By the
Statute of Winchester of 1285 (
13 Edw. 1. St. 2. c. 4), it was provided that anyone, either a
constable or a private citizen, who witnessed a crime shall make hue and cry, and that the hue and cry must be kept up against the fleeing criminal from
town to town and from
county to county, until the felon is apprehended and delivered to the
sheriff. All able-bodied men between the ages of fifteen and sixty, upon hearing the shouts, were obliged to assist in the pursuit of the criminal, which makes it comparable to the
posse comitatus. It was moreover provided that "the whole
hundred ... shall be answerable" for the
theft or
robbery committed, in effect a form of
collective punishment. Those who raised a hue and cry falsely were themselves guilty of a crime. The hue and cry was utilised in medieval European towns and villages as a means of community policing. The oath of office for
constables in the
United States state of
Tennessee specifically mentions that it is the duty of the constable to sound the hue and cry. ==Etymology==