No. 104.
Mr. Baker to Mr. Gresham.

Sir: In my dispatch of the date of August 28, I informed you of the probable expulsion from Nicaragua, without trial or opportunity to be heard and without time to arrange their business affairs, of two citizens of the United States, lately residents of Bluefields, viz, J. S. Lampton and George B. Wiltbank. I inclosed in that dispatch a copy of a protest which I hastily addressed to the President (as dictatorial powers had been conferred upon him, and the decree of the expulsion had been issued by him).

At 11 o’clock on the same morning the prisoners named in my dispatch were sent to Oorinto and placed upon a ship the same evening. It was understood that they would be landed at Punta Arenas, Costa Rica. Their purpose, I understand, was to go from there to Port Limon, and later to the States. About two hours after the prisoners were sent away I received from the state departmentehere the inclosed answer to my protest.

If Messrs. Lampton and Wiltbank were “chief promoters of the disturbances,” and “disturbers” and “revolters,” as therein characterized, I have been misinformed. But if this was true, as charged, it was easily susceptible of proof; and proof rather than unsupported assertion would be more desirable.

I have, etc.,

Lewis Baker.
[Inclosure in No. 104.—Translation.]

Mr. Matus to Mr. Baker.

Sir: The President of the Republic has honored me with the duty of answering Your Excellency’s communication of this date, which has just been received.

The article contained in a newspaper of this morning is correct in saying that Messrs, J. S. Lampton, George B. Wiltbank, and other foreigners who resided in Bluefields, will be expelled from the territory of the Republic, it having resulted from the investigations that they were very much compromised in the crimes of rebellion and sedition perpetrated in the Mosquito Reserve during the first part of July last.

The President is pained at not being able to grant Your Excellency’s request that sufficient time he allowed the said persons to arrange their [Page 179] business affairs, because they are only in this city en route, and it would not be possible to permit them to return to Bluefields, where they have established their business, because there they are the cause of disturbance and constant in tranquillity, for which reasons they have been forced to leave that place.

The constitution of the Republic, Mr. Minister, does not guarantee to foreigners a fixed time in which to arrange their private affairs when they are expelled from the country; such regulations are left to the statute laws, which have not yet been promulgated; and the measure of which we treat being purely one of police, to prevent further uprisings against the public order on the Atlantic Coast, is of an urgent character and does not admit of delay.

Permit me to call your excellency’s attention to the inconvenience and danger that would be caused by allowing the chief promoters of the disorders which occurred to return to Bluefields even for a short time, as they had sufficient time to arrange their business before leaving the Mosquito Reserve.

The Government, Mr. Minister, is unavoidably in duty bound to procure the interior secure [security?] of the State and to have its sovereignty respected; and notwithstanding that the full rigor of the military law could have been applied to the disturbers for their acts, out of consideration and sentiments of humanity toward the nations to which the revolters belong, the Government limited itself to dictate a preventive measure of a political character in use of extraordinary faculties.

With expressions of consideration of my particular esteem for Tour Excellency, I have the honor to subscribe myself your very obedient servant,

M. C. Matus.