Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Lawyer Guilty, Tony's Head on the Blok, Update, 4, Four Years Jail time !!


Breaking News

The Bruce Cutler of the British Underworld, Anthony Herschel Blok, former senior partner of solicitors firm Sears Blok, was today found guilty on six charges under the Proceeds of Crime Act, the first three charges relating to the painting 'Girls on the Beach' by Sir William Orpen.

Prosecuting council Ms. Amanda Pinto QC, council for the defence Mr. Michael Wolkind QC.
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Art Hostage comments:
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Back-story here:
http://arthostage.blogspot.com/2008/11/stolen-art-watch-underwood-stroke.html
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more to follow.........................
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Update:
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Tony Blok will be sentenced today, Wednesday 1st July 2009 at 3.00pm by the Honourable Mr Justice Bean at Croydon crown court.
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Update:
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Word coming through Anthony Hershel Blok today received a Prison sentence of Four years .

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panthers, Mission Accomplished or Premature Ejaculation ???


Net closes on the Pink Panther robbery gang

Formed in the wilds of Balkans bandit country in the aftermath of the Yugoslav civil war, an elite gang of jewel thieves have become a target for Interpol, reports Colin Freeman

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/montenegro/5664487/Net-closes-on-the-Pink-Panther-robbery-gang.html

Ribboned with limestone peaks and glistening lakes, the wooded valleys of Montenegro are well known as the setting for the remake of James Bond film Casino Royale. But for Vladimir Lekic, a well-known face in local gambling joints, it seemed the local roulette wheel may not have provided enough of a jackpot.

The jobless 34-year-old was arrested two weeks ago near his home in the 15th century town of Cetinje, suspected of stealing watches worth EU 1 million from a jeweller in Germany in 2003. Neighbours describe him as an unremarkable character who usually lost more than he won - yet if detectives are to be believed, he was just the kind of shady, well-heeled gambler that 007 might meet at the blackjack table.

He stands accused of belonging to the Pink Panthers - an elite Balkans robbery crew suspected of stealing around £100 million in daring jewellery store raids worldwide.

Operating from London through to Tokyo, the Panthers' exploits read like a compendium of heist-movie scripts, combining the ingenuity of Oceans 11, the ruthlessness of Reservoir Dogs, and the snazzy Riviera locations of Inspector Clouseau's crime capers.

Believed to have been formed by smugglers and militiamen from the Balkan civil wars, they have used every trick in the jewel thief's handbook - and added several new ones.

In Paris in 2004, they waited until store staff were distracted by a visit from the French prime minister's wife before sneaking gems worth 11m euros from an unguarded safe. In Cannes, meanwhile, they put fresh paint on a public bench opposite the jewellery store to deter potential witnesses from sitting there. No less spectacular have been their getaways. In St Tropez, they headed to a waiting speedboat, while pursuing police cars remained stuck in traffic.

"I hate using the term 'professional', but you have to give them some grudging respect," said John Shaw, of Paris-based loss adjusters SW Associates, which is involved in asset recovery efforts for stolen jewellery. "We have seen some robberies where they have certainly shown some skill."

Now, though, after a decade in which they have notched up some of the biggest robberies on record - their 2003 raid on Graffs in London's New Bond Street was Britain's biggest successful diamond heist - the net finally seems to be closing in.

Mr Lekic's arrest was followed by another raid a week ago, when a 30-strong squad of armed police pounced on three suspected Panthers as they sat in a black Audi 4x4 outside Monaco's Monte Carlo Casino. "They were hard-looking men, but dressed in designer casual wear and sunglasses," said a source in the principality. ""The square is full of jewellery shops, and it seemed they were planning an armed raid."

The trio are now in Monaco's Maison d'ArrĂȘt prison, where they are being held in the "Category A" unit. French officials are mindful of how a previous Panther, ex-soldier Dragan Mikic, escaped from a Lyon jail in 2005 after accomplices raked a watchtower with machinegun fire. While the guards' attention was turned, Mikic fled out of a window using a fold-up ladder.

The Sunday Telegraph understands that the Monaco swoop was launched on a tip-off from gang members arrested elsewhere and intelligence pooled by detectives Europe-wide. Just days before, a Russian suspected of "casing" Monaco targets for the Panthers was arrested on the roof of Zegg et Cerlati, another jewellers in the main Monte Carlo square.

And last month, two more suspected gang members, Zoran Kostic, 38, and Nicolai Ivanovic, 36, were arrested at a cheap hotel in Paris's Pigalle red-light district. Mr Kostic, whose "wanted" photo shows him dressed as a businessman, is described by police as a "big fish" in the organisation. He too, hails from Cetinje, as did the men convicted of the New Bond Street raid.

The Paris arrests came just two months after detectives from 16 different countries met in Monaco as part of "Project Pink Panthers", a working group set up by Interpol in 2007.

"The criminal gang is a transnational crime group believed to include at least 200 individuals responsible for more than 90 robberies in 19 countries since 1999, with the value of stolen jewellery estimated at well over 100 million Euros," said an Interpol spokesman.

While Mr Kostic and Mr Ivanovic are being quizzed over raids in Monte Carlo, Le Touquet and Geneva, police also hope they may also be to shed light on alleged Panther robberies in Dubai, the US and Japan.

Among the detectives' priorities is locating the Panther's most spectacular prize to date, the Comtesse de Vendome, a 125-carat necklace of 116 diamonds worth around £20 million. It was stolen from a Tokyo jewellers in 2004, where raiders arrived on bicycles and disguised themselves with anti-pollution masks, using tear-gas to subdue store staff.

The Panthers got their nickname after a £500,000 diamond stolen during the New Bond Street raid was later found hidden in a jar of face cream, copying a tactic used in the original 1963 Pink Panther film, starring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau. Legend has it that the robbers liked the comparison, and have occasionally carryied out raids dressed in trademark pink shirts.

Admittedly, as with most good crime capers, this is where the fact begins to blur with fiction. Indeed, some claim that the Pink Panther gang as such exists purely in the minds of Flying Squads who have watched too many heist movies, and suspect it is nothing more than individual Balkans criminals acting entirely alone.

Yet frequently, the trail seems to lead back to Cetinje, which, for a town with a population of only 17.000, appears to have a surprisingly large alumni of armed robbers.

Some investigators believe that up to 30 of the original gang members hailed from Cetinje, having turned to armed robberies after the demise of smuggling rackets during the United Nations embargo on neighbouring Serbia. The area has long had a reputation as bandit country, with Robin Hood figures revered in local folklore.

In the 1990s there was even a local expression coined for them. A "saner" (pronounced "shaner") was a thief who only robbed abroad, returning home to spend his booty and take advantage of Montenegro's lack of extradition treaties.

"Certainly the first Panthers I knew were from Montenegro," said Mr Shaw. "I would guess they got into it because they had some experience of firearms and were ballsy. Now, though, I think it has spread across the Balkans, rather than just being a particular gang."

All the same, as more Panthers end up behind bars, there may be one consolation. Russia's gangster and nouveau riche class, whose tattoed forearms and necks once provided much of the market for Panther booty, can no longer afford the stuff. "We suspect some pieces ended up being sold in Russian nightclubs," said Mr Shaw. "But now that Russia is suffering from the economic crash, that market is drying up rather."

Art Hostage Comments:

This writing off, declaring victory over the Pink Panthers reminds me of the premature ejaculation President George Bush exclaimed when he ejaculated the war in Iraq was won and it was "Mission Accomplished"

Whilst some corks have been suppressed in the barrel of water, others will pop up, such as those nearing the end of prison sentences.

