This is an archived copy of a post written by Conflict Of Justice (conflictofjustice.com). Used with permission: Conflict Of Justice may not agree with any alterations made.
Honorably Acquitted
Oliver Cowdery wrote in the Messenger and Advocate about Joseph Smith’s 1926 arrest: “Some very officious person complained of him as a disorderly person and brought him before the authorities of the county but there being no cause of action he was honorably acquitted.”(Oliver Cowdery)
All other information relies on forgeries and shaky sources. There are six accounts of the 1826 hearing:
- Benton Account, 1831 – Antimormon Abraham W. Benton studied medicine under Nathan Boynton, who married the sister of one of the 1826 hearing witnesses, Arad Stowell. I’m not sure how this made Benton qualified to know anything about the 1826 trial, but apparently he knew enough to write an article about it in the Evangelical Magazine and Gospel Advocate. Is it just coincidence that Abraham W. Benton’s account includes the same details as unrelated allegations that Obediah Dogberry had published earlier that year in the local paper? Fake.
- Noble Account, 1842 – Presiding judge for Joseph Smith’s later 1830 trial, Joel K. Noble, allegedly wrote a letter he to Antimormon Socialist Jonathan B. Turner. If this letter was written in 1842,hy wasn’t it known about until 1973? In the alleged letter, Noble does not explain how he knows anything about the trial. If this letter is authentic, maybe he just read Benton’s Account in the local newspaper.
- Marshall Account, 1873 – Charles Marshall, a journalist from England, claimed that he copied this account from the original “judicial proceedings” which an anonymous woman in Salt Lake City had shown him. No explanation of who the woman was, where he got the proceedings, or what made him think it was authentic. Fake.
- Purple Account, 1877 – William D. Purple claimed to be a friend of Justice Neeley, who presided at the hearing, and he claimed he had coincidentally taken copious notes of the trial. He also just happened to be a rabid Antimormon who called Mormonism a “giant evil” that threatened “to subvert all principles of law and order.” Then why did he wait over 50 years to mention anything about the trial? Fake.
- Tuttle Account, 1883 – Bishop Daniel Tuttle of the Utah Episcopalian mission published what he claimed was the “official court record,” which he claimed to have received from Emily Pearsall, the niece of Justice Neely. But then he claimed that he gave it to a Methodist group and the “official court record” mysteriously disappeared. Also, this coudn’t have been a “court record,” as misdemeanor trials were not recorded. Fake.
- Walters Court Bills – In 1971, Antimormon Wesley P. Walters “found” the court bills from Justice Neely and Constable De Zeng in the Norwich county jail house in New York. Instead of notifying a historian or scholar, Walters stole the documents, which coincidentally happened to suffer severe water damage, making them highly suspect to be forgeries, and published them in Antimormon propaganda. The timing is also curious, as this was around the time expert forger Mark Hofmann started passing off phony early Mormon documents. Even so, the alleged court bill calls Joseph Smith a “glass looker” but says nothing of the arrest except that it was for a “misdemeanor.”
Contradictions Among Accounts
These accounts are all filled with serious contradictions.
Who brought the charges? | Cowdery:A very “officious” person Benton:The public Noble:Civil authority Marshall:Peter G. Bridgman Purple:Sons of Mr. Stowell Tuttle:Peter G. Bridgman Walter Bills:The Public |
What were the charges? | Cowdery:Disorderly person Benton:Disorderly person Noble:Vagrancy Marshall:Disorderly person & imposter Purple:Vagrancy, without visible means of livelihood Tuttle:Disorderly person & imposter Walter Bills:A misdemeanor |
How many witnesses? | Marshall:5, billed for 7 Purple:4 Tuttle:6 Walter Bills:12 |
What Was The Verdict? | Cowdery:Honorably acquitted Benton:Tried and condemned Noble:Condemned, took bail Marshall:Guilty Purple:Guilty Tuttle:Discharged Walter Bills:Never went to trial |
Joseph Smith’s defense? | Marshall:Spent most of his time farming, going to school, and little time money digging. Used a stone to look for treasure, but no longer solicited this kind of work. Purple:A girl with a stone helped him find his stone buried beneath a tree, and it gave him the power of an “all seeing eye.” |
Who Was The Second Witness? | Marshall:Josiah Stowell Purple:Joseph Smith Sr. – “Mortified” that his son used “this wonderful power” for “filthy lucre.” |
Who Was The Last Witness? | Marshall:Jonathan Thompson – Found treasure chest buried by Indian who killed his friend to guard it. Purple:Jonathan Thompson – A group of robbers enchanted a treasure, and they sacrificed a lamb to get it. |
Phony Charges From A Religious Competitor
It is likely that there was some kind of arrest, as Oliver Cowdery admits it happened. But the case was thrown out in a pre-trial hearing.
