Among the most noted of these is the case of Thomas Wilson, who a
few years ago committed a burglary and most atrocious murder near
Windsor, England.
Besides the bludgeon with which he felled his
unsuspecting victim, Wilson carried a lantern which was blackened by smoke,
and, after accomplishing his design of robbery, the fiend took his
departure.
As he made his escape after the foul murder, Wilson picked up
the smoke-begrimed lantern and left upon it an imprint of a thumb wet
with the blood of his victim.
SENT TO GALLOWS BY BLOODY THUMB
PRINT.
With the cunning of the criminal he covered his tracks, and as a
last resort Chief Henry of Scotland Yard secured the lantern bearing
the tell-tale print and resolved to try the efficiency of the
ancient Chinese method of fixing responsibility by finger tracks.
This
astute detective had paid some attention to the fact that no two hands would
leave a similar imprint, and, working upon this theory, he pursued a still
hunt until he found a man whose right thumb made an imprint identical with
that upon the lantern. When found, vigorous denial followed accusation, but
measurements were drawn to such a fine point that the culprit finally
confessed and expiated his heinous crime upon the gallows.
Recently
the perpetrator of an extensive burglary in the jewelry shop of Mr. Bickley,
Lord Mayor of Staffordshire, England, left the imprint of his fingers upon a
plate glass shelf. The shelf was sent to Scotland Yard and the finger-print
record disclosed a duplicate in the records left by the digits of William
Davis, well known to the authorities. When confronted with the mute evidences
of guilt the culprit confessed.
In a police court at London a few
months ago a man appeared who declined to give any name or address. A
detective thought he recognized him as John White, wanted for a jewel robbery
some time before, though his facial appearance had changed and did not
tally with photographs held by the police. However, the imprint left by
his fingers when in custody before had not changed a particle and
his identity was established.
After the success attained in numerous
instances the authorities at Scotland Yard decided to adopt the system and
have now so perfected it that no malefactor who leaves a finger print can
hope to escape ultimate punishment.
Mr. Wm. A. Pinkerton, of the
famous Pinkerton's National Detective Agency, and without doubt one of the
greatest criminal experts, on his return from Europe, in an interview
published recently, says: "During my visit at New Scotland Yard, London, I
was greatly interested in the high state of efficiency which the finger print
system of identification has reached in the police service of London. The
Bureau of Finger Prints there is one of the most marvelous departments I
ever examined. Identification of criminals has been reduced practically
to a matter of bookkeeping. You get the finger print and then simply
turn up your indexes, and you know your man at once. A criminal may
shave or grow his beard, become stout or thin, alter his appearance to
a considerable extent, but the one constant feature of his makeup is
his finger prints.
"The only safe way for criminals nowadays is to
wear gloves when they go out on a job, for the impressions they leave of the
fingers are found by detectives on glasses, newspapers, dusty tables, and
the slightest impression of the fingers on a damp table or paper can, by
the process in use at the Yard, serve as an adequate means
of identification."
GOVERNMENT TO KEEP WATCH ON
CRIMINALS.
The United States government at Washington, D. C., has
established a criminal identification bureau, or what may be called an
"Habitual Criminal Registry," for keeping the records of all men convicted
of crimes against the federal laws, and also all indicted by grand juries
of the United States courts. The bureau is to be under the supervision of the
department of justice, and all prisons in the United States where government
prisoners are or have been confined have been directed to send their records,
consisting of photographs, Bertillon measurement cards and finger-print
identification sheets immediately to the department of justice.
This
bureau is intended to be used for the identification of federal lawbreakers.
It has been urged for some time by criminologists. Heretofore each prison in
the United States has kept its own records, and a federal lawbreaker could
serve a term in one prison and be freed without the fact ever becoming known
that he had served a previous term for a similar offense in another
penitentiary.
Now all records are to be classified in Washington, and not
in any of the federal jails or prisons. The Bertillon measurements,
photographs and _finger prints_ of the convicts are to be taken and sent to
the central bureau.
Also, the records of all men suspected of being
yeggmen, train or postoffice robbers are to be taken. Those held in federal
jails under indictment, etc., are to be sent there.
