No. 360.

Mr. Bayard to Mr. Langston.

No. 350.]

Sir: I transmit, in connection with, the Department’s previous instruction No. 324 of January 20 last, a copy of a letter addressed to the President by Mr. C. M. Bran, at Paris, France, in regard to the case of Mr. Alexander C. d’Almena, now held in prison as a witness by the authorities at Port-au-Prince.

I have explained to Mr. Brun the nature of the Department’s instruction to you relative to this case, and observed that his communication would be forwarded to you in connection therewith.

I am, &c.,

T. F. BAYARD.
[Inclosure in No. 350.—Translation.]

Mr. Brun to the President.

Mr. President: As the representative in France of Mr. d’Almena, an American citizen of the State of New York, I have the honor to call your Excellency’s attention to the arbitrary arrest of that estimable gentleman, and to the bad treatment which he is now suffering at Port-au-Prince, Hayti, he being in danger of losing everything—his life, his honor, and his property.

It is now more than three months (seventy days had elapsed at last accounts) since your fellow-citizen was placed in solitary confinement, wholly without cause. During this time he has been allowed no communication with any one, not even with counsel or his most intimate friend. The reason alleged is that he was implicated in the frauds that were committed in connection with the Bank of Hayti, and afterwards in the revolutionary movements that took place at Port-au-Prince in September, 1883.

Having been deprived of all means of subsistence, and of all things that are an absolute necessity in hot climates, he owes the preservation of his life to indomitable will-power and his good constitution only. I do not hesitate to assert that so long a period of such solitary confinement is without precedent in Hayti; the greatest criminals have never been subjected to it, much less foreigners. During all this time, more than one hundred and fifty witnesses have been heard, and it has not been possible to make good the slightest charge against him.

It is not to be denied that the Bank of Hayti was robbed, and that those robberies were a matter in which the Government, as well as the bank, was interested; but Mr. d’Almena, who was the attorney for the Paris board of directors, and a mere inspector, had no part therein whatever. The parties who really committed the robberies, and who were doubtless the bank officers themselves, the directors of that board, concealed themselves from him, owing to his perfect honesty.

For the very reason that they were conscious of their guilt, they saved themselves by flight, whereas he came to France at the request of the Paris board, and returned to Hayti of his own accord in the month of October last, in order to attend to his private business. He, therefore, evidently believed that he had nothing to fear from Haytian justice.

It seems to have been designed to make him the scape-goat for all the errors of others, and for reasons of which I am ignorant he has been tormented with a view to shielding the real offenders.

It is not possible, Mr. President, for such a state of things to continue, and your protection must be accorded to an American citizen who has been thus outraged.

I therefore take the liberty to call your attention to these facts, which are in violation of international law, as it is my duty to do, and, as has doubtless already been done by the American consul at Port-au-Prince, and I trust that your Excellency will espouse the cause of the oppressed by issuing the necessary orders for his release, and afterwards for his proper indemnification for all outrages to which he has been subjected.

I have, &c.,

BRUN.

(C. M. Brun, formerly a notary at Paris.)