As part of an irregular series of blogs looking at notable trials from this month in history, I'd like to enter Mr. Peabody's Wayback Machine. Let's revisit 1845 and the murder trial of Albert Tirrell. Although old, the case offers an opportunity to consider the roles of defense attorneys, prosecutors, and novel defenses.
Twenty-two-year-old Albert Tirrell was no paragon of virtue.
The scion of a wealthy Weymouth, Massachusetts family, he left his wife and two
children to maintain a relationship with Maria Bickford, a prostitute living in
a Boston brothel. Although they traveled and were constantly together, she
refused to abandon her profession. Maria was successful in her work; she could
afford a maid and expensive clothing. The relationship between Bickford and
Tirrell was described as volatile. Maria reportedly said that she enjoyed
quarreling with Albert because they had such a good time making up.
In
September 1845, local authorities charged Albert with adultery for cohabiting
with Maria while married. He surrendered, posted a bond, and returned to Maria.
Albert
visited her at her disreputable boarding house after her last customer on
October 26th, 1845. Late that evening, the proprietor saw and heard
the couple arguing. The next morning, the proprietor and his wife heard a
scream and a heavy thud from the upstairs room. They heard someone running down
the stairs and out the door. Maria was found on her back, a neck wound nearly
cutting off her head. Someone had set fire to the bed on which she lay. At the
foot of the bed was a bloody razor. A man's walking stick and vest in the room were found spattered with blood. The landlord also found a letter addressed with the initials, "A.J.T. to M.A.B."
National Police Gazette
At about the same time, Albert Tirrell arrived at a nearby stable and requested a horse. He had gotten into a little scrape, he reported. When the police tried to find Tirrell, they discovered he had fled. From Weymouth, Tirrell traveled through Vermont to Canada. There, he boarded a ship bound for Liverpool. Bad weather forced the ship back to port. He journeyed to New York and booked a boat for New Orleans. He was arrested in Louisiana.
Tirrell hired Rufus Choate to defend him. A protégé of Daniel Webster, Choate is considered one of the great American lawyers of the 19th Century. An outstanding orator, he was famous for delivering the “longest sentence known to man.” (1,219 words)
The
prosecutor presented a strong circumstantial case, relying on the
abovementioned facts. The witnesses, however, all resided in the brothel, and
no one was beyond impeachment. Additionally, no one witnessed the murder. Still,
robust evidence pointed toward Albert Tirrell.
Then Rufus
Choate began his defense. His strategy was three-pronged. Maria may have killed
herself, the defense argued. Choate’s associates impugned Maria’s character and
suggested that suicide was “almost the natural death of persons of her
character.” This theory suffered, however, from the violent nature of the
injury to her neck. The defense team also presented evidence of Albert’s good
character before he was ensnared by the lascivious Maria. Choate suggested another
resident of the boardinghouse might have done it. And finally, the defense
argued that if Tirrell had killed her, it was while he was sleepwalking.
A parade of
friends and family testified to his sleepwalking habit beginning as early as
age six. They elicited testimony that the somnambulism had increased in
frequency and manifested bizarre behaviors. These episodes,
according to his family, included window-smashing and threatening his brother
with a knife. The dean of the Harvard Medical School testified that a person in
a somnambulistic state could rise, dress, kill, set a fire, and escape.
It is an
essential element of most crimes that the defendant intended to commit
the offense. As a society, we criminalize behavior that a person knows or
should know is wrong. But if they don't understand, then punishment serves no purpose. Usually, this applies to young children or to the insane.
On March
27th, 1845, Rufus Choate gave his closing argument to the jury. He began by
telling them he did not intend to take up much of their time. He then talked
for five hours non-stop. The court recessed for a meal, and when the court resumed,
Choate continued for another hour and a half. He spent much of the
postprandial argument focused on somnambulism. 
Harvard Art Museum
The jury
deliberated for two hours before acquitting Tirrell.
The
strategy worked again when the prosecutor tried to convict Tirrell of arson for
setting the room on fire.
Tirrell
later wrote to Rufus Choate asking the lawyer to return half his legal fee.
He argued that he shouldn't have to pay so much for a case where it had been
too easy to persuade the jury of his innocence.
I do not
want to leave the blog with the impression that somnambulism serves as a
get-out-of-jail card. According to an internet search, the defense has been
tried perhaps sixty times. Most of the time, it has not been successful. Sleep
scientists say it would not work today; Tirrell's behaviors, especially the
flight, cannot be explained by sleepwalking. Even Tirrell did not get away
completely. He went to prison for the original adultery charge. The judge
refused to dismiss the case and sentenced him to three years.
Besides an
interesting fact pattern, the case highlights the roles of the prosecutor and
the defense. The government must prove each element. The government
needs a clear message to explain the defendant’s actions. It has a problem,
even today, when a victim comes from a marginal or ostracized part of the
community.
The
defense, meanwhile, succeeds when it undermines even one necessary element of
the government's case. To do this, sometimes an astute lawyer presents a
unified theory; other times, he or she scattershoots. Sometimes, the defense
merely picks at the government's case, testing its reliability and challenging
the credibility of the witnesses on which it rests. In other cases, the
attorney prosecutes the defense—putting forward an alternative theory that
explains the evidence and exonerates the client.
Choate tried all of the above. He picked at and maligned the government's evidence. He highlighted matters the prosecutor had not brought up--chiefly an eyewitness. He also put forward several alternatives. Choate's chief theory, the one that keeps the murder case of Albert Tirrell in the public eye, was the defense of somnambulism. A novel defense that in this case worked.
Albert Tirrell's murder trial is the March Trial of
the Month.
Now go get a good night's sleep.
Until next time.
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