A Peculiar Case—A Detective’s Story
There is a case that I will call to mind now that is rather a peculiar one, and that never was published yet. One day when I was in the office a fine-looking woman came in and said that her house had been robbed. Her name, she said, was McLoud, and she lived somewhere near Lefferts Park—Macon street or Monroe street, I don’t know which—anyway, it was in the locality of Lefferts Park, and she, her husband and two children, lived there in pretty good style. She reported that her bedrooms had been visited by a thief, and that the bureau had been visited by a thief, and that the bureau had been robbed of nearly $2,500 worth of jewelry. This jewelry was all her own—presents that she had received from her husband when she was married—and the jewels were kept in a little Japanese cabinet, which was also a present, and which for safety she locked in one of the upper bureau drawers. Well, I went to work on it, and supposed some second-story thief had been at work there, and, obtaining a full description of the jewelry, I started off to New York and Brooklyn pawn-offices trying to search up the goods but it was no use.
Mrs. McLoud was so anxious after the property that I did really make extraordinary efforts to… Read More