On 7 July, seamen from the
Carnatic and
Mangalore, both owned by
Jardine, Matheson & Co., landed in Kowloon where they were joined by colleagues from other British and American ships. After a group of sailors consumed the rice liquor known as
samshu, an innocent local named Lin Weixi (, Cantonese: Lam Wai-hei) in the village of
Tsim Sha Tsui was beaten in a brawl by these drunken sailors and died the next day. On 15 July, Chief Superintendent of British Trade in China,
Charles Elliot, offered rewards of $200 for evidence leading to the conviction of those responsible for the murder and $100 for evidence leading to the instigators of the riot. He also gave $1,500 in compensation to Lin's family, $400 to protect them against extortion of that money from what he called the "lower
mandarins", and $100 to be distributed among the villagers. Imperial Commissioner
Lin Zexu demanded the handover of the culprit by the British authority, which was refused by Elliot. On 12 August, under an Act of Parliament of 1833, Elliot began a Court of Criminal and Admiralty Jurisdiction on board the
Fort William in
Hong Kong harbour, with himself as judge and a group of merchants as the jury. Two men were found guilty of rioting, fined £15 each, and sentenced to three months hard labour to be served in England while a further three men were found guilty of assault and rioting, fined £25 each, and sentenced to six months imprisonment in similar conditions. However, the Act was under review and after arriving in England, they were set free on the grounds that the trial held no jurisdiction. Elliot invited Lin to send observers to the trial, but none came. Without the handover of a man to the Chinese, Lin was not satisfied with the proceedings. Chinese labourers working for the British in
Macao were withdrawn the next day. War
junks arrived in coves along the
Pearl River and notices above the fresh water springs warned that they were poisoned. On 25 August, former Superintendent John Astell proposed to Elliot that all British boats should evacuate to Hong Kong. By the end of the month, 2,000 people in over 60 ships were in Hong Kong harbour without fresh food or water. The ships held European merchants,
lascars, and dozens of British families. The 28-gun frigate
Volage of Captain
Henry Smith sailed to Hong Kong on 30 August. Smith was an old friend of Elliot from their service in the
West Indies Station. Elliot warned Kowloon officials that there was bound to be trouble if the embargo continued against the merchant fleet. == Battle ==