Thieves are numerous in New
York. As a general rule, they
herd together in the worst
quarters of the city--in the
Five Points and along East
River--where they can rapidly
and easily communicate with each
other, and where they can hide
from the police without fear of
discovery. There are many
blunderers in the fraternity,
but there are also many
experienced hands, who do a
great deal of damage, and give a
world of trouble to the
authorities. These are generally
well known to the police.
The Thief Language
The thieves of the city have a
language, or argot, peculiar to
themselves. Those who have been
raised to the business use this
argot to such an extent, that a
stranger finds it as impossible
to understand them as he would
if they were speaking in a
foreign tongue. The Detectives'
Manual gives a glossary of this
language, from which we take the
following specimens, to be found
in that work, under the head of
the letter B.:
Badger.--A
panel-thief.
Bagged.--Imprisoned.
Bag of nails.--All in
confusion.
Balram.--Money.
Bandog.--A civil officer.
Barking irons.--Pistols.
Bene.--Good, first-rate.
Benjamin.--A coat.
Bilk.--To cheat.
Bill of sale.--A widow's
weeds.
Bingo.--Liquor.
Bingo boy.--A drunken man.
Bingo mort.--A drunken
woman. |
Blue-billy.--A strange
handkerchief.
Blue ruin.--Bad gin.
Boarding-school.--The
penitentiary.
Bone box.--The mouth.
Bowsprit in parenthesis.--A
pulled nose.
Brother of the blade.--A
soldier.
Brother of the bolus.--A
doctor.
Brush.--To flatter, to
humbug.
Bug.--A breast-pin.
Bugger.--A pickpocket.
Bull.--A locomotive.
Bull-traps.--Rogues who
personate officials to
extort money.
|
We could multiply these
examples, but the above are
sufficient to illustrate this
branch of our subject.
Professional
Thieves
The poor wretches who steal a
few dollars' worth in open day,
from stores and stands, are not
considered by professional
thieves as amongst the
"fraternity," which embraces
house-breakers, pick-pockets,
and burglars. These persons are
carefully trained by "old
hands," and are by practice made
as perfect as possible in their
arts. Indeed, to be an
accomplished burglar requires a
very great degree of
intelligence, courage, strength,
and ingenuity. These men all
have certain distinct methods of
performing their work, so that
after they have been operating a
short while, a detective can, by
examining the traces, tell, with
absolute certainty, the name of
the burglar. Besides this, the
life which these persons lead
stamps their countenances and
general bearing with marks which
an experienced officer will
recognize at a glance. The
sneak-thief, the pickpocket, and
the burglar, have certain
habits, attitudes, haunts; they
act in certain ways when placed
in certain positions, which
reveal them and their
occupations to a practiced eye,
with almost as much certainty as
the form and aspect of a blade
of grass reveals its genus and
species to the eye of a
practiced botanist. A skilled
detective will stand at the
corner of a street, in a strange
city, that he has never entered
before, and will pick out,
almost unerringly, the
passers-by who belong to this
criminal class. He will say,
"This is a sneak-thief;" "This
is a pickpocket;" "This man has
just been released from the
State prison;" "This one is a
gambler, stool-pigeon," etc.,
etc.; being guided in his
judgments by certain indications
which the criminal involuntarily
displays by the sheer force of
habit.
A sneak-thief will pass along
with that rapid, rolling glance
of the eyes which distinguishes
the tribe; now he checks himself
in his career; it is but for an
instant; no unprofessional eye
directed towards him would
notice it; but the sudden pause
would speak volumes to an
experienced police officer. He
knows that the thief's eye has
caught the sight of silver lying
exposed in the basement. In an
hour after he hears that the
basement has been entered, and
the silver in it carried off. He
knows who has taken it, as well
as if he had seen the man take
it with his own eyes; but if the
thief has had time to run to the
nearest receiver's den, the
silver is already in the
melting-pot, beyond the reach of
identification.
How Fine Houses Are Robbed
Families living in the city
cannot, of course, know who they
are taking into their midst as
servants, and it frequently
happens that these girls are the
confederates of burglars. They
come for the purpose of spying
out the premises, and from time
to time report the internal
arrangements to their "men." At
the proper moment, the burglar,
who has thus acquired a
sufficient familiarity with the
house, is admitted by the girl.
He performs his work sometimes
without detection, but sometimes
adds murder, or attempts at
murder, to his crime. These men
are well known to the police,
but as they are to be deemed
innocent until proved guilty, it
is hard, if not impossible, to
prevent their crimes. A servant
girl is seen in the area,
towards evening, with a broom in
her hand; by her side is a man
who is conversing earnestly with
her. The policeman, as he passes
along, recognizes him as a
notorious burglar. That night
the house is broken open and
robbed, and perhaps some of the
family murdered. The officer
knows perfectly well who did it,
but this knowledge goes for
nothing in law. The man must be
regularly tried, and proved
guilty. Although the officer
feels sure the man and woman are
planning a burglary, when he
sees them in the area, he cannot
prevent it by arresting the man.
An incident in point has
transpired of late, in
illustration of this familiar
danger. A gentleman's house,
situate on Fifth Avenue, near
Thirty-second street, was
entered on the night of March
24th, by a brace of burglars,
who were, as subsequent
investigation proved, admitted
at the basement, or servant's
entrance, by one of the
chambermaids.
