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Judicial Murder of Mary E. Surratt

April, 1865 -- The war ended and throughout the Northern States joy and relief reigned. Then, less than a week later, a thunderbolt: the president was dead -- struck down by an assassin's bullet. Could this have been the mad act of a single demented actor? Or was there a wider conspiracy to be rooted out? At this dark moment of national confusion, rage and despair, would the provisions of the Constitution and the procedures of established law be able to deal with the crisis -- or would extralegal methods be needed? Summary by Delmar H. Dolbier (6 hr 40 min)

Chapters

Preface

The Reign of Terror

The Bureau of Military (In)Justice

The Opening of the Court. Was She Ironed?

Animus of the Judges

Conduct of the Trial

Arguments of the Defense

Charge of Judge Bingham

Verdict, Sentence and Petition

The Death Warrant and Execution

Was it not Murder? The Milligan Case

Setting Aside the Verdict. Discharge of Jefferson Davis

Reversal on the Merits. Trial of John H. Surratt

The Recommendation to Mercy

Trial of Joseph Holt

Andrew Johnson Signs another Death Warrant

Conclusion