Art Hostage Services
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The Art Hostage team undertakes a wide range of services, including due diligence, collection conservation and management, risk assessment and security as well as legal issues, recovery and dispute resolution involving art and artifacts. Through partnerships with leading organizations, the Art Hostage team can provide a complete service for all aspects of collecting and protecting art.
The Verdict
If you’re a fan of Ocean’s Eleven-style heists –
capers with a good sense of humor and a high dosage of fun – The Art of
the Steal is right up your alley. The characters steal the show, much
like they steal some damn fine art in the movie itself.
Amherst College, FBI reopen 1975 Mead Art Museum heist investigation
JASON PICARD Mead
Art Museum Director Elizabeth Barker, left, and Director of Security
Heath Cummings are seen in front of the Pieter Lastman painting "St.
John the Baptist," which was stolen from the museum in February 1975 but
recovered in January 1989.
AMHERST — It was
just over 39 years ago that the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College
experienced what was likely its worst moment: Thieves broke in on a
winter night and made off with three centuries-old paintings valued at
more than $400,000.
Two of the paintings
were recovered in 1989 following a federal sting operation in Illinois,
in which a notorious art thief and bank robber from Massachusetts, Myles
Connor Jr., was arrested. He had offered the two paintings as
collateral in a drug deal set up by undercover FBI agents.
In a 2009 book, “The Art
of the Heist,” in which he details his life of crime, Connor claims he
stole both those paintings from the Mead.
But the third painting — a piece by Dutch artist Jan Baptist Lambrechts
that is believed to date from the early 18th century — hasn’t been seen
since vanishing from the museum Feb. 8, 1975. And Connor doesn’t mention
it in his book.
Now museum officials,
with the FBI, have reopened the investigation for the missing painting,
titled “Interior with Figures Smoking and Drinking.” Though no new
information has come to light about the work, museum staff said they
have no reason to believe the Lambrechts is not still in decent
condition, somewhere, and they hope that by publicly announcing the
renewed search they’ll prompt some new leads, including tips from the
public.
“I’ve been trying to do
this since I came on here,” said Heath Cummings, the Mead’s head of
security, who began working at the museum in 2006. “It was basically a
matter of going back, looking at all the paperwork on the case, talking
to people who had been involved in it, just slowly collecting data about
it.”
Cummings examined museum
files, college archives, and old newspaper accounts, and he also talked
to various art experts and other law enforcement agents. Then he took
the information to the FBI, which agreed to take a fresh look at the
case, including assigning an agent in the bureau’s Springfield office to
review past information on the missing painting to see if anything had
been overlooked.
Special agent Greg
Comcowich, media coordinator for the bureau’s Boston office, said the
FBI is looking to generate additional publicity for the case beyond the
Valley and Massachusetts.
“It’s not uncommon for
art to resurface years or even decades after it’s been stolen,”
Comcowich said. “It can follow some strange paths.”
He said the art can sometimes wind up with people who don’t realize the value of what they have.
“Anytime we get a
request like this from the public, we want to do all we can to help
out,” said special agent Geoff Kelly, who oversees art theft
investigations for the Boston FBI office. “And today we have better
resources for tracking stolen art than we did in 1975.”
He noted, for instance,
that the bureau maintains a digital national file for looted art, on
which the Lambrechts painting has been listed.
Elizabeth Barker, the
Mead’s director, credited Cummings with doing all the “heavy lifting” on
researching the case of the missing Lambrechts painting. The museum,
she added, decided bringing the case forward again and seeking public
input outweighed the embarrassment of reminding anyone that the
paintings had been stolen in the first place, when museum security was
not as tight as it is now.
“I think it’s important that we show we’re making a real good-faith effort to try and find this painting,” Barker said.
Grim discovery
The theft was discovered
in February 1975 after state police at the Northampton barracks got an
anonymous tip. They contacted Amherst College police, who tracked
footprints still visible in some fresh snow to a broken window at the
Mead. Inside the museum, it quickly became evident that three Dutch
canvasses — all of which the museum had obtained in the previous few
years — had been stripped from their frames.
