Lately the pendulum appears to have swung back slightly in favour of MM having had some good points as a police administrator.
There have been mentions of him correcting a junior officer's minor mistake in
identification which had later greater importance on the case.
He was in charge when fingerprinting replaced the Bertillon method of criminal investigation.(I believe this was partly influenced by the Adolph Beck cases of 1896 and 1904, where an extraordinarly number of women wrongly identified Beck as the swindler, when, in fact, it was William Thomas).
I understand the use of albums of mug-shots of repeat offenders was introduced around 1889, and MM mentions something like " using our albums against them..".
I would be interested to hear pluses and minuses for actions Sir Melville Macnaghten approved or instigated during his term as head of the C.I.D. then as Assistant Commissioner.
Too much emphasis on the (important) mistakes in the Macnaghten Memorandum may have coloured our view of him perhaps too distortedly.
Doubtless, his memoirs trace some of this interesting history - for it is not just Macnaghten's history but the whole Metropolitan detective forces history.
I should be very interested to have other people's opinions.JOHN RUFFELS.
There have been mentions of him correcting a junior officer's minor mistake in
identification which had later greater importance on the case.
He was in charge when fingerprinting replaced the Bertillon method of criminal investigation.(I believe this was partly influenced by the Adolph Beck cases of 1896 and 1904, where an extraordinarly number of women wrongly identified Beck as the swindler, when, in fact, it was William Thomas).
I understand the use of albums of mug-shots of repeat offenders was introduced around 1889, and MM mentions something like " using our albums against them..".
I would be interested to hear pluses and minuses for actions Sir Melville Macnaghten approved or instigated during his term as head of the C.I.D. then as Assistant Commissioner.
Too much emphasis on the (important) mistakes in the Macnaghten Memorandum may have coloured our view of him perhaps too distortedly.
Doubtless, his memoirs trace some of this interesting history - for it is not just Macnaghten's history but the whole Metropolitan detective forces history.
I should be very interested to have other people's opinions.JOHN RUFFELS.
Comment