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Tracking a Criminal


The Story of a Pinkerton Detective


While a member of Pinkerton's detective force I made the arrest of a highway robber at Madison, Wis. He was arrested for a robbery committed in Illinois five months before, and I had been on the case two months when I finally ran him down. He was a machinist by trade, and was then working in a shop. I proved him to be an old crook and a dangerous one, and was satisfied that he went into the shop to baffle pursuit; but it seemed to strike others differently. The reporters wrote him up as one anxious to reform, and they wrote me down as a bloodhound hanging to his trail, and so considerable public sympathy was aroused for him. I then had proofs of four other crimes committed by him, any one of which would send him to prison, but I had to keep silent and take public criticism. My man got a sentence of five years, and he had scarcely departed for prison when I received through the mail a note reading:

“You have by money and perjury sent an honest man to prison. You know he was honest and hardworking. You wanted to glorify yourself. The poor fellow is a friend of mine, and I have sworn to revenge him. Take notice that I will have your life on the first opportunity.”

There was no signature to the letter, but I knew at a glance that the writer meant business. It was a plain, bold hand, and after half an hour's study I made these deductions:

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