Aside from the
Lambrechts painting, the missing art included “The Interior of the New
Church, Delft” by Hendrick Cornelisz van Vliet (1611-1675) and “St. John
the Baptist” by Pieter Lastman (1583-1633).
Museum officials did
what they could, registering the stolen works with the Art Dealers
Association of America in case someone tried to sell them, and the
college overhauled the Mead’s security system. In 1982, insurance
allowed the museum to purchase a replacement painting, another work by
van Vliet, “Interior of Nieuwe Kerk, Delft.”
But the trail of the
missing art soon went cold — until 1989, when the van Vliet and Lastman
paintings were recovered during Connor’s arrest in the FBI drug sting.
Both paintings were in pretty good condition, Cummings said, and were
back on display in the museum that year.
However, Connor, who
once stole a Rembrandt from Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts in broad
daylight — then later used it as a bargaining chip for a reduced prison
sentence — gave a new wrinkle to the Mead story in his 2009 book, in
which he details his long list of crimes and prison sentences, including
one for shooting a police officer.
In the book, co-written
by crime novelist Jenny Siler, Connor claims he stole the van Vliet and
Lastman paintings from the Mead on a whim after coming to the area with
two partners to check out a South Hadley bank they were thinking of
robbing. Connor, who enjoyed art and studied it in his spare time,
stopped by the museum before heading to the bank.
Connor, now 71 and
according to various news reports living in Blackstone, in Worcester
County near the Rhode Island border, does not say specifically when he
went to the Mead. But judging from the book’s timeline, his visit would
appear to be in the mid 1970s, about the time the three paintings were
stolen from the museum.
He writes that he didn’t
care for the Mead’s atmosphere — “Small yet pretentious, with an
overblown sense of itself” — but did appreciate its collection of Dutch
oil paintings. Noticing one in the curator’s empty office, he stepped in
for a quick look, only to have the curator reappear, irritated to find
Connor there and dismissive of his inquiries about the painting,
“immediately identifying me as someone of a lower caste.”
Feeling disrespected,
and noticing there did not appear to be any alarm system connected to
the window in his office, Connor resolved to come back that night with
his partners to teach the curator a lesson. He claims the subsequent
break-in, through the window of that same office, “wasn’t especially
memorable” but personally very satisfying, “on par with the most daring
heists of my career.”
Yet, among a number of
items he claims he and his partners stole from the museum, Connor does
not mention Lambrechts’ “Interior with Figures Smoking and Drinking.”
Asked if Connor had been
questioned about that painting, or would be in the future, Geoff Kelly,
the FBI agent, said he couldn’t comment on any specifics about the
investigation but added, “Typically we will approach anyone who we
believe may have knowledge about the case.”
It’s not clear what the
Lambrechts painting might be worth today; Barker said that as a museum
director, she’s ethically bound not to discuss the monetary value of
artwork. But according to artnet.com,
an online service provider for the international art market, other
works by Lambrechts were sold in the past two decades for the equivalent
of anywhere between $22,000 and $43,400.
People get disheartened
sometimes with how long it can take to recover stolen art, Kelly said,
“but they have to be patient — there can be a break in a case anytime.”
He cited a 1978 case in which seven paintings worth millions of dollars
were stolen from a private residence in Stockbridge — the largest
residential theft in state history — and all the art was finally
recovered by about 2010.
“There’s always hope,” said Kelly.
Anyone who may have
information relating to the theft or location of the Lambrechts painting
is asked to contact the FBI at 617-742-5533 or online at https://tips.fbi.gov.
12-page list details drugs seized from apartment where stolen artifact sat for years
Simon Metke, 33, kept an ancient artifact worth $1.2-million on a bookshelf for two years.
EDMONTON
- An RCMP officer helping in the search for a stolen $1.2 million
artifact noticed a strong smell of marijuana within the south Edmonton
apartment. In the first kitchen drawer he opened while looking for
documents related to the Persian bas-relief sculpture, the officer found
containers with what he believed to be marijuana, hash or heroin,
psilocybin, and cocaine or methamphetamine inside, court documents say.
