253 F. 538 | 8th Cir. | 1918
That any person who enlisted in the army oí the' United States for service In France would be used for fertilizer, and that is all he was good for, and that the women of the United States were nothing more nor less than brood sows, to raise children to get into the army and be ma.de into fertilizer.
She was indicted for violating that part of section 3, title 1, of the Espionage Act of June 15, 1917 (40 Stat. 219, c. 30), which provides that “whoever, when the United Stales is at war, * * * shall willfully obstruct the recruiting or enlistment service of the United States to the injury of the service or of the United States” shall be punished as therein provided. She was tried, convicted, and sentenced to imprisonment for five years. It is contended that the indictment did not charge an offense under the statute, and that the trial court erred in excluding evidence, and in giving and refusing instructions to the jury. Of these in their order.
The first count will illustrate the claim of the insufficiency of the indictment It charged that at the time and place mentioned the defendant “did commit the crime of willfully obstructing the enlistment service of the United States to the injury of the service of the United States, committed as follows, to wit.” Then follow averments that she made the statements under the circumstances already recited, that she did so with the intention of willfully obstructing the enlistment service of the United States, to the injury of that service, and that there was then war between the United States and the Imperial German government. We will assume, without consideration, that the attack upon the indictment was seasonably made. It is urged that the defendant was merely charged with an attempt and an intention to obstruct the service, whereas the statute requires an actual willful obstruction. But counsel ignore the first part of the count, which, coupled with those following, is equivalent to a charge that the defendant did not merely attempt to obstruct, but
Complaint is made of the exclusion of some evidence of a local political controversy, upon which witnesses for the government and for the defense were divided. The defendant was not. a party to it, and it did not affect her, except as it bore upon the feeling of the witnesses toward each other, and therefore rather remotely upon their credibility, and for that limited purpose sufficient of the evidence was admitted by the trial court.
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The other criticisms of the court’s charge are clearly without merit.
The sentence is affirmed.