REASONS for the Indictment of the D. of York, Presented to the Grand-Jury of Middlesex, Saturday June 26. 80. By the Persons here under-named. I. BEcause the 25. Car. II. when an Act was made to throw Popish Recusants out of all Offices and Places of Trust; The Duke of YORK did lay down several Great Offices and Places, (as Lord High Admiral of England, Generalissimo of all His Majesty's Forces both by Land and Sea, Governor of the Cinque-ports, and divers others;) thereby to avoid the punishment of that Law against Papists. II. 30. Car. II. When an Act was made to Disable Papists from sitting in either House of Parliament; There was a Proviso inserted in that Act, That it should not extend to the Duke of York; On purpose to save his Right of Sitting in the Lord's House, though he refuseth to take those Oaths which the Protestant Peers ought to do. III. That His Majesty in his Speech March 6. the 31. Year of his Reign, doth give for a Reason to the Parliament, why he sent his Brother out of England; because he would leave no man room to say, that he had not removed all Cause which might influence him to Popish Counsels. IV. That there have been divers Letters read in both Houses of Parliament, and at the Secret Committees of both Houses, from several Cardinals, and others at Rome; and also from other Popish Bishops, and Agents of the Pope, in other Foreign parts, which do apparently show the great Correspondencies between the D. of Y. and the Pope: And how the Pope could not choose but weep for Joy, at the reading some of the Duke's Letters; and what great satisfaction it was to the Pope to hear the D. was advanced to the Catholic Religion. That the Pope hath granted Breev's to the D. sent him Beads, ample Indulgences, with much more to this purpose. V. That the whole House of Commons hath declared him to be a Papist in their Votes, Sunday, April 6. 1679. Resolved, Nemine Contradicente, That the Duke of York's being a Papist, and his hopes of coming such to the Crown, has given the greatest Countenance and Encouragement to the present Conspiracy and Designs of the Papists against the King and Protestant Religion.— What this Conspiracy and Design is, will appear by a Declaration of both Houses of Parliament, March 25. 1679. Resolved, Nemine Contradicente, by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons in Parliament Assembled; That they do Declare, That they are fully satisfied, by the Proofs they have heard, There now is, and for divers Years last passed hath been a Horrid and Treasonable PLOT and Conspiracy, Contrived, and carried on by those of the Popish Religion, for the Murdering of his Majesty's Sacred Person, and for the subverting the Protestant Religion, and the Ancient well Established Government of this Realm. VI That besides all this Proof, and much more to this purpose, It is most Notorious and Evident He hath for many Years absented from Protestant Churches during Religious Worship. These are the Reasons why We believe the Duke of York to be a Papist. Huntingdon. Shaftsbury. Grace of Wark. L. Russel. L. Cavendish. L. Brandon. Thomas Wharton. Sir Will. Cooper Bar. Sir Gilb. Gerard Bar. Sir Edw. Hungerford. K t. of the Bath. Sir Henry Calverly. Sir Scroop How. Tho. Thine Esq W. Forester Esq J. Trenchard Esq The Jury were sent for up by the Court of King's Bench whilst they were on this Indictment, and Dismissed; so that nothing was further done upon it, saving that the Jury received the Presentment: And by the Dismission of the Jury, a very great number of Indictments were Discharged; A thing scarcely to be paralleled, and of very ill Consequence, not only to many Private Persons, but chiefly to the Public. And on Wednesday July 30. the former Lords and Gentlemen with the L. Clare, Sir John Cope Bar. Sir Rowland Gwin, and Mr. Wandsford, Presented the same to a second Grand Jury, who were Discharged as the former.