This is what Mark King says:
The calendar records for the Central Criminal Court have an entry for Jacob Levy having been arrested on 10 March 1886 for the theft of a weight of meat from his master Hyman Sampson, who formerly had a butcher's business at 58 Goulston Street, and he was found guilty of the charge on 6 April 1886 and sentenced to twelve months at Holloway Prison.
Wrong!
Levy was convicted of receiving (buying) meat stolen by Moss Woolf and Morriss Phillips from their employer.
Another example of the risks of treating Casebook articles as holy writ.
The calendar records for the Central Criminal Court have an entry for Jacob Levy having been arrested on 10 March 1886 for the theft of a weight of meat from his master Hyman Sampson, who formerly had a butcher's business at 58 Goulston Street, and he was found guilty of the charge on 6 April 1886 and sentenced to twelve months at Holloway Prison.
Wrong!
Levy was convicted of receiving (buying) meat stolen by Moss Woolf and Morriss Phillips from their employer.
Another example of the risks of treating Casebook articles as holy writ.
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