The only blog to do what it says on the Tin, reveal the truth about art crime investigation.
Monday, December 16, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Anthony Amore, Behind the Cloak of the Rose Dugdale Vermeer book, Negociates With Irish Republicans For Gardner Art Recovery
Anthony Amore, for the last two years has been writing a book about Rose Dugdale and the IRA Vermeer theft to give himself cover in finally trying to flush out any Irish Republican influence in recovering the Gardner art.
Anthony has tried, in vain thus far, to convince people of the current reward offer and immunity offer being collectable, therefore negociations are at an impass.
The suggestion of the Gardner Art Reward Price List would go some way to establish the sincerity of the Gardner Museum and be an olive branch to those would could help recover some Gardner art.
Those who hold or control some of the Gardner art fear the clenched fist of the FBI will come crashing down on their houses with God's own thunder if they step forward.
A test balloon of a lesser valued Gardner artwork being handed back would also give confidence to follow through with the future recoveries of the Vermeer and Rembrandts.
Much more will be revealed in the months ahead as we move towards the thirty years since the Gardner Art Heist March 1990- March 2020.
Whomever holds any Gardner art must be terrified of stepping forward, so reassurances should be given by the FBI and Gardner Museum, such as a Gardner Art Reward Price List, to cover the distinct possibility the thirteen Gardner artworks are not held together anymore.
Sadly, the assurances of Anthony Amore have rung hollow to those who can facilitate the recovery of some Gardner Art.
They think Anthony Amore is conducting "The Art of The Con" to quote the title of Anthony Amore's last book.
Lets Bring The Gardner Art Home, Change.org Petition:
https://www.change.org/p/let-s-bring-home-the-stolen-isabella-stewart-gardner-museum-art-a-new-approach?recruiter=886928978&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink&utm_campaign=share_petition
Thursday, November 28, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Tiny Reward On Dresden Green Vault Heist, Should Be $10 Million Like Gardner Heist, Dresden "White" Worth More Than Reward In Underworld Alone, Updated
Reward offered for information on German treasure robbery
BERLIN (AP) — German authorities are offering a 500,000-euro ($550,000) reward for information leading to the recovery of 18th century jewels snatched from a unique collection in Dresden or the arrest of the thieves.A large diamond brooch, a diamond epaulette and other treasures were taken from Dresden’s Green Vault early Monday morning.
A 40-member investigating commission is working on the robbery.
The Green Vault is one of the world’s oldest museums. It was established in 1723 and contains the treasury of Augustus the Strong of Saxony, comprising around 4,000 objects of gold, precious stones and other materials.
Art Hostage Comments:
The tiny reward offered makes authorities look stupid.
First, the billion dollar value, although perhaps too high, means the reward offered is 0.05% and also the 49 ct "Dresden White" diamond is worth more in the Underworld than the total reward offered.
Furthermore, the cushion shape of the "Dresden White" makes it easier to re-cut and a reduction from 49ct to say, 35ct would disguise it enough for resale on the legitimate market for much, much more than the $550,000 reward offered for the whole stolen haul, seventeen pieces.
The Dresden White is by far the most valuable single item stolen. Augustus the Strong, the 18th century Prince-Elector of Saxony who founded the Green Vault, is said to have been so enraptured by the diamond he paid $1m for it — a fabulous sum at the time.
When a huge deep blue diamond known as the French Blue was stolen from the French government following King Louis XVI's attempt to flee the country during the French Revolution, it was recut from 67.125 carats to 45.52 carats, which in turn became known as the Hope Diamond.
It would have been far better to offer a "Substantial" reward leaving the actual figure as a matter of debate and a way to attract leads.
If, as suspected, the Remmo family are involved, if not the actual heist, then certainly the following handling of the Dresden Green Vault haul, then offering such a tiny reward might encourage the current handlers to break up and sell the whole haul on the black market, destroying the jewels forever.
Much better to replicate the Gardner Museum and offer a $10 million reward, thereby making the Dresden Green Vault haul worth much more as it is, rather than broken apart.
