Page:Memoirs of Vidocq, Volume 2.djvu/261

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246
MEMOIRS OF VIDOCQ.

to be dreaded. We broke legs and arms unsparingly; nothing resisted us; and we were everywhere. I was invulnerable; and some asserted, that I was enveloped in armour from head to foot; which may be said, perhaps, to be true, when one is not reputed a coward.

The formation of the brigade soon followed the expedition of la Courtille. I had at first four agents, then six, afterwards ten, and finally twelve. In 1817, I had no more; and yet, with this handful of men, from the first of January to the thirty-first of December, I effected 772 arrests and 39 perquisitions or seizures of stolen property.

The following table, which is a recapitulation of the arrests during the year 1817, shows the importance of the operations of the "Brigade de Sûreté:"—


Assassins or murderers
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
15
Robbers or burglars
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
5
Ditto with false keys, &c.
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
108
Ditto in furnished houses
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
12
Highwaymen
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
126
Pickpockets and cut-purses
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
73
Shoplifters
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
17
Receivers of stolen property
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
38
Fugitives from the prisons
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
14
Tried galley-slaves, having left their exile
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
43
Forgers, cheats, swindlers, &c.
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
46
Vagabonds, robbers returned to Paris
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
229
By mandates from his excellency
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
46
Captures and seizures of stolen property
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
39

 
Total
....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
811


From the moment that the robbers knew that I was to exercise the functions of principal police agent, they gave themselves up for lost; and what most disturbed them was to see me surrounded by men who, having lived and "worked" with them, knew them thoroughly.