This bureau will
ascertain the record of each man from the date he has, and if one not yet
given trial proves to be an habitual criminal, this fact will be made known
to the prosecuting attorney and the judge previous to the hearing, and if the
man is convicted it will mean that he will be given the limit
sentence.
At the present time there are about 8,000 known criminals who
violate the government laws, and a close tab is to be kept upon these in
the future. It will go hard on a known criminal convicted in a
United States court hereafter.
BURGLARY A
SCIENCE.
Up-To-Date Professional Burglar Must Be Skilled in Latest
Methods.
ELECTRICITY NOW A FACTOR.
It Has Taken the Place of
Dynamite and the Jimmy in Advanced Safe Looting.
Scientific Equipment
of Burglar Includes High-Class Automobile.
Jobs at Country Houses Usually
Planned Far in Advance, and With Intimate Knowledge of Loot To Be
Gained.
[Illustration: _HOW BURGLAR UNLOCKS DOORS._
Unlocking a
door is one of the easiest tasks of the professional burglar. His ingenuity
defies the efforts of locksmiths to invent safety devices. The picture shows
how an expert turns a key in the lock, and also a simple device to prevent
this.]
The up-to-date burglar must have a motor car, the use of which
is only a part of his scientific equipment. That the modern burglar does
not consider that he is properly equipped unless he possesses a motor car is
an incontrovertible fact. House-breaking nowadays has been reduced to a
science. The use of gloves renders detection by finger prints impossible.
Besides, the modern burglar's tools are most scientifically made. The men who
make it their business to manufacture these tools are first-class
workmen.
The majority of large country burglaries are planned for days
in advance, and every detail is most carefully arranged. In
some mysterious manner the word is conveyed to the gang that a visit
will be made on a certain day, by a member of the household which it
is intended to rob, to a jeweler's shop. The train is met at the
terminus and the person followed to the jeweler's or wherever they
go.
When they enter the shop a man strolls in casually and makes
some inquiries. While an assistant is attending to his supposed wants
it is very easy for him to see what the person at the same counter
is purchasing and, having obtained all the necessary information, the
man leaves and imparts all his information to his confederates.
Before
a county ball or such function a visit to the jeweler's is often necessary to
get the family diamonds, and the fact that this visit is going to be made is
either communicated or anticipated, and the same system of following is put
in operation. Equipped with all the desired information, the modern burglar
then brings his motor car into operation. There is no tedious waiting for
trains; he simply drives down to the "crib" and avoids the old-fashioned way
of taking a train at a small wayside station, with the chances of being
arrested on his arrival in the metropolis.
If he is noticed on the
road he is taken for a rich man touring in his car, and if a great social
function is in progress he is regarded as a belated guest. The car is
carefully stalled in an obscure place while the robbery takes place. The
booty is subsequently placed in it and a quick trip back to town is made. The
police are left practically without a single clew.
Those members of
the community who make a business, or a profession, rather, of burglary keep
up with the march of science quite as closely as do people in a more
legitimate calling.
The burglar of today is a vastly differently equipped
individual from the one of a generation ago. He must of necessity be an
enterprising and daring man, and in addition to that if he would make a
success of safe cracking in this twentieth century he must be something
of a scientist as well. The great progress made in the manufacture
of safes for the storage of valuables has brought about this revolution in
the burglar's methods, and it is a regrettable fact to note that no matter
how strong and secure safes may be made, the ingenuity of the scientific
burglar is pretty sure to devise some method to overcome their
security.
The most recent development in the burglar's advancement is the
use of electricity to open safes in place of the old-time jimmy and the
more recent dynamite.
OLD-TIME STRONG BOX.
Years ago the
old-fashioned strong box was considered quite an adequate protection for
hoarded wealth and was the legitimate successor of the stocking in which the
gold pieces were carefully stored and hidden away. The strong box of wood
bound with iron and with ponderous locks proved but child's play for the
burglar thoroughly intent upon obtaining its contents. Then came the
more modern iron and steel safe, with its thick plates of highly
tempered metal and ingeniously complicated time locks.