The burglars succeeded in
obtaining a considerable amount
of plunder, but were alarmed by
the unexpected awakening of some
of the inmates of the house, and
hastily departed. Suspicion fell
upon the delinquent maid, who
was examined, confessed her
guilt, stated that the principal
burglar was her sweetheart, and
promised that if she was
permitted to escape the deserved
public punishment of her crime,
she would see that the missing
property was restored to its
rightful owners. This
'arrangement' was accepted, the
girl fulfilled her part of the
contract, and every article that
had been stolen was promptly
restored. The chambermaid was
dismissed, and any further
prosecution of the affair was
summarily closed. In this
particular instance, it will be
seen that matters terminated
favorably, but it would be well
if wealthy citizens would be
warned against the 'family' risk
to which their property is
exposed, and led to adopt the
most stringent precautions
against these dangers,
especially when summer pleasures
will entice the majority of the
votaries of gayety and fashion
'out of town,' leaving their
dwellings almost wholly to the
'care' of not always reliable
domestics.
A Hair Thief
During the summer of 1868, a
young lady residing in a
respectable part of the city,
was decoyed by an elderly woman,
(under the pretence of being
able to introduce the young lady
to a cheap dressmaker,) into a
low neighborhood, where she was
seized by two men, dragged into
a hovel, and there held by the
ruffians, while the old hag who
had decoyed her thither, with a
pair of shears cut off the
larger portion of her luxuriant
hair--to fill, as she coolly
informed her victim, 'an order
from a wig-maker.' The screams
and struggles of the poor dupe
were of no avail, and when
finally thrust out of doors by
her tormentors, she was so
frightened that she wandered
mechanically along, up and down
streets, until she met a
policeman, who, on hearing her
story, called a carriage and had
her conveyed home, but was not
able from her incoherent and
inaccurate description, either
to identify the place where the
outrage was committed, nor the
people by whom it was
perpetrated.
The Thieves' Exchange
There is, in the Eighth Ward of
the City, an "Exchange," where
the light-fingered gentry
congregate and interchange
confidential intelligence, the
news of their profession, and
exchange the stolen goods
temporarily in their possession.
Attached to this is the wareroom
of the proprietor, who is simply
a receiver of stolen goods.
There are many of these places
in the city.
The agent of the New York Prison
Association, in one of his
reports, says:
When a burglar has successfully
entered a store, and carried off
a large amount of property, in
the form of fine goods, this
property itself is of no more
use to him than the dust of the
street. He does not want to wear
lace or jewelry. He does not
need watches or pencil-cases. He
cannot eat cameos or vases. He,
therefore, at once takes his
plunder to his 'fence,' and
receives from him, in money,
such a price as is usually
agreed upon. It is very
difficult to ascertain, with any
degree of exactness, what
proportion of the value of the
plunder is realized on the
average by the thief; but from
the best information we could
obtain, we feel confident it
does not exceed one sixth.
A man whom we met in one of the
jails, told us he was
unsuccessful at first, because
he had received no instructions
in the art. We asked him what he
deemed the most important
information to be obtained by a
tyro in the business. He
answered promptly: 'To know the
names and characters of all the
"fences" within a circle of
thirty miles.' He could do
little or nothing without this
knowledge.
In the rural districts, these
receivers of stolen goods are
quite unknown, except among the
thieves themselves, unless some
unusually active deputy sheriff
makes the discovery; but in the
cities, especially in New York
and Brooklyn, they are as well
known to the police officers as
the city halls of those places.
These officers are sure that
everything they have in their
warehouses is stolen; they are
acquainted with their ways of
doing business; and they know
what thieves resort to each, and
where they dispose of their
ill-gotten property. Yet this
knowledge avails but little in
promoting the ends of justice.
It is but rarely that any of
this class are convicted of
their offences. The reason is
that strict legal proof of their
guilt can very seldom be
procured.
The study of the means of
rapidly and effectually removing
the marks by which the property
in their hands can be
identified, is the main business
of their lives, and they acquire
a degree of skill and dexterity
in altering or effacing these
marks, which is truly
surprising. A melting-pot is
always over the fire, to which
all silver ware is consigned the
instant it is received. The
marks on linen, towels, and
handkerchiefs, are removed,
sometimes by chemicals,
sometimes by fine scissors made
expressly for the purpose.
Jewelry is at once removed from
its settings, and the gold is
either melted or the engraving
is burnished out, so as in
either case to make
identification impossible. Rich
velvet and silk garments are
transmogrified by the removal
and re-arrangement of the
buttons and trimmings. Pointed
edges are rounded, and rounded
edges are pointed, entirely
changing the whole aspect of the
garment, with such celerity that
the lady who had worn the dress
in the morning would not have
the slightest suspicion that it
was the same in the evening.
Cotton, wool, rags, and old
ropes, require no manipulation.
When once thrown upon the heap,
they defy the closest scrutiny
of the owners.
There is
scarcely an article which can be
the subject of theft, which the
resources of these men do not
enable them, in a very short
time, to disguise beyond the
power of recognition. Their
premises are skillfully arranged
for concealment. They are
abundantly provided with secret
doors and sliding panels,
communicating with dark
recesses. Apertures are cut in
the partitions, so that a person
coming in from the front can be
distinctly seen before he enters
the apartment. The 'fence' is as
well skilled as any lawyer in
the nature of evidence. He knows
the difference between
probability and proof as well as
Sir William Hamilton himself. He
does not trouble himself about
any amount of probabilities that
the detectives may accumulate
against him; but the said
detective must be remarkably
acute if he is ever able to get
anything against him which will
amount to strictly legal proof.