By offering $550,000 reward for all seventeen Dresden Green Vault pieces, authorities have given Underworld figures, such as the Remmo family a price benchmark, whereby if they offer $3-5 million for the total Dresden Green Vault haul, they will be the buyers.
An Underworld offer of $1 million for the "Dresden White" alone would secure it for Underworld figures such as the Remmo family.
To be continued..............................................
Burglars hit East German secret police museum in Berlin
Berlin (AFP) – Burglars broke into Berlin’s Stasi Museum, which
showcases items of East Germany’s hated secret police, making off with
collectible medals and gold jewellery, authorities said Sunday, days
after a spectacular diamond heist in Dresden.
The robbers broke in through a window on the first floor, “smashed several showcases, and stole medals and jewellery”, said police in a statement.
They made off with their spoils undetected.
The time of the raid was unclear but a museum employee found showcases smashed in the exhibition rooms on Sunday morning.
Museum director Joerg Drieselmann told the Tagesspiegel daily that among the medals taken were a gold Patriotic order of Merit, an Order of Karl Marx — the highest honour awarded in the former communist East Germany and an Order of Lenin.
Stolen jewellery included rings and a watch, he said.
The items were confiscated by the Stasi from private individuals.
After the collapse of the communist regime, many items were returned to their owners. But some which remained unclaimed were on loan to the Stasi Museum as part of its exhibition.
“These are not huge treasures. But we are a history museum and don’t expect people to break in,” the museum chief was quoted as saying.
The latest robbery came hot on the heels of a brazen heist at the Green Vault museum in Dresden’s Royal Palace on November 25.
Having sparked a partial power cut before breaking in through a window, the thieves stole priceless 18th-century diamond jewellery — including a famous 49-carat Dresden white — from the collection of the Saxon ruler August the Strong.
Police are still hunting four suspects, and have offered half a million euros ($550,000) as a reward for information leading to an arrest or recovery of the stolen goods.
Investigators are also in contact with colleagues in Berlin to explore possible connections to a similar heist in the capital two years ago.
In 2017, a 100-kilogramme (220-pound), 24-karat giant gold coin was stolen from Berlin’s Bode Museum.
Four men with links to a notorious Berlin gang were later arrested and put on trial.
The coin has never been recovered, and fears are growing that the Dresden treasures will also remain lost forever.
Shaken by the loss, Germany’s culture minister Monika Gruetters this week called for a national conference on museum security.
“We need to look at how museums can protect their objects from such brutal activities while still being accessible to the public in the normal way,” she said.
The robbers broke in through a window on the first floor, “smashed several showcases, and stole medals and jewellery”, said police in a statement.
They made off with their spoils undetected.
The time of the raid was unclear but a museum employee found showcases smashed in the exhibition rooms on Sunday morning.
Museum director Joerg Drieselmann told the Tagesspiegel daily that among the medals taken were a gold Patriotic order of Merit, an Order of Karl Marx — the highest honour awarded in the former communist East Germany and an Order of Lenin.
The items were confiscated by the Stasi from private individuals.
After the collapse of the communist regime, many items were returned to their owners. But some which remained unclaimed were on loan to the Stasi Museum as part of its exhibition.
“These are not huge treasures. But we are a history museum and don’t expect people to break in,” the museum chief was quoted as saying.
The latest robbery came hot on the heels of a brazen heist at the Green Vault museum in Dresden’s Royal Palace on November 25.
Having sparked a partial power cut before breaking in through a window, the thieves stole priceless 18th-century diamond jewellery — including a famous 49-carat Dresden white — from the collection of the Saxon ruler August the Strong.
Police are still hunting four suspects, and have offered half a million euros ($550,000) as a reward for information leading to an arrest or recovery of the stolen goods.
Investigators are also in contact with colleagues in Berlin to explore possible connections to a similar heist in the capital two years ago.
In 2017, a 100-kilogramme (220-pound), 24-karat giant gold coin was stolen from Berlin’s Bode Museum.
