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AMAZING DISCOVERY.

THIEVES' G.HiQ. PACKED WITH LOOT. NEW YORK, April 8. The curiosity of a lone constable led to the amazing discovery that a very large and'Sfully equipped warehouse near the waterfront of the city waa nothing less than a den of thieves, whose operations have been mystifying the police for many months. So well organised was the place with offices and all appurtenances necessary to the conduct of a large bust ness that it was evident the band were directed by what the criminal investigation authorities call a "master mind."

The constable, casually interested in a lorry loaded with woollen goods w.hich drove up, to the place at seven o'clock in the morning as he patrolled his beat, strolled after it as the warehouse doors opened and the lorry rolled in. The big doors were hastily shut in his, face. Suspicious Slam. The constable hads suspected nothing wrong, and probably intended_only to get into conversation with two men on the vehicle. But the slamming of the door put him on the alert. He telephoned his station, and in a very f.ew minutes a squad of reserves arrived, and smashed their* way into the placo. where there was-no response to their summons, to admit'them. Loot, that a hurried inventory estimated anywhere from £150,000 U £200,000, was found. It consisted of vast stores of silks, velvets, woollens, tobacco and- other merchandise of many kinds. There were twenty-two motor lor ries, three motor-cars and two light delivery waggons, all recently stoleiv some of them still piled with goods with which they were loaded when the thieves made off with them. One had a full load of cigars and cigarettes. ' ' ■

In the store-rooms, neatly and systematically arranged, were the proceeds of numerous burglaries. A great quantity of business correspondence, papers and: well-kept books were in the offices. Not "Dry." In the cellar were 100 barrels of alcohol and two stills of the latest model.

Two men, who pretended that, they' were employed as night watchmen and that they had been asleep, were arrested. There was plain evidence, however, that the offices had been vacated in a hurry, and further search there resulted in the discovering of a trap door that led by a secret staircase to an exit 1 on the street in the rear. Through this, the "master mind" and his lieutenants had made their escape.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SNEWS19250717.2.23

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Shannon News, 17 July 1925, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
394

AMAZING DISCOVERY. Shannon News, 17 July 1925, Page 4

AMAZING DISCOVERY. Shannon News, 17 July 1925, Page 4

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