Safe breakers
have more than kept pace with improvement in safes, including time locks,
chilled steel chests of eight or nine inches thicknesses and electric
protective attachments. Their tools are made by some of the finest mechanics
and inventive geniuses of the world. A full kit of the most approved modern
safe workers' tools costs about $5,000.
The modern burglar is like
love in one respect; he "laughs at locksmiths." Yet he is not much of an
artist, although he is rapidly improving. The simple tools of the burglars'
trade indicate how easily the contrivances made to bar his progress are
overcome. Yet these tools give no mark of great mechanical genius. They are
as crude as the average burglar is. They are in keeping with his practices
of force and brutality. The destructive power of the best pieces
of handiwork is their main advantage, and doubtless an illustration of the
house-breaker's stunted idea, that the best way to overcome obstacles is in
all cases to break them down.
The tools used by the burglar are supplied
to him. They are made by men after his own heart, and who make for him what
is most effective in his hands. No doubt there are smart men engaged in the
business of defying law and setting the rights of honest people at naught.
Some of the methods they employ might be used to their credit in a
commendable industry.
JIMMY IS NECESSARY.
There are places
where the jimmy is absolutely indispensable to the burglar. Front doors,
which a house proprietor usually has doubly bolted and barred and supplied
with improved locks, are the last apertures in the world a night marauder
would seek to enter.
It must be an amusing thing to the burglar, after
noting the precautions taken to prevent his entrance by the street door,
when he has walked through the skylight on the roof without the
slightest resistance, or dropped through the coal-hole leading to the
cellar from the sidewalk, to find that no doors bar his passage from there
to the rooms above.
Those are the popular ways of getting into many
banks and business houses. The basement door, at the rear, if there is one,
is another. In such case the jimmy is the magic wand that opens the way.
It is more useful to the burglar than any half dozen of his
other implements, and is the first thing he purchases when getting an
outfit.
How do safe burglars get their tools? Why, every man of any
account in that line has what he calls "his man," who is a practical
mechanic, and makes everything in the shape of jimmies, punches, etc., that
the burglar uses. A safe blower's outfit consists of many curious
tools, some of them being of special design for some particular class of
work of which the owner is the originator. Scarcely any two men work
alike, and some of the clever ones invent instruments to do a certain
part of their work. When a well-known notorious crook was arrested
several years ago in his room, the officers found one of the finest
kits of burglars' tools that was ever brought into police
headquarters. Talk about ingenuity--if that man had applied but one-third of
the intelligence to a legitimate business that he had spent in
devising tools for robbery, he would have been a millionaire
today.
Twenty years ago when burglars started out to rob a safe they
filled a carpet sack with highly tempered drills, copper sledges,
sectional jimmies, dark lanterns, powder and a fuse. On the way they
stole a horse and wagon, filling the latter with the greater portion
of the tools of a country blacksmith shop. They would work on the
safe from four to six hours, and finally blow it open with a fine grade of
ducking powder. Usually the shock would break all the glass in the building,
arouse the town, and the burglars would often have to fight for their lives.
In those days the men had to be big and powerful, because the work was
extremely laborious. If the burglar was an ex-prize fighter or noted tough,
so much the better, for he could make a desperate resistance in case he was
caught in the act, or immediately after it.
With the modern safe
burglar it is almost totally different. Although much more skillful and
successful than his predecessor, he is more conservative. He seldom runs his
own head into danger, and therefore seldom endangers the head of a
law-abiding citizen by permitting his head to come into contact with him or
the job while it is under way. Every precaution is taken against being
surprised, and it is seldom the robbery is discovered until the cashier's
appearance the next morning. The modern safe burglar is an exceedingly keen,
intelligent man. He can open a safe having all modern improvements in from
ten minutes to two hours without the aid of explosives and by
only slightly defacing the safe. Sometimes he leaves scarcely a
mark.
A first-class modern safe, whether large or small, generally
has double outside and inside doors, with a steel chest in the
bottom, forming really a safe within a safe, the inside being the
stronger. The outside door is usually either "stuffed" or "skeleton."
