New Search - HELP
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07-03-2016, 10:44 AM
Post: #23
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RE: New Search - HELP
Found this online in a screed referring to a case of classical contract law - Shuey vs. U.S. - authored by Joseph M. Perillo.
ir./lawnet.fordham.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article+3870&content Notice footnote #19 in which Richards supposedly corrected Weichmann's manuscript on the trip to the alley, BUT Weichmann did not make the changes. Why? Two men from Ford's Theatre go out in pursuit of Booth-Jacob Ritterspaugh, a carpenter who worked for the theatre, and Joseph B. Stewart, a member of the audience. Booth is on horseback and Stewart runs after the horse and rider, but the horse is too swift.' 9 When Ritterspaugh returns to the theatre, Spangler slaps him and says "Don't say which way he went." Ritterspaugh asks him what he meant by slapping him. Spangler answers, "For God's sake, shut up."2 "1 Spangler appears to have been crying. Spangler will be 15. See Roscoe, supra note 11, at 99-100. 16. Official Statement of Major H.R. Rathbone, National Archives, War Dept. Records, File "R," R.B., JAO, at 74, reprinted in Roscoe, supra note 11, at 536-38. 17. This is the conventional account and an American legend. E.g., Weichmann, supra note 13, at 152. Booth, apparently contradicting press accounts, wrote in his diary "I shouted 'Sic semper' before I fired." Id. at 209. 18. Weichmann, supra note 13, at 153. 19. That, at least, is Stewart's testimony, accepted by Weichmann in his narrative. See Weichmann, supra note 13, at 154-55. A.C. Richards, who was Superintendent of the Washington Metropolitan Police at the time of the assassination, reviewed a draft of Weichmann's narrative and cast doubt on Stewart's story. Richards, in a letter to Weichmann, described Stewart as a shady lawyer and alleged that Stewart's story was "apocryphal and imaginary." The letter, dated June 10, 1898, is appended by Risvold, the editor of the volume, to Weichmann's narrative. Id. at 417. The quoted language appears on page 418. According to Richards, Stewart and Richards went out of the Theatre together; Booth and the horse were already out of sight. Weichmann did not change the manuscript to reflect Richards' comments |
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