Mr. Grant to Mr. Blaine.
Vienna, January 18, 1890. (Received February 8.)
Sir: I have the honor to inclose herewith a copy of the translation of a note which I received yesterday from Baron Pasetti, chief of section of the ministry of foreign affairs. This is in reply to a note which I addressed to Count Kalnoky, under date of October 5, 1889, upon the subject of the arrest, at Wolfurt, Austria, of Mr. Frank Xavier Fisher, a naturalized citizen of the United States. I inclosed to you, in my dispatch No. 37, under date of October 10, 1889, a copy of my note to Count Kalnoky, which was written in compliance with your instruction No. 21, under date of September 19, 1889.
In the copy of the complaint, which was inclosed in your instruction No. 21, Fisher states that he was arrested on the evening of August 21, and was thrust into jail, where he was detained until the morning of August 22. He also states that when he was arrested he informed the local authorities at Wolfurt that he was an American citizen, which fact he offered to prove by showing his passport, which they refused to examine. Baron Pasetti states in his note that the local authorities at Wolfurt or Bregenz say in their report to the minister of foreign affairs that Fisher was arrested and questioned as to his “liability to military duty, and was transported on the same day to the district authorities at Bregenz. Not proving his American citizenship, he had to be confined in order to prevent his escape.”
“On the following day he [Fisher] was examined as early as 7 o’clock in the morning, and having shown by producing his passport that he was a United States citizen, which fact was also proved by the records, which showed that his name was struck from the list of those who were liable to military duty, according to the provisions of the treaty of September 20, 1870, he was immediately set at liberty.”
I think that the local authorities at Wolfurt should have made an investigation as to whether Fisher had violated their laws before arresting him, and that the arrest and confinement in a common jail of an American citizen, with the mere explanation that it was too late in the afternoon or evening to investigate thoroughly his case, is a very serious matter, especially as reference to their own records would have shown them that Fisher was not liable to military duty.
I have, etc.,