Thomas
Scott
On
On February 18, Major Charles Boulton and his men, passing near the Fort, were arrested by Riel's men, 48 were captured, including Thomas Scott. Major Boulton was tried and sentenced to death, but the sentence was never carried out. After causing problems and attempting to escape, Thomas Scott was summoned to appear before a Métis court martial formed in accordance with the custom of the buffalo hunt and presided over by Ambroise Lépine, Louis Riel's lieutenant. The seven members of the court found him guilty of defying the authority of the Provisional Government, of fighting with the guards and insulting the President.
He was sentenced to death by a vote of five
to two and the next day,
Was it an act of vengeance against Scott or
fear of losing the respect of the Métis? Scott was an Orangeman who was
fiercely anti-Catholic and Riel perhaps believed he would make an example of
him. Whatever the real motive, this action excited much controversy. It forced
Riel into exile and shook even his most ardent supporters.
http://www.shsb.mb.ca/Riel/escott.htm