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''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<head>C</head>
 
<head>Offences against the Coin</head>
 
<!-- page cancelled with vertical lines --><p><note><del>Danger of punishing coiners more than Robbers</del></note> the reasons that have been given more particularly so <lb/>
with this; insomuch that it might be worth while to<lb/>
incur some hazard in <add>the</add><del>this</del> experiment for the sake of<lb/>
trying the efficacy of such milder remedies: I mean that<lb/>
hazard, whatever it might be, which might be incurred <del>for</del> <add>by</add><lb/>
reducing, for a time at least, the punishment of coining<lb/>
to a level with that of theft. I do not say that any<lb/>
difference in point of punishment will bring back robbers<lb/>
and convert them into coiners; but it may prevent<lb/>
coiners from <del>rising</del> <add>being corrupted</add> into robbers. Now though nothing<lb/>
is less true than that any robber will do for a coiner, yet<lb/>
almost any Coiner will do for a robber.</p>
 
 
<p>(one thing it is true is to be considered) on the other<lb/>
side that in general a thief or sharper or a robber who has<lb/>
followed any of these occupations for a length of time<lb/>
cannot of himself turn to anything else: so that he has<lb/>
nothing left for it but to go on in <add>the</add> track he is in till he <add>is</add></p>
 






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Latest revision as of 10:07, 4 February 2020

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C

Offences against the Coin

Danger of punishing coiners more than Robbers the reasons that have been given more particularly so
with this; insomuch that it might be worth while to
incur some hazard in thethis experiment for the sake of
trying the efficacy of such milder remedies: I mean that
hazard, whatever it might be, which might be incurred for by
reducing, for a time at least, the punishment of coining
to a level with that of theft. I do not say that any
difference in point of punishment will bring back robbers
and convert them into coiners; but it may prevent
coiners from rising being corrupted into robbers. Now though nothing
is less true than that any robber will do for a coiner, yet
almost any Coiner will do for a robber.


(one thing it is true is to be considered) on the other
side that in general a thief or sharper or a robber who has
followed any of these occupations for a length of time
cannot of himself turn to anything else: so that he has
nothing left for it but to go on in the track he is in till he is




Identifier: | JB/073/031/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 73.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

not numbered

Box

073

Main Headings

law in general

Folio number

031

Info in main headings field

offences against the coin

Image

003

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f45 / f46 / f47 / f48

Penner

Watermarks

[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

jeremy bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

23871

Box Contents

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