12 - ‘We do not Prosecute Opinions’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 March 2021
Summary
THE first real challenge to Britain's system of political policing came later in the year as a result of yet another gruesome, high-profile assassination. On the afternoon of 10 September 1898, shortly after leaving the Hôtel Beau Rivage in Geneva, the sixty-one-year-old Empress Elisabeth of Austria was attacked by a short, burly looking man and stabbed with a triangular needle file. Within the hour, the empress was dead from suffocation (her right lung having been punctured), leaving worldwide public opinion in a state of appalled disbelief. The bereaved Emperor Franz Joseph declared his incomprehension ‘that a man could be found to attack such a woman, whose whole life was spent in doing good and who never injured any person’, while the socialist L’Aurore described the assassination as ‘the act of an unthinking idiot [and] a stroke of bloody madness’.
The assassin, a twenty-five-year-old French-born Italian named Luigi Lucheni, had offered no resistance to police when apprehended, appearing simply to bask in his newfound notoriety. Despite boasting of being a ‘most dangerous anarchist’, Lucheni was also a clearly disturbed individual, as attested by his erratic behaviour, his express wish to be guillotined, as well as the fact that the Empress Elisabeth had been only a last-minute substitute for his actual intended target, the Duke d’Orleans. Following a brief trial in Geneva, where the death penalty had been abolished, Lucheni received a sentence of life in prison, which he served until his suicide in 1910.
Despite this pathetic dénouement, however, in countries where anarchist outrages had been a common feature all throughout the decade, the official mood was decisively vindictive. In the wake of the assassination, Alessandro Guiccioli, the mayor of Rome, dreaded:
To think the infamous brute was an Italian! What shame this brings once more on our disgraced country! And what a heavy burden for those who with their fanaticism and their ideological sophistry arm these… stupid, perverse animals who call themselves anarchists, and for the governments who have treated this conspiracy of evil forces only with the most benevolent tolerance.
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- State Surveillance, Political Policing and Counter-Terrorism in Britain1880–1914, pp. 179 - 192Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2021