The inside one is made of eight or nine sheets, of different temper, of
the finest steel. These sheets are bolted together with conical bolts having
left-hand threads, after which the heads of the bolts are cut off, leaving
what is virtually a solid piece of steel, which no drill can penetrate. The
best locks are of the combination type, with time lock attachment. In many
cities and town safes containing the valuables have an electric alarm
attached. Any tampering with it will communicate the fact to the owners or
the safe's guardian, which in cities is either an electric protective bureau
or a central police station. A recent invention in France is a photographic
attachment. As soon as the safe is touched this device will light an electric
lamp, photograph the intruder and give the alarm at the electric
protective company's office. As a consequence safe-breaking is going out of
date in France, as the cleverest criminals have so far failed to find a
way to circumvent the camera.
The first thing considered by a gang of
the finest experts is a desirable bank's location and the chances for getting
safely away with the plunder. Every transportation facility is carefully
considered. As the work is almost invariably done at the season of the year
when wagon roads are impassible, railroad time tables are carefully
considered. In these days of the telegraph and telephone the gang must be
under cover in a large city or concealed with friends by the time the crime
is discovered, which, at the utmost, is about six hours after the crime has
been committed.
From November 1 to March 1 is the safe burglar's harvest
time, because then the nights are longest and the chances of
detection less, as fewer people are on the streets and houses adjoining,
being tightly closed to exclude the cold, exclude noises also. A man
can, furthermore, carry tools in an overcoat without attracting
attention, that he could not wear with a summer suit. The remainder of the
year is spent in "marking" the most desirable banks for future
operations. Four men, who compose the ordinary safe mob, will put up from
thirty to forty "jobs" for a winter's work, allowing for all
contingencies. From six to ten of these will be carried out. A bank safe will
be broken into in a small town in Maine, and in ten days the gang will
be operating in Texas.
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part
1)]
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part
2)]
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part
3)]
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part
4)]
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part
5)]
[Illustration: (Burglar blowing up safe, part 6)]
Having
decided on a bank, the habits of the cashier and other chief employees are
carefully studied; but, above all, of those who visit the bank after working
hours, chief of whom is the watchman, if the bank has one. If the watchman
drinks, or spends time visiting women when he should be at the bank, the bank
is an easy prey. Weeks, and sometimes even months, are spent in putting up a
job of magnitude, and a number of smaller jobs are done to carry out one
where the proceeds may run into the tens of thousands of dollars.
Men
visit the town who have a legitimate business as a "blind." They make all
preliminary preparations. The greatest ingenuity is employed to obtain exact
information, such as the evenings the cashier or teller is likely to visit
the bank and the exact time.
SCIENTIFIC BURGLARY.
Burglars
whose chief qualification is the mechanical ability to open bank vaults and
safes and steal thousands of dollars in bonds or cash cannot be classed with
those who break open a store door and filch a lot of buckets, brooms or dry
goods.
The man who makes the defects of a combination lock, safe or vault
a study must have intelligence and mechanical knowledge equal to that of a
man who draws a big salary for what he knows. Whenever any new combination
lock is brought in the market for vault or safe use the scientific burglar
obtains one, and by patient study discovers its weakness or defect, something
which every safe or vault has.
The combination of a safe or vault has
often been learned by these burglars by obtaining an entrance to the banking
house after banking hours, removing the dial of the combination and placing a
sheet of tin foil behind it. Then, replacing the dial, the turning of
the combination in opening or closing makes the impression of letters
or numbers on the soft foil, which is removed by the burglar at the
first chance he has to get into the banking house. Having the
combination impressed on the tin foil, he and his accomplices open the vault
or safe, secure the contents, and then often change or put out of
order the combination, so the doors of the vault or safe cannot be
opened for some hours after the regular time for opening, and then only
by an expert of that particular safe company. This, of course, gives
the thieves several hours of valuable time in which to effect their
escape.
The tools required by the mechanical burglar who forces open
safes are the air pump, putty, powder, fuse, sectional jimmy, steel
drills, diamond drills, copper sledges, steel-faced sledges (leather
covered), lamp and blow pipe, jack screw, wedges, dynamite and syringe,
brace with box slide, feed screw drills, steel punches, small bellows,
blank steel keys, skeleton keys, nippers, dark lantern, twine and
screw eyes. The latest, most dangerous set of tools manufactured is
the second power in mechanics--the screw.
