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Ann Putnam's confession was a revocation of her accusations of witchcraft during the infamous 1692 witch trials in Salem Village, Massachusetts. Under seventeenth-century English law, witchcraft was a capital offense, and ultimately twenty men and women were executed for witchcraft. Hundreds of others were accused, and dozens languished in jail until they were released. Putnam issued her public confession expressing remorse for her actions fourteen years after the trials. She was the only one of the accusers to do so.