Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0> ?p ?o }
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- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 accessdate "2015-06-20".
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 date "1883-07-27".
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 isCitedBy Louise_Upton_Brumback.
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 page "2".
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 quote "The conviction of Charles E. Upton, late president of the City Bank of Rochester, on a charge of embezzling the funds of that institution in order to retrieve his disastrous gambling in oil, is received by the press of that city in an excellent spirit, as a vindication of public justice which not only does not exclude warm personal sympathy for the criminal and his family, but is made more signal by that sympathy. No doubt this feeling of the community was that of the jury which convicted Upton. The verdict, it is owned, was a surprise, as it was expected that the social position and the personal popularity of the defendant would pervert justice through sympathy. It is so rare as to be noteworthy when an American jury in a criminal case can put aside the human feelings of its own members as irrelevant to the case it has to try.".
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 title "Editorial Comment".
- 9c038103c9c0d2e3b38ece5144583751ff929b2bc685f3af4f1cdd67109996c0 work "Pittsburgh Daily Post".