The coin has never been recovered, and fears are growing that the Dresden treasures will also remain lost forever.
Shaken by the loss, Germany’s culture minister Monika Gruetters this week called for a national conference on museum security.
“We need to look at how museums can protect their objects from such brutal activities while still being accessible to the public in the normal way,” she said.
Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Dresden Green Vault Heist, Who Did It ?
Criminals large families: Where in Germany what are the Clans have to Say
With the deportation of a leading Bremer Clan member in the Lebanon this week, the topic of criminals, puts families back into focus. How is the situation in the whole of Germany – and in which regions the phenomenon of the Clan, it is common to crime? An Overview of some of these large families and police actions against members of such Clans are:
When talking about Clan-crime in Germany, then two of the most brazen acts quickly get out of this and the last year has been stolen in the sense: As this may, from a Berlin primary school is a work of art, the state office of criminal investigation quickly a well-known large family in the suspicion that the “family R”, such as the “Berliner Morgenpost” reported. The stolen “gold nest” should be about 80,000 euros in value. Even more rewarding is the theft of a 100-Kilo gold coin from the Bode-Museum in Berlin-Mitte in March 2017. The material value of the “Big Maple Leaf” will then have 3.75 million euros. Where the coin is today, don’t know the police. Melted down and made into money, it is suspected. Money that you can invest prima – in real estate, for example.
night-and-fog action
Leading the Miri-Clan-member from Bremen deported
dpa police actions against criminal familiesWith illegal activities, it Makes such large families in many regions of Germany, and wealth. The state has sent to break this Power, and recently had several calls to the deportation of one of the leading heads of a Lebanese clan from Bremen in the middle of the week belonged to. The Person had been “obliged to leave the country,” said a spokeswoman for the Bremen Department of interior on Thursday. From media reports, that this “obligation to leave” already existed for a good 13 years.
another spectacular use, there was over a year ago in Berlin. There were seized at a large-scale action real estate is in the million value. This, too, is regarded as a significant blow to the Clan-crime in Germany.
But what the large families, and in which areas of Germany family members are criminal activities? A spokeswoman for the Federal criminal police office on star-demand in Berlin, North Rhine-Westphalia and Bremen, as the focus of the Clan-crime – a General Overview for the whole of Germany, the authority has not. As with all police powers, the Clan-crime countries thing. And the number of people counted on these networks, are usually appraised values.
Berlin: the capital of The Clans in Germany
The German capital is regarded in this country as the main location for criminals from large families. There, according to media reports, up to 20 such Clans. Particularly well known is the Abou-Chakers – also because of the friendship and subsequent enmity between the Rapper Bushido and Clan-chief Arafat Abou-Chaker, against the investigators in the past few years, more than 30 methods have hard are.
The Abou-Chakers come originally from Lebanon and immigrated in the 80s to Germany. You are in Berlin, the most famous of the Clan – the largest but they are not.
star talk
separation of Arafat Abou-Chaker
Bushido: “If anything happens to me, is taken care of for my family”
Bigger the Rammo-Clan is supposed to be, sometimes Remmo-Clan written – with an estimated 500 members, about twice as large as the Abou-Chakers. Known to the family Union, and also by his involvement in the Rapper scene. Bushido makes according to his own statement in the star after his break with Arafat Abou-Chaker now with a family member of Ashraf Rammo shops.In the summer of 2018, there was the already mentioned use in Berlin: investigators seized 77 real estate this large family of more than nine million euros: money laundering is suspected. According to the LKA, the Clan is suspected of criminal profits in the amount of 28 million euros scammed. Money that should be invested in the family in those properties.
