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CAT BURGLAR’S RECORD.

INTERN A TION AL CRIMIN AL. ! VISIT TO NEW ZEALAND. ROBBERY AT AUCKLAND HOTEL. A cablegram from London published on Saturday with reference to the absconding of the original “cat burglar,” George Enright, alias George McCraig, recalls that this international criminal once paid an unprofitable visit to Auckland. According to the cable message Enright vanished while on bail. The police record indicated that he had served sentences in England and America, dating from a conviction in San Francisco in 1919 under the name of Cyril G. Eegg. Enright’s criminal career began earlier than the London records show, and his face is in the “rogues’ gallery” in Auckland. On January 3, 1917, there was a mild ' panic in a hotel in the city when it ' was discovered that a thief had made a systematic overhaul of a number of bedrooms during the night. Some valuable jewellery was among the missing property. Chief-Detective Hammond, at that time a detective on the Auckland staff, examined the hotel register and decided to investigate the movements of a man booked under the name of Enright. It was ' found that Enright had vanished , before breakfast, and had not slept in his bed. All outlets from the city were watched with the assistance of one of the hotel staff, but Enright did not take part in the holiday exodus. Mr. Hammond checked over the crew of vessels in port and asked to see a steward named Pegg who was sleeping. The chief steward turned his men out ostensibly for duty and Pegg and Enright proved .to be the one man-. With the exception of a valuable ring, all tne missing jewellery was recovered. When Enright appeared for sentence in the Supreme Court the Judge suspended pronouncement pending production of the ring. Enright indicated a stick of shaving soap among his effects and re--1 vealed the ring embedded beneath the tinfoil wrapper. After serving 18 months in prison Enright left the Dominion on an overseas vessel, the post having been secured for him by a detective, who ideemed it the jhcsl way of removing a clever parasite.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19280531.2.25

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, Volume XLIX, Issue 3799, 31 May 1928, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
352

CAT BURGLAR’S RECORD. Manawatu Herald, Volume XLIX, Issue 3799, 31 May 1928, Page 4

CAT BURGLAR’S RECORD. Manawatu Herald, Volume XLIX, Issue 3799, 31 May 1928, Page 4

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