Allegations are not facts, and they frequently prove to be false. Politics, corruption, bribery, greed, revenge, and blind ideology are often the seeds of false witness that produce character assassination and murder. The Salem Witch Trials of 1692 resulted in the judicial murder of twenty people based on the testimony of false and hysterical witnesses. This is the history of the judicial murder of Henry Wirz in 1865, using a false witness and a military commission that was really a “hanging jury.”
Henry Wirz was a Swiss immigrant, who settled in
Louisiana before the Civil War. He enlisted in the Confederate Army and
by 1864 held the rank of Captain. Captain (later Major) Henry Wirz was
appointed Commandant of the Confederate Prisoner of War (POW) camp at
Andersonville, Georgia, a few months after it was established early in
1864. During its existence in 1864 and 1865, it was the largest
Confederate prison, holding at one time nearly 33,000 Union POWs. Of the
45,000 Union soldiers there during its existence nearly 13,000 died.
Most of these died of diarrhea, dysentery, typhoid, small pox, scurvy,
and hospital gangrene. Dysentery and diarrhea alone accounted for 4,500
deaths from March to August 1864.
More @ The Tribune