Remember, the prison sentences handed out over the last few years to Pink Panthers range from a few years to the fifteen years given to Dragan Mikic in absentia.

Whilst those on point within the Pink Panthers take the hits and serve jail time, those behind the curtain remain untouched.

So, whilst these latest arrests may provide a lull, the Doldrums will not last forever, unless of course some of the potential EU membership loans given to Montenegro and Serbia are slipped sideways to the Pink Panthers, via their political paymasters as a deliciously dishonest payment of Danegeld.
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Or put another way by Butch Cassidy in film Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid:
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"It would be cheaper for the Railway to pay me not to rob their trains"

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Harry Winston Paris, Smoke and Mirrors, Update !!!!


'World's Best Robbers' Arrested in Paris

http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/18571/

PARIS—It took just a little more than six months to the French Brigade for the Repression of Banditry (BRB) to track down the gang that stole 85-million euros (US$120 million) worth of jewels on December 4, 2008, in Paris.
Nicknamed the “World’s best robbers” and “Gentlemen robbers” by a sometimes easy-worded press, the gang’s loose and relaxed mode of action had created a sensation: in broad daylight, the robbers quietly raided the prestigious Harry Winston story near the Champs Elysees—some of them dressed as women.

They knew precisely the name of the employees, their personal address, the location of the most valuable jewels, and they cared little about operating in the most heavily guarded district of French capital city.

British insurance company Lloyd's of London had offered US$1 million to anyone who would help recover the stolen jewels.

80% of all jewels—rings, necklaces, luxury watches—have been retrieved, announced Helene Dupif, head of the BRB, at a press conference, while 22 suspects, aged 23 to 65, remain in custody.

“Most of these people have a very heavy [judiciary] past, they are suspected to have committed other thefts and to gradually have taken more and more guts,” AFP quoted Dupif. “The good point however is that in the long run they have been making mistakes, and we did exploit these.”
The starting point of the “jackpot” discovery by French police was the surveillance of one of Harry Winston’s security agents suspected to have taken part in the theft. After months of surveillance, the French police decided to act upon authorization from Judge Corinne Goetzmann right when a deal was to be made between the robbers and a buyer arriving from Israel.

During their raid on Monday, June 22, BRB forces also found nearly 1 million euros in 50 and 100 euro bills, meaning that part of the jewels have already been sold. An AK-47 assault rifle and several guns were also found in the Paris 18th district apartment used by the gang.

Le Monde newspaper reports that the owner of the house where most jewels were found is a 45 year-old French citizen, probably the group’s leader. This comes to most as a surprise since the Pink Panthers, a gang from the Balkans, was widely suspected since Winston employees had testified that the cross-dressed gang members had a foreign accent. In the end, according to currently available information, all would be French natives.

“Let us acknowledge the quality of their work,” said Christian Flaesch, head of the Paris judiciary police, interviewed by Le Monde newspaper. “These may be the same guys, or be part of the same network as those who committed the first robbery at Winston,” he said, referring to a previous US$20 million theft in the same Harry Winston story in October 2007.

It is a new success for the BRB. In the past months, the elite squad successfully arrested suspects of previous spectacular robberies. In March, they caught a woman who had stolen a prestigious ring from The Maison Cartier and replaced it by a fake one in a luxury store at Place Vendome in Paris, and in May, two suspected members of the Pink Panthers gang were arrested.

The December 2008 Harry Winston robbery is the most important in French history, only second to the world record—a US$100 million diamond theft in Antwerp, Belgium, in 2003.

Art Hostage Comments:

Don't be too quick to dissmiss a Modus Vivendi between these guys and the Pink Panthers.

When the truth comes out about the circumstances of this heist and the recovery process it will leave the public wondering "who are the good guys and who are the bad guys !!!"
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Update:
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Fourteen people have been referred to prosecutors in Paris Thursday and Friday in the investigation into the robbery record (85 million euros) to the Harry Winston jewelry in Paris, it was learned from a judicial source.

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panthers Treated as Financial Terrorists, Rather Than Financial Nationalists !!


Manhunt yields arrest of Eastern European criminal
Apprehended suspect in 'Pink Panther' style heist
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http://community.livejournal.com/monaco_mc/5545.html

Monaco police arrested at least one suspected member of the "Pink Panther" international jewel thieves, investigators said. And two other men arrested with him are also suspected to be members of an Eastern European crime syndicate involved in thefts, drug and human trafficking, murder and kidnappings.

Officials at Monaco's ministry of public security refused to comment on what progress they were making in their questioning of the Eastern Europeans citing the ongoing investigation across the border of 8 countries.

The three were picked up on Thursday as they were parking in Monte Carlo's Place du Casino, where several jewellery shops are located. Police threw the men to the ground and had to use taser guns to subdue the thugs. The police action, which appeared to have come just in time to prevent yet another robbery in the Principality, drew huge crowds of spectators who ostensibly applauded the police conduct and success.

Interpol has been coordinating the work of several police forces to track down the gang, thought to number around 60 members.

The group is suspected of having carried out raids in the Mediterranean millionaires' playground of Monte Carlo, the French Channel resort of Le Touquet, as well as in Germany and the Swiss cities of Lausanne and Geneva. It has also been linked to robberies as far afield as the United States, Japan and the United Arab Emirates, where the 'Panthers' carried out a spectacular heist.

In October 2008, Monaco police arrested two suspected members of the "Pink Panther" in the same square. Two Montenegrins, suspected "Pink Panther" members, were jailed for 14 years each by a French court earlier this month on charges relating to forged papers.

And on Sunday, Montenegrin police, acting on an Interpol warrant, arrested Vladimir Lekic, another suspected member of the gang, at his home in the central town of Cetinje.
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Art Hostage Comments:
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Dragan Mikic and the Pink Panthers are not financial Terrorists they are are Financial Nationalists.
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If proof of this were needed then one only has to ask the question
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"Why would Dragan Mikic and the Pink Panthers carry on with these jewel and art heists as they already have accumulated considerable wealth ??"
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There are much easier ways to make millions from drugs and arms, especially as these guys have military training.
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No, the real reason why the Pink Panthers carry out these heists is to draw attention to the fact Serbia and Montenegro should be allowed to join the EU.
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Rather than send suicide bombers to highlight the Serbian and Montenegrin cause, these guys are much more subtle and act in a manner that makes the general public sort of admire the sheer audacity and cunning of these Pink Panthers.
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Art Hostage has said it many times, allow Serbia and Montenegro into the EU and all Pink Panther activity will cease.
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On the subject of the stolen Swiss paintings, Cezanne, Degas and two Picasso's, they were not taken for profit they were taken to highlight the injustice of both Serbia and Montenegro being denied entry into the EU and they will appear once EU membership is forthcoming.
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To be continued....................................

Monday, June 22, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Harry Winston, Thieves and Handlers Rounded Up, Swiss Picasso's, Degas and Cezanne Next, Update, Dragan Mikic Monaco Man !!


French police arrest 25 suspects linked to Harry Winston jewel robbery in Paris

PARIS (AP) — French police arrested 25 suspects Monday in connection with last year's multimillion-dollar robbery at Harry Winston jewelers and recovered some of the stolen rings, necklaces and watches.

The robbers, some dressed as women and wearing wigs, had grabbed euro85 million ($118 million) worth of loot Dec. 5 at the store on a fashionable street off the Champs-Elysees. It was one of France's largest jewelry thefts.

French investigators and police had been watching suspects in and around Paris for months. On Sunday, they learned foreigners were on their way to collect some of the booty, police said Monday on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to speak publicly about current cases.

Police decided to swoop in the suspects and arrested them Sunday afternoon and Monday morning, police said.