The reason Peter Bridgman brought charges of being a “disorderly person” was because his uncle Josiah was joining with the Mormon church and he didn’t like it. Bridgman was licensed as an “extorter by the Methodists, and within three years had helped establish the West Bainbridge Methodist church.” He had religious reasons for bringing down Joseph Smith.
What Was Joseph Smith Charged With? – There is discrepancy across the board about what the complaint actually was. It appears to have been about vagrancy or disorderly conduct–not fraud or anything of that sort. The alleged bill from the judge lists the charge simply as a “misdemeanor,” which is unusually vague for a court document. Perhaps they weren’t settled on what the charge should be? If it was vagrancy, obviously Joseph Smith had a home and was not vagrant, so that’s ridiculous. Vagrancy was defined by the 1813 New York legal code: “…all persons who not having wherewith to maintain themselves, live idle without employment, and also all persons who go about from door to door, or place themselves in the streets, highways or passages, to beg in the cities or towns where they respectively dwell, and all jugglers, and all persons pretending to have skill in physiognomy, palmistry, or like crafty science, or pretending to tell fortunes, or to discover where lost goods may be found; … shall be deemed and adjudged disorderly persons.”(Laws of the State of New York, vol. 1)
It is weird that they would accuse Joseph Smith of pretending to discover lost goods from town to town when Joseph Smith obviously had a home and did not beg. He obviously had “visible means of livelihood,” as he was a farmer. Perhaps this is why the case was so quickly thrown out.
According to the accounts, Joseph Smith had been employed by Josiah Stowell to help search for a lost silver mine and do some other work, and he reportedly used a seer stone. But there is no solid evidence from this trial that Joseph Smith did use a seer stone. The alleged court bill labels Joseph Smith “the glasslooker,” but this is a title it gives him, not an accusation. It doesn’t charge him with “glass looking.” I can’t find any serious explanation of what a “glass-looker” actually is–presumably it has something to do with seer stones–but it is curious that this is given as a title for Joseph Smith instead of the charge against him.
There was no trial, no court record, and no guilty verdict.
No Treasure Digging Happened
“Many people believed in buried treasure, and the ability to see spirits and their dwelling places within the local hills and elsewhere. This is why treasure digging existed. Joseph Smith, his father, and his brother (Hyrum) had a family business treasure hunting from 1820-1827.”
(CES Letter)
Not true. The family business was farming, not treasure hunting, and they were quite successful farmers. In fact, even the fake arrest account claims that Joseph Smith Sr. was “mortified” by Joseph Smith’s activities and urged him to use his seer abilities correctly. His family had nothing to do with it, if it happened at all, and it was not at all a “business.” Newspapers in Joseph Smith’s area were filled with accounts of successful treasure digging. If Joseph Smith did use seer stones, it would make sense for a young teenager to get caught up in the excitement and try his hand at it.
1830 Arrest – Joseph Smith was arrested again in 1830 in the same fashion, on charges of vagrancy, after baptizing locals into the Mormon church and stirring up vindictive religious competitors. Charges were again dismissed, as he clearly had a home and did not move around like a conman would.
