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Letter from Thomas Carlin, 30 June 1842

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June 30th 1842
Dear Sir
I have received by the last mail your letter of the 24th instant; in which you have thought proper to give me a statement of Charges against the conduct, and Character of Genl. . I Can say that I regret that any individual should so far disregard his obligations to his God, and to his fellow man, as to condesend to the commission of <​the​> crimes alledged in your letter to have been perpetrated by . It is however in accordance with representatons of his Character, made to me more than two years since, and which I then felt Constrained to believe were true, since which time I have desired to have as little intercourse with him as possible. No resignation of his Commission as Mjr. General of the has reached me. Some weeks since I recd. a short note from him stating that, you had reason to believe that a conspiracy was geting up in the state of , for the purpose <​of​> mobing the Mormons at , and kidnapping you, and taking you to that , and requested to be informed in case of such mob, whether you would be protected by the authorities of the this &C. to which I replied, that as all Ci◊◊zens of the [illegible] <​men​> were held amenable to the laws, so in like manner the rights of all [p. 1]
June 30th 1842
Dear Sir
I have received by the last mail your letter of the 24th instant; in which you have thought proper to give me a statement of Charges against the conduct, and Character of Genl. . I Can say that I regret that any individual should so far disregard his obligations to his God, and to his fellow man, as to condesend to the commission of the crimes alledged in your letter to have been perpetrated by . It is however in accordance with representatons of his Character, made to me more than two years since, and which I then felt Constrained to believe were true, since which time I have desired to have as little intercourse with him as possible. No resignation of his Commission as Mjr. General of the has reached me. Some weeks since I recd. a short note from him stating that, you had reason to believe that a conspiracy was geting up in the state of , for the purpose of mobing the Mormons at , and kidnapping you, and taking you to that , and requested to be informed in case of such mob, whether you would be protected by the authorities of the this &C. to which I replied, that as all men were held amenable to the laws, so in like manner the rights of all [p. 1]
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