In writing the book on the Almanac Trial I tried to present
my conclusions and to show the line of reasoning I took to arrive at them. I
recognized that other people could look at the same evidence and draw different
conclusions, and that suited me fine. I wanted readers to be able to decide for
themselves what happened, a task which is made harder when they’re reading the
facts filtered through someone else’s conclusions. I therefore included two
appendices which set forth the statements of the major witnesses to the trial
and the court record. Considerations of space prevented me from including
everything I wanted in the appendices, but I’m satisfied that what I omitted
was of lesser importance. Space considerations also prevented me from dealing
with all the details of other works which I believed to be mistaken.
Some errors were caused by the authors not having all the
relevant information. When an author like Sandberg, Beveridge, or Tarbell is
writing a multivolume work about the entire life of Lincoln, the author isn’t
going to be conversant with the minute details of every aspect of Lincoln’s
life. Other errors resulted because the authors, not being criminal trial
lawyers, were not familiar with the ins and outs of prosecuting and defending
criminal cases and hence misunderstood the significance of some evidence. Others
came about because when the authors looked at the evidence, they looked at it
from the vantage point of preconception. Often you fail to see what is there
because your preconceptions have conditioned you to see what you expect. As
Sherlock Holmes once complained to Dr. Watson, they saw but they did not
observe.
Here is an example of what I am talking about. The idea has
become current that when Lincoln moved to have Duff Armstrong released on bail,
the motion was really a motion to reduce the charge from murder to
manslaughter. The Illinois constitution at the time denied bail as a matter of
right to those accused of murder where the proof of guilt was evident or the
presumption great. Nonlawyers looking at the situation used this chain of
reasoning: (1) Murder defendants could not be to bail. (2) Duff Armstrong was
charged with murder. (3) Duff Armstrong could not be released on bail. (4)
Lincoln asked that Armstrong be released on bail. (5) Armstrong could only be
released on bail if he were charged with manslaughter. (6) Therefore, Lincoln
was asking that the charge be reduced to manslaughter. A good, tight line of
reasoning leading to an inescapable conclusion if premise (1) were correct.
Unfortunately for the soundness of the argument, it is not correct. It was possible for murder defendants to get out on bail regardless of whether they were legally entitled to bail.
Bail as a matter of right was denied to murder defendants only if
the proof of guilt was not evident nor the presumption great. This meant that
if the evidence against the defendant was strong, he had no right to bail, but if
the defendant could show that the evidence against him wasn’t strong he was
entitled to bail as a matter of right. Lincoln may have been arguing that the evidence
was weak enough to allow for the defendant to be entitled to bail as a matter
of right. I don’t think that was the
case for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that apparently the
court did not hear testimony on the motion for bail. At least there is no
record of witnesses having testified. I think it is more likely that Lincoln
made another argument to the judge. A capital defendant had no right to bail,
but that doesn’t mean that the judge can’t grant bail as a matter of judicial
discretion.
I like your line of clarification about the way Lincoln was thinking. It clears up a lot of doubts in my mind. Clearly, Lincoln was trying to have the charges dropped. I agree that Lincoln probably thought that the defendant should be denied bail, under those circumstances. The judge in the case, however, had the right to grant bail.
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