MILWAUKEE
(AP) — A Milwaukee man who provided the stun gun used in the theft of a
$5 million Stradivarius violin in January was sentenced Thursday to 3½
years in prison.
Universal K. Allah,
37, pleaded guilty in May to being party to felony robbery, a charge
with a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison. His attorney and family
asked for leniency, noting that Allah loaned the weapon but didn't
participate in the attack.
Milwaukee County Judge
Dennis Moroney
was not moved. He told Allah that being party to the crime makes him
just as culpable as the man who carried out the attack, especially since
Allah knew his acquaintance planned to use the weapon to steal a rare
musical instrument.
"You
knew what was going on. You knew he was not capable of getting a gun,
he wasn't eligible to get a gun. Yet you helped him get armament to hurt
another human being," Moroney said, anger evident in his voice. "You're
not exactly a Boy Scout in this operation, let's be frank."
The
instrument, which is almost 300 years old, was missing for nine days
before police recovered it in good condition. Moroney said the crime was
an attack not only on the concertmaster from whom it was taken but on
the Milwaukee community as a whole.
Before sentencing, Allah apologized to the court, the violin's owner and the concertmaster to whom it had been loaned.
"I
just want to humbly apologize to you for making this mistake," Allah
said. "This is a total setback within my life. I plan on changing my
life, changing everything from this point on."
Moroney seemed more influenced by the statement of
Frank Almond,
the concertmaster who was attacked with the stun gun Jan. 27 in a
parking lot after he finished a musical performance. Almond said he
wasn't seeking revenge or retribution, but that a severe penalty was
"critical."
Almond
said he was lucky he didn't suffer a career-ending arm or wrist injury
when he crumpled to the icy pavement that night. He was also alarmed to
learn how closely the perpetrators had been stalking him and his family
for years.
"They knew where I lived, they knew the names of my children and other details of my day-to-day life," Almond said.
Moroney
ordered Allah to pay restitution to Almond to cover about $3,500 in
lost wages, $400 in violin repairs and about $140 for his
ambulance bill.
The
other man charged in the attack is Salah Salahadyn, who court documents
describe as the mastermind who'd been plotting for some time to carry
out his "dream theft" — snatching a Stradivarius from a musician in
broad daylight.
Salahadyn's public defender,
Alejandro Lockwood,
had requested a second plea hearing, a step that often indicates a plea
deal has been reached. But the Thursday hearing was postponed after
Lockwood asked to be allowed to withdraw from the case.
Lockwood
provided little explanation in court except to say that Salahadyn
didn't agree with his decision, and that Lockwood had a conflict of
interest. He recommended that Salahadyn get an attorney who wasn't a
member of the public defender's office.
The
violin's owner has remained anonymous. But she filed a victim-impact
statement extoling the virtues of the nearly 300-year-old instrument,
calling it a direct link to history.
"It
is, after all, an amazing work of craftsmanship that in the right hands
is capable of producing matchless, exquisite sound that expresses every
emotion," her statement said.
Many Stradivarius violins, crafted by renowned Italian luthier
Antonio Stradivari,
are owned by private collectors who lend them to top violinists to be
played in symphonies. Experts say a Stradivarius violin deteriorates if
it's not used but remains in good condition when played regularly.
Experts
estimate 600 to 650 Stradivarius instruments remain, or about half of
what the master produced. Although they can be worth millions of dollars
apiece, they're rarely stolen because they're catalogued so well that a
thief would have a hard time selling one.
Tired of selling guns and drugs? Try art theft — another profitable criminal endeavor.
Vermeer’s
oil on canvas “The Concert” is shown in a photo provided by the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. The painting is included on a
list of several works of art stolen from the museum in a brazen robbery
on March 19, 1990. (REUTERS/Gardner Museum) The empty frame from
which thieves took “The Concert,” on display at the Isabella Stewart
Gardner Museum in Boston in 2010.
When
you watch “White Collar,” USA’s successful show about master forger and
art thief Neal Caffrey (Matt Bomer) and the FBI agent tasked with
criminal-sitting him, it’s easy to get drawn in by Caffrey’s charm, wit
and disarming good looks.
In fact, that’s the point. Sure,
Caffrey’s a criminal — but he’s not violent, his crimes don’t really
seem to hurt anyone and when he does commit them, it’s for the right
reasons, no? Besides, how awful can he be? He’s a criminal informant,
tracking down and foiling lesser thieves with bigger guns and smaller
brains.
“White Collar” makes for entertaining television. But in
the real world, stealing and forging art amounts to big, big business
with a small, overstretched group of people tasked with policing a black
market trailing only weapons and drug dealing in the amount of money it
nets.
Matt Bomer, left, as Neal Caffrey in an episode of “White Collar.”
A new
Newsweek
piece by Kris Hollington examines the world of art crime and the people
fighting it with a look at a recent conference called “Fakes,
Forgeries, and Looted and Stolen Art.”
Among the revelations?
There’s a 63-year-old Max Ernst forger named Wolfgang Beltracchi who
doesn’t sound much different from Caffrey. He spent 35 years ripping off
Ernst and convincing experts his fakes were the real deal — fakes that
sold for millions. After fooling an Ernst authenticator and expert with
58 forgeries, Beltracchi eventually ended up in prison — if you can call
it that. It’s more like camp; he gets to go home during the day. Art
detectives still haven’t tracked down all of the ersatz Ernst works, and
Beltracchi claims hundreds of them are on display the world over.
