65 N.Y.S. 640 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1900
The prisoner was arrested June 27, 1900, charged with the crime of stealing, without the State, the property of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Gould, and bringing said property within this county, contrary to the statute. Penal Code, § 540. The prisoner pleaded not guilty and at his request the examination before the magistrate was adjourned until July third, at two p. m., on which day the examination proceeded. Mr. Schrady, who testified for the People, identified the property, consisting of jewelry, as belonging to the Gould family, many of the articles bearing their initials. Detective Cronin, who likewise testified, proved that he found the jewelry in question in the possession of the prisoner, who told the detective that the jewelry did not belong to him, that he got it from a woman at Coney Island who directed him to dispose of it. The detective asked who the woman was and where she lived, and on being informed thereof by the prisoner the detective, after a diligent search, could find no such woman at the place designated. These circumstances cast strong suspicion against the honesty of the prisoner’s possession of the property, and all that remained to make a complete case under the statute was proof of the larceny, which occurred at a hotel in London, Eng., where the Goulds were then stopping. The Goulds are still abroad, hence their evidence cannot, in the nature of things, be supplied without some necessary delay. The chief of Scotland Yard sent a cablegram to the chief of the detective force at Hew York that four other larcenies were committed at the same hotel on the same night, and that the thief was, no doubt, one and the same. When the larceny is established, the possession by the prisoner of the fruits of the crime recently after its commission is prima facie evidence of guilty possession. 1 Greenl. Ev. (14th ed.), § 34; Goldstein v. People, 82 N. Y. 231; People v. McCallam, 103 id. 587. After Schrady and Cronin had testified, the People moved for an adjournment of the examination, which was granted until July fifth, and on that day a further adjournment was granted until July seventh. In the meantime the writ of habeas corpus was obtained for the purpose of procuring the prisoner’s discharge on the grounds
Writ dismissed and prisoner remanded.