Revolutionary Criminal Punishments: Treason, Mercy, and the American Revolution

American Journal of Legal History 61(2): 139–76 (2021), https://doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/njab001.

31 Pages Posted: 1 Feb 2021 Last revised: 13 Jan 2023

See all articles by Mugambi Jouet

Mugambi Jouet

University of Southern California Gould School of Law

Date Written: January 20, 2021

Abstract

NOTE: This Article won the 2021 Brophy Prize for the article in the American Journal of Legal History that “most significantly breaks new ground and adds new insights to the study and understanding of United States legal history.”

This Article focuses on the exceptional mildness of criminal punishments for alleged traitors in the wake of the American Revolution. American leaders were disinclined to inflict the death penalty on loyalists who supported British rule in the revolutionary war or on insurgents in the Shays, Whiskey, and Fries rebellions shortly after independence. In fact, the Founding Fathers and other first-generation officials commonly showed remarkable mercy. Numerous “traitors” readily rehabilitated themselves by recognizing their faults, swearing an oath of allegiance to the new American republic, and promising to refrain from further wrongdoing. These revolutionary punishments were a striking prefiguration of modern penal practices: guilty pleas, probation sentences, and rehabilitation policies aiming to reintegrate wrongdoers into society. While American revolutionary punishments comprised stark racial inequities and did not constitute a lost utopia, they were particularly mild for the period. In contrast, the contemporary French Revolution led to wide-scale executions of purported traitors. Besides shedding light on historic events that criminal justice scholars have neglected, the Article’s findings are relevant to ongoing debates about American exceptionalism and the peculiar harshness of modern American justice, including originalist and non-originalist interpretations of the Eighth Amendment. The rise of mass incarceration in the United States and its retention of the death penalty can foster cultural essentialism about how American culture traditionally lacks humanistic sensibilities. In reality, the revolutionary criminal punishments of the late eighteenth century demonstrate how America once was a trailblazer in embracing humane conceptions of justice.

Keywords: American Revolution, Death Penalty, Mass Incarceration, Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Criminal Punishment, Criminology, Dignity, International Human Rights, Race, Eighth Amendment, United States, France, Comparative Law, War, Legal History, Enlightenment, French Revolution, Loyalists, Treason

Suggested Citation

Jouet, Mugambi, Revolutionary Criminal Punishments: Treason, Mercy, and the American Revolution (January 20, 2021). American Journal of Legal History 61(2): 139–76 (2021), https://doi.org/10.1093/ajlh/njab001., Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3770353 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3770353

Mugambi Jouet (Contact Author)

University of Southern California Gould School of Law ( email )

699 Exposition Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90089
United States

HOME PAGE: http://https://gould.usc.edu/faculty/?id=78647

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