💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › stephen-t-byington-police-methods.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 14:11:01. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Title: Police Methods
Author: Stephen T. Byington
Date: October 1907
Language: en
Topics: crime, Émile Armand, police
Source: Retrieved on December 22, 2011 from http://libertarian-labyrinth.org/archive/Police_Methods
Notes: From Mother Earth 2, no. 8 (October 1907): 333–335.

Stephen T. Byington

Police Methods

E. Armand, the editor of L’etre Nouvelle, writes to me from a Paris

jail. He has been arrested on the charge of uttering counterfeit money.

The evidence against him, aside from a probably malicious denunciation,

is said to consist of one counterfeit coin, found by searching his room

in his absence. What he feels worst over, however, is that all his books

and papers have been seized. Apparently, he thinks it will be harder to

get these back than to get acquitted on the charge of counterfeiting. I

think so, too.

It reminds me of the time when Alexander Horr was arrested in New York.

Not being a habitual criminal, he did not know that the police would

hold as evidence whatever they found in his pockets; so the police got

everything that was in his pockets in the ordinary course of things, his

keys, (part of which were not his own property, but belonged to the

landlord, on whose premises the Freeland Central Association did its

printing), his proof-sheets, and I don’t know what else. The Freeland

concern had been doing a little typefounding, and Horr had in his pocket

six or seven proofs of type sold — merely AAAAA and so on, BBBBB and so

on, as type is sold, half a dozen wide galleys. I, as the firm’s

business agent, in Horr’s absence, wanted to get hold of those proofs

and measure the number of inches, so that I could make out a bill and

collect the money. The police sergeant, to whom I applied in Fifth

Street, was very willing to tell me that I couldn’t see those proofs,

that I couldn’t even measure the number of inches, and that he and the

police force did not desire to be told my opinion as to whether this was

reasonable or not; but he was not gracious enough to tell me that I had

come to the wrong office and that he had properly nothing to say about

it, the goods being in Mulberry Street. I made up my mind later, that

when next time a police sergeant used such recklessly over-bearing

language to me across his desk, I would infer that he was irresponsible

in the matter, and would ask him to direct me to the man who had really

something to do with the business. When Horr was finally tried and

sentenced, I heard that I could now get the goods; but his lawyers told

me it would be more trouble than was worth while, unless there was

something that I specially cared about. But I did want those proofs, and

the key that belonged to the other man, and I went at the job. It took

me half a day, for the Mulberry Street man had his red tape tied up good

and tight; he would not give me the goods on the strength of my

signature as Horr’s attorney. Backed by the exhibition of a power of

attorney whose validity he acknowledged, — though he was legally bound

to give them to me on those terms, or else I know less about a power of

attorney than I think I do, — but insisted that either he must have my

power of attorney to keep, or else I must bring an order for the

delivery of the goods, signed by Horr’s own hand. I had to get into the

Tombs — and out again — twice, outside of regular hours, before I could

get the papers. One key I failed to get. It was one of the most

elaborately designed keys I ever saw, the bit having narrow side-pieces

that turned and ran back. The elaborateness and delicacy of the pattern

struck the eye of the policeman in charge, and he declared it to be a

“regular pick” that would open almost any door. He got another policeman

by his side to agree with him that the thing was a skeleton key, and on

this ground he refused to give it up. As I suppose most of my readers

are no more familiar with skeleton keys than I was at that time, let me

explain that a skeleton key is necessarily simple in pattern. When a key

is elaborately designed, or has any bars of metal running in a way in

which the metal of ordinary keys does not go, it proves that that key

was made to fit a particular lock, and not for the work of a skeleton

key. But these two policemen, speaking as experts in burglars’ tools,

decided that this chamber-key of Horr’s was a skeleton key, and I had to

leave it there. By the way, Horr was not imprisoned for burglary or

theft, or for anything in which a skeleton key could be useful; and

nothing in the evidence or the allegations had tended to cast upon him

any suspicion of being dishonest to pick anybody’s lock. I wonder if it

is the ordinary custom in France to seize a man’s library when you

arrest him for counterfeiting. I strongly suspect that if Armand had

kept clear of the Anarchist and anti-militarist agitation, he would

never have been arrested as a counterfeiter; or, at the very least, that

his library would have been spared.