Difference between revisions of "Joseph Smith/Legal issues/Trials"

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|sublink1=Question: What is Joseph Smith's 1826 South Bainbridge "trial" for "glasslooking"?
 
|sublink1=Question: What is Joseph Smith's 1826 South Bainbridge "trial" for "glasslooking"?
 
|sublink2=Question: What events resulted in Joseph Smith's 1826 court appearance in South Bainbridge?
 
|sublink2=Question: What events resulted in Joseph Smith's 1826 court appearance in South Bainbridge?
|sublink3=Question: Why was Joseph fined if he wasn't guilty?
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|sublink3=Question: Why was Joseph fined if he wasn't found guilty of anything?
 
|sublink4=Question: Didn't Hugh Nibley claim that a record of this trial would be "the most damning evidence in existence" against Joseph Smith?
 
|sublink4=Question: Didn't Hugh Nibley claim that a record of this trial would be "the most damning evidence in existence" against Joseph Smith?
 
|sublink5=Question: What did critics of the Church during Joseph Smith's lifetime think of the 1826 court hearing?
 
|sublink5=Question: What did critics of the Church during Joseph Smith's lifetime think of the 1826 court hearing?

Revision as of 08:23, 12 April 2017

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Joseph Smith legal issues: Trials


Joseph Smith and legal trials


1826 trial for "glasslooking"

Summary: Joseph Smith was brought to trial in 1826 for "glasslooking." Didn't Hugh Nibley claim that if this trial record existed that it would be "the most damning evidence in existence against Joseph Smith?"

Was Joseph found guilty of being a "con man"?

Summary: Was Joseph convicted of being a "con man" in a court of law in 1826?