And finally, three members of the Clan are just currently due to the downturn in the Bode-Museum in front of the court, in which those gigantic gold coin was stolen. According to current planning, is expected to fall according to a court spokeswoman at the end of September a judgment.
separation of Arafat Abou-Chaker
Bushido and his wife Anna-Maria from the pack: “We will not allow ourselves to be more intimidating”
the Rammo family immigrated in the 80s, during the Lebanese civil war, to Germany. They were, so read it again and again in the media, stateless, and were originally from the area of today’s Southeast Turkey. Arrived in Germany, they were safe from war and violence, but at the time, initially no permission to work in the Federal Republic of Germany, and also the children were not subject to in the new home first, the school duty. Both circumstances are considered to be one of the reasons that a number of the former immigrants from Lebanon entry into the criminal Milieu and the emergence of a criminal parallel society in Germany.Bremen: home base of the Miri-clan
Bremen Miri-Clan is a family, which immigrated in the 80s, from Lebanon to Germany. Family members of the Miris is accused of Organised crime in various areas. But also in the Hanseatic city, the authorities try, the criminal activities of the clan curb. So it was on Thursday, first through the “image”newspaper known that one of the leading heads of this criminal has a big family and chief of the Bremen forbidden Chapters of the motorcycle club, Mongols MC in the early Morning at 3.40 PM in his at home. Then, the 46-Year-old was deported to Lebanon, and, accompanied by elite police officers, there flew out. The action are supposed to have authorities from Bremen, Berlin, and the Federal government working together in Secret for months.
North Rhine-Westphalia: Over a Hundred of families and thousands of crimes
North Rhine-with its many Metropolitan areas, the first state to the presented recently a comprehensive picture of the situation to the Clan-crime – and with spectacular data was the talk of the made Westphalia. After the middle of may, the study presented 104 Turkish goods in the past two years-Arabic immigrant families in the state for 14.225 crimes responsible, especially food as the focus of the clan crime, followed by Recklinghausen, Gelsenkirchen, Duisburg and other Ruhr area cities.
Also in the Ruhr area, many of these people came in the 80s and 90s over Lebanon. And also, you are originally from the Ottoman Empire, today’s Turkey. Clan name lists the picture of the situation – the police in Germany is called, for reasons of privacy protection, generally, no such name, of which there are also all sorts of spellings. But observers of the scene will know who is meant, if in the NRW collection abbreviations of the family names are called as “Clan O”, “E”, “A.”, “K”, “S”, “I”, “F”, “Ta”, “R” or “T”.
Criminal Clans
Scam: Driving in Germany to know thousands without traffic rules?
As one of the larger clan families , the family Al-Zein , sometimes El is Zein wrote. She has, according to media Compounds according to Berlin reports, but should be, especially in Essen and Duisburg widely used. Also the Name Omeirat is considered to be a term in the Ruhr area, which was also in Bremen and Berlin-based Miris .Postmarked by the last name
However, of course, anyone who is wearing one of the infamous last name, or from one of these large and widely branched families, not a Clan-Criminal. Also article on the topic back again. The Green Essen Alderman Ahmad Omeirat, who came as a child from Lebanon to Germany, is supposed to be a model example for Integration, Sr., But he met with hostility by his own admission again and again – because he bears the surname Omeirat.
sources: “Berliner Morgenpost”, “Bild-Zeitung”, “WAZ”, Ralf Ghadban: “to integrate the Lebanon-refugees yet?”, “Clan crime management report NRW 2018”, “Welt.de”
topics in this article with Make family Germany Berlin Bremen Lebanon, LKA North Rhine-Westphalia police of North Rhine-Westphalia, Bushido Berliner Morgenpost Berlin-Mitte drug Offense Arafat Abou-Chaker Bild-Zeitung
Monday, November 25, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist Has Pretender To Billion Dollar Throne, Green Vault Dresden, Were They Children, Artful Dodger & Oliver Twist ?
Diamond thieves steal jewellery 'worth up to a BILLION EUROS' from German museum in possibly world's biggest heist after making off with three 'priceless' sets commissioned by 18th century royalty
- The Green Vault in Dresden was targeted by thieves early on Monday morning
- It is believed they shut off an electricity supply and broke in through a window
- Reports in Germany say the treasures stolen may be worth up to a billion euros
Diamond thieves stole three 'priceless' sets of 18th-century jewellery from a German museum in an early-morning raid today.
