On May 22, 1649, Agnes Affleck, a resident of the parish of Tranent in Haddington, became the subject of a formal legal inquiry into the crime of witchcraft. Her case, documented under reference C/LA/3121, emerged during a period of heightened judicial activity regarding perceived maleficium in Scotland. Following her apprehension, Agnes was processed through the Haddingtonshire court system, where her case proceeded to trial under the specific designations T/LA/1527 and T/LA/1957.
The legal proceedings culminated in the formal recording of a confession by Agnes. While the specific content of this testimony remains obscured by the limitations of the surviving archival fragments, the existence of the confession document confirms that she provided an account of her actions to the authorities presiding over her case. As the record stands, the judicial process for Agnes concluded with this final entry, marking her place in the significant series of trials that defined the mid-seventeenth-century Scottish legal landscape.