Surgeons examine McEntire's wound and proclaim that…
December 1790 CE
Following this, McEntire apparently confesses of "crimes of the deepest dye".
"From the aversion uniformly shown by all the natives to this unhappy man, he had long been suspected by us of having in his excursions, shot and injured them. To gain information on this head from him, the moment of contrition was seized. On being questioned with great seriousness, he, however, declared that he had never fired but once on a native, and then had not killed, but severely wounded him and this in his own defence. Notwithstanding this death-bed confession, most people doubted the truth of the relation, from his general character and other circumstances." ("A Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson". Watkin Tench. Retrieved November 3, 2017.)