27 F. Cas. 212 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas | 1873
The offense is charged to have been committed on the 31st day of December, 18G7, and the indictment was not found until the 6th day of May, 1873, —more than five years afterwards. The indictment alleges also that the defendant is a person fleeing from justice in this district, and that he has been thus fleeing since the 1st day of December, 1S69.
The limitation statutes of congress require an indictment for an offense, such as that here charged, to be found within two years from the time the offense was committed; but the-statute contains a proviso, that the bar or the-limitation shall not “extend to any person or persons fleeing from justice.”
It becomes necessary to construe this proviso. It is in evidence that the defendant left the district of Kansas in August, 1869. and that he was afterwards publicly employed in the pay-master’s department of the army in New Orleans, and that he afterwards resided for a time in Little Rock, in St. Louis, and in Colorado, where he was arrested after this indictment was found. Before August, 1869, he had resided for some years in Leavenworth, doing business as a claim agent and
There is also evidence that there was a criminal proceeding pending against him when he left Kansas, in the state court at Leavenworth for a violation of the laws of the state. There is no evidence that the defendant voluntarily returned to the district of Kansas, or had been therein since his departure in 1809.
It is necessary to determine upon the evidence, the motives of the defendant in leaving the state in the summer of 1869,—or more specifically to determine whether he at that time fled from justice.
What is “fleeing from justice,” within the meaning of the statute? Having reference to the facts in this ease, my answer is, it means to leave one’s home or residence or known place of abode, with intent to avoid detection or punishment for some public offense against the United States. It results from, or is implied in this definition, that if the defendant left his home in Leavenworth solely to avoid the criminal justice of the state of Kansas, and not to avoid the criminal justice of the United States, this will not deprive him of the two years limitation.
The criminal codes of the general government and of the states are entirely distinct, as was held by this court in U. S. v. Hawthorne [Case No. 15,332], and in my opinion it cannot be supposed that congress intended to make any provision in respect to persons fleeing from the justice of the states.
It is implied also in the definition above given, that mere departure by the defendant from the limits of the district of Kansas, irrespective of the motives and purposes of such departure, is not a fleeing from justice. An offender may flee from justice, within the meaning of the statute under consideration, though he never left the limits of the district; as for example, by secretly concealing himself, or by not being usually and publicly known as being within it. If the defendant, after his departure from Kansas, publicly resided in various places in the United States, did not conceal his whereabouts, and kept up an open correspondence with his friends in Kansas, these facts may be properly taken into view by the jury in connection with other circumstances in evidence,, in forming their opinion of his intent and purpose in leaving the state in August, 1869.
The jury found for the defendant, on the ground that the prosecution for thé offense was barred.