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declares: "No Person shall be convicted of Treason unless on the
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Testimony of two Witnesses to the same overt Act, or on
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Confession in open Court." This constitutional statement was
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strictly followed by Chief Justice John Marshall in the 1807
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trial of Aaron Burr, who was charged with treason for allegedly
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plotting to establish an independent republic in the Louisiana
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Territory but who was acquitted because the prosecution could not
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prove Burr guilty of "an overt act of levying war."
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Due to the unusually difficult burden of proof, less than 40
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federal prosecutions for treason have occurred, and
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only once in its history has the U.S. Supreme Court sustained a
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conviction for treason (Haupt v. United States, 1947). Many state
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constitutions have treason provisions, but only two persons have
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been successfully prosecuted by states: Thomas Dorr and John Brown.
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Dorr's Rebellion was an uprising in Rhode Island in 1842 to
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secure constitutional reform. At that time the state was still
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governed under the terms of the 1663 colonial charter, which
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restricted voting rights to male property owners. In 1841 a
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reform movement began, led by Thomas Wilson Dorr (1805-54). Dorr
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called a convention (October 1841) which drafted a constitution
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based on universal male suffrage. The state legislature countered
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by drafting its own new constitution; but it was rejected in a
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referendum, and Dorr's constitution was approved.
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Although state government ruled Dorr's constitution illegal, his
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party nonetheless held elections, and as a result, Dorr
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proclaimed himself governor in April 1842. The official
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government then declared martial law, and after some armed
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clashes Dorr fled the state. Later sentenced (1844) to life
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imprisonment, he was released after one year. In the meantime,
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Rhode Island legally adopted (1843) a new, liberalized
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constitution."
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"The American abolitionist John Brown is remembered especially for
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his raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Va., in 1859.
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Born on May 9, 1800, in Torrington, Conn., he grew up in Ohio.
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During most of his adult years Brown wandered from job to job.
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Ill fortune, business reverses, and charges of illegal practices
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followed him from the 1820s onward. By the 1850s, however, he had
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become deeply interested in the slavery question.
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Brown envisioned emancipation by massive slave insurrection, but
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he did not pursue that goal until the 1859 raid on Harpers Ferry.
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Before then, he and five of his sons became embroiled in the
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struggle between proslavery and antislavery forces for control of
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the territorial government in Kansas. By the spring of 1855,
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civil strife had broken out in Kansas and Brown had assumed
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command of local Free-Soil militia. Within a year, proslavery
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forces had sacked the Free-Soil town of Lawrence, an event that
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triggered a bloody retaliation by Brown. During the night of May
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24, 1856, Brown, four of his sons, and two other followers
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invaded the Pottawatomie River country and killed five helpless
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settlers, hacking them with sabers. Brown, who was never caught,
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took full responsibility for the act.
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From then on, Brown became even more preoccupied with abolition
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by slave insurrection. Observers often remarked on his magnetic
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ability to dominate and involve others in his designs. By 1858 he
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had persuaded a number of the North's most prominent
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abolitionists to finance his insurrectionary projects. After
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protracted conspiracy, delay, and diversion, Brown finally chose
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Harpers Fery as his point of attack, hoping to establish a base
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in the mountains to which slaves and free blacks could flee.
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Brown assembled an armed force of 21 men about five miles from
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Harpers Ferry, and on Oct. 16, 1859, they seized the town and
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occupied the federal arsenal.
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The town was soon surrounded by local militia, and federal troops
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under Robert E. Lee arrived the next day. Ten of Brown's army
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died in the ensuing battle, and Brown himself was wounded.
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Arrested and charged with treason, Brown conducted himself with
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great courage and displayed considerable skill in arousing
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Northern sympathy. Many hailed him as a noble martyr, even as
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Southern whites expresed deep outrage at his fanaticism. His
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hanging, on Dec. 2, 1859, symbolically foreshadowed the violence
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of the Civil War, which broke out two years later."
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