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able and useful citizens, may be the victims of these votaries of vice and licentiousness. Without some powerful and certain remedy, _our streets will become butcheries overflowing with the blood of our citizens_." The Editor of the "New Orleans Bee," in his paper of Oct. 21, 1837, has a long editorial article, in which he argues for the virtual legalizing of LYNCH LAW, as follows: "We think then that in the circumstances in which we are placed, the Legislature ought to sanction such measures as the situation of the country render necessary, by giving to justice a _convenient latitude_. There are occasions when the delays inseparable from the administration of justice would be inimical to the public safety, and when the most fatal consequences would be the result. "It appears to us, that there is an urgent necessity to provide against the inconveniences which result from popular judgment, and to check the disposition for the speedy execution of justice resulting from the unconstitutional principle of a pretended Lynch law, by authorizing the parish court to take cognizance without delay, against every free man who shall be convicted of a crime; from the accusations arising from the mere provocations to the insurrection of the working classes. "All judicial sentences ought to be based upon law, and the terrible privilege which the populace now have of punishing with death certain crimes, _ought to be consecrated by law_, powerful interests would not suffice in our view to excuse the interruption of social order, if the public safety was not with us the supreme law. "This is the reason that whilst we deplore the imperious necessity which exists, we entreat the legislative power to give the sanction of principle to what already exists in fact." The Editor of the "New Orleans Bee," in his paper, Oct 25, 1837, says: "We remark with regret the frightful list of homicides, whether justifiable or not, that are daily committed in New Orleans. It is not through any inherent vice of legal provision that such outrages are perpetrated with impunity: it is rather in the neglect of the _application of the law_ which exists on this subject. "We will confine our observation to the dangerous facilities afforded by this code for the escape of the homicide. We are well aware that the laws in question are intended for the distribution of equal justice, yet we have too often witnessed the acquittal of delinquents whom we ca
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