Border-related violence and crime due to illegal immigration are critically important issues to the people of our state, to my Administration and to me, as your Governor and as a citizen.
–Statement (pdf) by Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer on signing the anti-immigration law, which went into effect July 29, 2010
Some stories are just plain classics.
In February 1903, two Mexicans shot up Goddard Station stagecoach stop, for motivations that were never plain. (There was no robbery, but it might have been revenge.)
The shooters got away, but law enforcement soon enough decided that a couple of railroad workers on the Mexican side of the border matched their description, and contrived to lure them into Arizona where they could be arrested.
Hilario Hidalgo and Francisco Renteria, were put on trial for their lives in Prescott, Ariz., in June 1903, where they were doomed to hang on the strength of eyewitness testimony and thirty minutes of the jurymen’s time. Appeals forbidden, the sentence was executed on this date — not six months after the crime.
With feelings of profound regret and sorrow, I hereby invite you to attend and witness the private and decent and humane execution of two human beings, namely: Richard Roe and John Doe. Crime — Murder.
Said men will be executed on July 31, 1903 at 12 noon. You are expected to deport yourself in a respectful manner and any flippant or unseemly language or conduct on your part will not be allowed. Conduct on anyone’s part bordering on ribaldry and tending to mar the solemnity of the occasion will not be tolerated.
-Sheriff’s invitation to the hanging, quoted in Frontier Justice in the Wild West: Bungled, Bizarre, and Fascinating Executions
The men cracked wise at the reading of their death warrant — “I have heard that repeated so often that if it was a song I would sing it to you,” reported the Los Angeles Times (Aug. 1, 1903) — and with “perfect nerve” checked out, calling only “Adios! Adios!” from the scaffold.
It was the last hanging in Prescott, Ariz.
On this day..
- 1909: Sheikh Fazlollah Noori, anti-constitutionalist martyr
- 1849: Maximilian Dortu, republican martyr
- 1940: Udham Singh, Jallianwala Bagh massacre avenger
- 1934: Otto Planetta and Franz Holzweber, for the Juliputsch
- 1767: Obadiah Greenage, colonial gangster
- 1701: Esther Rodgers, repentant
- 1868: Stefan Karadzha, Bulgarian national hero
- 1812: Hölzerlips, Blood Court prey
- 1722: Cartouche's brother, hanged by the armpits
- 1602: Charles de Gontaut, duc de Biron
- 1959: Cho Pong-am, Presidential runner-up
- 1963: 21 Iraqi Communists