Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

SALESMAN SENTENCED

CHARGE OF BLACKMAIL. THREE YEARS HARD LABOUR. (Per United Press Association.) Auckland, February 15. A sentence of three years’ hard labour was passed by Mr Justice Fair to-day on Alfred McDowell, a salesman, who was found guilty of blackmailing an Auckland professional man. Counsel for the prisoner said that complainant had admitted that he had been influenced in continuing his payments to the prisoner by a desire to retrieve the money previously paid. The Judge said that McDowell had been found guilty on ten counts.. In respect of three of them he was liable to life imprisonment. Blackmail was a peculiarly vicious and cruel offence. Once the victim had made a payment and had committed himself in one way, he found himself exposed to a series of threats which exposed him to torture and might ruin his character. It might be that a man of strong character would make a stand from the beginning, but occasionally it so happened that the victim might not care to expose himself to having his character blackened. However, he might clear himself. It was hard in this case to find a redeeming feature. The prisoner was comparatively young, there was no evidence that he was under pressure or in serious want, and the money he secured he had wasted.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19350216.2.112

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 22508, 16 February 1935, Page 9

Word Count
217

SALESMAN SENTENCED Southland Times, Issue 22508, 16 February 1935, Page 9

SALESMAN SENTENCED Southland Times, Issue 22508, 16 February 1935, Page 9