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Ch. 18: An Expensive Farce

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416                      THE DIAMOND
charged with fraud. The mysterious envelope was called for. Sir Julius offered Lemoine an additional $8o,ooo for it, but the prisoner, assisted by his counsel, Maitre Labori, strenuously resisted every attempt to ob­tain possession of the envelope, and Mme. Lemoine was sent to London to stop the Bank from giving it up. Sir Julius followed post haste to secure it if possible, before she got an injunction preventing. Lord Arm­strong defended the Frenchman by saying that the crys­tals he made were certainly genuine diamonds. It looked like a fight for millions between an inventor and capital.
The newspapers exploited the matter, and though the affair was covered with the earmarks of fraud, many believed that the envelope in London contained the great secret. In the trade, the claim had little if any influ­ence.
Revelations came with the trial. Lemoine accused Sir Julius of conspiring with him to sell the secret to the De Beers Company for $25,000,000. The Frenchman was said to be preparing to buy De Beers shares when they dropped on the publication of stories about his suc­cess. There seemed to be more need for a press-agent and a broker, in the scheme, than a laboratory.
Lemoine was held prisoner for two months, during which the contest for the envelope was transferred to London. The Bow Street magistrate refused to allow anyone to remove it. The Court of King's Bench re­versed his decision on April 30, and authorized the Bank to hand it over to the French court. Before that decision, Lemoine maintained the attitude of a man fighting desperately to hold a valuable secret. The
Ch. 18: An Expensive Farce Page of 448 Ch. 18: An Expensive Farce
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