On the morning of December 17, 1827, nine convicts were executed by public hanging in Hobart Town, the capital of the British colony of Van Diemen's Land (now the Australian state of Tasmania). Two months previously they had drowned senior Constable George Rex on Small Island, which was part of the penal settlement at Macquarie Harbor, in front of five bound and gagged witnesses. They offered no defence at their trial. Examination of the Tasmanian colonial convict records shows that “suicide by lottery” involved convicts choosing two men, one to die and the other to kill him. The witnesses would earn a respite when taken away for the trial, and the murderer would be executed. “Death by gallows” could be considered a nineteenth‐century version of an orchestrated suicide reminiscent of more modern “death by cop.” This category of “judicial” murder‐suicide expands the range of contemporary classifications of dyadic deaths.
Funding
Australian Research Council
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History
Publication title
Journal of Forensic Sciences
Volume
63
Issue
4
Pagination
1146-1148
ISSN
0022-1198
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
American Academy of Forensic Sciences
Place of publication
100 Barr Harbor Dr, W Conshohocken, USA, Pa, 19428-2959
Rights statement
Copyright 2017 American Academy of Forensic Sciences