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Train, Arthur Cheney, 1875-1945

"Courts and Criminals"

At any rate circumstances are against him, and he
should be anxious to explain them away if he can.
The fact of the matter is, that in dealing with practical
conditions, police methods differ very little in different
countries. The authorities may perhaps keep considerably more
detailed "tabs" on people in Europe than in the United States,
but if they are once caught in a compromising position they
experience about the same treatment wherever they happen to
be. In France (and how the apostles of liberty condemn the
iniquity of the administration of criminal justice in that
country!) the suspect or undesirable receives a polite
official call or note, in which he is invited to leave the
locality as soon as convenient. In New York he is arrested by
a plainclothes man, yanked down to Mulberry Street for the
night, and next afternoon is thrust down the gangplank of a
just departing Fall River liner. Many an inspector has earned
unstinted praise (even from the New York Evening Post) by
"clearing New York of crooks" or having a sort of "round-up"
of suspicious characters whom, after proper identification, he
has ejected from the city by the shortest and quickest
possible route.


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