Alberta
RCMP assisted Quebec RCMP’s Integrated Art Crime Investigation Team on
Jan. 22 in recovering the artifact stolen from Montreal’s Museum of Fine
Arts in September 2011. When RCMP entered the 14th-floor suite shortly
before 9 a.m., Simon Metke showed investigators where the stolen
artifact was in his bedroom, an application to obtain a search warrant
says.
Metke, 33, previously told the Edmonton Journal the
artifact, dating from the fifth century BC, sat on an Ikea bookshelf for
two years, displayed above a plastic Star Wars spaceship, flanked by
crystals and a small collection of stuffed animals. He bought the
sculpture from the neighbour of a friend in Montreal for $1,400.
“I’m
not really happy with the way that I found out what it was, but ... I’m
really honoured to have been able to look after it,” he said.
As
Metke and his girlfriend Jana Lang, 25, were escorted out of the
apartment and taken to RCMP headquarters, officers began searching the
suite for documents related to the stolen artifact. Police sought a
second search warrant for drugs and seized what they believed to be
1.072 kilograms of marijuana, 11.1 grams of hash, one gram of heroin,
64.8 grams of psilocybin, 18.1 grams of opium, LSD, “score sheets,”
scales, and packaging material.
The items found are detailed in a 12-page list.
Police
also seized an undetermined amount of cash in 19 bundles and numerous
unidentified drugs, including a plastic margarine container with various
suspected drugs inside and unknown plant matter in small plastic
baggies.
“I noticed two white coffee grinders on the kitchen
counter in plain view,” wrote RCMP Const. Brent Clarke in an application
to obtain a search warrant. One coffee grinder contained ground-up
marijuana, and a kitchen drawer Clarke opened contained small containers
with various drugs, as well as rolling papers, a metal grinder and
scissors.
Clarke also noticed two pieces of paper, believed to be
score sheets. “Score sheets record how much the drug trafficker is
selling the drugs for and the amounts. I noticed code names and prices
consistent with that of a cannabis marijuana trafficker,” the document
says.
Metke previously told the Journal he had been working on
getting his medical marijuana licence, and that the money seized by RCMP
were donations and savings to start a business teaching children about
ecology.
Metke and Lang have been charged with trafficking
marijuana and possession of money obtained by crime. Metke has also been
charged with possession of stolen property. They are slated to appear
in Edmonton provincial court on March 19.
Man charged over Edinburgh antiques theft
Antiques worth about £100,000 were taken from Shapes auction house in December
A 53-year-old man has been charged in connection with the theft of antiques from an auction house in the west of Edinburgh.
Gordon McIntyre appeared at Edinburgh Sheriff Court charged with theft by housebreaking.
He made no plea or declaration and was remanded in custody.
Police Scotland said about £100,000 worth of items were taken from Shapes on Bankhead Medway early on 7 December, 2013.
Officers confirmed they are still attempting to trace the
stolen goods and have appealed for anyone with information to contact
them.
The theft was investigated as part of Operation RAC, which
was established to target housebreaking and other crimes against
property.
Det Insp John Kavanagh said: "Since these items were stolen
during a break-in last year, officers in Edinburgh have been pursuing
numerous lines of inquiry to identify those responsible.
"These inquiries, undertaken as part of Operation RAC, have
culminated in an arrest, while we continue with our efforts to trace the
stolen antiques.
"Anyone who believes they have information that can assist with our investigation should contact police immediately."
Kingpin’ of Wafi Mall jewellery heist held
DUBAI: Dubai Police have confirmed the news
reported by Kuna news agency from Madrid that the Spanish police
arrested on Feb.3 a new member of the “Pink Panther” gang. The gang had
robbed jewellery worth three million euros from a shopping mall in Dubai
in 2007.
According to Kuna agency, the Spanish TV news quoted
the Spanish police that they had arrested a 33-year-old Serbian, Borok
Leinshitesh, one of the members of the “Pink Panther” gang, who is
wanted in more than 20 countries and purportedly the gang leader.
