field, where she saw two men whom she knew as Montigny and Duyall. She agreed to bring Blake back, and remain with him while Douglas took photographs of thorn from behind a screen. Montigny told her, "There is no wrong m it, otherwise I would not bring a girl into it. It is to teach Blake a lesson to stick to his wife." Later m the day Blake accompanied her to the house, but while there he evidently saw the camera and., tan downstairs, when he^.^aidr^^'li'ls not fair to brin£,~ftrman here and take jjhoiGgraphs of him." She replied that it was only done for fun. After Blake had gone, Montigny said, "We ought to have had a dictai phone record so that we could have had a record of what was said." The statement concluded: — On the 16th, while at Enfield, I discovered they intended to get money from Blake on the strength of the photos, and with the money Douglas was going to take me away for a holiday, to which I consented. The defendant was remanded.
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Ashburton Guardian, Volume XLII, Issue 9372, 29 October 1921, Page 2
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178Untitled Ashburton Guardian, Volume XLII, Issue 9372, 29 October 1921, Page 2
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