To Thomas Jefferson from George Blake, 19 June 1805
From George Blake
Boston 19. June 1805
Sir
Your letter of 12th. march, with the petition of John Southack inclosed, I had the honor duely to receive;
The Judge who presided in the trial of this convict, having, since his return from the Southward, never been in town, until the late session of the Circuit court, I have had no opportunity of confering with him more seasonably on the subject concerning which his opinion was required.
I am now authorised to state, as the decided opinion of the court, with which my own is perfectly coincident, that the Culprit has not the least pretence of claim to a mitigation of his sentence. The fraud of which he is convict was in itself of a flagrant character; besides which it appeared on the trial, to have been but an item in a series of transactions of a similar nature in which the Defendant had long been concerned—
The strong belief which I entertained that the Judges cou’d not, under all the circumstances of the case, recommend this person as a proper object for Executive interference was the reason that I did not take extraordinary pains, to obtain more promptly the result of their deliberations—I have the honor to be with the highest respect & mo perfect Esteem—Yr. Obed St
Geo: Blake
RC (DLC); endorsed by TJ as received 25 June and so recorded in SJL.