Record 07 · Instance 01 — Massachusetts Bay, 1692

Refuse to plead, and they add weight. Literally.

Giles Corey’s last words were an instruction to his executioners: “More weight.”

A defendant who refused to enter any plea couldn’t legally be tried — so the court applied peine forte et dure: stones piled on the chest, more added each day, until a plea came or the accused died.

Corey chose silence for two days. A never-tried man’s property couldn’t be seized — so his sons kept the farm. He died to protect an inheritance.