Grab The Big Policeman: The Rise And Fall Of Americas First, Most Ruthless, And Greatest Detective Developed By J. North Conway Accessible As Paperback

as good as I expected, more cases than the history of this crook, But in the end it was interesting seeing what the world was in those days, The guy that got acquitted of a crime because he was a former member of the cabinet of a president, while the others went to jail, including Julian Hawthorne, son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, who later wrote a book about the corruption of the system.
The Big Policeman chronicles the career of Thomas F, Byrnes, who headed the New York City Police Departments Detective Bureau fromuntil, Among the cases he oversaw or personally investigated were the Manhattan Savings Bank robbery of, the snatching of millionaire merchant Alexander T, Stewarts corpse from St. Marks churchyard, and the Ripperstyle murder of aging barfly Carrie Brown in, These and other lesser known investigations are recounted in detail by J, North Conway, whose previous publishing credits include King of Heists: The Sensational Bank Robbery ofThat Shocked America and The Cape Cod Canal: Breaking Through the Bared and Bended Arm.


Born in Dublin, Ireland, Byrnes joined the
Grab The Big Policeman: The Rise And Fall Of Americas First, Most Ruthless, And Greatest Detective Developed By J. North Conway Accessible As Paperback
NYPD in, When the New York City draft riots broke out that same year, he conducted himself with such courage and tenacity that his superiors took notice.
Over the years his bravery and resourcefulness won him accolades and promotions, He was appointed chief of the Detective Bureau inand soon became the most powerful policeman in the city, revered by the Wall Street financiers whose assets he personally protected and feared by the criminals whom he systematically set out to ruin.


Byrnes was the bane of New Yorks netherworld, He compiled the Rogues Gallery, a mug shot portfolio presented to witnesses and victims of crime for identification purposes, and perfected the physical and psychological torture known as the Third Degree.
Inhe instituted a Mulberry Street Morning Parade of suspected criminals before his detectives so that they could remember the arrestees faces and connect them with future crimes.
That same year, he published a book, Professional Criminals of America, Author Julian Hawthorne found him so inspiring that he made Byrnes the subject of a series of crime fighter novels,

Byrnes usually got his man or woman, If evidence was too circumstantial to support a future conviction, he conned confessions out of suspects via mental gimmickry that played on their fears and suspicions.
When mind games or verbal intimidation failed, he cheerfully resorted to the Third Degree, Once the cases went to trial Byrnes, who kept the press in the dark whenever he was on unstable ground, reframed events to make himself look like a hero.
Jacob Riis, who was a police reporter for the New York Sun, acknowledged his superior detective skills and called him the "big policeman".


Although he acted like a dedicated public guardian, Byrnes was actually corrupt, His salary averaged less than,a year, but he managed to bank over,, which suggests that he accepted bribes from those who subverted the law.
When questioned about this fortune inby the Lexow Committee, a probe into NYPD corruption, he attributed it to successful land speculation in Japan and good investment advice from grateful Wall Street financiers.
Among those who received this explanation skeptically was Theodore Roosevelt, who became president of the New York City Police Commission inand compelled Byrnes to resign.


The “Big Policeman” took advantage of his citywide fame and valuable contacts to open his own successful detective agency on Wall Street, and died in luxury in.


The Big Policeman is an absorbing read, because it contains all the salient details of Byrnes most notorious cases, Conway also does a nice job of creating period atmosphere by itemizing other interesting historical events that occurred during the investigations, But theres surprisingly little said about the shadow side of Byrnes police career: the bribes he almost certainly took, and the payments he must have made in turn for his promotions, as insiders admitted that advancement in the NYPD was rarely made on merit alone.
While Byrnes is not exactly made out to be a paragon of civic virtue, he did have serious ethical flaws besides tricking and beating suspects! that should have been thoroughly documented in a book dedicated to his life and exploits.


That said, I enjoyed The Big Policeman and recommend it to those who fascinated by the darker history of Gilded Age New York.

An average biography with an interesting central character,

Perhaps the most striking aspect of the book is its reminder of how criminal cases are not in real life tied up neatly at the end.
Maybe you caught the right person, or maybe you just beat him into confessing, Sometimes the most likely suspect goes free in the end, or only some of the criminals are ever caught, Really enjoyed this book. Very interesting on how Tom byrnes was a man ahead of his time, Although his methods of interrogation were not quite appropriate, he was the forerunner in some of our common police procedures, He was the one who started the mug shot, the lineup and keeping files on criminals, I also enjoyed the time period and the interesting facts about A, T. Stewart, and the crimes of the last's in NYC, Excellent novel. The story about Thomas Byrnes could be written as fiction and it would be as fantastic a story as any detective novel written today.
And the most interesting part of it all is that it was completely real, Great book, a welltold story about a truly ruthless New York detective, who was a master criminal chaser as well as a master publicity manipulator.


I really enjoyed this book, The book claims to be about the life of lateth century New York City Police Chief Thomas Byrnes, however it contains only minimal information about the man himself.
The author includes newspaper articles about Byrnes' cases in their entirety but provides scant details about the life of Chief Byrnes, the man who published "Professinal Criminals of America" in.
I hoped to read a biography about Thomas Byrnes, who is credited with coming up with many modern approaches to crime investigation, not a series of old news articles and simplified rehashes of the cases in which he was involved.
A story bursting at the seams with murder, mayhem, and intriguethe astonishing career of Thomas Byrnes, theth Century New York City detective who closed the city's most notorious murders and robberies perfected and popularized "the third degree" and became one of the most celebrated detectives in American history.
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