Unrelated To Visions – None of the rumors and charges of treasure seeking and seer stones are credible. The rumours probably came from somewhere, yes. The church has a stone in its vaults, after all, which was passed down as a “seer stone” so it is likely that Joseph Smith had one. Maybe he used it as a kid to seek out a silver mine and people’s lost items. Maybe he was even successful at it. The fake accounts admit that the supposed victim of this 1826 hearing, Josiah Stowell, defended Joseph Smith and joined the church. But Joseph certainly never used a stone to “see spirits and their dwelling places.”
The alleged seer stone activities were always unrelated to his spiritual visions and translations. The allegations themselves are not very credible, as they rely on shaky quotes and possibly forged documents.
CES Letter Logical Fallacies
Falsehood | CES Letter claims Joseph Smith was arrested “for trial on fraud.” But none of the accounts claim that the charges were “fraud.” The hearing could not have possibly been a “trial.” There is no evidence that he was arrested–though it is likely to have happened, as a pre-trial examination likely did take place. There is no evidence that the Smith family ran a “treasure hunting business” or that Joseph looked for precious items as early as 1820. |
Shifting Goalposts | Earlier, CES Letter suggested that people of the time were excited about looking for treasure because of Captain Kidd novels. But now it is because they were superstitiously seeing spirits and their dwelling places. Of, CES Letter ignores the newspaper accounts of people actually discovering treasure in the area. |
Guilt By Association | CES Letter thinks treasure hunting existed because people claimed to see spirits in the hills and associates this to Joseph Smith. |
Affirming The Consequent | Not only is this guilt by association, but this typical argument is a logical leap of a consequent: Treasure hunting existed because people were superstitious; Joseph Smith was arrested after looking for a silver mine; therefore, Joseph Smith was superstitious. This is like saying Martin Luther King was arrested therefore he was a terrible criminal. |
Post Hoc | CES Letter uses Joseph Smith’s mention of Josiah Stowell in his ‘history’ as evidence for the argument, but Joseph Smith never said anything to back up this argument. |
Ad Hominem | The entire point of this argument, and the reason he was arrested in the first place, was to smear his character. |
Appeal To Ignorance | When very little is known about an event, it is easy for skeptics to fill in the blank, as people overwhelmingly believe negative opinions before they believe positives. We know very little of the seer stone activities, if they happened at all. The only slightly-credible allegations of “treasure hunting” is Joseph Smith finding some lost coins and looking for a silver mine. |
Tu Quoque | CES Letter‘s ideology is essentially one of superstition, where we should rely on dubious quotes that are found on the internet, yet Mormonism is what is “rooted in folk magic and superstition”? |
Charged Language | Notice that CES Letter calls it treasure “hunting,” a subtle use of violent imagery. Also, notice how skeptics act like there aren’t any treasure hunters today because people don’t believe in spirits today like they did back then. The use of this word “spirits” also builds a false association with “the Spirit” aka. Holy Ghost which CES Letter was just talking about, further making Mormons look superstitious. |
Stereotyping & Dehumanizing New Englanders
“n order to truly understand the Book of Mormon witnesses and the issues, one must understand the magical worldview of people in early 19 th century New England. These are people who believed in folk magic, divining rods, visions, second sight, peep stones in hats, treasure hunting (money digging or glass looking), and so on. Many people believed in buried treasure, the ability to see spirits and their dwelling places within the local hills and elsewhere.”
(CES Letter)
This argument is very disturbing because it portrays not only Mormons but the entire 19th century New England community as a superstitious and backwards community, primitive compared to us today. They push the entire regional community into the ‘out-group’ in order to make it look like Mormons are still part of that ‘out-group.’ This is like a racial supremacist who says another culture is ‘degenerate’ or ‘primitive.’ This racism instigates hatred. It is disturbing how this argument from CES Letter generalizes and portrays a large and diverse region of people as superstitious primitives.
These were people who were pushing the frontier of civilization. Yes, they were almost all Christians, but they were incredibly diverse in beliefs and customs. They were trailblazers, inventors, and farmers who were much closer to the land than we are today. Maybe, just maybe, they know more about superstition is or isn’t than does CES Letter?