The method of work with the
screw is to first rig a brace, and then drill a hole in the safe, cut a
thread in the hole and then insert a female screw. Then, with a long steel
screw with a handle so long that two men can turn it, the screw is inserted
in the female screw, and by turning it goes in until it strikes the back of
the safe. Then either the back or the front must give way. In nearly all
cases it is the latter, as that is the weakest, and it gives enough to insert
the sectional jimmy, which the screw handle is part of. The jimmy is
then inserted in the part forced out, and the safe is then torn asunder
and its contents easily appropriated. This work is accomplished
without much noise.
INVENT NEW DEVICES.
However, these new
one-piece safes have not discouraged the malefactors. They have only
suggested to them the creation of special appliances which enable them,
without stopping to pick the lock, to remove from the side wall of the safe a
circle of the metal large enough to allow of an arm to be put
inside.
One of the most important of these new devices for assisting
the safe-crackers in their crime is formed of an iron hoop furnished
with well-tempered steel teeth, which is fixed by means of a simple
pivot on the safe after a screw worm has been previously driven in.
The instrument is then turned on its pivot and plows a groove in the
safe wall each time it revolves.
Science has not left the burglar
weaponless, however. The progress accomplished has merely compelled him to
obtain higher qualifications, and in the continuous strife between the armor
plate and the desperado who would pierce it the thieves have had hitherto the
last word. For many years dynamite was their chief reliance, and then a
product was discovered some years ago by a chemist, who gave it the name
of "thermit," by which the cracksman was able to melt sheet metal,
inches thick, with comparatively little trouble.
MELTS HARDEST
STEEL.
This substance known as "thermit" is in current use for
repairing, heating or soldering large pieces of metal and consists of a
mixture of aluminum and oxide of iron, the latter being replaced, according
to the requirement, by oxide of lead, peroxide of sodium or peroxide
of barium. This composition is thoroughly mixed together, or is used
in the form of cartridges or tablets, which ignite by means of a piece
of magnesium fixed in the substance like a wick. The heat developed
is more than sufficient to cause the hardest steel to melt.
Although
this process is rapid and silent and really marvelous from the point of view
of the result obtained, it is not without much danger to those using it, for
at the high temperature produced by it an inexperienced operator runs the
risk of being seriously burned. In consequence the prudent and careful
burglar uses accessories which render him secure against such accidents. He
protects his eyes by means of heavy dark glasses, wears shields of aluminum
over his hands and applies the mixture through a small hole in the bottom of
a crucible. When the reaction takes place it lasts long enough to
allow the operator to charge the crucible again and again in proportion
as the melting of the metal plate is effected, thus making an opening
of the desired size in the safe. It is a simple enough operation for
a skilled burglar, but a very dangerous one for an amateur.
TESTS
WITH ELECTRICITY.
But even this has been discounted by an experiment
before a United States government commission, showing that electricity can be
so applied as to give the scientific cracksman a greater field
for operation than ever before. The experiment was made by an
expert burglar, who, having retired from business after amassing
a sufficient competency, was requested to favor the commission
by contributing the light of his knowledge.
He demonstrated that by
the aid of electricity he could, within a short time, reduce safes of the
highest repute to old iron. For this purpose he took out of his pocket a
style in the form of retort carbon, similar to those used for arc lamps; a
few yards of electric wire, black eyeglasses and a plate pierced in the
middle. It was with this simple outfit he pierced in less than three minutes
a circle of holes in a cast steel safe with walls one and a half inches
thick.
His method of procedure was simplicity itself. To the electric
supply current of the chandelier overhead he connected two wires, one
of which he fixed on the safe, and the other at the extreme of his
carbon style. It was suitably insulated by a wooden handle. Then,
having inserted this pencil in the hole of the plate, whose purpose was
to protect him against the heat and light, he produced a voltaic arc
of immense power between the point of his style and the wall of the
safe, thus melting the metal with the greatest ease.
