The University of Texas at Austin

Law in Popular Culture collection

The Complete Newgate Calendar
Volume V

WILLIAM HITCHIN

Transported for Seven Years for stealing an Exchequer
Bill, September, 1810

AT the sessions at the Old Bailey, September, 1810, this
man, an old offender, better known in London as the
celebrated Bill Hitchin, was tried before a London jury,
for having, in the month of July, 1806, stolen from the
warehouse of Messrs Kent, London Wall, upholsterers,
one Exchequer bill, of the value of one hundred pounds.
   It appeared that the warehouse of the prosecutors was
burglariously broken open, and plundered of various pro-
perty, to the amount of several hundred pounds, at the
period above mentioned, and no trace of the robbers could
be obtained till two years afterwards, when the prisoner,
being apprehended in the county of Warwick for an offence
committed there, was being searched, and the Exchequer bill
mentioned in the indictment was found upon his person.
Having been convicted of the crime at that time imputed
to him, and suffered imprisonment for the same, there was
no opportunity of bringing him up for trial here till the
period of his imprisonment in Warwick jail had expired.
That having lately taken place, he was now put to the bar
to answer to this charge.
   The case being gone through on the part of the prosecu-
tion, Mr Alley, his counsel, submitted that it was not made out
according to law against the prisoner : that the indictment
having stated that the prisoner had stolen an Exchequer
bill, it was incumbent on the prosecutor to prove that it was
an Exchequer bill, which he failed to do. The Court, how-
ever, overruled the objection, and the prisoner was found
guilty. It being a grand larceny, the prisoner had his clergy,
but was sentenced to seven years' transportation.

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