The robbery had taken place several weeks before Christmas when thieves, some of them dressed as women and wearing wigs, had nabbed the jewels at the store on a fashionable Paris avenue that is lined with fashion shops, a luxury hotel and fancy cafes.

The suspects range in age from 22 to 67 and include some women. Police also recovered shoulder weapons, as well as euro250,000 ($345,000) in cash.

Members of the Pink Panthers gang that operates out of the Balkans and have been involved in some other high-profile jewel thefts were originally suspects, but they appear to have been ruled out, police said.

Interior Minister Michele Alliot-Marie congratulated the police involved in the operation.

The theft lasted just a few minutes, when the armed robbers entered Harry Winston through the front door before scooping up rings, necklaces, earrings among other jewels and escaping down the Avenue Montaigne. The store, on the same street as Dior, Armani, Prada and other boutiques, has been the target of thieves on several other occasions.

Art Hostage Comments:
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Remember Art Hostage said look in the South Suburbs of Paris for the Harry Winston haul ??
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French Police pulled out all the stops and were given a free reign by none other than French President Nicholas Sarkozy.
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The Pink Panthers pissed off Nicholas Sarkozy in January 2009 when they robbed his ex-wife Cecilia Attias of her jewels, bad move guys !!!
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Back-story:
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Art Hostage tried to warn the Pink Panthers back in January they had gone too far and they should have returned the jewels stolen from Nicholas Sarkozy's ex-wife.
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The French Police approached this as if they were investigating a terrorist organisation and seemed to have come up trumps. A security guard at Harry Winston was among those arrested as well as local gangsters with affiliations to Pink Panthers.

The news blackout on the identity of those arrested in Monaco played a part and it was only when leaks started to emerge French Police were forced to move in.

Exactly how much of the Harry Winston haul was recovered will emerge over the next few days.

Also, expect a breakthrough on the paintings stolen in Switzerland February 2008 which include Cezanne's Boy in the Red Vest a Degas and the two Picasso's on loan from the Sprengel Museum in Hanover.

Those trying to deal for these stolen paintings will discover they are about to be arrested as they show the paintings to a potential buyer.

As soon as any of the stolen Swiss paintings see the light of day Police will swoop and arrests will be made.

Don't say you were not warned, no good crying when you are under arrest, it's your own fault for not consulting Art Hostage.
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Should have stuck to making a deal in Belgrade, Serbia !!!
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Update: Word From Serbia, Dragan Mikic is Monaco Man !!!!
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P.S. Temple Newsam clock,
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Recovered, arrests to follow !!!

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panthers, Dragan or Jelly, Sacrificed by Political Paymasters ???


Three suspected Pink Panther gang members arrested in Monaco

Three suspected members of the "Pink Panther" gang of international jewel thieves were in custody on Saturday following a daring police swoop outside the Monte Carlo Casino.

By Peter Allen in Paris
Published: 4:00PM BST 20 Jun 2009
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/monaco/5586122/Three-suspected-Pink-Panther-gang-members-arrested-in-Monaco.html

Police said one of the men was a Serb on the group's "Most Wanted" list, prompting speculation that he could be Dragan Mikic, the gang's fugitive boss who escaped from prison in 2005.

The Pink Panther group is believed to be behind the theft of some £150 million worth of goods from luxury stores around the world during the past two decades.

Many of the group's members are ex-soldiers from eastern Europe with past convictions for violence - and a reputation for some of the most glamorous heists in criminal history.

Specialist police carrying machine guns and stun grenades surrounded the men's 4x4 Porsche on Thursday after it pulled up outside the world famous casino in the billionaire's playground of Monaco .

"It was broad daylight when their vehicle pulled up in Casino Square late in the morning," said a source in the principality.

"They were hard-looking men, but very well dressed in designer casual wear and sunglasses.

"The square is full of jewellery shops, and it appeared that the men were planning an armed raid. Their 4x4 parked alongside Ferraris and Bentleys, whose owners were shopping or visiting the casino.

"But as soon as one of the men got out of the car all hell broke lose. Armed police appeared from everywhere, shouting orders and telling the men to lie on the ground.

"There could have been a shoot-out but the police did a brilliant job. The men were handcuffed and whisked away to a secure prison within minutes."

The gang made its name in 1993 after stealing a £500,000 diamond from a jewellers in London's Mayfair and hiding it in a jar of face cream, copying a tactic used in the 1963 Pink Panther film, tarring Peter Sellers as Inspector Clouseau, and earning the group its nickname.

The sophisticated members - all are said to speak several languages and travel on genuine passports issued to other people - have since carried out around 120 heists across the globe, including further thefts in London, as well as in Paris , Dubai , Geneva , Monaco and Tokyo .

Last year a court in Chambéry, south-eastern France, found three Serb members of the Pink Panthers guilty of robberies in Biarritz, Cannes, Courchevel and Saint-Tropez.

Boban Stojkovic, 35, and Goran Drazic, 35, were respectively handed down six-year and ten-year sentences.

The gang's mastermind, Dragan Mikic, 33, who could be among the three alleged members captured on Saturday, was sentenced in absentia to 15 years.

Mikic, who is said to carry a .375 Magnum hand gun at all times, has been on the run since escaping via a ladder from a French prison in 2005, as accomplices peppered the compound's watch tower with machinegun fire.

The Pink Panthers' attention to detail led one criminologist describing their work as "artistry".

In Biarritz , for example, they applied fresh paint to a bench opposite the jewellery store they were about to rob to deter potential witnesses from sitting on it.

In 2005, they raided a Saint-Tropez jewellers dresssed in flowery T-Shirts before escaping in a speed boat.

In 2008, eight Pink Panthers rammed two limousines through the front window of a luxury shopping mall in Dubai to break into the Graff jewellers, escaping with £8 millon worth of watches and gems.

Christophe Haget, judicial police chief in Monaco, said: "Their cold determination is only matched by their highly meticulous mode of operation. No fortress scares them."

Interpol, the international police organisation, said there may be as many as 200 Pink Panther criminals, most Serb or Montenegrin nationals with military experience.

A Monaco police spokesman said: "Following a police raid on Thursday, three suspected jewel thieves are in custody. They are being questioned pending charges."

Art Hostage Comments:

Art Hostage cannot get confirmation if it is Dragan Mikic or Radovan Jelusic.

Art Hostage has been told however, the main suspect is believed to be the armed robber of Chopards in Paris a couple of weeks ago.
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Ironically, these recent arrests have been made possible with the co-operation of authorities in Montenegro, and to a lesser extent Belgrade, Serbia, who previously gave cover for the Pink Panthers.

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panthers, Banksy and Hitlers Bookmark !!!





'Pink Panther jewellery thief' suspect arrested in Monaco
At least one suspected member of the "Pink Panther" international jewel thieves has been arrested in Monaco.

Two other men arrested with him could also be members of the gang, investigators said.

The three, who have not been identified, were picked up on Thursday as they were parking in Monte Carlo's Place du Casino, where several jewellery shops are located.

The Pink Panthers are estimated to have staged some 120 attacks on luxury stores in around 20 countries since their first robbery in London's exclusive Mayfair district in 2003.

Interpol, the international police organisation, has said there may be as many as 200 "Pink Panther" criminals, many of whom are believed to be Serbian and Montenegrin nationals with military experience.

The group was given its nickname, a reference to the debonair gentleman diamond robber from the 1960s Pink Panther film, by British police after the 2003 robbery.