SOME CONCRETE
EXAMPLES.
BURGLARS USE ACETYLENE FLAME TO OPEN SAFE DOOR.
In
Paris, January 4, 1908, burglars broke into the premises of Martin and Baume,
colonial traders, at Marseilles, and stole money and goods to the value of
$20,000. Most of their booty they took from a safe, the door of which they
burnt through with an apparatus giving an acetylene flame of sufficient heat
to melt the metal.
The case recalls one at Antwerp recently, when the
thieves melted a safe with a combined oxygen and acetylene flame.
The
police believe that the Marseilles burglars are past masters of the art, and
that probably not more than a dozen possess such apparatus for melting safes.
One or more of the burglars may probably have been employed at a motor
factory, where acetylene lamps are in frequent use.
In any case, even
the finest lock or the best steel safe can't resist, if burglars take to
using oxygen and acetylene lamps with blow-pipes. Safe manufacturers have a
new problem to solve.
THE BANK SNEAK.
The bank sneaks of the
country were formerly among the most troublesome criminals with whom the
police had to deal. The money and jewelry stolen by them aggregated hundreds
of thousands of dollars annually.
The bank sneak is the cleverest of
crooks, and as bold and daring as any of them. But modern police methods, the
system of exchanging Bertillon photographs, and the organization of bankers'
and jewelers' associations, together with perfect burglar alarm equipment,
have combined to put him out of business, and his work nowadays is on
a limited scale.
During the past ten years not more than five good
bank sneak games have been pulled off, while there has been a similar
reduction in the raids on jewelry shops.
The Bertillon photographs
facilitate the identification of the sneak and the bankers' and jewelers'
organization put up the money with which to pursue him remorselessly, and
soon catch him. Concerning the bank sneak and his mode of
operating:
An expert professional bank "sneak" thief and his associates
study the habits of all employes to determine when the greatest number are
absent (which generally happens at the noon hour), decide how many
confederates will be necessary to engage the attention of the remaining
employes, while the sneak thief noiselessly enters a vault, teller's cage, or
goes to a safe, and commits the robbery.
Confederates are usually of good
appearance, understand business methods, can discuss loans, mortgages, sale
of securities, etc., long enough to allow the "sneak" to operate without
discovery. A "sneak" thief, wearing rubber-soled shoes, will frequently pass
within a few feet of the official or clerk in charge, enter a vault or
teller's cage, or rob a safe or money drawer, without creating the
slightest noise.
A ruse to make the way clear for the "sneak" is for a
confederate to drive in a carriage to the bank or store to be robbed, as a
pretext exhibiting a crutch, or accompanied by a female, requesting
some passer-by to ask the cashier or some other official to step out to
the carriage, which usually occurs when few of the employes are in
the place.
Another device is to hold a large blue print of some
property on which is pretended a loan is desirable, or a bundle of maps
offered for sale, in such position that the view of the official being
interviewed is obstructed, thereby covering the "sneak" and giving him
opportunity to operate.
Another more recent artifice is the telephone;
the confederate of the "sneak" at an appointed minute "calls up" the bank and
requests that the paying teller be sent to the 'phone, and there detains him
in conversation while the "sneak" thief operates; confederates, as may
be necessary, engaging the attention of other employes.
CIRCUS DAY
BRINGS A HARVEST.
Many sneak robberies were formerly committed in
medium-sized towns on circus days, while most of the employes were at windows
or doors watching the circus parade. This offered "sneak" thieves
the opportunity to enter the building by some unguarded door or window, or
having, prior to the parade, concealed themselves in the bank or store, to
commit the robbery while the parade is passing, virtually behind the backs of
the employes.
A favorite scheme, especially in savings banks, is for one
thief to attract the attention of a customer who is counting money, to have
a bill purposely dropped in front of him on the floor by the thief
and, while he stoops down to pick it up, believing it part of his
money, another thief steals the then unprotected money he, the
customer, was counting. Often professional "sneak" thieves have posed as
bank clerks or porters, wearing office coats or porter's uniforms and,
when the opportunity presents itself, committed robberies of
considerable magnitude.
