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SMART POLICE WORK

Arrest of Perpetrator Of Bank Fraud STORY OF TRANSACTION By Telegraph—Press Association. Dunedin, June 18. “The police are entitled to congratulations for their promptitude and skill,” stated Mr. 11. \V. Bundle, 8.M., this morning, when James Alexander Fleming, aged 26, a former bank employee, pleaded guilty to two charges of forgery, and was committed for sentence. The case was a sequel to the daring bank fraud on June 6, accused being charged with forging a bill or exchange on the Bank of New Zealand at Wellington for £834/16/8, and also with procuring a young woman to cause the bill to be acted upon. Alexander Chisholm, a teller, gave evidence that at 11.20 a.m. on June 6 a woman presented a bill purporting to be signed by the head of the bills department. The document also bore what purported to be the initials of tne bank manager, with instructions to cash it. Shortly after the woman left witness became suspicious, and after inquiry reported to the police. A public typist, whose name was suppressed, stated that on June 4 she received a letter through her letter-box which purported to be from one A. G. Spence. The envelope contained a pencilled letter, a pencilled bill of exchange and a blank bill. Witness’s instructions were to type a letter from the pencilled one, type a blank bill from the pencilled one and forward the completed work to Spence at the Post Office. Another young woman, a clerk attending a commercial college, stated that on June 5 the director of the college said he had given her name to a person applying for a clerk. .Witness's telephone number had been supplied to this person, and later a man calling himself Jenkins telephoned her, telling her she was appointed to the position, and was to go to the Post Office for a letter. She did this, receiving papers and instruction to cash the bill of exchange, put the money in an attache case, and deliver It at the office of Gold Band Taxis with a letter. Witness cashed the bill and followed the instructions. Joan Griffin, employed by Gold Band Taxis, said that the previous witness handed in an attache case and letter which were given to a taxi-driver to deliver, as the instructions said, to Cavendish Chambers, which he did. The remainder of the evidence described how suspicion fell on accused, resulting in his arrest some hours later, when £774 was recovered in the attache case and £26 in the accused’s pockets.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19360619.2.145

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 225, 19 June 1936, Page 13

Word Count
421

SMART POLICE WORK Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 225, 19 June 1936, Page 13

SMART POLICE WORK Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 225, 19 June 1936, Page 13