IDAHO
DAILY STATESMAN – BOISE, IDAHO
- DECEMBER 18, 1904 |
EDWARD A. LANCASTER
MUST SERVE SIX YEARS IN PRISON FOR RAPE |
The
supreme court has affirmed the judgment of Judge Steele of the district
court of Idaho County in the case of State vs. Edward A. Lancaster,
appellant. Lancaster was
convicted of statutory rape and sentenced to a term of six years
imprisonment. The contention of the appellant was that the court erred in
failing to require the clerk to state the plea of the defendant to the
jury and also in admitting evidence to prove other like offenses
committed by the defendant on the prosecutrix prior to the date of the
specific offense for which he was tried.
In
the opinion of Chief Justice Sullivan, concurred in by his colleagues,
the court holds that there are exceptions to the general rule in
criminal cases which is that where one specific offense is charged, the
commission of other offenses cannot be proven for the purpose of showing
that the defendant would have been more likely to commit the offense for
which he was on trial. The
proof of other offenses than the one charged in the information is not
admissible for the purpose of proving this distinct offense, but to show
the relation of the parties and as corroborative of the prosecutrix
testimony concerning the particular act relied upon for a conviction.
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IDAHO
DAILY STATESMAN – BOISE, IDAHO
- MARCH 29,
1905 |
GIRL
CONFESSES TO PERJURY
Admits She Swore Falsely Against Edward A.
Lancaster |
A
Grangeville dispatch says” Considerable
comment has been aroused by the turn affairs have taken regarding t he
Edward A. Lancaster assault case, which probably means that Lancaster
will escape the six year penitentiary term imposed on him by Judge
Steele. Lancaster’s case
was first called at the September term of the district court, and was
prosecuted by Estella I. Tefft, his sister-in-law, and by the girl’s
father, resulting in the jury being unable to agree.
At the February term he was found guilty and sentenced to six
years.
The
girl swore during both trials that Lancaster was the father of her
child. Lancaster is
well-to-do and since his conviction has languished in the county jail
here, and has taken his conviction very hard.
A motion will be made before Judge Steele asking that he be
admitted to bail.
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