R. Liston presents his respects to Col. Pickering, Secretary of State. A seaman of the name of Thomas Nash having been committed to jail in Charleston, South Carolina, at the instance of His Majesty's Consul there, on suspicion of his having been an accomplice in the piracy and murder committed on board His Majesty's ship Hermione, and information of the circumstance having been transmitted to Vice Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, a cutter was despatched to Charleston, with an officer on board to whom the man was well known, in order that his person might be identified, and that he should be carried to the West Indies for trial. But on the application of the Consul for the restoration of Nash, in conformity to the treaty of 1794, Judge Bee and the Federal Attorney were of opinion that he could not with propriety be delivered up, without a previous requisition on my part made to the Executive Government of the United States. May I therefore request, sir, that you will be pleased to lay this matter before the President, and procure his orders that the said Thomas Nash be delivered up to justice.
Letter from the Secretary of State to Judge Bee.
Department of State,
Philadelphia, June 3, 1799.
Sir: Mr. Liston, the Minister of His Britannic Majesty has requested, that Thomas Nash, who was a seaman on board the British frigate Hermione, and who, he is informed, is now a prisoner in the jail of Charleston, should be delivered up. I have stated the matter to the President of the United States. He considers an offence committed on board a public ship of war, on the high seas, to have been committed within the jurisdiction of the nation to whom the ship belongs. Nash is charged, it is understood, with piracy and murder, committed by him on board the above mentioned British frigate, on the high seas, and consequently within the jurisdiction of His Britannic Majesty; and therefore, by the 27th article of the Treaty of Amity with Great Britain, Nash ought to be delivered up, as requested by the British Minister, provided such evidence of his criminality be produced as, by the laws of the United States or of South Carolina, would justify his apprehension and commitment for trial, if the offence had been committed within the jurisdiction of the United States. The President has in consequence thereof authorized me to communicate to you "his advice and request" that Thomas Nash may be delivered up to the Consul or other agent of Great Britain, who shall appear to receive him. I have the honor to be, &c.
TIMOTHY PICKERING.
Hon. Thomas Bee,
Judge of the District of South Carolina.
Letter from Thomas Bee, Esq., to the Secretary of State, dated Charleston, South Carolina, July 1st, 1799.
In compliance with the request of the President of the United States as stated in your favor of the 3d. ult., I gave notice to the British Consul that at the sitting of the district court on this day I should order Thomas Nash, the prisoner charged with having committed murder and piracy on board the British frigate Hermione, on such strong evidence of his criminality as justified his apprehension and commitment for trial, to be brought before me on habeas corpus, in order to his being delivered over agreeably to the 27th article of the Treaty of Amity with Great Britain. The Consul attended in court and requested that the prisoner should remain in jail until he had a convenient opportunity of sending him away. I have therefore directed that he remain in prison, until the Consul shall find it convenient to remove him. I have the honor to be, with great respect, your most obedient servant,
THOMAS BEE,
District Judge of South Carolina.
Hon. T. Pickering, Secretary of State.