Interpol has been coordinating the work of several police forces to track down the gang, which is suspected of having carried out raids in the Mediterranean millionaires' playground of Monte Carlo, the French Channel resort of Le Touquet, as well as in Germany and the Swiss cities of Lausanne and Geneva.

It has also been linked to robberies as far afield as the United States, Japan and the United Arab Emirates.

In October 2008, Monaco police arrested two suspected members of the "Pink Panther" in the same square.

Two Montenegrins, suspected "Pink Panther" members, were jailed by a French court earlier this month on charges relating to forged papers.

And on Sunday, Montenegrin police, acting on an Interpol warrant, arrested Vladimir Lekic, another suspected member of the gang, at his home in the central town of Cetinje.

Fake Banksy art work court battle

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23709608-details/Fake+Banksy+art+work+court+battle/article.do

Three people have appeared in court accused of selling fake Banksy prints and punk designer clothing.

The trio allegedly made and sold bogus art as well as what they claimed was clothing designed by Vivienne Westwood and Malcolm McLaren.

Grant Howard, 43, of Birdhurst Rise, South Croydon, south London, and Lee Parker, 44, of Caroline Way, Eastbourne, East Sussex, appeared at City of London Magistrates' Court yesterday charged with conspiracy to defraud.

Vesna Grandes-Howard, 32, of Birdhurst Rise, South Croydon, appeared at the same court charged with money laundering.

They are all also accused of possessing articles for use in fraud.

Howard was remanded in custody and Parker and Grandes-Howard were remanded on bail.

The trio will appear at Southwark Crown Court on August 18.

SEATTLE – A Romanian immigrant who tried to sell a stolen gold bookmark that purportedly once belonged to Adolf Hitler will spend 30 days in prison.

Christian Popescu, 38, of Kenmore was sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court in Seattle. He pleaded guilty in March.

Popescu will also have three years of supervised release and 90 days electronic home monitoring. He could have received up to ten years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Popescu was arrested by immigration officials in Bellevue in November 2008 after he set up a clandestine meeting with an undercover agent to sell the bookmark for $100,000.

The bookmark, believed to have been given to Hitler by his mistress, Eva Braun, was stolen from an auction house in Madrid, Spain in 2002 along with several pieces of jewelry.

It is believed Braun gave Hitler the bookmark in 1943 as consolation for his army's defeat in the battle of Stalingrad. It is inscribed, in part, with the following words from Braun: "My Adolf, don't worry … (the defeat) … was only an inconvenience that will not break your certainty of victory."

Some antiques experts have questioned its authenticity.

The bookmark is believed to have previously belonged to the family of Wilhelm Keitel. He was an armed forces chief under Hitler who was executed following the Nuremberg trials.

The Spanish auction house had paid the owner of the bookmark about $10,000 to compensate for its loss. Most of the other items stolen that day have been recovered.

At sentencing, Judge Ricardo S. Martinez said the bookmark has "great historical value for better or for worse. You had no qualms about selling it to someone who would hide it from the world.”

Popescu is a legal U.S. resident.

Art Hostage Comments:
Pink Panthers, three finger salute is key to stopping Pink Panther Gang from further heists.

Banksy forgers, whoopee, a potential scalp for Scotland Yards Art Squad whilst art theft in general soars !!!
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Banksy back-story:
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Hitler Bookmark, no doubt this tough jail sentence will deter others from handling stolen artifacts, not !!!!

Friday, June 19, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Bulmer Paintings, Where Are You ???


Art Hostage wonders what happened to the stolen paintings taken from the Bulmer family earlier this year ?

Rumours aplenty.
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Art Hostage values this stolen painting above, by Watts at £2 million let alone the other 14 paintings and the £1.2 million in diamonds and jewellery from the safe.
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Total value of this haul was between £5 million and £10 million rather than published figure of £2 million.
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To those who may have information about the whereabouts of these paintings, beware, there is no reward, no fee, just a pre-planned sting operation ready to swing into action when anyone steps forward and they will come under close scrutiny and surveillance by Police and as soon as any of these paintings see the light of day, Police will swoop and arrest all and sundry. If anyone expresses interest in buying these paintings they are an undercover police officer or they are liaising with Police to sting and no monies will ever be paid, got that !!

More to follow................................................

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Meissen Monkey Teapot Sells for Five Times Lower Estimate !!!


Remember the recent article in which Art Hostage found a near identical Monkey Teapot to that stolen from Sir Reggie Sheffield, coming up for sale at Bonhams and Butterfields in San Franscisco on June 15th ?

Backstory:
http://arthostage.blogspot.com/2009/06/stolen-art-watch-meissen-memo-to-sir.html

Well, the said Meissen Monkey Teapot Sold for $20,740 inclusive of Buyer's Premium against the estimate of $4,000-$6,000, five times lower estimate.

http://www.bonhams.com/cgi-bin/public.sh/pubweb/publicSite.r?sContinent=USA&screen=lotdetailsNoFlash&iSaleItemNo=4209633&iSaleNo=17106&iSaleSectionNo=1

I'll let you know if Sir Reggie Sheffield was the buyer or if it was it Sir Elton John?
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The Meissen Monkey Teapot stolen from Sir Reggie Sheffield, below, is a much more true, crisp, perfect version.
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Perhaps one day both Meissen Monkey Teapots can live side by side in peace to be enjoyed by all !!
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Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Fairfax House Barometer Recovered !!!



A RARE 300-year-old barometer is back at the finest Georgian townhouse in England after the thief who snatched it from display was arrested by police.
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The historic barometer was returned to Fairfax House in York on Monday after a man who stole it appeared before the city's magistrates and admitted the theft.

Director of Fairfax House Peter Brown said the barometer, which dates from 1695, would be checked for damage by a conservator before being put back on display.

Mr Brown praised the North Yorkshire Police investigation which led to the return of the barometer, and confirmed a security review had been launched.

He said: "It is not in too bad a condition on the surface, but we are getting a conservator in to check. The barometer contains mercury and we are having that looked at and we are obviously going to upgrade our security."

The theft was only the second in the 25-year history of the museum, which is the home of the Noel Terry collection of English furniture and clocks. The exact value of the barometer has not been disclosed, although it is believed to be worth several tens of thousands of pounds.

Mr Brown said: "It is still distressing and there are lessons to be learned. We are just so pleased to have got it back. It is such an important part of the Noel Terry collection. It is one of a very small and unique group of barometers made by Daniel Quare."

The barometer was stolen by a visitor who was recorded on closed circuit television cameras at Fairfax House on May 18. He will be sentenced at York Crown Court in July.

Quare's customers included the Royal Family and his work can still be seen in Windsor Castle, the Science Museum and other high-profile venues.

Fairfax House, which was restored by York Civic Trust between 1982 and 1984, was created in 1762 as a dowry for Anne Fairfax, the only surviving chid of Viscount Fairfax.

Update: Woman quizzed over stolen antique
A woman has been arrested over the theft of an antique barometer from a historic house in North Yorkshire.

The £150,000 barometer, which was taken from Fairfax House in York in May, dates back to the 18th Century and is used to measure atmospheric pressure.

North Yorkshire Police said a 20-year-old woman from West Yorkshire had been arrested and was in custody.

The barometer was returned to Fairfax House this week after a 38-year-old man was charged with theft. He is due to appear at York Crown Court next month.
-
Art Hostage Comments:
-
Art Hostage will explain after the sentencing next Month........

Monday, June 15, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panthers, Merely Window Dressing, Pandering to EU !!


Police arrest 'Pink Panther'


Podgorica - A suspected member of a gang of jewel thieves dubbed the Pink Panthers, who is suspected of being involved in a series of daring robberies throughout the world, has been arrested in Montenegro, police said on Monday.

