The 1855 Victorian high treason trials took place between 22 February â 27 March in the aftermath of the Battle of the Eureka Stockade. The Goldfields Commission recommended a general amnesty for all on the runs from the fallen Eureka Stockade. Instead, thirteen of the rebels detained were eventually indicted for high treason. The juries all returned a verdict of not guilty by a jury, and the indictment against Thomas Dignum was withdrawn. On 23 January, the trial of Ballarat Times editor Henry Seekamp resulted in a finding of guilt for seditious libel, and a month later, he was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of six months. The trials have been described as farcical, and the colonial secretary would rebuke Governor Sir Charles Hotham over prosecuting the Eureka rebels for the lofty offence of high treason.
On 14 December 1854, the Goldfields Commission sat for the first time. The first Ballarat session is held four days later at Bath's Hotel. At a meeting with Hotham on 8 January 1855, the gold fields commissioners made an interim finding that the mining tax be scrapped, and two days later made a submission advising a general amnesty be granted in relation to all those persons criminally liable for their association with the Eureka Rebellion.
The first trial relating to the rebellion was a charge of sedition against Henry Seekamp of the Ballarat Times. Seekamp was arrested in his newspaper office on 4 December 1854 for a series of articles that appeared in the Ballarat Times. It has been speculated some of the offending articles were written by either John Manning, George Lang, the embezzling bank manager whose father was the prominent Republican and Presbyterian Minister of Sydney, the Reverend John Dunmore Lang, or Clara Seekamp, Henry's de facto wife. Seekamp was tried and convicted of seditious libel by a Melbourne jury on 23 January 1855 and, after a series of appeals, sentenced to six months imprisonment on 23 March. He was released from prison on 28 June 1855, precisely three months early. During Seekamp's absence, Clara would serve as editor of the Ballarat Times.
The approximately 120 detainees were mainly apprehended at or in the vicinity of the Eureka Stockade on the day of the battle. They marched to the Ballarat police holding cells until indictments could be issued or dropped. Most of the detainees faced a committal hearing presided over by a bench of magistrates. Depositions of crown witnesses for the brief of evidence in the high treason trials were taken between 7-9 December 1854 in Ballarat, mostly from soldiers and police officers who took part in the battle and other witnesses. Each deponent made a signed and sworn written statement concerning their knowledge of the facts concerning the indictment. The testimony was given in open court in the presence of the accused person, who was able to respond via submitting a statement of the accused, although this right was often waived by the detainees. Where the death of a person was involved, the proceedings became an inquest. The deponents were bound by recognisances to give evidence or a signed undertaking to appear at the trial for examination in chief at various venues if required.
Nothing is known about the status of most of the detainees regarding their actual participation in the armed uprising.
It was reported during the high treason committal hearings that the following detainees had been discharged for either "no evidence against the prisoners, or they were only proved guilty of living in the neighborhood of the Eureka Stockade, and giving no information as to its erection". A group of thirteen rebel prisoners were eventually committed to stand for trial for high treason at the Supreme Court in Melbourne.
8 December 1854 hearing
11 December 1854 hearing
The thirteen rebel prisoners had already been served with written summonses and, after being called by name and seated, were asked in the following manner to answer the following indictments:
The prosecution was unable to proceed with any lesser charges, such as murder due to the difficulties associated with the criminal burden of proof. Commissioner of Crown Lands, Gilbert Amos, testified that "it was perfectly impossible for us to be seen until we came within 500 yards." A sergeant in the 40th regiment, James Harris, said that it was only possible to positively identify certain rebels at a distance of 50 yards at the time of the fighting. Private John Donnelly swore under oath that: "It was scarcely light; it was light enough to see what we were doing" and that the sun was shining by the time the stockade was overrun, stating that: "Ten minutes at the break of day makes a great deal of difference."
The defendants were originally to be tried in the same order as they were listed in the indictments as follows: Timothy Hayes, Charles Raphelo Carboni, John Manning, John Joseph, Jan Vennick, James Beattie, Henry Reid, Michael Tuohy, James Macfie Campbell, William Molloy, Jacob Sorrenson, Thomas Dignum and John Phelan. However, due to the pre-trial legal chicanery and the unavailability of witnesses, Joseph, an African American, was the first accused man to go on trial. The prosecution may have hoped to exploit any racial prejudices among the jurors. Two privates from the 40th regiment testified that they saw the defendant fire a double-barreled shotgun, and by implication, that he inflicted the fatal wounds to Captain Wise.
Butler Cole Aspinall, who appeared pro bono as junior counsel for the defendants John Joseph and Raffaello Carboni, was formerly chief of parliamentary reporting for The Argus before returning to practice and was elected to the Legislative Assembly in the wake of the Eureka trials. He would receive many other criminal briefs later in his legal career, including the matter of Henry James OâÂÂFarrell, who was indicted for an 1868 assassination attempt on the Duke of Edinburgh in Sydney. Gavan Duffy said of Aspinall that he was: "one of the half-dozen men whose undoubted genius gave the Parliament of Victoria a first place among colonial legislatures."
As John Molony points out, "No question could arise as to the legality of trying a foreigner for treason, as such a matter had been widely agreed upon as early as 1649". However regarding the mens rea requirement:
The jury deliberated for about half an hour before returning a verdict of "not guilty." The Argus reported that "A sudden burst of applause arose in the court," but it was instantly checked by court officers. The Chief Justice condemned this as an attempt to influence the jury, as it could be construed that a jury could be encouraged to deliver a verdict that would receive such applause; he sentenced two men (identified by the Crown Solicitor as having applauded) to a week in prison for contempt. Over 10,000 people had come to hear the jury's verdict. According to Richard Allan's account published in the Ballarat Star, upon emerging from the courthouse, Joseph "was put in a chair and carried around the streets of the City in triumph with the greatest demonstrations of joy".
Manning's case was the next to be heard. The remaining trials were then presided over by Victorian Chief Justice Redmond Barry, with all the other accused men being acquitted in quick succession except Dignum, whose indictment was withdrawn nolle prosequi. The remaining five were all tried together on 27 March. The lead defence counsel Archibald Michie observed that the proceedings had become "weary, stale, flat, dull and unprofitable." The trials have, on several occasions, been described as a farce.
Following the acquittal of the thirteen prisoners, Lalor and all the other wanted Eureka Stockade rebels were granted a general amnesty on 9 May 1855. The Colonial Secretary Lord John Russell rebuked Hotham over the decision to prosecute them for treason, saying in a despatch: