ESPIONAGE
CHARGE AGAINST A POLICEMAN CONSPIRING TO SELL CODE BOOKS AN ACCOMPLICE GOES MAD. By Telegraph.— Pm* Association.— Copyright. (Received June 28, 10 a.m.) BERLIN, 27th June. The trial of Glauss has commenced in camera at Leipzig. The accused is charged with conspiring with one Ehlers, a navy signaller, to sell to Great Britain navy code books. His accomplice, a policeman named Jaenicke, has gone mad. [Glauea was a policeman at Wilhelmshaven, and was extradited from England on a charge of larceny in Germany. He pleaded that the extradition should not be granted, on. the ground that he was wanted, in Germany/ for having committed espionage. For the larceny he was sentenced at Aurich (Prussia) to six years' imprisonment and ten years' "lose of honour."]
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 153, 28 June 1912, Page 7
Word Count
125ESPIONAGE Evening Post, Volume LXXXIII, Issue 153, 28 June 1912, Page 7
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