Vladimir Lekic was arrested on an Interpol warrant at his home in the Montenegrin town of Cetinje.

Police said Lekic was suspected of taking part in a robbery in Frankfurt, Germany, in December 2003, when watches worth about $1.4m were stolen from a jewellery store.

Lekic allegedly carried out the robbery together with two fellow Montenegrins, who are already in jail in France, police said.

The police statement said that Germany would allow Montenegro to try Lekic. Local laws in Montenegro do not allow for the extradition of Montenegrin citizens.

The Pink Panthers are believed to be mainly from countries in the Balkans. They are the prime suspects in a series of jewel thefts worth over $150m over the past decade in Europe, Asia and the Persian Gulf.

They are suspected of carrying out a robbery shortly before Christmas at the glamorous Harry Winston jewellery shop on one of Paris' fanciest streets. Thieves walked into the store and made off with jewels worth $108m.

Some Pink Panther members already are serving time in jail. Three Serbs were convicted in 2005 for a robbery in Japan, which included a necklace worth $27m.

Art Hostage Comments:

The main purpose of this arrest is to stop Vladimir Lekic travelling abroad to commit and organise further heists.
-
Also it is being used as a show of good faith to the Germans for their support in the EU membership application Montenegro submitted in April 2009.

It will be interesting to see how much jail time is handed out, if indeed there is a conviction in this case.

Those behind the curtain, including some leading SRS members, who direct the Pink Panthers, can order a stop to all Jewel and art heists if they feel the desire to do so.

Serbia & Montenegro within the EU will make the antics of the Pink Panthers a thing of the past, as the Pink Panthers will be stood down from jewel and art heists.

EU membership for Serbia & Montenegro and the following loans will be the pay off needed to put an end to the antics of the Pink Panthers.
-
Montenegro is taking the lead and will become an EU member leaving the Pink Panthers to retreat to their headquarters in Belgrade and elsewhere in Serbia.
-
When Serbia gets EU membership all Pink Panther activity will cease, for a time that is !!!!!

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Irish Pink Panthers Strike Again !!!








Staff at Holker Hall discovered on June 2 that two 19th century Ormolu ring holders worth a combined total of £1,600 had been taken from a dressing room during the estate’s Garden Festival between May 29 and 31.

And a second theft was reported on June 3 after staff noticed a bronze model of a goat had been swiped from another room open to the public.

Karen Seaman, press officer for Holker Hall, home to Lord and Lady Cavendish, says such incidents are “rare”, but regrets it has prompted tighter surveillance with more cameras and further training for staff.

She said: “We are quite lucky here in that we rarely have anything like this happen, but obviously now this has happened we have upgraded a lot of our security operation and are being extra vigilant now.

“At Holker Hall there are no barriers so there is nothing to stop the public looking round the room. Lord and Lady Cavendish would hate to have barriers, but it is not something we are considering at the moment.”

The ring holders are mounted on square malachite plinths. One was 10 inches tall and surmounted by an eagle, the other 11 inches tall and surmounted by a swan and had some damage to the plinth.

The goat model, found to be missing on June 3, is eight inches wide and also dates from the 19th century.

Ms Seaman said: “We are quite convinced the second item was there after the weekend because we had a sweep round to check if anything else was missing. The cleaner was convinced that she had seen it the day before.

“It’s a real shame. They are lovely things. They are property of the family and they are really disappointed and quite upset about it.”

Police are appealing for any potential witnesses or anyone with information to contact them on 0845 3300 247.


Art Hostage Comments:

Totally Predictable !!!
-
The value given, £1600 should read £16,000.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Picasso Sketchbook Theft Proves Museum Display Cases are Weak Point !!


So, the display case was locked with an Allen key device after all.

However, these Allen key devices are normally universal because museums can have 20 or 30 display cases and they need to be able to access them without having 20-30 different Allen key devices.

So, the thieves just contact the display makers and either order a duplicate Allen key device on the pretext of owning a display case and they have lost their Allen key.

Better still, the thieves order and pay for an identical display case and they will receive their own set of Allen key devices.

Then the thieves can steal their prey at their leisure as in this case with the Picasso sketchbook.

It is a hole in security that museums have one or two universal Allen key devices to access the whole collection of display cases in their museum.

As a consequence display cases in museums are vulnerable and museums have been lulled into a false sense of security because they think their display cases are locked with the Allen key device therefore they don't focus other security measures on areas where display cases house iconic artifacts. CCTV cameras and security guards are focused on areas where artworks are on open display therefore exposing display cases that house iconic artifacts.

Still, this is all very well but does not help recover the Picasso sketchbook.

The destination of the Picasso sketchbook is what should be the focus and Art Hostage has already narrowed down the likely path which the Picasso sketchbook will take.

How Easy is it to Learn About Museum Security and Display Case Locking Devices ???

Abloy provide museum display cases and they give inside information at this link below which could be invaluable to thieves wanting to have access to museum display cases.

http://www.lukucentrum.ee/File/Abloy%20museum%20display_in_english.pdf

CAM LOCKS
Cam locks can be fitted into almost any basic
display case design. Whether surface mounted
or concealed, they can be used to secure and
control access through glass doors, panels and
where appropriate into lighting compartments
and plinths.
Cam locks are available in various lenghts and
can provide key retention in the unlocked
position as an option.
Full technical information including
accessories can be found in ABLOY®
Cam Locks brochure.

FURNITURE LOCKS
Furniture locks can be surface mounted or
recessed to secure metal or timber display
cases with a choice of latch, straight or
hooked bolts.
The OF205 Security claw deadlock
illustrated here provides that extra level of
anti lift protection to deter attack against
hinged glass framed display cases.
Full technical information including
accessories can be found in ABLOY®
Office Furniture Locks brochure.

T-HANDLE LOCKS
T-Handle locks are mounted internally
within free standing and wall mounted glass
display cases. They are designed to discreetly
secure removable doors. Similar measures are
used to secure smaller lift off glass topped and
hinged glass framed cabinets.
Only when locks are removed can access be
gained.
Deadlocking and latching variants are available.
Full technical information including
accessories can be found in ABLOY®
Cam Locks brochure.

PUSH BUTTON LOCKS
Push Button locks provide the capability to
lock sliding timber or glass doors in variety
of storage cabinets or display cases.
The ABLOY®3421 shown here is part of the
extensive push button range and is designed
to secure tracked sliding doors.
Full technical information including
accessories can be found in ABLOY®
Office Furniture Locks brochure.

CUSTOM MADE APPLICATIONS
Should ABLOY® range not have a lock to
answer the needs of the customer it will
endeavour to design a product to meet the
specific requirements. Any such co-operation
is made with close contact between the
customer and the ABLOY® design team

Still think museum display cases are not at risk ????

How about this little investment for thieves:

http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=uFsev1L6PM4C

The Manuel of Museum Planning gives insights into security that makes it easy for thieves to counter.

The preview of this book is free and contains valuable insights that could be useful to thieves.

The Picasso sketchbook theft was either done by an insider who had access to the Allen key device, or by cunning thieves who had done their homework well and executed their plan with daring, cunning and sheer audacity, in other words, Pink Panthers.
-
Picassos found at Zurich airport
-
October 15th 2008
-
A sketchbook containing 14 original Picasso drawings has been found in a spot check by customs officers at Zurich airport.
-
The Federal Culture Office said on the total market value of the sketches, dated May and June 1971, had been put at between SFr1.2 and 1.7 million ($1.06 million and $1.5 million).

Since there were no papers accompanying the sketchbook, it was sent to an auction house for valuation.