The
Green Vault in Dresden has suffered an 'immeasurable' loss after
burglars broke into the building in the early hours of this morning,
officials said.
The thieves switched
off a power supply at 5am before breaking through a window into a museum
which once boasted it was 'as secure as Fort Knox', it is believed.
Once
inside, they stole three jewellery ensembles which were commissioned by
Saxony's former ruler Augustus the Strong in an 18th-century show of
power.
Museum experts have said the items are priceless and could never be sold, but Bild reported
that up to a billion euros' worth of treasures may have been stolen -
which would make it the biggest art heist in history.
Two
thieves were seen on CCTV cameras inside the museum but they escaped in
a getaway car and a manhunt has so far proved fruitless.
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Stolen: A cabinet of 18th-century
jewellery which was smashed open and looted by burglars at a German
museum today, causing an 'immeasurable' loss
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Investigation: A police officer
wearing gloves and a mask works at the crime scene outside Dresden's
royal palace this morning following the break-in
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Means of entry? A window at the
side of the building where the thieves - who were said to be noticeably
small - are feared to have forced their way inside
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Sealed off: A police officer mans a
cordon outside the Green Vault museum in Dresden, eastern Germany, this
morning following what could be a record art theft
At
a press conference this afternoon, museum director Marion Ackermann
said she was 'shocked' by the 'brutality' of the break-in.
Thieves
smashed into a glass cabinet and made off with three sets of jewellery
which were made for Augustus the Strong, the elector of Saxony in the
18th century, she explained.
Augustus
competed with French monarch Louis XIV to assemble the most extravagant
jewellery, she explained, describing the items stolen as 'state
treasures of the 18th century'.
Augustus,
who was elector of Saxony from 1694 to 1733 and also king of Poland for
much of that time, established Dresden as a cultural centre and founded
the museum which was targeted today.
The material worth of the jewellery was less important than the fact that the jewels had come as a set, Ackermann said.
Asked about the suggested
value of a billion euros (£850million), she said the value of the items
stolen could not be quantified.
'We’re
dealing with priceless artistic and cultural treasures,' she told
reporters in Dresden this afternoon. 'We cannot give a value because it
is impossible to sell.'
Appealing to
the thieves not to destroy the objects or melt them down, she said the
jewellery was of 'inestimable cultural and historical value' and could
never be sold on the open market.
Police
say they were alerted to the break-in at 4.59am and suspect that the
thieves were behind an electrical fire which broke out nearby.
Shutting
off the electricity may have helped the burglars to disable the
museum's alarm systems and also left the area in darkness.
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Targeted: Visitors at the Green
Vault in Dresden where thieves are feared to have stolen up to a billion
euros' worth of treasure in an early-morning heist today
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A map
showing where the break-in took place this morning and the bridge where
the thieves are believed to have cut off a power supply to help them
gain entry
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Forensic investigation: A specialist police officer arrives near Dresden's former royal palace to investigate the theft today
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Inquiry: Police officers work
behind a cordon tape at the museum, which was closed to visitors today
after the early-morning break-in
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Police tape hangs across a doorway
at the Dresden museum, where thieves broke in after the power supply was
stopped and a fire broke out
In
addition, a burned-out vehicle was discovered nearby and detectives are
now trying to track down the owner to establish whether the fire was
related to the theft.
Reports in Germany say the thieves were 'noticeably small' and able to fit through a tiny space in a window.
At
the press conference, police said that the smashed cabinet had been
made of special safety glass but that it was unclear how the thieves had
broken it.
Detectives are now
examining the video footage on which two people are seen, but others may
have been waiting outside to help them escape in a getaway car.
A getaway car could have been well on its way to the motorway within minutes of leaving the museum, they warned.
State police officers are now at the crime scene as they investigate how the thieves got inside and stole the jewellery.
