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1 Review of Edward Gibbon Wakefield's Facts Relating to the Punishment of Death in the Metropolis 170 (1832)

handle is hein.agopinions/egwfr0001 and id is 1 raw text is: (  170  )

ART. VI.-1. Facts relating to the Punishment of Death in the
Metropolis. By Edward Gibbon Wakefield, Esq. London. 1831.
Q. Reports from the Select Committee on Criminal Commitments
and Convictions.   Communicated by the Commons to the
Lords, 1828.
3. Ditto, 1829.
HAVING no intention to discuss the abstract question of the
justice or fitness of capital punishments, but simply to offer
some remarks on the question, «iether the Englisi penal law, as
it exists, can with propriety be mitigated, we beg, as a preliminary,
to call our readers' attention to a short view of the past and present
condition of that code. In dealing with legislative questions, we
think it is most important, before we decide whither we would go,
to understand exactly where we are, and to view the steps by
which we have arrived at our actual position.
The committee on the Criminal Law in 1819, over which Sir
James Mackintosh so ably presided, made the first important and
successful steps in the work of mitigating severity of punishment. In
compliance with its recommendations, acts were shortly afterwards
passed, repealing a variety of capital punishments, some of which
ought never to have been enacted, others of which remained wholly
unexecuted, or were inapplicable to the existing times. The
provisions for putting to death persons taking away women un-
lawfully ;-persons receiving money to procure a return of stolen
goods;-bankrupts defrauding their creditors ;-persons pulling
lown and destroying turnpike-gates, or flood-gates in rivers;-
Egyptians remaining one month within the realm;-notorious
thieves in the border counties of Northumberland and Cumber-
land ;-persons going in masks or disguises in the Mint ;-persons
attempting to destroy Westminster, Fullam, and other bridges;*
-persons shoplifting to the value of 5s.-were most properly
removed from the statute-book.
Sir Robert Peel, in the valuable acts which he completed in
1826, for the consolidation of the law respecting larceny and
malicious injuries to property, and for improving the administra-
tion of justice, (which we noticed at large on a former occasion,)
introduced still further mitigations into the punishments for crime.
le repealed the penalty of death attaching on the offence of
purloining in a church, and confined that punishment to the
offence of church-robbery with violence. He removed the ca-
pital punishment from the crime of stealing in booths or stalls
* These acts were passed in consequence of the watermen, who were injured by the
new bridges on the Thames, endeavouring to damage and deface them. The felony
of destroying turnpike-gates was created in consequence of the attacks made upon
them on their first introduction.
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