Wisent! That's a "wisent" discovery there!
Today's trivia: I'm sure every
American is already aware of the Pinkerton Agency, the very first of its kind in law enforcements that was actually separate from government control. "There are eyes everywhere," some say, "but sometimes you really need to hire a 'private eye'." Their logo of the ever watchful eye claiming it never blinks, always vigilant, was the first to inspire the term "Private Eye" in pop-culture.
What you probably
didn't know was that Allan Pinkerton had a unique predecessor: the very very
first French Detective by the name Eugène François Vidocq, the truest of the liars, the rascal of rascals, but certainly a
Master of the Craft. When I say "rascal", he was indeed one since his very childhood, and he occasionally found himself in and out of prison (though he always played some trickery while at it, such as helping an inmate escape). His first murder was at the age of fourteen when he bragged about his swordsmanship. The called him "le Vautrin" (aka, the Wild Boar), and of course it ticked him off. He was a flirt, and quite one, and had his fare share of womanizing and heartbreaks. But more importantly, he was a master criminal, and his life of crime under false identities simply had no end, because not only did it provide him comfort but also offered him the
thrill like none other. He was the man of great intelligence and street smarts, with eyes of the hawk and voracious appetite for observation. He was the
perfect predator.
But no matter how great his skills his past eventually caught up with him. He couldn't always flee for his life, and was inevitably arrested (in front of his heartbroken mother) and was taken to
Louvres, where he learned he was sentenced to death. He filed petition for a re-trial and waited, but when no signal came his inner demons got the better of him and he cleverly escaped. His life was already a mess, so there was no turning back. He saw his friend being executed, which made him reconsider the path he chose. He traveled as a gentleman, but his past haunted him again. Then he tried to legally become a merchant, but one of his former wives recognized him and blackmailed him. And soon, he was arrested again.
But it was time to turn a new leaf. He was a
Master of the Craft, after all, and the world would benefit from his skills. He offered to be a police spy, and with all his skills at his disposal, of charm, disguise, surveillance and theft, of criminal knowledge and minds, he became the predator of predators and brought the worst of their kind to justice. But the criminal underworld became suspicious of the betrayal; Vidocq was walking a thin line.
The man eventually founded his own unit,
The Sûreté, a security force of plain-clothed police for undercover investigation of the most horrible crimes imaginable. Their powers only grew when Napolean signed a decree to make the force a nationwide influence. It was much like Sherlock Holmes'
Baker Street Irregulars, except the force consisted of professional ex-criminals who wished to turn over a new leaf by applying the skills for the better of humanity. These guys were eyes and ears, the long arms of Vidocq, and haunted the scene of the crime unnoticed, picking up every detail. There were like shadows of the underworld, the secret guardians of every soul that walked France.
And Vidocq? He was the ringleader, the best. He walked into a house and observed, and while the police noticed that "the door was broken and a man was killed", Vidocq would know
how it was broken,
what was broken,
why it was broken, and with all the patterns emerging he could even accurately pinpoint the most likely suspects. He could see the stains in your suit and tell you everything about you or where you've been. He could take a hint and deduce the most logical outcomes. He took practicality to a next level, and there was no clue that ever escaped him. He was the real life
Sherlock Holmes.
Alas, despite all that, not a lot of people remember him for his efforts. But he changed the world to a better, safer place, and his influence and legacy live on: He befriended the great Honoré de Balzac, who based many of his characters on Vidocq; His approach and methods benefited future law enforcements greatly, even today, and was thus termed "Father of Criminology"; He was one of the very first to adapt Forensics to criminal investigation; Many police, intelligence and FBI agencies remodeled themselves based on his work; He is credited with the introduction of undercover work, ballistics, criminology and a record-keeping-system to criminal investigation, and made the first plaster casts of shoe impressions; He created indelible ink and unalterable bond paper with his printing company;
The Surete was revived as
Vidocq Society, where even today the world's greatest professionals congregate to solve the most baffling and unsolved cases; and even in literature, the guy inspired the whole phenomenon of thrill, inspiring authors like Edgar Allan Poe, Victor Hugo, Charles Dickens, Herman Melville, Wilkie Collins, and even Arthur Conan Doyle for his greatest work
Sherlock Homes.
In short, the guy's a
legend!