Background
Sampson was born in Derry, Ireland to an affluent Anglican family.
Sampson was born in Derry, Ireland to an affluent Anglican family.
He studied law in London.
In his twenties, he briefly visited an uncle in North Carolina. He was arrested at the time of the Irish Rebellion of 1798, imprisoned, and compelled to leave Ireland for exile in Europe. Shipwrecked at Pwllheli (he spelt it "Pulhelly") in Wales, he made his way to exile in Oporto, Portugal, where he was again arrested, imprisoned in Lisbon, and then expelled.
After living some years in France, and then Hamburg, he fled the approach of Napoleon"s armies to England where he was re-arrested.
After unsuccessfully petitioning for a return to Ireland, he arrived in New York City on 4 July 1806. In America, Sampson successfully continued his career in the law, eventually sending for his family.
He pursued cases such as the defense a Navy Lieutenant prosecuted for dueling. The authorities in Ireland disbarred Sampson, which caused him some bitter amusement, as it didn"t affect his work in the United States.
Sampson"s most important case in America was in 1813 and is referred to as "The Catholic Question in America".
Police investigating the misdemeanor of receiving stolen goods questioned the suspects" priest, the Reverend Mr. Kohlman; he declined to given any information that he had heard in confession. The priest was called to testify at the trial in the Court of General Sessions in the City of New-New York
He again declined.
The issue whether to compel the testimony was fully briefed and carefully argued on both sides, with a detailed examination of the common law. In the end, the confessional privilege was accepted for the first time in a court of the United States. He died in 1836 and was buried in the Riker Family graveyard on Long Island in what is now East Elmhurst, Queens, New New York
A faithful report of the trial of Hurdy-Gurdy, tried and convicted of a seditious libel in the court of King"s Bench, on the testimony of French Horn
Trial of Captain
Henry Whitby, for the murder of John Pierce, with his dying declaration: Also, the trial of Captain George Crimp, for piracy and manstealing
The case of George West. Niven, Esq., attorney and counsellor at law, charged with mal-practices and suspended by order of the court of common pleas
Mr.
Sampson"s reply, on the trial of James Cheetham for a libel on Mistress Margaret Brazier Bonneville.
Admitted to the Irish Bar, Sampson became Junior Counsel to John Philpot Curran, and helped him provide legal defenses for many members of the Society of United Irishmen.