Witness. I decline to answer the question. The prisoner having pressed for a reply, the court was cleared, and, on reopening, the deputy judge-advocate announced the opinion of the Court to be that the question was as to a matter of inference, and not to be answered by the witness.
Cross-examination continued. I was at the Curragh in March. I was sworn a Fenian in March, 1865.
When did you first give information of an intended mutiny to your commanding officer?—I decline to answer that question.
Deputy Judge-Advocate. You must answer it.
Prosecutor. Answer the question.
Witness. I gave information in March or April, I am not sure which, this year.
Cross-examination continued. I decline for the safety of the officers to say to whom I first gave information.
State under what circumstances, without mentioning names.—For the purpose of injuring the Fenians, and the leaders, and so forth, to the utmost of my power, I came forward from the motives of loyalty and love of justice.
Reëxamined by the prosecutor. I was, in fact, fired at, as I stated in my cross-examination.
By the Court. The intentions to mutiny existed in the months of January and March, 1866, and the prisoner was aware of them. I was fired at and wounded, and the persons who did it were Fenians.
Private John Abraham examined by the prose-