The
Spanish police confirmed that Leinshitesh was arrested in the city of
Alkala de Henares in Madrid, while he was driving a rented car checking
out of a hotel. They said he was sentenced in absentia to life
imprisonment by the Dubai Police.
It is mentioned that this gang
consists of 200 people, and they had committed more than 210 robberies
all over the world, most recent of which was in the French city of
Cannes, during the Cannes Film Festival.
A security source said
they had already arrested about two members of the “Pink Panther” gang
after their identity was revealed by the Dubai Police for the first time
in the world, and they had issued charges against them on the request
of Interpol.
An official arrest warrant against the suspects was
issued by the Dubai Interpol Police since committing the theft in a
famous jewellery store in Wafi Mall. An extradition order has been sent
to the Spanish authorities to extradite the accused to the Dubai police.
It was noted that the Dubai Police had a great role to play in
detecting the case of the jewellery store theft by four suspects,
including a woman.
Dubai Police also revealed the identities of these criminals.
The police confirmed that the suspects were members of a gang which was called the “Pink Panther.”
The
police chased them and they were able to detect the place where they
hid the jewellery a few days after the theft, and arrested one member of
the gang.
Fernando de Szyszlo painting stolen from museum in Arequipa, Peru
Three paintings were taken from the Arequipa Museum of Contemporary Art, among them “Cuadro de Auvers” by Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo.
Three painting have been stolen from the Arequipa Museum of Contemporary Art, say museum officials.
The most well-known work taken by the art thieves is the “Cuadro de
Auvers” by Peruvian abstract artist Fernando de Szyszlo. The two other
paintings that were taken were “Aves de totorita” by Gerardo Chavez and
“Sueño de Fuego” by Venancio Shinki.
Eduardo Ugarte, director of the Arequipa Museum of Contemporary art told EFE
“We’re asking for international help in distributing [images] of the
paintings so they won’t be sold, as we think what we’re dealing with is
an international art trafficking network, because one of the criminals
had a foreign accent.”
“These three painting are very important for us,” explained the director. EFE reports that the burglary appears to
have been a well-organized operation. “They studied the routine and
[knew] how to do it,” said Ugarte.
According to EFE, the paintings were cut
from their frames with a razor blade. Two members of the three-person
team worked to distract museum staff while the third went alone to
remove the paintings from their frames. They were able to leave before
museum security realized what had happened. EFE reports that Interpol has been notified of the theft.
Theft of $1.8 million in baroque paintings a blow to Guatemalan art world
“La Oración en el Huerto,” Tomás de
Merlo, 18th century, stolen from Guatemala’s El Calvario church in
Antigua, in early February.
(Courtesy Miguel Torres)
ANTIGUA, Guatemala – Two weeks ago, thieves made off with six
paintings by 18th century master Tomás de Merlo from the colonial-era
church of El Calvario in La Antigua. Experts are devastated by the loss.
Late on the afternoon of Feb. 7, two men entered the historic church,
tied up groundskeeper Feliciano Chávez hand and foot, and, joined by
accomplices, cut the six paintings from their frames, one by one.
Experts have valued the paintings at about $300,000 each, or $1.8
million total. But for Miguel Torres, an academic fellow at the
Guatemalan Academy of Geography and History, “it’s impossible to assign a
monetary value to any of the paintings.”
“It’s ridiculous,” Torres lamented. “The paintings are part of our history.”
Benjamin Reeves/The Tico Times
The stolen works, which depict the Passion of Christ and were
commissioned after the 1717 San Miguel earthquakes to adorn the walls of
El Calvario, represent a crucial component of Guatemala’s 18th century
art.
In a recent story in the daily Prensa Libre, historian Haroldo Rodas
called the theft “intolerable,” while art historian Guillermo Monsanto
said the “heart of baroque Guatemala was stolen.”
Art theft is sadly not uncommon in Guatemala, and the Museum of
Colonial Art in La Antigua has targeted before. In 2004, a large
painting by Cristóbal de Villalpando was stolen and cut into pieces. A
museum guard was killed in that heist. Both halves of the painting were
later recovered in Mexico.
