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04 November 2016 / Dominic Regan
Issue: 7721 / Categories: Features
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Strange but true

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To catch a thief! Dominic Regan spills the beans on some infamous rogues & eccentrics

Suspicion is insufficient. Hard proof is required to prove a case. Over the years resourceful parties have secured the necessary evidence.

The playwright Joe Orton and his partner Kenneth Halliwell stole over 1,600 illustrations from library books. They also took books out and defaced the covers before returning them. For example, the dust jacket blurb of a 1930s’ detective story was slightly adjusted to say: “Read this behind closed doors and have a good shit while you are reading.”

Islington Council suspected the duo. It was a member of the legal department, Sydney Porrett, who was their undoing. He sent a provocative letter to the couple alleging, without any foundation, that they had illegally parked their car. Orton typed an indignant denial. The typeface was an exact match to the alterations made. The men were convicted of malicious damage and imprisoned for six months.

Virgin records?

Billionaire Richard Branson also got off to a rocky start. He discovered that purchase

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NEWS
Hugh James has secured 500 places on King’s College London’s new AI Literacy for Law course as part of a major firm-wide push to strengthen its responsible use of generative artificial intelligence
The criminal courts will sit to their maximum capacity next year, after the Lord Chancellor David Lammy lifted the cap on Crown Court sitting days
The Lord Chancellor David Lammy has set out his plans for ‘Blitz courts’, a national listing framework and other elements of the Leveson reforms
A former Commerzbank analyst has been sentenced to eight months in prison for lying during an employment tribunal hearing
The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has joined with 60 data protection authorities from around the world to call for ‘urgent regulatory attention’ to the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI)
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