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A Detective’s Story


Men are often amazed at the talent and cunning that experienced villains employ in carrying forward their plans of plunder and crime. And it is not ungrateful to our feelings, when we find officers of justice resorting to a measure of talent and cunning even greater than their own to arrest and bring to punishment these desperadoes of crime. The following incident in New York ‘police life,’ taken from the ‘Curiosities of Crime,’* is a case in point on this subject. A “Detective” tells the story as follows:

Several years ago I had with much difficulty arrested a clerk in a leading jewelry house, who for a long time had not only successfully purloined from his employers, but had successfully diverted suspicion from himself. He made no confession when apprehended, and was very sullen; but I got facts enough to give me a clue that the property he had taken was sold to the Ehrwitz Brothers, who for a series of years had defied by their “finesse” all the exertions of police and magistrates. After commitment he was ‘habeas corpused’ – plague on those bothersome writs! Instead of being helps to justice, as in olden times, they had got to be mischievous, and often times – as in the case I now speak of – mere dodges to help an escape. Being somewhat his criminal guardian, I was selected to care for him on his way to the judge’s chambers and back again. The argument over, he was remanded; for there was nothing in the points made ‘for the liberty of this citizen,’ as the counselor with the bombast contended.

Just at the corner of Leonard and Elm streets, as we were going to the Tombs, two intensely countrified fellows came along, and as quick as lightening seized me by each arm, and as quickly my prisoner cut and ran towards Broadway. The thing was so bold and audacious, I was for a moment paralyzed, and they held tightly, too, I assure you. In an instant there was a crowd. “Help me,” I… Read More