Guatemala hosts vast quantities of cultural patrimony, from ancient
Mayan artifacts to the treasures of the colonial Catholic Church. Much
of the Central American country’s fine art, like De Merlo’s paintings in
El Calvario, originally was commissioned by the Catholic Church, and it
is still largely under the church’s purview.
But the theft of the De Merlo paintings was preventable, Torres said.
“I personally recommended that [they] put in an alarm [on each
painting],” Torres said. Security firms were solicited for bids on an
alarm system, but in the end, “we never got the money.”
While El Calvario did have an alarm, it was only activated when the church was closed, and individual paintings were not wired.
El Calvario, Antigua, Guatemala.
Benjamin Reeves/The Tico Times
Now, finger-pointing has begun, with the Guatemalan Culture Ministry
pinning the blame on the local Catholic Church. According to Eduardo
Hernández, who polices the illicit traffic of cultural goods for the
ministry, the paintings were stolen because of a “lack of cautiousness”
and a “dearth of finances for a new alarm.”
Even Torres has admitted that many experts in the art world,
including himself, were naive in thinking the large scale of the
paintings would prevent their theft.
Experts say the biggest markets for stolen colonial Guatemalan art
are Mexico and Spain, and according to Torres, the De Merlo paintings
are likely in the hands of a private collector. Investigators have
alerted Interpol and major auction houses and museums.
Meanwhile, the investigation continues, and a crime-scene squad from
the Prosecutor’s Office closed the church for a day last week.
Investigators also have requested polygraphs for church employees, and
the government is offering a $13,000 reward for information leading to
the paintings’ safe return.
Police say anyone with information should call +(502) 2239-2100. Benjamin Reeves is a freelance journalist based in Antigua, Guatemala. Follow him on Twitter and on his blog.
More of the stolen paintings:
“La Piedad,” Tomás de Merlo, 18th century.
(Courtesy Miguel Torres)
“Jesús ante Caifas,” Tomás de Merlo, 18th century.
(Courtesy Miguel Torres)
“El Pendimiento de Cristo,” Tomás de Merlo, 18th century.
What we know about suspects accused in Stradivarius theft
MILWAUKEE (WITI) – FOX6 News is learning more about the suspects
accused in the theft of the Stradivarius violin. They are accused of
pulling off one of Milwaukee’s largest heists ever.
Salah Jones
During a news conference on Thursday, February 6th, Milwaukee Police
Chief Ed Flynn said an anonymous tip helped them to identify a primary
suspect — 41-year-old Salah Jones.
Police believe 36-year-old Universal Knowledge Allah purchased the
taser used in this case. Law enforcement officials worked closely with
Taser International which led officials to Allah.
Jones has a criminal history involving stolen art in the past.
In 1999, he was charged with trying to sell a $25,000 statue back to its owner. The statue was taken from a gallery in 1995.
Universal Allah
Allah was once a member of a black supremacy group, known as the
“Five Percenters.” He legally changed his name in 1999 from Shaudell
Johnson.
On the Internet, he can be heard preaching the word of a supreme being.
“My name is Universal Knowledge Allah. Universal — that which can be
applied everywhere. I bear witness to myself having a supreme
intelligence, and supreme knowledge of myself. Allah is the name of the
supreme of all beings — the supreme being black man of Asia. I am the
supreme being black man of Asia,” Allah is heard saying online.
Back in 2005, FOX6 Investigators did a story on the “Five Percenters”
— the black supremacy group Allah has been linked to. Members of the
group were accused of slashing tires of vans rented by the Republican
Party a year earlier.
It has been revealed that he recently cut the hair of Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett.
Allah does not have a criminal record.
A 32-year-old female suspect has been released from custody.
Charges in this case could come Friday morning, February 7th.
1715 Lipinski Stradivarius violin
The Milwaukee Police Department recovered the stolen 1715 Lipinski
Stradivarius violin from a home in the city’s Bay View neighborhood. It
appears to be in perfect condition — and is expected to be returned to
its owner soon.
