CO129-028 - Bonham - 1849 [1-3] — Page 54

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

(Very cleverly, the official report from Mr Tarrant dated 3rd July 1847, I forwarded it to Sir John Davis, with a request that His Excellency would be pleased to order a most strict searching into the whole matter. The Acting Attorney General (Mr. Campbell) received his instructions direct from the Governor, and that officer's investigation, on oath of twenty witnesses, together with his opinion thereon, was forwarded to The Right Honorable Earl Grey in Despatch No. 87 of the 9th August, 1847.

The examination before Mr Johnston (one of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for this Colony) which took place on the 27th, 28th, and 29th days of July 1847, and was at my instance, thereof is clearly shown in the examination (a copy of which is attached) forming enclosure No. 2 of the Despatch 87 already alluded to. On this examination, Mr Tarrant made his defence, he was committed for trial by Mr Johnston, and here ended all responsibility, my responsibility, as it is obvious that I could not have acted or done any part further, after it had passed into the Supreme Court. The indictment was drawn up by Mr Campbell as Acting Attorney General, with whom the case rested from that period. The subsequent release of Mr Tarrant from the charge was a matter of some surprise to me, but

Edit History

2026-05-17 08:59:38 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
(Very cleverly, the official report from Mr Tarrant dated 3rd July 1847, I forwarded it to Sir John Davis, with a request that His Excellency would be pleased to order a most strict searching into the whole matter. The Acting Attorney General (Mr. Campbell) received his instructions direct from the Governor, and that officer's investigation, on oath of twenty witnesses, together with his opinion thereon, was forwarded to The Right Honorable Earl Grey in Despatch No. 87 of the 9th August, 1847. The examination before Mr Johnston (one of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for this Colony) which took place on the 27th, 28th, and 29th days of July 1847, and was at my instance, thereof is clearly shown in the examination (a copy of which is attached) forming enclosure No. 2 of the Despatch 87 already alluded to. On this examination, Mr Tarrant made his defence, he was committed for trial by Mr Johnston, and here ended all responsibility, my responsibility, as it is obvious that I could not have acted or done any part further, after it had passed into the Supreme Court. The indictment was drawn up by Mr Campbell as Acting Attorney General, with whom the case rested from that period. The subsequent release of Mr Tarrant from the charge was a matter of some surprise to me, but
Baseline (Original)
!.. (leverly, the official report from. Mr Tarrant dated 3rd July 1847, I forwarded it to Sir John Davis, with a request that His Peale sy would be pleased to order a most Strict searching into the whole_ matter. The Acting Attorney General (Mr. Campbell. ) received his Instructions direct the Governor, and that officer's on from- Investigation. bath of Twenty Witnesses, together with his Opinion thereon, was forwarded to The Right Stonorable_The_ in Despatch 87 of Earl Grey the 9th August, 1847. The Examination before Mr Johnston (one of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for - this (clony ) which took place the 27th 28th, and 29. days on the of July 1847. and was at the cause. 52 my instance, thereof is clearly thewn in the examination (a copyp of which is attached) forming metonire Nob of the Despatch 87 already atwired to. On this examination, Mr Tarrant made Defence, he was committed for trial by Mr Johnston, and here ended all =sibility, my respon as it is as it is obvious, that could not have act or sone, part further, aftor it had into the Supreme Court ._ He drawn up by indictment Mr was Campbell as Acting Allorney General, with whom the case rested from that period. The subsequent release of Mr Tarranti from the charge. was a matter of some surprize to me, but
2026-05-17 08:59:38 · Baseline
View content

!..

(leverly, the official report from. Mr Tarrant dated 3rd July 1847, I forwarded it to Sir John Davis, with a request that His Peale sy would be pleased to order a most Strict searching into the whole_ matter. The Acting Attorney General (Mr. Campbell. ) received his Instructions direct the Governor, and that officer's

on

from-

Investigation.

bath of Twenty Witnesses, together with his

Opinion thereon, was forwarded

to The Right Stonorable_The_

in Despatch N° 87 of

Earl Grey the 9th August, 1847.

The Examination before Mr Johnston (one of Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace for - this (clony ) which took place

the 27th 28th, and 29. days

on the

of July 1847.

and

was at

the cause.

52

my instance, thereof is clearly

thewn in the examination (a copyp of which is attached) forming metonire Nob of the Despatch 87 already atwired to. On this examination, Mr Tarrant made Defence, he was committed for trial by Mr Johnston,

and here ended all

=sibility,

my respon

as it is as it is obvious, that

could not have act or

sone,

part further, aftor it had into the Supreme Court ._ He drawn up by

indictment

Mr

was

Campbell as Acting Allorney General, with whom the case rested from that period. The subsequent release of Mr Tarranti from the charge. was a matter

of

some surprize to me, but

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.