No need to question this Lincoln conspirator’s guilt
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05-09-2016, 07:18 PM
Post: #20
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RE: No need to question this Lincoln conspirator’s guilt
(05-09-2016 05:16 PM)L Verge Wrote:(05-09-2016 01:05 PM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote:(05-08-2016 08:21 PM)L Verge Wrote: Excellent summation, Anita.I've asked this before and as far as I remember received no reply - if the intention indeed was to kidnap Lincoln, this was AFAIK speculated/intended to happen using a carriage to transport him to Richmond, not on horseback (never read of this possibility/speculation). Why wouldn't they have had all the stuff in the carriage where it would have been available right away without the need of any interrupting of the flight? (This IMO indicates kidnapping had never been the actual goal.) I'm not convinced about the third visit either. I think Booth had enough to keep him busy in the hour before the assassination. Olivia Jenkins testified at John Surratt's trial that a "gentleman named Scott, of the navy" brought her two papers on the evening of the assassination. Mary Surratt in her interrogation of April 28, asked who was at her house the night of the murder, replied, "No one except our own family. A gentleman I don't know called to leave some newspapers for a niece of mine. He did not come in & I don't think I saw him. The little servant girl took the papers." My major issue with Weichmann's claim about Booth's evening visit is that he said nothing about it during his interrogations or during the conspiracy trial--even though he was asked at the trial about a visitor to the house that evening. He said then he did not know the identity of the visitor. He didn't even attempt to speculate that it was Booth. Q. Who came to the house between the period of your return and three o’clock on Saturday morning when the detectives came? Anybody? A. There was some one that rang the bell; but who the person was I do not know. Q. Was the bell answered? A. Yes, sir. Q. By whom? A. It was answered by Mrs. Surratt. Q. Was there any one at the door? A. Yes, sir: I heard steps going into the parlor, and immediately going out, going down the steps. Q. How long was that after you had got back from Surrattsville? A. It must have been about ten minutes. I was taking supper at the time. Q. That was before ten o’clock, was it not? A. Yes, sir: it was before ten o’clock. After the trial, however, Weichmann told Benn Pitmann that Booth had visited the boardinghouse shortly before the assassination. Only after the executions did he make this public, along with his claims that Mary had told him she was expecting a visitor, that Mary had been glad to know about the pickets being withdrawn, that Mary made the remark about rejoicing being turned into mourning, that Mary said she expected the house to be searched, and that Anna Surratt exclaimed that Booth had been at the boardinghouse an hour before the assassination. I believe that most of Weichmann's testimony was truthful, but I suspect that after the trial, and especially after the executions, consumed with guilt, he needed to justify his actions to himself and may well have adjusted his memory accordingly--quite possibly unconsciously. Memory can perform remarkable gymnastics, particularly under stress. |
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