No details were given about the nationality of the passenger, or where he had come from. He was passing through the Nothing to Declare channel when he was asked to open his bags.

The Culture Office said the incident occurred two or three weeks ago.

The passenger violated three laws at once. He faces fines for trying to avoid paying customs duty and VAT, and he also broke the law on the international transfer of cultural property, under which cultural items must be declared even when they are in the possession of their rightful owner.

Meanwhile, the book has been returned to the passenger.
to be continued......................

Tuesday, June 09, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Picasso, Pink Panthers, Predictable !!!



Sketchbook of Picasso drawings stolen from Paris museum

http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/273872

A sketchbook containing some 33 drawings by Pablo Picasso worth about 8m euros has been reported stolen from a museum in Paris.
-
The exact time and how the theft was carried out are not yet known but the sketchbook has been taken from the Picasso Museum. The sketchbook is valued at more than £10million.

The BRB which is a special unit of the interior ministry is in charge of the investigation.

It is likely the theft was carried out between Monday evening and noon on Tuesday.

The initial investigation shows there was no sign of a break-in. This suggests professional art criminals could well be behind the crime.

Alarms in the fortified museum were somehow switched off, and no windows were smashed or doors broken open.

Apparently, the sketchbook, which was once the property of one of the world's best known artists, was kept in an unlocked display case on the first floor.

The museum's management are not yet commenting.have so far refused to comment on the theft.

The Picasso museum is set to close this summer for at least two years for renovation work put at 20m euros.

The museum contains more than 250 paintings and 1,500 drawings by the Spanish artist.

BREAKING NEWS from the ART LOSS REGISTER
June 9, 2009
Picasso Book of Sketches stolen from Paris Museum

Paris, France - June 9, 2009 - A notebook of sketches by Pablo Picasso has been stolen from the Picasso Museum in Paris, France. The folio, which includes 33 drawings, was discovered missing on Tuesday morning. Sources report that the book is work several million euros.

The book has been registered on the Art Loss Register's database of lost and stolen artwork. Picasso is the ALR's most stolen artist, with 710 items currently missing. The ALR added 93 stolen Picassos in the last year alone. The Art Loss Register believes the reasons for Picasso's popularity among thieves are the artist's widespread name recognition, as well as the fact that he was extremely prolific. The high prices reported in the press following record-breaking auction sales also fuel thefts of artwork. Recently, for example, a Picasso painting sold in New York at Christie's for $14.6 million dollars.

To Contact the Art Loss Register:

In London:
Julian Radcliffe
Office: +44 (0) 20 7841 5780
Email: julian.radcliffe@artloss.com

In New York:
Christopher A. Marinello
Office: +1 212 297 0941
Email: cmarinello@alrny.com

Art Hostage comments:
-
Unlocked, unlocked, they left the bloody display case unlocked !!
-
The credibility of the BRB is as wobbly as cafeteria jello !!!
-
An unlocked display case, what was the museum thinking of ???

Small, priceless and portable, worth more than its weight in gold, this Picasso sketch book is a huge loss for the art world.

Pink Panthers, with a little help from their friends.

Tuesday, June 02, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Meissen Memo To Sir Reginald Sheffield !!


Dear Sir Reginald Sheffield,

It must be a nightmare to lose such rare items as your Bronze Cordier and Meissen Monkey.

However, good news, if you take a look at the Bonhams and Butterfields auction website you will observe they have another Meissen Ape Teapot by Kandler coming up for sale in their June 15th 2009 sale to be held in San Francisco. This may be an inferior version, but it is 18th century, by Kandler and only a fraction of the insurence payout.

See link: http://www.bonhams.com/cgi-bin/public.sh/pubweb/publicSite.r?sContinent=USA&screen=Catalogue&iSaleNo=17106


The lot number you are looking for is 1353.

Lot No: 1353

A Meissen porcelain monkey teapot (affenmutter als teekanne)
modeled by Johann Joachim KĂ€ndler
circa 1740-45
-
The mother crouching wearing buckled belt on an oval base molded with leaf fringe, cradling youngster forming the spout another on her back as the handle also belted (lacking cover, monkey forming handle with firing crack to rear leg and lacking tail, monkey forming spout with partly filled firing crack to front paw)
height 6 3/4in (17.2cm)

Estimate: $4,000 - 6,000

Footnote:
KĂ€ndler's work records for July 1735 note: "Einen Thee Pott in Gestalt eines Affens Welcher einen Jungen auf dem rĂŒcken und einen Vornen in den HĂ€nden hĂ€lt, Woraus der Thee lauffen thut, geĂ€ndert und in gehörige Gestalt gebracht, sitzet auf einem kleinen postamentgen Woran er mit einer Kette under Vorlege Schloß befestiget ist"
-
[A teapot in the form of an ape which has a baby on its back and holds another in front in its hands, from which the tea pours, altered and rendered in appropriate form, seated on a small base to which he is secured with a chain and lock]

Notice the tempting estimate of only $4,000-$6,000.

You can leave a bid and if you are successful you will have a replacement and some money left from the $40,000 insurence payout.

If by some chance Police recover your stolen Meissen Monkey you will then have a pair and a story to tell about how they became a pair.
-
The insurance company will realise they could only get a trade price for your recovered Meissen monkey and would let you buy it back for a nominal fee.

This will not only be a good story for dinner but will also increase the value of a now pair of Meissen Monkey teapots by Kandler.

I shall watch to see how much the Meissen Monkey fetches at Bonhams and Butterfields on June 15th 2009.
-
P.S. Don't let Sir Elton John know because he would like another Kandler Monkey teapot for his huge Meissen collection.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panther Jelly Wobbles, Dragan Stays Cool and $8 million Chopard Jewels Become Art Hostage !!!







Jewels worth €6 million stolen from Paris store
Saturday 30 May 2009


Jewellery worth some six million euros (8.4 million dollars) was stolen in a hold-up at the elite Chopard store in Paris's Place Vendome, police said. Suspicion fell on the international gang known as the Pink Panthers.

AFP - Jewellery worth some six million euros (8.4 million dollars) was stolen in a hold-up Saturday at the elite Chopard store in Paris's Place Vendome, police said.

The theft happened at around 3 pm (1300 GMT) at the premises near the Ritz Hotel, an official at the Paris police headquarters said, giving no details.

Chopard makes watches and jewels for the stars and has branches in most of the world's capitals.

-
In December thieves staged a record 100-million-dollar jewel heist at the Harry Winston boutique in the posh Avenue Montaigne of the Champs-Elysees.

Suspicion fell on the international gang known as the Pink Panthers.

Lone robber steals $11m jewels

A LONE robber armed with a handgun got away with jewellery worth around €6.6 million ($11.73 million) in a hold-up at the exclusive Chopard store in central Paris, police said.

The man, in his 50s, dressed in a suit and wearing a Borsalino-style hat, passed himself off as a customer to get in through the security door on Saturday before drawing his weapon, police spokesman Olivier Lebon said.

He ordered staff to give him jewels from the window display.

They did as they were told and the man got away on foot, the whole robbery having taken two minutes, said police.

"A man on his own, well dressed, who could have been a potential client, came into the jewellers, his faced unmasked, at one o'clock," said another source working on the case.

He pulled out a handgun and got staff to give him 12 jewels, said the source. "It happened very quickly," said the source. He did not take the whole contents of the shop window."

Staff in nearby stores in the Place Vendome said they had noticed nothing out of the ordinary at the time.

The theft happened at around 1pm at the premises, which are near the Ritz Hotel.

Later Saturday, only a few leather handbags could be seen in the shop's window.