It is so easy for us today to sit in judgement of these 19th century trailblazers, in our cushy office chairs, our convenience stores and air conditioned homes, and to brag about how advanced we are above those superstitious Mormons. But how would these skeptics and Antimormons handle that trek across the open plains, and how would they build a civilization out of barren salt flats? How would they deal with the persecution and fear, with death waiting around every corner? Joseph Smith did not have time to parse his words so fragile Millenials of our day wouldn’t get offended.
Even f the allegations are true, so what? What if Josiah Stowell did hire Joseph Smith to find a silver mine? Does that justify him getting arrested? Do Antimormons support arresting teenagers for treasure digging?
I find it ironic that the same skeptics who complain about Mormons ‘stifling free speech’ or patroling people’s behavior attack the victim of this, someone who got arrested for free speech. Did it ever cross CES Letter‘s mind that it was wrong to arrest Joseph Smith on these charges, even if the charges were true? Or should we start going around arresting psychics and card readers? In their zeal to attack Joseph Smith, CES Letter adopts a mindset of a Dark Age church inquisitor.
Attacking The Victim – This argument is the kind of argument that a bully uses against someone he beats up. “If you are so smart, nerd, why can’t you do anything about it?” Joseph Smith allegedly gets arrested for practicing what he considered spiritual abilities, and CES Letter blames him for it? Blaming the victim?
CES Letter builds a narrative where Joseph Smith had to be pure as the white snow as a kid or he isn’t a real prophet. If the people really were all about looking for treasure using rocks, isn’t that something a kid would try to do? Isn’t that the kind of thing a religious competitor would exploit to get him in trouble over? If Joseph Smith really did have prophetic powers to translate ancient documents, couldn’t that manifest in other ways, perhaps in an ability to find coins in the ground? I imagine a future version of CES Letter 200 years from now looking back at a prophet and screaming, “Look, he played with Pokemon Cards in his teenage years!!”
Isn’t it interesting that Mormons need science to verify every single part of their narrative, yet CES Letter gets to make all kinds of guesses based on dubious quotes? We need to prove that every single animal mentioned in the Book of Mormon existed in Book of Mormon times, but CES Letter gets to make all kinds of claims based on a tiny piece of paper some guy supposedly stole from a county courthouse? This is science?
Actually, I think it would be detrimental to Mormonism if undeniable evidence were found, because it would shift our narrative away from matters of faith toward unspiritual confirmation of a historical event from physical evidence. And that’s what CES Letter is trying to do. The shift away from faith serves Satan’s intentions because a person who relies on superstition is not practicing personal agency, but being total reliant on others for his beliefs and actions. I prefer a religion where the prophet is human. I prefer a leader who makes mistakes, who is controversial, and who has some mystery.
This Is An Attack On All Mormons – This isn’t just an attack on Joseph Smith. CES Letter brings the whole Smith family into it. Treasure hunting was a “family business.” Lets follow the logic here and see where it leads. Maybe all Mormons are con-men, disorderly imposters, and frauds? We could all be lawbreakers who need to be arrested and locked up.
CES Letter tells us people looked for treasure because they were seeing spirits in the local hills, like some kind of character out of The Hills Have Eyes. Nobody ever looked for treasure before? People looked for treasure because there were lots of stories of buried treasure, as CES Letter already touched on in their argument about Captain Kidd. But don’t people continue to look for treasure today? The phony association between spiritual visions and treasure hunting is designed to smear any spirituality as a money-making scheme and con. But this is totally baseless, as Joseph Smith never conned anybody. Nobody brought charges against him on conning them. Nobody even really talked about the 1826 arrest for 50 years! Joseph Smith did not make money from the church and he never used “folk magic.”
For people who insist on sound physical evidence, I am stunned that CES Letter would attack a man–the entire 19th century New England civilization–based on such shaky evidence.Complete answers to CES Letter questions about Mormons: