The historical record for Sarah Johnson (Case C/EGD/2460) identifies her as a resident of Perth during the final decades of the Scottish witch trials. While the archival documentation available for her case is notably brief, it places her within the judicial landscape of 1715, a period when the legal mechanisms for prosecuting witchcraft were gradually moving toward their eventual repeal in 1736.
Sarah is formally catalogued within the records of the Justiciary court, though the specific charges or the eventual outcome of her trial remain elusive in the surviving documentation. The reference to Sarah in historical databases notes that her inclusion was drawn from a printed secondary source previously cited by the historian Christina Larner. Consequently, while her name serves as a point of intersection with the formal apparatus of the seventeenth and eighteenth-century Scottish legal system, the precise nature of the accusations brought against Sarah in Perth remain lost to the limitations of the existing record.