What
really casts a shadow over the art world though — much more than tales
like the one of the Middle Eastern aristocrat who coughed up $60 million
for a collection Fabergé eggs that all turned out to be Fauxbergés —
is the breathtaking amount of art stolen by the Nazis during World War
II. It is next to impossible to communicate the
scale of just how much Adolph Hitler’s minions pilfered. Much still hasn’t been recovered, let alone returned to its rightful owners.
Instead, art was hoarded by people like
Cornelius Gurlitt, who died in May, leaving investigators to
discover a trove
of more than 1,400 works in his Munich apartment worth in excess of $1
billion. Gurlitt’s father was an art collector with Nazi ties held and
questioned by the Monuments Men, U.S. military art detectives charged
with hunting down what the Nazis stole from Jews. Gurlitt, who never
paid taxes or registered with the German healthcare system, was
unemployed. He lived off the sale of the paintings, thanks to dealers
unconcerned with his collection’s provenance.
In Gurlitt’s
possession was at least one painting that had been part of the
collection of Paul Rosenberg, a Paris art dealer forced to flee to New
York. His collection was stolen by the Nazis, and he spent his life
trying to track down his possessions–a mission that has been continued
by his granddaughter.
A
reproduction of “Seated Woman” by French painter
Henri Matisse at a press conference in Augsburg, Germany.
She
was able to find one of her grandfather’s paintings, Matisse’s “Seated
Woman/Woman Sitting in Armchair.” They finally got Gurlitt, who
initially tried to sell it to them, to agree to return the painting, but
he died. When Gurlitt and his billion-dollar stash were discovered, he
signed an agreement with the German government agreeing the stolen work
would be returned to descendants of the Nazis’ victims. However,
Gurlitt’s will conflicts with the government agreement — and left the
art, including Rosenberg’s, to the Kunstmuseum in Switzerland, which
apparently has the right of first refusal. The museum has not publicized
its decision yet.
The Nazis would have deemed one of the works
Rosenberg was able to flee with “degenerate.” Van Gogh’s “Starry Night,”
which Rosenberg sold to the Museum of Modern Art, where it still hangs —
across from one of four versions of Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.” “The
Scream” was never returned to Rafael Cardoso, great-grandson of Hugo
Simon, the painting’s original owner. Simon consigned the painting to a
Swiss gallery because of Nazi persecution, Cardoso said.
Wrote Hollington:
Cardoso
refused compensation offers from the consignor, Norwegian shipping
magnate Petter Olsen, stating that his only issue was a moral one: ‘That
the legacy of those who were wronged should be remembered and
respected.’
The sale went ahead regardless, and The Scream was
sold for a record-breaking $119.9m to New York billionaire Leon Black,
buying it for New York’s Museum of Modern Art in May 2012 – which has
yet to add the painting’s full history to the display.
Back in February 2011 we reported
that the disgraced international art dealer Helly Nahmad was in
possession of a $20m painting by Amedeo Modigliani, Seated Man with a
Cane (1918) that had allegedly been stolen by the Nazis from Oscar
Stettiner, a prominent Paris gallerist. In 1939. Stettiner escaped Paris
leaving the painting behind. The work was confiscated by Marcel
Philippon, who was appointed by the Nazis to sell the Stettiner
property.
Nahmad is now being sued by relatives of the
descendants of Oscar Stettiner the original owner of the masterpiece.
Nahmad is currently serving a prison sentence of 366 days as punishment
for his involvement in a Russian mob linked high-stakes gambling ring,
he was, needless to say, unavailable for comment. Nahmad was arrested in
2013 as part of an inquiry into illegal gaming promoted as private
parties for high net worth individuals including film stars,
professional athletes and bank bosses.
Lawyers for the Nahmad
family have stated that they never owned "Seated Man with a Cane" by
Modigliani. The billionaire New York art dealing family's head David
Nahmad recorded in court papers stating the painting was owned by the
International Art Center (IAC) and that the “Helly Nahmad Gallery have
never owned the painting. However lawyers for Philippe Maestracci, are
claiming Modigliani’s Seated Man with a Cane, is owned by an offshore
company used by the Nahmads as a cover for their interests in works of
art, most of which are kept in an art storage facility, in tax free
Geneva.
The Nahmads purchased the work at Christie’s, London, in
June 1996 for $3.2m. The painting has been publicly displayed at museums
and galleries around the world. A Christie’s catalogue states as
provenance that the masterpiece belonged to Roger Dutilleul a Paris
collector who sold it to J. Livengood, in Paris, around 1940 to 1945,
however holes in the provenance have now appeared, including the
exhibiting of the picture at the Venice Biennial in 1930. In November
2008, the work was consigned by the Nahmads to Sotheby's, where it was
went unsold in a high profile sale. Sotheby’s raised the possibility
that the work was stolen by the Nazis at which time the Nahmads
allegedly moved the painting to Switzerland. Richard Golub, the Nahmads’
lawyer, called these claims “totally false”.
Left Seated Man with a Cane (1918) Center photo: Helly Nahmad (Courtesy Patrick McMullan) Right Amedeo Modigliani
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