Support For Bid To Clear Pirate

SUPPORT FOR BID TO CLEAR PIRATE

BBC NEWS
d/tayside_and_central/8112769.stm
2009/06/22 13:51:12 GMT

The Scottish Parliament has been asked to support a campaign to
clear the name of a captain who was hanged for piracy more than three
centuries ago.

Captain William Kidd had been appointed by the Crown to tackle piracy
and capture enemy French ships.

In 1698, he looted the Armenian ship the Quedagh Merchant, which was
apparently sailing under a French pass.

However, the captain of the ship was an Englishman and Capt Kidd was
executed in London in 1701.

The Quedagh Merchant had been carrying satins, muslins, gold and
silver when she was attacked by Kidd.

It is thought that a large amount of the booty belonged to the British
East India Company.

As well as the piracy charges, Capt Kidd was accused of murdering
one of his crewmen during a row in 1697.

During his execution, the first rope put around this neck broke,
so he was strung up a second time. That rope also snapped but the
third one held.

" People are going to be worried about the fact that someone can be
used and abused in that way by the state " Bill Kidd MSP Capt Kidd’s
body was dipped in tar and hung by chains along the River Thames to
serve as a warning to would-be pirates.

Legend had it that Kidd hid much of his lo ot, which has prompted
numerous treasure hunts around the world and inspired Robert Louis
Stevenson when writing Treasure Island.

American researchers have been investigating the history of Capt
Kidd, who it is thought was born in Greenock or the Dundee area in
about 1645.

Dan Hamilton and Chris Macort claim that Kidd was set up by King
William III, who wanted to appear tough on piracy but who also stood
to profit from the goods which Kidd seized.

A parliamentary motion has been lodged by SNP MSP Bill Kidd, who
is not related to the pirate, urging that the parliament welcomes a
fresh bid to clear his name following the new research.

Mr Kidd said: "There’s no time scale over which justice isn’t
important.

"I think these types of incidents, whenever they happen, have a lesson
and a morality for all time because otherwise we allow people to get
away with breaking the law and breaking rules and we allow governments
to get away with punishing people wrongly.

"I don’t expect that there’s going to be a mass campaign in the
streets for something that happened 300 years ago but I do expect
that people are going to be worried about the fact that someone can
be used and abused in that way by the state, whatever time in history.

"If someone is accused and hung for something that he didn’t actually
do, when he was operating for the government and he was doing the
job properly, t hat comes down to a criminal act on the part of the
government not on him."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/scotlan