1 00:00:03,840 --> 00:00:07,760 Speaker 1: In July eighteen eighty one, a man walked into a 2 00:00:07,800 --> 00:00:11,880 Speaker 1: train station, pulled out a gun, and shot the president 3 00:00:12,000 --> 00:00:16,920 Speaker 1: of the United States, President James Garfield didn't die right away. 4 00:00:17,520 --> 00:00:21,240 Speaker 1: For more than two months, he lingered between life and death, 5 00:00:21,720 --> 00:00:26,599 Speaker 1: eventually dying in September eighteen eighty one. The American public 6 00:00:26,760 --> 00:00:31,960 Speaker 1: was a heartbroken and furious. They called for Garfield's assassin, 7 00:00:32,280 --> 00:00:35,879 Speaker 1: a man named Charles Getteau, to be punished, to be 8 00:00:36,000 --> 00:00:40,199 Speaker 1: thrown to wild dogs, to be burned alive, to be 9 00:00:40,280 --> 00:00:44,559 Speaker 1: shot like he had shot Garfield. But as the government 10 00:00:44,640 --> 00:00:49,600 Speaker 1: began to prepare for Getou's trial, a problem emerged. Getaux, 11 00:00:49,880 --> 00:00:55,120 Speaker 1: many medical experts believed, was insane. If this was the case, 12 00:00:55,560 --> 00:00:59,960 Speaker 1: was he responsible for his actions? And if he wasn't responsible, 13 00:01:00,480 --> 00:01:03,800 Speaker 1: how could the public get the closure or the vengeance 14 00:01:04,280 --> 00:01:08,040 Speaker 1: that they longed for. In the end, many wondered could 15 00:01:08,080 --> 00:01:13,080 Speaker 1: the justice system truly deliver justice in a case like this? 16 00:01:13,080 --> 00:01:16,080 Speaker 1: This was the question at the heart of Getou's trial. 17 00:01:16,840 --> 00:01:20,000 Speaker 1: The country had never seen a trial like it. The 18 00:01:20,080 --> 00:01:24,679 Speaker 1: crime was so great, the evidence was so compelling, and 19 00:01:24,800 --> 00:01:29,560 Speaker 1: yet the defendant was so troubled, telling the court that 20 00:01:29,720 --> 00:01:33,840 Speaker 1: God had told him to kill Garfield. Americans watched with 21 00:01:34,000 --> 00:01:37,360 Speaker 1: bated breath as Getou's trial unfolded in the fall of 22 00:01:37,400 --> 00:01:41,400 Speaker 1: eighteen eighty one, each moment more shocking than the last. 23 00:01:42,240 --> 00:01:46,640 Speaker 1: Would Getou be set free, would Garfield be avenged? What 24 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:50,960 Speaker 1: would the verdict mean for the country. Though Getou's trial 25 00:01:51,120 --> 00:01:57,240 Speaker 1: was extraordinary, it wasn't unique. Throughout American history, important trials 26 00:01:57,240 --> 00:02:02,520 Speaker 1: have always raised questions about good and evil, about truth 27 00:02:02,720 --> 00:02:06,040 Speaker 1: and justice, and about who we are as a nation. 28 00:02:07,760 --> 00:02:10,639 Speaker 1: My name is Mira Hayward, and I'll be diving into 29 00:02:10,720 --> 00:02:14,440 Speaker 1: the stories of these trials in my new podcast, History 30 00:02:14,600 --> 00:02:18,679 Speaker 1: on Trial. Every episode will cover a different trial from 31 00:02:18,680 --> 00:02:22,960 Speaker 1: American history, revealing the real people behind the headlines, and 32 00:02:23,080 --> 00:02:26,280 Speaker 1: examining how the legal battles of the past have shaped 33 00:02:26,280 --> 00:02:31,120 Speaker 1: our present. To hear these astonishing trial stories, listen and 34 00:02:31,200 --> 00:02:35,360 Speaker 1: subscribe to History on Trial, out February eighth, on the 35 00:02:35,360 --> 00:02:39,240 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your 36 00:02:39,280 --> 00:02:40,080 Speaker 1: favorite shows.