[Courts and Criminals by Arthur Train]@TWC D-Link bookCourts and Criminals CHAPTER I 2/33
The judge who had started the rumpus expressed himself as very much pleased and declared that now at last a new era had dawned wherein the government was to be administered with a due regard for law. Now, curiously enough, although the judge had demanded the removal of the commissioner on the ground that he had violated the law and been guilty of tyrannous and despotic conduct, the mayor had ousted him not for pursuing an illegal course in arresting and "mugging" a presumptively innocent man (for illegal it most undoubtedly was), but for inefficiency and maladministration in his department. Said the mayor in his written opinion: "After thinking over this matter with the greatest care, I am led to the conclusion that as mayor of the city of New York I should not order the police to stop taking photographs of people arrested and accused of crime or who have been indicted by grand juries.
That grave injustice may occur the Duffy case has demonstrated, but I feel that it is not the taking of the photograph that has given cause to the injustice, but the inefficiency and maladministration of the police department, etc." In other words, the mayor set the seal of his official approval upon the very practice which caused the injustice to Duffy.
"Mugging" was all right, so long as you "mugged" the right persons. The situation thus outlined was one of more than passing interest.
A sensitive point in our governmental nervous system had been touched and a condition uncovered that sooner or later must be diagnosed and cured. For the police have no right to arrest and photograph a citizen unconvicted of crime, since it is contrary to law.
And it is ridiculous to assert that the very guardians of the law may violate it so long as they do so judiciously and do not molest the Duffys.
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