Joseph Le Brun starred in the U.K.’sthe British Crown Dependencies’ last public execution on this date in 1875.
Although capital punishment had been moved behind prison walls in Great Britain several years earlier, the relevant statute did not apply to Crown dependencies like the Channel Islands. And it is upon one of these rocks, Jersey to be precise, that Joseph Le Brun allegedly killed his sister. The names in this post are Gallic, as was much of the Channel Islands populace.
The milestone case was a strange and unsatisfying one. It entered the view of the judiciary on the evening of December 15, 1874, when a neighbor of Nancy’s reported to the police that Nancy had been murdered and her brother-in-law Philip Laurens wounded in a shooting. The unmarried Le Brun was a frequent dinner companion of this couple as he had been on this night as well, and there was no hatred known to exist among the trio. According to a True Crime Library summary, police
asked Laurens, who had face injuries and an arm wound, who had attacked him, and he replied: ‘My brother-in-law Joseph shot me.’ They found the body of Nancy covered in blood sitting on a sofa. There was a shawl covering her face and her stockinged feet were in a bucket of water.
They arrested Le Brun, who was in bed, and took him to the house where Laurens was awaiting a doctor. Laurens called Le Brun a ‘hangdog,’ and asked, ‘Why did you fire at me?’ Le Brun replied, ‘It wasn’t me.’
At the inquest on Nancy, Philip Laurens said that when he opened his front door on returning home Le Brun pointed a gun at him and shot him in the face. I said to him, ‘What have you done? You have shot me.’ He made no answer.
This evidence of Philip Laurens’s cinched the hemp for Joseph Le Brun. Certainly Philip did know his brother-in-law well. But on the other hand, well, the guy cracked open his front door, in the dark, and immediately got the business end of a rifle in his face. These are circumstances not conducive to the orderly cognitive processes that you’d prefer in a witness.
There was the suggestion that Le Brun might have contemplated such a crime to rob his sister of 28 quid she had recently come into; however, “there was no blood on his clothes, no powder on his hands, and only small change in his pockets” … besides which Nancy was a drunkard who could have been easily relieved of her windfall without the need for homicide. In fact, all three of the principals involved were known to get into their cups.
The crown prosecutor was openly discomfited by the prospect of executing Le Brun on this evidence and the jury likewise. It returned a guilty verdict for the non-fatal shooting of Laurens, but could not come to a unanimous decision about Nancy — the murder charge that would demand the prisoner’s hanging. It was only because Jersey permitted majority verdicts that Le Brun went to the scaffold after the court polled the 24-man panel. Even so, jurors joined the island’s public sentiment and wrote the Home Secretary begging in vain for a reprieve.
Le Brun too maintained his innocence all the way to the end. On the eve of his death, his brother-in-law paid a visit to the man his evidence had doomed, and their queer exchange only deepened the mystery.
Laurens: Joe, I’m sorry to see you here.
Le Brun: And you still wish to say that it was I who did it?
Laurens: Yes, I repeat, you murdered my wife, as you wished to murder me, and no one else but you did it.
Le Brun: You have proof of that?
Laurens: I did not come here to argue with you. I forgive you, but I say that you committed the crime. Adieu!
(Source)
On this day..
- 1469: Andrea Viarani
- 1335: Prince Moriyoshi, imperial martyr
- 1896: Mirza Reza Kermani, assassin of the Shah
- 1806: Josiah Burnham, despite Daniel Webster's defense
- 1895: Minnie Dean, the only woman hanged in New Zealand
- 1912: Sing Sing's seven successive sparks
- 1936: Manuel Goded Llopis
- 1469: Richard Woodville, father of the queen
- 2008: Leon David Dorsey, the Blockbuster Killer
- 1527: Jacques de Beaune, baron de Semblançay
- 1952: Night of the Murdered Poets
- 1833: Captain Henry Nicholas Nicholls, sodomite