OF WILLIAM FREEMAN, FOR THE MURDER OF JOHN G. VAN NEST, INCLUDING THE EVIDENCE AND THE ARGUMENTS OF COUNSEL, WITH THE DECISION OF THE SUPREME COURT GRANTING A NEW TRIAL, AND AN ACCOUNT OF THE DEATH OF THE PRISONER, AND OF THE POST-MORTEM EXAMINATION OF REPORTED BY BENJAMIN F. HALL, COUNSELLOR AT LAW. AUBURN: DERBY, MILLER & CO., PUBLISHERS. 1848. THE NEW YORK ASTOR, LENOX AND Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1848, BY DERBY, MILLER & Co., In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Northern AUBURN, N. Y. TO THE PUBLIC. BEING advised by Legal and Medical men, that the trial of William Freeman for the murder of John G. Van Nest was, in view of the extraordinary character of that tragedy, the mental condition and singular appearance of the prisoner, and the important questions of medical jurisprudence involved in the case, justly regarded by the profession as one of the most remarkable that ever occurred in the United States; and being urgently desired to procure and publish an accurate report of the same, together with an account of the post-mortem examination by Doctor's Brigham, McCall, Briggs, Dimon, Van Epps, Fosgate and Hyde, made with reference to his probable insanity, the publishers of this volume, soon after his death, took measures to obtain such a Report as seemed to be demanded, for publication. That it might be free from suspicion of bias, it was deemed advisable that it should be prepared by some gentleman other than any of the judges or counsel connected with the trial. Learning that it would be agreeable as well to the judges who composed the Court of Oyer and Terminer, as the counsel respectively employed in the case, to have the report prepared by BENJAMIN F. HALL, Esq., a counsellor of this city, that gentleman was solicited to prepare the work. We believe it has been executed with fidelity. Our desire that the volume should embrace the arguments of Gov. Seward and Attorney General Van Buren, induced us to delay the publication until a report of both of them could be obtained. We now give to the public |