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Lila Jimson Trial

Decent Essays

2. Why did the defense attorneys for Lila Jimerson and Nancy Bowen, defendants in the 1930 Buffalo, NY murder trials of Clothilde Marchand, use witchcraft as part of their legal strategy to keep their clients from being executed in New York state for Second degree murder? How did these attorneys demonstrate that Henri Marchand, husband of the deceased Mrs. Clothilde Marchand, was involved in this ‘witchcraft scenario’ though he strenuously denied it during the trials? Include material from “The Red Lilac of the Cayugas: Traditional Indian Laws and Culture Conflict in a Witchcraft Trial in Buffalo, New York, 1930” by Sidney Harring in Spellbound, edited by Elizabeth Reis in your essay. In the 1930’s there was a case against Lila Jimerson and Nancy Bowen (Both Iroquois) for the death of Clothhilde Marchand (White American), both were tried for her murder. Both were originally convicted of her murder, but went through long trials and questionings to find …show more content…

At the beginning of the episode they find their old Ouija Board that had this inscription on the back “To my three beautiful girls, may this give you the light to find the shadows. The power of three will set you free. Love mom” for years the girls didn’t understand what this meant (Charmed, “Something Wicca This Way Comes,1998). As the episode goes on, they read more in their Book of Shadows, that explains their family line and how it has been foretold that when three sisters were born, their family would have the most powerful witches, the family and the world has seen. In this case, “the power of three” refers to these three sisters, and the show explains how important the power of three and sisterhood is. When the three sisters are together, is when their powers are strongest, this making them “seen as stronger than that to any man, enterprise or idea” (Gibson,

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