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Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume III

MOSES MORAVIA AND JOHN MANOURY

Convicted at the Old Bailey, 27th of June, 1752,
for sinking a Ship and swindling Insurers

SHIP-INSURERS were about this time greatly defrauded
by conspiracies of villains to sink vessels, in order to
swindle the underwriters, and the utmost difficulty was
always experienced in bringing the crimes home to them.
   It was usual for those who practised the imposition upon
ship-insurers to purchase goods, pay for them, get them on
board, and in the night-time take them clandestinely out
of the ship and dispose of them for what they would
bring.
   Thus when they had sunk the ship they could produce
receipts for the goods, and the shipping papers for the
same; upon which the insurers were compelled to pay the
amount.
   This was precisely the crime proved upon these Jews,
who, conspiring with one Samuel Wilson, who died before
his trial came on, and Captain Misson, commander of the
ship Elizabeth and Martha, sunk that fine ship at sea, in
order to defraud the underwriters. Misson absconded, and
a reward of fifty pounds was offered for apprehending him,
but he was never brought to justice.
   Moravia and Manoury were arraigned for this offence at
the bar of the Old Bailey, on the 27th of June, 1752, and,
after a long trial, found guilty. Solomon Carolina, another
Jew, was tried with them, as an accomplice; but, the proof
not fully reaching him, he was acquitted.
   They were sentenced to a year's imprisonment in Newgate,
and in that time to stand in the pillory, once on Tower Hill
and once at the Royal Exchange; to pay a fine of twenty

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pounds each, and to find securities for their good behavior
for five years, themselves in two hundred pounds each, and
such other securities as the Court might require.

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Newgate Calendar Vol. III Table of Contents / The Complete Newgate Calendar