On Monday, January 27th, two armed suspects, a man and a woman, approached concertmaster violinist Frank Almond of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra who
had just performed at Wisconsin Lutheran College. Almond walked to a
parking lot after the concert and the suspects approached Almond. They
used a taser on Almond, causing him to drop the violin and fall to the
ground. The suspects then stole the violin, valued at approximately $6
million.
Edmonton man charged with possessing stolen artifact ‘honoured' to have looked after it
Sculpture that dates back to fifth century BC is worth $1.2 million
Simon Metke, 33, kept an ancient artifact worth $1.2-million on a bookshelf for two years.
EDMONTON
- For two years, a stolen ancient artifact worth $1.2 million sat on an
Ikea bookshelf in a south Edmonton apartment, displayed above a plastic
Star Wars spaceship, flanked by crystals and a small collection of
stuffed animals. The Persian bas-relief sculpture, dating from the fifth
century BC, sat slightly behind a handmade vase decorated with a
painted fish and filled with dried flowers.
Then, at about 9 a.m.
on Jan. 22, a team of police officers working with Quebec RCMP’s
Integrated Art Crime Investigation Team banged on Simon Metke’s
apartment door.
“There’s like 20 RCMP officers flooding my place,
the sunshine’s coming in, the crystals are making rainbows everywhere,
the bougainvillea flowers are glowing in the sunrise light,” Simon
Metke, 33, said Thursday evening, sitting cross-legged in his south
Edmonton apartment.
“And I’m just sort of, ‘What the heck is
going on?’ And, OK, here’s the thing I think you’re looking for. This
thing is a lot more significant than I thought it was.”
Police say
the sculpture was stolen from Montreal’s Museum of Fine Arts in
September 2011. The same thief is then believed to have taken a second
piece from the museum a month later. That piece, a statuette of a man
dating from the first century B.C., is still missing. The man who took
the pieces has not been charged. Police aren’t saying what led them to
Metke.
Metke said he bought the sculpture from the neighbour of a
friend in Montreal, thinking it was an “interesting replica” or maybe an
antique — but mostly drawn to it because of his own interest in
Mesopotamian religion and art.
“I didn’t realize that it was an
actual piece of the Persepolis,” he said, referring to the ancient
Persian ceremonial capital. “I’m honoured to have had it, but I feel
really hurt that I wasn’t able to have a positive experience in the end
with it.”
He said he was somewhat skeptical about buying the piece
for $1,400 — mostly because he thought it might not be worth it. In the
end, he said he bought it to help out his friend, a “starving artist”
who received a $300 commission, and the seller, who said he needed to
pay child support and rent, and assured Metke it was “a good deal.”
Metke
said he thought of taking it to Iran or Iraq to see if an art expert
knew what it was, or going on Antiques Roadshow with it.
“That would have been an interesting Antiques Roadshow, I guess,” he said.
Instead,
Metke was charged with possession of stolen property. He and his
25-year-old girlfriend, Jana Lang, were also charged with trafficking
marijuana and possession of money obtained by crime.
Metke said
he had been working on getting his medical marijuana licence, and that
the money seized by RCMP were donations and savings to start a business
teaching children about ecology.
“I hope that people will
understand, this is just something I thought was neat,” he said. “This
was an interesting piece of art that I could put on the shelf and have
represent my own personal spiritual journey that I was going through.”
Quebec
provincial police announced the recovery of the artifact and the
charges at a news conference Thursday in Montreal. The artifact was
displayed under armed guard.
Danielle Champagne, director of the
Museum of Fine Arts’ foundation, called the thefts of the two pieces
“very unusual.” The last theft from the museum was in 1972, she said.
Metke
said he is worried about the charges, and particularly the impact they
will have on his girlfriend. Neither of them have been in trouble with
the police before, he said.
Still, he said he’s glad he was able to care for the ancient piece — even if he didn’t know it.
“It
sort of feels like it may have come to me to be protected so that it
didn’t get destroyed or lost or something like that ...,” he said. “I’m
not really happy with the way that I found out what it was, but ... I’m
really honoured to have been able to look after it.”
