These shots are from the The Sydney Justice & Police Museum and New South Wales Police Department in Australia.
William Stanley Moore was charged with selling opium and fake cocaine.
Harry Leon Crawford was a hotel cleaner who in fact turned out to be a woman and mother called Eugeni Falleni. Passing as a man for over 20 years, Falleni had married a widow called Annie Birkett. Three years later Birkett reported that she had found out something incredible about her new husband but disappeared shortly afterwards.
Falleni was charged with Birkett's murder.
Joseph Messenger was arrested after breaking and entering into an army warehouse and stealing overcoats and boots. The charges were dropped but he was rearrested later that year for another case of theft. Records show that he became a seasoned gang member by the 1930s.
Not much is known about the nature of these men's crimes but their names are recorded as De Gracy and Edward Dalton
According to records in the NSW Police Gazette Sydney, Skukerman who also went by the name Cecil Landan "obtains goods from warehousemen by falsely representing that he is in business".
This image taken on August 5th, 1924 describes Guiseppe Fiori (alias Permontto) as a safe breaker.
Kong Lee was also a safe breaker.
Walter Smith was charged with stealing blinds and clothes from the house of an Edward Mulligan
Sidney Kelly appears to have been something of a career criminal, having been arrested numerous times from the 1920s to the 1940s. Shooting, assault and illegal drug trading appeared to be his specialties.
Like Kelly, Ellis was known to the police with arrests from the 1910s to the 1930s. His convictions included "goods in custody, indecent langauge, stealing and throwing a missile." He was also a noted safebreaker