The Disagreeing jury Failed to Disagree
and indivisible. For some six weeks, up to a few days before the burglary, Amos Vagabond had been a sort of choreboy to the minister, and thus
knew all the ins and outs of the minis terial household. He knew, for instance, that the govern
ment funds were kept in a little tin box, and just where that box was kept. He probably knew also, that when the family all went to church, it was cus
tomary, after carefully locking up, to place the key on a little ledge just above the door.
There were new and strange footprints observed in the snow leading to and
from the house.
675
a few days before. He apparently needed the post-office or other money.
Jim Johnson had several times in dicated to his client the difliculty of making a successful defense, and sug
gested that a plea of guilty would likely materially reduce the coming sentence. But Amos Vagabond would not consider such a thing and insisted on his inno cence. After a thorough investigation of the situation, it appeared to the lawyer that his whole defense opportunity lay
in a prospective hopeless cross-examina tion of a lot of honest witnesses, and in putting on the stand a half-dozen
When a couple of
reluctant farmers to swear, in effect,
ofiicious inhabitants surreptitiously se questered one of the suspect’s Sunday
that so far as they knew the prisoner’s reputation in the matter of robbing post-ofiices before this particular occa
shoes, and placed it in the snow-prints,
the accuracy of the fit seemed un
questionable. other
male
The
fact
neighbors
that
wore
many number
nine shoes of similar pattern, was not considered sufficiently extenuating to exculpate the one derelict toward whom all eyes were directed.
That the eleven dollars and indefinite cents were there in the tin box before this particular Sunday service, was evidenced by the fact that the mistress of the house had sold a postage stamp and made change just as she was going
to church.
After returning, the box
sion was good. The vagabond’s own testimony would count for little, no matter how smooth or plausible a story he told. There was
no chance for an alibi. It was a hopeless situation. The District Attorney was correct in saying that he "had a dead-open-and-shut case” for the government. The day before the trial Johnson again interviewed the prisoner with the view
of insisting on a plea of guilty. “See here, Amos. Do you realize that you are absolutely up against it?
and money were gone and neither were
You are practically certain of being
ever re-discovered, unless some twenty
convicted, and after a fight you'll be sure to get several years in the peni
odd pennies found in the vagabond’s vest pocket were part of the hoard. He insisted not and nobody could prove that he was wrong in his statement. Still this circumstance was looked upon
askance. Aside from those pennies, the only funds found upon the culprit’s person or among his effects when apprehended,
was a fifty-cent piece, and the minister's wife had given him seventy-five cents
tentiary at hard labor.
If you plead
guilty I can probably get the District Attorney and the judge to let you off
with six months in the House of De tention." "Well, I don't care. I didn't do it, and I won’t plead guilty,” decided the
accused, adding, “I’m going to take a chance." "You’ve got about as much chance