A Brilliant Confidence Swindle in High Life
by Allan Pinkerton
In looking over the events of my most eventful life, as the frequency of criminal occurrences of similar often compels me to do, I cannot but reflect over the strange gullibility of the general public, and wonder at the great fertility of schemes and successful conspiracies on the part of criminals. Every day of the year some apparently new development in the way of criminal ingenuity is apparent, and the best detective of the time are constantly kept at their keenest friction to devise some means and expedients to cope with the advanced and apparently cultivated brains that are forever busy with fresh devices for living a life of elegance and ease without honest labor.
And yet to one who has spent the greater part of his life, as I have done, in conscientiously studying the philosophy of crime and the peculiar traits and characteristics of criminals, there appears to be nothing startlingly new in all these matters. There is change in manner of operation, there may be fresh method in execution, but the main principle of crime, as well as of its detection, always remains the same; and with the thousands upon thousands of warnings and public lessons coming to light every year, it would almost seem that respectable citizens refuse to profit by the bitter experience of others, and by their apparent implicity and unguardedness really invite upon themselves the manipulations of keen rogues and educated rascals; and so true is this of people of all grades of society, that… Read More