He said he
wishes he had known what it was, so he could have turned it in for an
undisclosed reward offered by the museum's insurer.
Metke and Lang are slated to appear in Edmonton Provincial Court on March 19.
Stolen artifact from Montreal museum recovered in Edmonton
Investigators still searching for missing 1st century antiquity
This recovered artifact — a fragment from a fifth century BC
Persian bas-relief — was found in an Edmonton home after it was stolen
from the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts. (Quebec Provincial Police)
Quebec provincial police have found an ancient artifact in
Edmonton after it was stolen in broad daylight from the Montreal Museum
of Fine Arts.
Police have been searching for more than two years for two pieces of art, which were stolen from the museum in September 2011.
Investigators said they believe a man slipped the antiquities into his pockets and slipped outside.
The recovered artifact — a fragment from a fifth century BC Persian
bas-relief — was found in an Edmonton home on Jan. 22 when officers
from the Sûreté du Québec/RCMP Integrated Art Crime Investigation Team and the Alberta RCMP carried out a search warrant.
Police in Quebec say that a tip led them to the home last month. Sgt.
Joyce Kemp from the Quebec Provincial Police said investigators believe
the artifact was purchased for much less than its value.
"I cannot give you details to how it was purchased because the
investigation is still ongoing it might interfere with the next steps of
the investigation," she said.
"I cannot give you the exact number but it's worth $1.2 million and
clearly the person paid much less than the value of the artifact." Simon Metke, 33, is charged
with possessing stolen property over $5,000, possessing a controlled
substance for the purpose of trafficking and possessing the proceeds of
crime.
A 26-year-old woman is charged with possessing the proceeeds of
crime and possessing a controlled substance for the purpose of
trafficking.
Police are still searching for the second stolen artifact, a Roman marble statue of a head, dating back to the first century BC.
Police are still searching for this artefact, a marble statue of a Roman head. (Quebec Provincial Police)
The two pieces were not in glass cases, but they were securely
anchored to their displays, and investigators said they are not sure how
the thief managed to take off with the antiquities.
On security footage, a suspect is seen strolling through the museum wearing jeans, a dark jacket and a baseball cap.
Anyone with information is asked to contact the SQ at 1-800-659-4264 or email art.alert@surete.qc.ca.
The museum's insurance company has been offering what it calls a
"substantial reward" for information leading to the recovery of the
pieces.
Artifact Worth $ 1.2 Million Dollars Recovered, Another Remains Missing
Edmonton, Alberta – On January 29, 2014, RCMP arrested and charged Simon METKE,
33, of Edmonton, with Possess Stolen Property over $5,000; Possess a
Controlled Substance for the Purpose of Trafficking; and Possess
Proceeds of Crime.
Jana LANG, 26, of Edmonton was charged with Possess a
Controlled Substance for the Purpose of Trafficking; and Possess
Proceeds of Crime. Metke and Lang appear in Edmonton Provincial Court on
March 19, 2014.
On January 22, 2014, RCMP Serious/Organized Crime North provided
assistance to the Surete du Quebec/RCMP Integrated Art Crime
Investigation Team by executing a search warrant at an Edmonton
residence and recovering an ancient artifact stolen in September 2011
from the Museum of Fine Arts in Montreal. The piece worth an estimated $
1.2 million dollars is a fragment of Persian bas-relief dating from the
fifth century BC.
The investigation continues in order to locate a second stolen
artifact. This item is a marble statuette representing the head of a man
in ancient Egyptian style dating from the first century BC. This piece
was stolen Oct. 26, 2011 from the Museum of Fine Arts in Montreal.
The investigation team is asking for the public’s assistance in
locating this second item. If you have information as to the location of
this item, please call Central Criminal Intelligence, Sûreté du Québec,
at 1-800-659-4264; or at email: art.alerte @ surete.qc.ca . All
information received will be treated confidentially.
Missing Artifact
The Integrated Art Crime Investigation Team consists of investigators
from the Sûreté du Québec and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who
investigate any offences related to the art market in Quebec. Lt. Guy Lapointe Media Communications Service Sûreté du Québec Montreal