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EXCITING CHASE.

SHOPLIFTER CAUGHT.

THROUGH A SYDNEY SHOP

Exciting incidents at the premises or a large Sydney departmental store amazed many shoppers recently. First a shopwalker was knocked down by a woman who rushed headlong from the shop, and then shortly afterwards another woman ran through the restaurant, descended from floor to floor until she reached the street, and then struggled on the footpath with a detective who had overtaken her. Both the detective and the woman were breathless almost and the detective was bleeding from a slight wound on one of his hands. ' The affair, which arose out of attempts to prevent the operations of a notorious, clever and persistent of women shoplifters, was really the result of a casual visit to the premises by the detective. Detective-Sergeant Sedgwick had restored to Anthony Horden and Sons lately about £BO worth of property which he had recovered and while he was there he was informed of the activities of a gang which was making levy bri certain valuable stock. Several women, he was told, visitie~d the shop regularly and purchased a cheap

attache case for a few shillings. After

this had been wrapped it was taken away and the paper was cut from around the lid so that the lid would open without any apparent difference being made to the' wrapping. By this cunning trick the case could be filled wth goods and removed without suspicion being aroused. The women operated systematically. The woman carrying the spoil would be guarded by her companions, and at any sign of danger the case would be abandoned. An assistant, hurrying after the woman, would say, "You have left your case behind, madam." "Oh, no," would be the reply. "I never had a case." And turning to her friends, "Did I?" "Oh, no," they would answer.. Dective's Discovery.

So, after hearing' this, the detective decided to take a walk through the shop. On one of the floors he observed three women and, with a shopwalker, he approached them. One woman hurried away, but the other two were being questioned when one felled the shopwalker and rushed from the premises, hotly, but unsuccessfully pursued. The remaining woman was taken to the office and after an interview the detective said that he would take her to the Central Police Station and lay a charge against her. She was being quietly escorted through the crowded shop by the detective and the shopwalker when at a moment when the detective was~ hemmed in by the crowd she knocked the shopwalker over and rushed away. The detective followed. He was trying to keep the woman in view, avoid colliding with anybody, and look as if he was merely hurrying towards the shirt counter. It was very difficult, even for a detective. Through the dining-room they raced. Waitresses anxiously shielded their trays, and down a flight of stairs —two at a time —and around a mountain of feather beds. Another flight of stairs and further dodging, scurrying and excitement. At last Pitt street was reached and the detective pounced on a woman who struggled violently with him. "I don't know you; let me go," she said. "I know you," muttered the detective, and a crowd commenced to gather, wondering whether the struggle was the result of love, jealousy, anger or hate. Later at the Central Police Station a woman was charged with being in the unlawful possession of a handbag and with being a suspected person. At Anthony Horden and Sons an attache case, tampered with in the usual clever way, was found abandoned half filled with valuable silks.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/FRTIM19290408.2.5

Bibliographic details

Franklin Times, Volume XIX, Issue 40, 8 April 1929, Page 3

Word Count
599

EXCITING CHASE. Franklin Times, Volume XIX, Issue 40, 8 April 1929, Page 3

EXCITING CHASE. Franklin Times, Volume XIX, Issue 40, 8 April 1929, Page 3

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