Some of the old-time "sneaks" used specially
made steel instruments of various shapes to move packages of money from one
section of the teller's cage to a point nearer the teller's window, so that
it could be more readily extracted. This practice, while the utmost caution
is necessary to avoid suspicion, has been quite successful.
At times
thieves have used large satchels or dress-suit cases to stand upon and, with
a long wire hook, extracted money by reaching over the wire screen
surrounding a paying teller's cage.
A method sometimes used to commit
money drawer or "till" robberies in stores is to select some
innocent-appearing storekeeper, usually a foreigner, whom one of the thieves
wearing a silk hat would approach, informing him that they had just made a
wager that the hat would not hold more than a gallon of molasses, and
requesting that the storekeeper measure a gallon of molasses into the hat at
their expense, to decide the wager.
BLINDING VICTIM WITH
MOLASSES.
Seeing the prospect of a sale, even if the wager was a peculiar
one, the groceryman would concede to this request. The hat being
partly filled, one of the thieves would place it quickly on the
merchant's head, blinding him with the molasses, while they stole the
contents of the money drawer.
The "sneak" who commits the robbery, to
be successful, usually is of small stature, active, alert and noiseless, as
upon him mainly depends the success or failure of the venture. He must judge
from the operations of his associates when the opportunity to commit
the robbery has arrived. There are no signals or conversations between
the confederates and the "sneak" designating the moment for him to act. He
must decide this from observation of what his confederates have accomplished
in preparing a safe way for him. If there is a suspicion or a discovery by
employes, it devolves upon his confederates to do their utmost to confuse and
obstruct the pursuers.
I once asked an old-time professional "sneak"
thief how he was first introduced into a band of first-class bank "sneaks."
He explained that he was raised in a small village having a general store
presided over by a widow; that she at times would go to the cellar for
certain merchandise, leaving the store unguarded. This suggested to him
how easy it would be to rob the money drawer during her absence in
the cellar, which he afterward did, and which was his first
successful "sneak" robbery. Afterward he stole from a small window in the
same store, packages of chewing tobacco, pipes, etc., also
occasionally again robbing a bakery of pies and cakes, and occasionally
again robbing the "till." But one afternoon, before a Fourth of July,
in attempting to steal some packages of fire-crackers and some
loose torpedoes, a couple of the torpedoes dropped to the floor,
causing an explosion and resulting in his discovery and arrest and
final imprisonment. In jail he met with other criminals, and finally
became one of them, joining with the first-class "sneak" band of
professional criminals. This man for years was a most successful leader of
"sneak" thieves, stealing fortunes, finally dying in prison and leaving
a family in actual want.
RARELY USE PISTOLS.
Among the
old-timers were some of the most remarkable criminals operating in any part
of the world; their thefts requiring, in almost every instance, dexterity and
great presence of mind, a quick eye and unflinching courage, yet few of these
"sneaks" used firearms or weapons of any kind in the commission of their
crimes.
Among the younger element appear the names of the cleverest
thieves of today, some of whom have operated extensively in this country
and abroad.
THE LORD BOND ROBBERY.
One of the largest
"sneak" robberies ever committed in the United States occurred late in the
sixties, and has always been referred to as the "Lord bond robbery." Lord was
a wealthy man, and had an office at 22 Broad street, New York City. He had
invested $1,200,000 in 7-30 United States bonds, all being coupon bonds,
payable to bearer, which any one with a knowledge of finance could easily
dispose of at this time. A band of "sneak" thieves, consisting of "Hod"
Ennis, Charlie Ross, Jimmie Griffin and "Piano" Charlie Bullard, planned to
steal these bonds.
Awaiting their opportunity until a morning arrived
when Mr. Lord was absent from his office, they entered it when it was in
charge of only two clerks.
