Defining Treason Why Are Founding Fathers Heroes But Confederate Leaders Not?

Published: April 1, 2021, 6:50 a.m.

b'There is perhaps no other accusation as damning as \\u2018traitor.\\u2019 The only crime specifically defined in the Constitution, the term conjures notions of Benedict Arnold, hundreds of thousands of Civil War deaths, and our own worst fears about living in a country so starkly divided between Red and Blue. Clearly this tern needs clarification. That\\u2019s what today\\u2019s guest, UC Davis law professor Carlton F.W. Larson, author of ON TREASON: A Citizen\\u2019s Guide to the Law , is here to do. He offers an accessible look at the legal definition of treason, as opposed to the way it has recently been used for rhetorical mudslinging.

We discuss how the law has historically been applied to the famous\\u2014and infamous\\u2014actions of people like John Brown, Tokyo Rose, Edward Snowden, Jane Fonda, and Aaron Burr, as well as the largely forgotten cases of men like Walter Allen and Hipolito Salazar, the only man executed by the federal government for treason since the end of the Revolutionary War. The varied stories provide snapshots of America at moments of danger: a nation terrified of an oncoming war at Harpers Ferry; in Hanoi, during a war that caused upheaval at home; and on the banks of the Hudson during the Revolution, a group of traitors from the Crown reeling from the treasonous actions of one of their own.'