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New York Herald/1866/The Nine Thousand Dollar Jewelry Robbery At Newark, N.J.

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The Nine Thousand Dollar Jewelry Robbery At Newark, N.J. (1866)

Charles Frederick Lindauer (1836-1921) and Lewis Julius Lindauer (1838-1915) involved in the Baldwin Jewelry Robbery in the New York Herald on January 23, 1866. Louis Julius Lindauer is Charles Frederick Lindauer's brother, not his cousin. They often gave false names at arrest, or if identified, false relationships and false job descriptions. Their relationship is properly identified in other articles on the robbery and subsequent trial.

4631531The Nine Thousand Dollar Jewelry Robbery At Newark, N.J.1866

The Nine Thousand Dollar Jewelry Robbery At Newark, N.J. Yesterday afternoon Charles and Lewis Lindauer, recently arrested in New York on a charge of being implicated in the robbery of $9,000 worth of jewelry from the safe of Baldwin & Co., at Newark, on the night of the 9th of December, were taken before Justice Sandford for examination. Charles Lindauer being sworn made general denial of any connection with the robbery. He stated that he was not at the establishment of Messrs. Baldwin & Co. on the morning eight days previous to the robbery, when it is alleged that he visited the place with his cousin Louis and inquired in relation to a diamond; and further, that on the night of the robbery be was in various places in Broadway, above Grand street, New York. The examination was not concluded at six P.M. There were quite a number of witnesses present from New York, by whom the defendants proposed to prove an alibi.

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.


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