
    The People vs. James Foxall.
    
      Receiving stolen goods, knowing they were\stolen.
    
    James Foxall was put to the bar for trial, with receiving stolen goods, knowing they were stolen. • The facts appeared as follows.—Mr. Kennedy, who lived at no 39 Pine-street, left the city, for the country, in consequence of the fever. About the first day of August, in the morning, about daylight, pi. Dubois, Sandy Smith, Richard May, and Adolphus ¿Taffy went to the house, forced their way into the yard ; broke open the back door, and plundered the house of a great variety of articles, among which were a quantity of silvef ware belonging to Mr. Brett, in a trunk in the garret, the subject"of the present indictment.
    After the robbery, Taffy fell in with John Dillon, who told him to go to James Foxall’s with his part of the plunder, and he would get the money for it. He called upon Foxall in company with Dillon, and gave him twelve silver tea-spoons, a pair of sugar tongs, five silver tablespoons worth about $ 15, for which Foxall gave him five dollars. Foxall took the .spoons to Mr. Dusenbury, and offered them to him for [sale. Mr. Dusenbury bought twelve of them at a fair price, not suspecting they were stolen ; and in a few days afterwards he was called upon again by Foxall, who wanted to sell him forty ounces of silver, and some other spoons. This offer excited Mr. Dusenbury’s suspicion. He gave information to Mr. Hays. About this time Taffy was taken up, and confessed he had stole the spoons ; and exposed a scene of depravity and crime, almost unparalleled : houses broken and robbed in the infected district; valuable articles destroyed that could not be taken away ; excesses of every description committed at the time of the greatest alarm and terror in that portion of the city, the seat of depredation and crime.'
    He confessed from what house he had stolen the articles; at what time, and to whom he had sold them. He exposed names of his associates, who were found to be young hoys from fifteen to twenty years of age and who, in consequence of his confession, were arrested, tried, and convicted : and are now suffering the pain of punishment for a long term in the State’s Prison'.
    Foxall was arrested, and part of the articles found in his coat pocket, between the bedticking and cords of the bedgtead.
    The articles were claimed and identified by Mr. Brett..
   Price, his counsel, made a strenuous defence ; but the testimony being too strong to resist,'¡he was convicted and sentenced.  