Champion (Newspaper) - July 9, 1814, London, Middlesex ' Vot Itll 11'hlfl at is for the Country the week fo of ' arrive up to w iff JULY Lord case is pregnant the most Weighty and most touching * Every Subject of this country has access to a knowledge of the is as a matter of positive duty to investigate its mo. with a view to behaving according to the means arising out of his in the way best calculated to assist the tion of what his conviction tell him to bo as it relates to the public and to the contains the most forcible appeal to every one to bring his opinion to bear on that the of. the popular Sentiment may either furnish to an injured person his or solemnly confirm the disputed decision of the tribunal which has adjudged him guilty of a serious On one the common feelings of as well as a regard for the national honour and the general as of the safety of arc warmly that an innocent man should not suffered toN sink down and he overwhelmed in the gulph of infamy and in the sight of us all standing around while he cries to Us for and extends his arms to us for If Cochrane shall be left by his countrymen to be sacrificed pursuant to his if there shall nevertheless appear tp be good grounds his we must blush for the advantages which its people Would be the occurrence among them of a calamity of this than the hy the 4tad almost said than the wholesale murders of the which were committed by a possessed of atrocities stupidly by an ignorant and debased The Judges and officially concerned in convicting and punishing Lord haye by 4ny their implicated correctness of these ings to the same degree the national isi people shall now adopt the A during the judicial which only lasts may be misled by some great the of the law regulated by prescribed and however generally will often become hardships in their particular cases dence bearing on his may mat it his employed cate may take a of what is the render an judgment and unmerited sentence motives in tribunal whence proceed abundantly 7pr'pve. how much depends holding no official decision whatever astonished when guch a roan r. that it is improperly disgracing a Law to of its proceedings io public investigation for whom we haye res is to the to such a although facte of. a n thf keenest thrust doubt and fore if we teeth would sively in what as legally com only - is me of this we have had his doctrine as to the indelicacy of scrutinizing the conduct of public functionaries been always enormities have been the consequence of its temporary Then how can it escape his as no human institution or person is none ought to or receive an exemption from a superintending cognizance as he must when put to that the Courts may pronounce wrong will he affirm that they would be more disgraced by having the injurious effects of these timely than by in that Worst of disgraces of is the point which is so overlooked by those who take Mr. view of the or at least by their arguments they would seem to that the correction of an error is more disgraceful to the party who is wrong than its perpetration they not seem to understand that the most honourable thing that can be said of the Institutions of any is as a they render it impossible that there should be a wrong without a an without a that each of derives a respectability and strength from this general of afar more legitimate and lasting thali can an which foster aud assist its We the it. ducted case j facts fore doubts of his of some of its most respectable alid impartial It Is the obi this tp that it now deJ volves on the and more particularly on his the of 1n^estt|atev whole business of the arid evidence Oui readers in Weekly our furnish them outline ings of jkhe Courts the Debates in the House of his Lordship's and the Supporting it. Most of to be and they be attentively We Shall and justify our own sentiments on most interesting as they beert influenced by the progressive This will bo of tfs repeat j in a case and judge fpr As we hive remarks possibility of it is proper hdw to the of the pubi p ported by ing its most should inquiry of We ther properly oj cherished opinion of Lord the He - more tP dit thy cause of honest polit won rately published came by tho reports of it in the belief was strengthened saw reason to doubt the propriety We front what we heard and to fancy that Lord guilt might be less heavy than that of the others who were included in the that he had not been made privy to the mysteries of tho although he might culpably at what he to be going understanding that it would tend to his but not perfectly nor seeking to all the With tjur we the same time that Lord Cochrane ban been posed to various hardships and iu the course of the proceedings against him and that these were sufficient to put even innocence in a very precarious situation on its in to justify an Member said in the he need to not only but fortunately who should escape conviction under such The being included in an indictment with & number Of several whom he had by which the evidence and an odium was thrown 6n Hit the accused should the guilt of be proved refusal of the Judge to attend to the they prayed that the trial might be adjourned of giving close thought to statement given to great advantage in framing f hti reply very fierce And terms ql the fact iir the strongest language against his and laying or ho other side supposition of which the ably The proceedings trial were equivocally which LoVd Cochrane was refined cause over whom he had no 1^ did not appear with him to seek with justice as distinct from laVy as it ill this shocked the public a feeling in the It IS pleasing to find Mr. who is by suspected of a disaffected rule is as little as reason it ancient to plead in its very iwi We fdr as everyone ad senseless arid is a more and ancient of The facts iti made personally in When lie