Hi, re-reading those last items I don't think I explained myself very well. There is a longish list of names under the heading about sentenced to death and others, maybe forty of them. About half way down is the list of seven names and the note about them being Custom House prisoners. There is no information about where most of the others were captured, apart from the few at the top who had been under sentence of death. As for the question of the Custom House captives being sentenced, when I was talking about the death of the Auxiliaries and of Davis the caretaker, the point is that the British wouldn't have had any evidence of any of them being involved in murder, but the fact is, I don't think they even bothered trying them. It was a Guantanamo job - they were enemy combatants interned after being captured in action. And of course, after a few weeks it became clear that the war was over anyway and that eventually they would be released under the terms of the peace.