Burglars' Tricks Upon Burglars
by Allan Pinkerton
Criminals not only are very ingenious in their schemes against the general public, but they frequently show considerable skill and a certain grade of quiet humor in well-laid plans against each other.
An instance of the kind happened in this wise:
In 1875, Scott and Dunlap—the famous bank robbers who robbed the Northampton National Bank of nearly a million dollars, and who are now behind the bars of the penitentiary of that State, through the efforts of my Agencies—had laid their plans to rob a certain uptown New York city bank.
George Miles, alias Bliss, alias White, the notorious Max Shinburne’s old partner, and his party were concocting a like operation for relieving a downtown bank of its capital.
Now it was found by the Miles party that both banks were to be robbed in like manner, by that very popular method of “bank-bursting,” which consists of renting a room or rooms above those occupied by a bank, and then, if possible, tunneling through into its… Read More