67 Ga. 460 | Ga. | 1881
The defendant was convicted of murder on circumstantial evidence and sentenced, under the verdict of the jury,
The evidence is all circumstantial, yet it points steadily to the prisoner as the criminal actor in the deed of blood. The finger posts direct the searcher for truth nowhere else. There is no motive for another to perpetrate the deed. He was tired of her, and she followed in jealousy his attentions to another woman. This had made him angry to the extent of severely beating her before more than once, and he had threatened to kill her. With the woman of whom she was jealous, he passed down the alley, and she followed. The woman left and defendant and deceased talked angrily together, and there or near there her body was found the next day. That silent but never perjured witness, his stick, with its finger prints of blood, was left at the house where he spent the night. There
Judgment affirmed.