The robbery took place over the Pentecost weekend, when the city centre was packed with shoppers and tourists. The Place Vendome hosts some of the world's most prestigious jewellery shops.

Chopard makes watches and jewels for the stars and has branches in most of the world's capitals. It also manufactures the distinctive Palme d'Or trophy for the Cannes film festival.

In December thieves staged a record $US100 million ($127.53 million) jewel heist at the Harry Winston boutique in the posh Avenue Montaigne of the Champs-Elysees.

Suspicion fell on the international gang known as the Pink Panthers.

On May 13 two Serbian alleged members of the gang of jewel thieves were arrested in Paris on suspicion of carrying out armed smash-and-grab raids on stores in Monaco, Switzerland and Germany.

On Thursday, a Montenegrin former soldier, believed to be a member of the Pink Panther gang was sentenced to 15 years in jail for a Saint-Tropez heist.

Dusko Martinovic was also fined $US150,000 ($A266,620) for the robbery in which he and accomplices stole €2 million ($3.55 million) worth of goods from a jewellers in the chic French Riviera resort.

The network of Balkan robbers is blamed for the theft of goods worth €110 million ($A195.52 million) in the past decade.

French police have described the group's crimes as "lightning fast hold-ups: daring, but carefully planned down to the smallest detail".

Art Hostage Comments:

A window of opportunity for Police.

As this "gimme heist" was carried out on a Saturday the jewels cannot be moved until start of business Monday.

This gives Police 36 hours to recover this latest haul from the Paris South suburbs where they are currently being held Art Hostage.

to be continued........................
-
Update:
-
News coming in the haul could be worth $20 million but authorities are trying to play down the real value.
-
A man in his fifties, wrong, grey tints that make him appear to be middle aged when in fact he was in his thirties.

Friday, May 29, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Sorbet by Irish Decent !!!


Raid on Cirencester antiques saleroom

BURGLARS have hit top Cirencester auctioneers.

http://www.thisisgloucestershire.co.uk/gloucestershireheadlines/Raid-Cirencester-antiques-saleroom/article-1031666-detail/article.html

Moore Allen & Innocent's salerooms at Norcote have been raided.

http://www.mooreallen.co.uk/furniturefinearts/index.php

A haul of antiques, including tables, jewellery and clocks, estimated to run into thousands, were taken.

Police were called at 12.30pm today after the company's security firm reported the break-in.

Officers are currently investigating and are appealing for anyone with any information to contact them as soon as possible on Gloucestershire police 0845 090 1234 or Crimestoppers anonymously 0800 555 111.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Stolen Art Watch Fairfax House Barometer Theft, Truth Emerges, Update !!!!





Putting pressure on barometer thieves

http://www.clicklancashire.com/news/national-news/122896-putting-pressure-on-barometer-thieves.html

Police are casting the net wider in their hunt for a pair of antique thieves who were caught on CCTV as they nabbed a valuable baromometer from a wall in Yorkshire.

Police are hoping a member of the public will recognise the thief who removed the 18th Century ivory barometer from Fairfax House in York.

The item, worth around £150,000, was stolen from the property on the afternoon of Monday 18 May.

A man and a woman were caught on CCTV taking the 3ft barometer and police are appealing nationwide for help in identifying the offenders as it is believed they could no longer be in the
area.

The man is described as white, slim build, aged in his early 30’s, 5ft 9” tall with a dark complexion and dark curly hair. He was wearing a dark coloured jacket and trousers.

The woman is white, of slim build, similar height to the man, with dark, wavy shoulder length hair. She is described as being aged in her early 20’s.

It is thought pair may have visited Kiplin Hall in Richmond, North Yorkshire, a week prior to the theft at Fairfax House.

Anyone with any information is asked to contact York CID on 0845 6060247.Alternatively you can contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.


Stolen Fairfax House barometer valued at £150,000


By Jennifer Bell »

AN ANTIQUE weather forecasting instrument which was stolen by visitors from a York tourist attraction has now been valued at £150,000.

The ivory and brass-plated barometer – part of Fairfax House’s Noel Terry Collection of English Furniture and Clocks – was stolen from the York Civic Trust-owned museum, in Castlegate, on Monday, May 18.

It is thought that the couple captured on CCTV casually unscrewing the Daniel Quare instrument from the wall may have visited Kiplin Hall in Richmond, North Yorkshire, a week prior to the theft.

Detectives said the pair walked into the museum at about 2.45pm and soon after removed the weather monitor from the wall, with the man then hiding the three-foot long device under his coat.

North Yorkshire Police have issued a appeal nationwide for help in identifying the offenders as it is believed they could no longer be in the area.

The man is described as white, of slim build, aged in his early 30s, 5ft 9ins tall, with a dark complexion and dark curly hair. He was wearing a dark coloured jacket and trousers.

The woman is white, of slim build, in her early 20s, and of a similar height to the man. She has dark, wavy shoulder-length hair.

A “substantial” reward has been offered by Fairfax House’s insurers, Axa, for information leading to the barometer’s safe return.

A spokeswoman for Axa said: “It is our hope that by offering a reward, information will be provided which will lead the authorities to recover the barometer and for it to be put back on display in its rightful home.”

Anyone with information is urged to phone police on 0845 6060247.

Art Hostage Comments:
-
Interesting to note, the Irish Pink Panthers regard themsevles as
"Fun Loving Criminals" and have adopted a signature tune that goes:
-
"Running around robbing art all whacked up, Scooby snacks"
-
-
Art Hostage vindicated in the valuation of this unique Daniel Quare barometer.

The usual bull shit put out after an art theft has been thwarted on this occasion.

Remember how they tried to play down the value of the Daniel Quare barometer and only say perhaps "tens of thousands ???"

Remember Art Hostage commenting the true estimate should read hundreds of thousands ??

Well, now they reluctantly admit a value of £150,000, when in fact the true market figure is £500,000.

Remember Art Hostage said the thieves are part of the Irish Pink Panthers and they are working from a target list ???

Remember Art Hostage said the thieves would be long gone and did not care about their identity as they were not British, but Irish ?

Art Hostage has heard Underworld whispers about this only being an appetizer and the main course art theft will be served between now and August 31st 2009.
-
The Main course will be an art theft of such high magnitude it will rock the establishment and trigger a cross border Police effort.

However, why wait until then and act reactively ????

Also, the whisper from the Underworld is whilst waiting for the Main course art theft, there will be several sorbets to keep authorities busy.

No specific details have been mentioned but Art Hostage has been told it will be abundantly clear when the Main course art theft occurs.

Upon another note, notice how vague the reward offer is ???

Word is the insurers are looking at a figure of £10,000, however, the value of the stolen Daniel Quare barometer within the underworld is reputed to be £25,000, or if used as collateral, £50,000 worth of drugs.

Anyone attempting to negotiate the return of the stolen Fairfax House Daniel Quare barometer will be asked for proof of life, then they will be ordered to go through with the recovery and set up those handling the Barometer.

If the negotiator refuses to participate then they will be threatened with prosecution for demonstrating control, by being able to produce proof of life.

Moral here is to stay clear and do not try and negotiate the return of the barometer unless you are an ex-policeman or freelance undercover officer working for S.O.C.A.
-
Leave the investigations to the Police, who after all, get paid very well indeed to do their job.

The only deal available is for someone with inside knowledge to become a Registered Police Informant and set up those involved in the theft and subsequent handling.

If there is a recovery, and if the thieves and handlers get convicted, then and only then will the insurers consider paying a reward.

The amount of reward paid is up to the insurers, is not negotiable and demands for a higher figure will be treated as blackmail and an extortion attempt.

