01e
JOI
1093
7
15618 Q.
1892.
Dr Clark Z
911
be coulo go, without uniform, If a man has warrants for
four or five houses in a street, he goes to the first
house and all the other houses know, and all the people
are out of their houses.
15618
Dont you think that could be covered by having four or
five officers to ake a simultaneous raid ?
A.
Yes, if we had then.
19
158619
Those men who make these raids have work to do during
the day!
A.
Yea.
20
Q..
And work to do during the night ?
15620
A.
Yes.
15.621
2/
Q.
The Chairman:-
A.
Would it hurt theother officers, - it would not taks
them so long during the night, the M. 0. H. night go if
it came to that, it would not take a quarter of a
hour, as against one man working two or three hours in
a night. Would that not be a proper system, when all
the houses are close together? It would do away with
that argument, and then it is not a thing which occurs
every night.
It occurs very frequently. We have 200,000 people here,
and there is a tremendous lot of overcrowding.
15.622
How many warrants do you say in the course of a month
for overcrowding, thirty ↑
22
A.
Ne, 1, 2, and 3 a wook. But that is not one house. That
is perhaps 20 or 30 houses, one warruht,
23 Q.
I mean speaking of sach individual house !
A
15.613
Ar Tung Ta Chưa:
24
That has been arranged of course with the other work.
Sometimve a man might visit easily from 50 to 100
à quses in a month. At other times, he might go a whole
month and not pay any visita.
rosp the law give the P. C. X. 0. power to sign one (5.614
warrant for ten houses ?
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
C.O. 537
361
RECORD OFFICE, LONDON
OUT PERMISSION OF THE PUBLIC REPRODUCED PHOTOGRAPHICALLY WITH- COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH - NOT TO BE