Bullard and Ross engaged these clerks in
conversation, while Ennis "sneaked" into the vault, seized the tin box
containing the bonds, and walked out with it. While these thieves were expert
in their particular line, they did not fully understand the negotiating of
the bonds, and for this called in George Bidwell, since renowned as
the Bank of England forger, who went to England and disposed of a
large part of them. The thieves were at the time suspected, and Ennis
fled to Canada, but was subsequently extradited to the United States
and convicted of a crime committed some time before. He was sentenced to a
long term of imprisonment. Charlie Bullard settled in Paris, but afterward
returned to the United States, and with Adam Worth, successfully committed
the Boylston Bank robbery, after which both returned to Paris and opened the
celebrated American bar under the Grand Hotel, 2 Rue Scribe, which flourished
for many years. Bullard afterward was arrested for an attempted bank burglary
in Belgium, and was sentenced to prison for a long term. Bullard, Ross, Ennis
and Worth all stole millions of dollars in their day and died
poor.
[Illustration: BLIND.
JUSTICE--"I CAN'T SEE
IT."]
ONE MAN'S BOLD OPERATIONS.
Another celebrated robbery
was on January 7, 1878, of $500,000 in bonds and securities from the office
of James H. Young, a banker and broker at 44 Nassau street, New York City, by
"sneak" thieves headed by "Rufe" Minor, alias "Little Rufe," exceptionally
clever in his line, and who had with him George Carson, Horace Hovan and
"Billy" Marr. They were located at Petersburg, Va., on March 23, 1878,
and found all of the stolen property in Minor's trunk. Minor was
a Brooklyn-raised boy, small of stature, of good appearance and
engaging manners, a most expert "sneak" leader, and was in his
lifetime concerned in many great "sneak" robberies, among them being:
$80,000 from the Commercial National Bank, Cleveland, Ohio, 1881;
$12,000 in bonds from the Bank of Baltimore, Md.; $114,000 in bonds
from the Erie County Savings Bank, in 1882; $73,000 from the
Middletown Bank, Middletown, Conn.; $32,000 from the Detroit Bank,
Detroit, Mich.; $70,000 from the Boston Safe Deposit Co., and $71,000 from
the Guarantee Safe & Safety Deposit Co.'s vaults, Philadelphia,
Pa.
In Chicago, many years ago, a band of professional bank
"sneaks" planned to rob the Subtreasury, then located in the Arcade
Court. Philip A. Hoyne, a leading republican politician in those days, had
an office in this building. He was also a candidate on the republican ticket
for some local office. At a ball game "Joe" Parrish, a professional
pickpocket and bank sneak, picked the pocket of a clerk. Among other articles
found in the pocketbook was a key and the personal card of the clerk, which
showed he was employed in the Subtreasury.
Parrish imparted this
information to Walter Brown, Sam Perry, Little Joe McCluskey and Jimmy
Carroll, all members of a noted bank "sneak" band, then
operating.
HIRE A BAND TO HELP THEM.
After several visits to
the Arcade Court and trying the key in different doors, it was finally found
to open a rear door to the Subtreasury office. On the day the robbery was
planned to be committed, the thieves hired a brass band to play in the Arcade
Court as a serenade to Candidate Hoyne, the plan of the thieves being
to start cheering for Mr. Hoyne, expecting that the band and the
cheering would attract the attention of the Subtreasury clerks from
their desks to the windows, giving Little Joe McCluskey, the "sneak,"
an opportunity of using the key to the bank entrance, passing into
the office at the back of the clerks and stealing as much money as
he could carry. About the time the plans of the thieves were completed Mr.
Pinkerton learned of them, and communicated with Elmer Washburn, then chief
of the United States Secret Service at Washington.
On the day the robbery
was to occur the band appeared as arranged, the Arcade soon filled with
people, and there was prolonged cheering for Mr. Hoyne. Not one clerk left
his desk, and when McCluskey tried to open the door with the key he found it
would not fit. Through precautions taken by Mr. Washburn, the lock had been
changed and instructions given to all clerks to remain at their desks when
the band played, which prevented what would have been a very heavy loss
to the government. Owing to the way the information had been obtained, and
not wishing to expose the source, no arrests were made.
Walter Sheridan,
known under many aliases, an accomplished "sneak" thief, was a Southerner by
birth and of gentlemanly, dignified appearance. In addition to being a sneak, he
was also a general all-round thief, counterfeiter and
forger. |
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