客服中心 | 代理专区 | 网站地图 | 公司简介
当前位置:亿城英语 -> 英语听力大全 -> VOA标准英语 -> 2005 -> 社会新闻(1) -> 印弟安人首领绞死后150年终得平反


 

150 Years after His Execution,

Justice for an Indian Chief

印弟安人首领绞死后150年终得平反

 

A special Historical Court in Tacoma, Washington, has exonerated a prominent Nisqually Indian chief in a unanimous decision that came a century and a half after he was hanged for the murder of a U.S. soldier. The descendents of Chief Leschi have long mourned the execution, calling it a miscarriage of justice. The soldier was shot in 1855 during the era of the so-called "Indian Wars" in what are now the states of Washington and Oregon.

 

Washington's first-ever Historical Court of Inquiry and Justice into session at the State History Museum. On the bench were seven judges in black robes. Before them were a panel of attorneys and an audience of nearly 200 -- mostly tribal representatives from across the state, some in colorful shawls and traditional beaded headdresses. In opening statement, lead defense counsel and Nisqually Tribal Attorney Bill Tobin said this was a case about riding a historical round.

 

Bill Tobin: Leschi is not here to enjoy the fruits of the acquittal he deserved, but the court can take a step toward providing justice, by entering a judgment of exoneration and removing the burden of guilt from Leschi's name.

 

On the stand, Nisqually tribal member and prominent Northwest Indian leader Bill Frank Junior spoke passionately about why clearing Chief Leschi's name remained so important.

 

Bill Frank Junior: We teach our young people about this hanging and it's not a very good story. So we could tell the truth about this hanging and get to our young people and tell them the truth is now being told after 150 years, then we'll have a new beginning.

 

In the mid1850s, Chief Leschi was tried and convicted of shooting to death territorial militia member A.B. Moses. It’s the state's first recorded murder. He is sentenced death by hanging. Questions linger as to whether Chief Leschi was even at the scene of the shooting. But that was not the argument in court on the state. The chief's modern-day defenders say, even if he did pull the trigger, he never should have been charged with murder because the killing occurred during a time of war.

 

Not so, responded lead prosecutor Carl Hultman of the Pierce County Prosecuting Attorney's office, suggesting that it was the shooting itself that started the Indian War.

 

Carl Hultman: The war began after the A.B. Moses killing, that's the beginning of the war. I don't think you could come in and have done whatever sets off the war and then claim that I did it at a time of war, perhaps.

 

During the four-hour trial, Chief Leschi was described as someone who simply wanted to stop the relocation of his people from the banks of the Nisqually River to the prairie. Historical experts suggested that he was the victim of discriminatory justice by hands of an all-white jury. In closing arguments for the defense, John Ladenburg, a former prosecutor, said the trial was about "the future, not the past…about humanity, not history."

                       

John Ladenburg: This case is a rare opportunity for the people of Washington, both Indian and non-Indian, to come together to heal old wounds and create a road towards understanding and respect.

 

After a short deliberation, the court returned its verdict. The death of A.B. Moses happened during a time of war announced Gary Alexander, Chief Justice of the Washington State Supreme Court.

 

Jennifer Mansfield, a direct descendent of Chief Leschi, said she was relieved.

 

Jennifer Mansfield: It's like the injustice is finally done, it's over, everything's clear, his name's good. We can start a new beginning.

 

The exoneration does not have the force of law. But members of the Nisqually tribe say the new verdict will allow them to correct their history…and that is what matters.

 

For VOA news now I’m Austin Jenkins in Tacoma, Washington.

 

注释:

robe [rEub] n. 长袍,罩衣

attorney [E5tE:ni] n. <>律师

shawl [FC:l] n. 披肩,围巾

beaded [5bi:did] adj. 饰以珠的

headdress [5heddres] n. 头巾,头饰

acquittal [E5kwit(E)l] n. 宣判无罪

exoneration [i^5zCnEreiFE n] n. 免罪,免除

prosecutor [5prRsikju:tE(r)] n. 原告,起诉人

deliberation [di7libE5reiFE n] n. 商议

verdict [5vE:dikt] n.(陪审团的)裁决,判决



声明:
这里只提供从网络公开资源收集的低精度英语听力和英语口语语音试听,完全免费供广大英语爱好者试用。我们不保证文章内容一定是完整和正确的。您如需要完整和高精度的语音产品,请在相应的音像书店购买正版产品和教材。除标明的外,这里的语音内容的版权属于原版权所有人。如果试学感觉好,请支持正版!英语听力部分页面可能缺少文本或者语音,请反馈到客服信箱;文字内容仅供英语学习者参考,英语听力音频内容仅供低精度在线试听(不提供下载)。若您打开页面后看不到Realplayer播放框,有可能是没有安装Realplayer播放器,请点这里下载并安装。





北京数码轻舟科技发展有限公司版权所有 ICP京050055号 客服电话:(010)62535917
地址:北京市海淀区成府路35号北楼119室 邮编:100083 传真:(010)62535917
联系我们: 客服邮箱: