Judicial murder

Judicial murder is the intentional and premeditated killing of an innocent person by means of capital punishment;[2] therefore, it is a subset of wrongful execution. The Oxford English Dictionary describes it as "death inflicted by process of law, capital punishment, esp. considered to be unjust or cruel".[3]

Adolf Reichwein before a Nazi People's Court. He was a victim of judicial murder after a show trial.[1]

An early case in which charges of judicial murder were raised was the Amboyna massacre in 1623, which caused a legal dispute between the English and Dutch governments over the conduct of a court in the Dutch East Indies that had ordered the execution of ten English men accused of treason. The dispute centered around differing interpretations of the legal jurisdiction of the court in question. The English believed that this court had not been competent to try and execute these EIC members, and so believed the executions to have been fundamentally illegal, thus constituting "judicial murder". The Dutch, on the other hand, believed the court to have been fundamentally competent, and wished to focus instead on misconduct of the particular judges in the court.

Another early use of the term occurs in Northleigh's Natural Allegiance of 1688; "He would willingly make this Proceeding against the Knight but a sort of Judicial Murder".[4]

In 1777 Voltaire used the comparable term of assassins juridiques ("judicial murderers").

The term was used in German (Justizmord) in 1782 by August Ludwig von Schlözer in reference to the execution of Anna Göldi. In a footnote, he explains the term as

"the murder of an innocent, deliberately, and with all the pomp of holy Justice, perpetrated by people installed to prevent murder, or, if a murder has occurred, to see to it that it is punished appropriately."[5]

In 1932, the term is also used by Justice Sutherland in Powell v. Alabama when establishing the right to a court-appointed attorney in all capital cases:

Let us suppose the extreme case of a prisoner charged with a capital offense who is deaf and dumb, illiterate and feeble minded, unable to employ counsel, with the whole power of the state arrayed against him, prosecuted by counsel for the state without assignment of counsel for his defense, tried, convicted and sentenced to death. Such a result … if carried into execution, would be little short of judicial murder.

Hermann Mostar (1956) defends the extension of the term to un-premeditated miscarriages of justice where an innocent suffers the death penalty.[6]

The term is often applied to show trials that result in a death penalty, and has been applied to the deaths of Nikolai Bukharin,[7] Milada Horáková,[8] and the eleven people executed after the Slansky trial.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. "German Resistance Memorial Center - Biographie". www.gdw-berlin.de. Retrieved 30 August 2020.
  2. Fowler, H. W. (14 October 2010). A Dictionary of Modern English Usage: The Classic First Edition. OUP Oxford. p. 310. ISBN 978-0-19-161511-5.
  3. Judicial murder at OED; retrieved 18 July 2018
  4. J Northleigh, Natural allegiance, and a national protection, truly stated, being a full answer to Dr. G. Burnett's vindication of himself. vi. p37 (1688); quoted in OED
  5. „Ermordung eines Unschuldigen, vorsätzlich, und so gar mit allem Pompe der heil. Justiz, verübt von Leuten, die gesetzt sind, daß sie verhüten sollen, daß ein Mord geschehe, oder falls er geschehen, doch gehörig gestraft werde.“ (von Schlözer, p. 273)
  6. Hermann Mostar. Unschuldig verurteilt! Aus der Chronik der Justizmorde. Herbig-Verlag, Munich (1956)
  7. Wasserstein, Bernard (2009). Barbarism and Civilization: A History of Europe in Our Time. Oxford University Press. p. 198. ISBN 978-0-19-873073-6.
  8. Day, Barbara (November 2019). Trial by Theatre: Reports on Czech Drama. Charles University in Prague, Karolinum Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-80-246-3953-6.
  9. Shenk, T. (17 December 2013). Maurice Dobb: Political Economist. Springer. p. 194. ISBN 978-1-137-29702-0.
  10. Judt, Tony (2006). Postwar: A History of Europe Since 1945. Penguin. p. 186. ISBN 978-0-14-303775-0.
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