 
                  
                  
                     1869
                           December 1st
Government Buildings
                   
                  
                  
                     The Council met at Noon
Present
                     
                     The Honbles The Colonial Secretary
                   
                  
                  
                     - "     The Attorney General
- "    The Chief Com of Lands and works
- "    The Collector of Customs
The Colonial Secretary informed the members of Council, he had been directed by the
                     Governor, (who was in consequence of illness unavoidably absent) to request a meeting
                     of the members to afford him their advice in 
determining whether the extreme sentence of the Law should be carried into effect in the cases
                     of three Indians, who were 
tried
tried for murder, and convicted before 
Chief Justice Begbie, at the late assizes on the 
mainland.
2. 
Chief Justice Begbie, who had been requested to attend the 
meeting, was then introduced, and his notes on the trial were read In the care of the Indian
                     known as 
Charley
, alias 
George
, for the murder of 
Alfred Perry, known as 
Mountaineer Perry,
 it was un-animously agreed by the Council that there existed no reason why the extreme
                     penalty of the Law should not be carried into effect.— With this view, the Chief Justice
                     fully concurred.
3. In the case of the Indian known as 
Peter,
 for the murder of 
Patrick O’Brien Murphy in 
1861, the Council, with the exception of 
Mr. Crease, were of opinion that the evidence appeared so unsatisfactory and 

Contradictory, that they would not be justified in 
recommending the extreme penalty of the Law should be carried into effect.—
Mr. Crease in the case of 
Peter,
 considered him guilty, but under the circumstances of the case, would not recommend
                     that the extreme penalty of the Law should be carried out.—
 
                  
                  Chief Justice Begbie, thought the evidence unsatisfactory, and suggested the Prisoner might be Kept in
                     custody, until steps were taken to elicit further evidence.—
  
                  
                  4 In the case of 
the Indian Mootsaik, for the attempted murder of 
John Alway, the Council were of unanimous opinion as to his guilt—The Colonial Secretary, and
                     Chief Commissioner of Lands, and works, considered he was 
as
as deserving of death as any Indian‸that had ever been hanged who had ever been hanged
                     the Colony, and altho’ it has been the practice in 
England, within the last 12 years, (as they were informed by 
Chief Justice Begbie), that the sentence of death should not be carried out, unless life had actually
                     been taken, yet, they were of 
opinion, that the circumstances of this Colony, do not call for a strict adherence to that
                     practice, and especially in this particular case, in which it appears to them an example
                     should be established, to deter others from such an act of Treachery.—
The Attorney General saw no reason for interfering with the sentence of the Court.
                  
                  The Collector of Customs agreed that there was no doubt as to the guilt of 
Mootsaik, and judging by the evidence would say, was deserving of 
death
death, but under the circumstances of the case, would not recommend the extreme sentence
                     of the Law should be carried into effect. — 
The foregoing minute being submitted to the Governor, His Excellency concurred in
                     the opinion expressed by the Council, in the cases of the convicts known as 
George
, and 
Peter.
 —
With regard to the third case of the Boy 
Mootsaik,
 His 
Excellency stated, that 
notwithstanding the opinion of the majority of the Council, he found 
himself unable to regard it, as one in which the extreme penalty should be inflicted, when
                     according to the present state of the English Law, the sentence of Death, would not
                     be carried into effect, in such a case in England; He regarded it as 
dangerous
dangerous to admit the principle, even with regard to the conduct of Offenders from
                     among the white population, that a 
different standard from that 
prevailing in the mother Country should govern the administration of Criminal Law in this Colony.
Painful instances had already come under his notice of a disposition to regard as Venial Offences, in the case of White men, Acts, which would have incurred
                     capital punishment in the case of Indians.
                  
                  More-over, 
the lad Mootsaik, had himself confessed his crime, before he had been accused, and the manner, and
                     circumstances of its Commiform, as well as the absence of any previous malic, or motive
                     suggestion strongly, the suspicion of 
Insanity in the Prisoner’s 
conduct; And life had not 
actually
actually been taken. — 
The Governor stated, that under all these circumstances of the case, he should commute
                     the sentence to Imprisonment for Life, and he understood the Chief Justice to agree
                     with him in the propriety of this course.
                  
                  I certify the above to be a correct copy of the minutes of the Executive Council held
                     December 1st 1869.