CAPTAIN KNYVETT'S CASE.
By Telegraph—Press Association. DUNEDIN, January 10. Con rerning the Knyvett episode, the "Otago Daily Times" remarks: "Thee conclusion remains unavoidable, that the enquiry was a travesty upon judicial methods, and that it was suggestive more of the procedure that was recently witnessed in France in the Steinheil trial (where the presiding judge was hardly distinguishable from the prosecutor) than of British practice. To express dissatisfaction at the turn this episode has taken is in no way to express approval of Knyvett's action in writing as ne did. The treatment accorded this officer, can bear no other interpretation, however, than that the military authorities of New Zealand would virtually deprive a volunteer officer altogether of a right of complaint. 'Under the circumstances, they need not be surprised if the issue of this unfortunate affair excites considerable indignation in volunteer circles as involving a gross ; miscarriage of justice."
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9687, 11 January 1910, Page 5
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149CAPTAIN KNYVETT'S CASE. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXII, Issue 9687, 11 January 1910, Page 5
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