So, to recap, if you have got inside information and want to become a Police Informant, contact police and begin your nightmare journey.

At the end of the whole process, sometime in about two years, the Police informant may, I repeat may, get around £10,000.

An investigator was overheard saying:
-
"If it wasn't for that pesky Art Hostage, we could use our usual bull shit and recover the barometer using a sting operation and without paying any reward"
-
Art Hostage replies;
Scooby Dooby Do !!!!!
-
Update:
-
Sad news if true, Michel Van Rijn arrested
-
Art Loss Register recovers stolen artifacts from New York Auction house. These were stolen in Holland in 2007 and proves yet again the Art Loss Register has slammed the door closed on selling stolen art through auction houses, worldwide.
-
Selling Stolen Art at Auction, Forget About it !!!!!

ICE recovers Egyptian artifacts stolen from a museum in the Netherlands

NEW YORK - U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement recovered seven artifacts of Egyptian origin that were found at a Manhattan auction house. The cultural heritage items were stolen from the Bijbels Museum in Amsterdam on July 29, 2007 in the middle of the afternoon. Dutch police contacted ICE to assist in the recovery of the artifacts on their behalf.

The investigation received significant help from the Art Loss Register (ALR) of New York, an organization that maintains a database of stolen works of art. The ALR discovered the artifacts at the Manhattan auction house, which turned the artifacts over to the Register and ICE agents.

One of the pieces recovered is a 7-inch-high depiction of a mummy with arms folded over the chest and hoes in each hand. It dates to between 1307 and 1070 B.C. The other recovered artifacts were an bronze figure of Imhotep, artchitect of the first pyramid, and one of Hapokrates, and an Egyptian painted Wood Osiris, all dating as far back as 712 B.C.

"The recovery of these artifacts sends a strong message to thieves that the market to sell stolen antiquities in the United States is freezing up." said Peter J. Smith, special agent in charge of the ICE Office of Investigations in New York. "ICE is committed to working closely with foreign governments and organizations like the ALR to recover priceless works of art and antiquities so they can be returned to their rightful owners."

ICE, the largest investigative agency of the Department of Homeland Security, handles investigations into cultural artifacts that show up on the world market.
-
That reminds me, wonder if there has been any enquiries at the art loss register about the stolen Cavalier Van Mieris painting taken from the New South Wales gallery in Sydney ??
-
Word is from DC the Cavalier could be in play !!

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Irish Pink Panthers Historic Art Theft


Antiques Roadshow painting sale halted after claim it was stolen

http://www.northamptonchron.co.uk/news/Antiques-Roadshow-painting-sale-halted.5304571.jp

Published Date: 27 May 2009

The sale of a £100,000 painting, which surfaced during an Antiques Roadshow recording at Althorp House, has been halted at the last minute amid claims it was stolen.

Sotheby's was due to auction Winslow Homer's Children under a Palm Tree last week at its New York auction house but the painting was withdrawn following an appeal by Simon Murray, the great, great grandson of Sir Henry Arthur Blake.

Mr Murray claimed the painting was given to Sir Henry during his tenure as Governor of the Bahamas, and that it depicts Sir Henry's children.

The work of art, painted in 1885, was found in a tip in Ireland about 20 years ago after allegedly being stolen from the nearby Blake estate, Myrtle House. It only resurfaced last summer when the BBC visited Althorp House to record Antiques Roadshow.

A spokesman for Sotheby's said every precaution had been made to make sure the painting had not been stolen, and added the family was given "every opportunity" to claim the piece since it was brought to them in March.

He added: "Extensive checks were carried out to ensure the painting was not stolen."

Sotheby's said the family would now have to provide "documentary evidence" that the watercolour had been taken from their estate.

There was no suggestion that the vendor was responsible for the alleged theft. He apparently found the painting while on a fishing trip near Cork, and his daughter approached Sotheby's in March looking to sell it on.

How it came to be on a rubbish tip is not known.

During the Althorp recording, BBC expert Philip Mould picked out the painting, before noticing Homer's signature. Works by Homer, considered to be one of America's greatest 19th century artists, have fetched as much as £2million at auction.

Sotheby's halts auction of their ‘stolen’ painting from fly tip

http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23696902-details/Sotheby%27s+halts+auction+of+their+stolen+painting+from+fly+tip/article.do

A £100,000 painting is at the centre of a dispute between Sotheby's and the descendants of a British colonial officer.

Winslow Homer's Children Under a Palm Tree was withdrawn from sale minutes before going under the hammer at Sotheby's in New York yesterday.

The sale was halted in an eleventh hour appeal by Simon Murray, the great, great grandson of British colonial administrator Sir Henry Arthur Blake. Sir Henry was given the 1885 painting of his children by the artist during his tenure as Governor of Bahamas.

Mr Murray, 34, a lawyer who lives in the City, claims the painting, which appeared on Antiques Roadshow last year after being found in a fly tip in County Cork in Ireland 20 years ago, had initially been stolen from his family estate nearby. The BBC programme's art expert spotted that it was signed by Winslow Homer, a renowned American landscape painter, and was worth £100,000.

Sotheby's said that, after the watercolour was brought to them in March, the family was given “every opportunity” to claim it. The painting is now in limbo until the auction house is given “documentary evidence” it was stolen.

Mr Murray says his mother Shirley Rountree, 60, who still lives in the family estate Myrtle House, had never been contacted by Sotheby's and only realised the heirloom was being sold on Tuesday after reading a newspaper article about the auction.

Mr Murray said: “She was distraught. She didn't know they were selling this painting. They did contact the family but gave a wrong number. They should have made a better effort. As we are concerned it belongs to us.”

Mr Murray said that Myrtle House suffered several break-ins in the early Eighties when the painting was found on a rubbish tip a mile away by a man who was on a fishing trip. His daughter approached Sotheby's in March.

Mr Murray says he was fortunate to have been in New York this week, so when he received the call from his mother was able to go in person to Sotheby's Manhattan auction house and stop the sale. He added: “Hopefully we can take back what is ours.”

A Sotheby's spokesman said that “extensive” checks were carried out to ensure it was not stolen and that no evidence has been presented.

Art Hostage comments:

The "found in a rubbish dump on a fishing trip to Cork" is a total fabrication to disguise the fact the person knew all along this was a stolen painting and it shows the Irish Pink Panthers have a long history of art theft.

First of all the painting was stolen then transported over to the UK mainland, where it was sold to the present owner who put it away until he thought he could cash it in.

To try and appear honest and innocent he sent his daughter to a filmed antiques roadshow.

Craftily he had it sent to the New York offices of Sotheby's and then just before the auction it was pulled.

However, authorities were on to this painting and were waiting for it to appear before it would be snatched back.

Cloak and dagger at work here.

What a coincidence the former owner, from Ireland, just happened to be in New York the day before the sale of the painting !!!!

This has all the hallmarks of an undercover effort by Julian Radcliffe of the Art Loss Register, pulling the strings behind the scenes to recover this stolen £2 million Homer painting.

Will the settlement involve the sale of this picture ???

Will any settlement involve payments to the stolen art handler who said he found it in Ireland on a Fishing trip ???

Will the Art Loss Register get paid their tribute ?????

All may be revealed in due course, especially if the painting is sold.

Still, this is yet another example of historic links to art theft by the Irish Pink Panthers and no doubt more 20 year old stolen art may surface in the near future.

Upon another note, during the Irish conflict tourists who went to Ireland on fishing trips and had not caught much, were often offered a hand grenade to use so they could throw it in the river or lake and collect the stunned fish and boast of a big catch.

Strange how a military conflict could benefit tourists who fish !!!!