'We have not identified a perpetrator and nor have we yet made any arrests,' police spokesman Marko Laske said.
A notice on the museum's website this morning states only that the building is closed today for 'organisational reasons'.
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Doors closed: A sign at the
entrance of the Green Vault informs visitors that no tickets are
available today following the break-in on Monday morning
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Search for evidence: A police
officer scours the steps of the Dresden royal palace for evidence on
Monday morning following a 5am raid on the museum
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Search: A German policeman looks
for evidence outside the Dresden royal palace which houses the Green
Vault where thieves staged a break-in this morning
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Crime scene: A police van parks outside the historic museum today following a break-in
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A view of Dresden's former royal palace today where the collection of treasures is on display
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Targeted: Visitors at the Green
Vault in Dresden where thieves are feared to have stolen up to a billion
euros' worth of treasure in an early-morning heist today
'Not only our state collections but we the people of Saxony have been robbed,' said regional premier Michael Kretschmer.
'You
cannot understand the history of our state without the Green Vault. The
treasures found there were made by the hard work of people in our
state.'
The security measures at the museum had appeared to be in order and 'comprehensive', he said.
State interior minister Roland Woeller said it was a 'bitter day for the cultural heritage of Saxony'.
The
thieves 'stole cultural treasures of immeasurable worth - that is not
only the material worth but also the intangible worth to the state of
Saxony, which is impossible to estimate,' he said.
A
€1billion art theft would be comfortably the largest in history,
surpassing the $500million raid on the Gardner Museum in Boston nearly
30 years ago.
Two thieves disguised as
police officers stole 13 works of art from the Boston museum in March
1990 and the crime remains unsolved.
The Dresden museum was founded by in 1723 and houses thousands of items including historic coins and jewellery.
However,
one of its most valuable treasures - a 41-carat naturally green diamond
called the Dresden Green - is currently out on loan in New York.
The
museum did not put a current value on the piece, but said that at the
time of its purchase it cost 400,000 thalers, compared to the 288,000
thalers it cost to build the city's lavish Frauenkirche church at around
the same time.
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A police van parks outside the
Green Vault museum in Dresden today following a burglary of items feared
to be worth up to a billion euros (£850million)
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Presence: A police officer walks
through the gates of the city palace today in Dresden where authorities
are investigating a massive art theft
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Dresden's former royal palace - the
home of the former electors and kings of Saxony in the centuries before
Germany was unified - is seen today
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Dresden's Green Vault takes its name from the green-coloured columns and decoration in rooms such as this one
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VIP visitors: German chancellor
Angela Merkel hosted then-US president Barack Obama at the Green Vault
in Dresden in 2009 (pictured)
The
museum also houses include a 25-inch figure of a Moor studded with
emeralds and a 648-carat sapphire gifted by Tsar Peter I of Russia at a
meeting in 1698.
Other valuable items
include a jewel-studded sculpture of an Indian royal court, made out of
gold, silver, enamel, precious stones and pearls.
Another is a 1701 golden coffee service by court jeweller Johann Melchior Dinglinger, decorated with lounging cherubs.
In 2010, then-museum director Martin Roth boasted in an interview with Die Welt that the Green Vault was 'as secure as Fort Knox'.
Roth
explained how the vault was protected by 'invisible' security systems,
but warned that the biggest danger was information leaking out from
inside.
The collection dates back to
1723, while the Dresden royal palace which houses it was first built in
1533 as the home for the electors and later kings of Saxony.
The Green Vault gets its name from the green-coloured columns and decoration in some of the rooms.
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A police officer kneels down by the steps of the royal palace today as he investigates the break-in at Dresden's Green Vault
+25
+25
Pictured
left: Police officers outside the entrance to the Green Vault this
morning; right: an investigator works at the scene of a cordon
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Treasures: Visitors look at the
collection in Dresden's Green Vault which dates back to the 18th century
and contains thousands of items
+25
Precious: Some of the gemstones in the museum's collection are seen in this file picture
The
museum and palace were rebuilt after the devastating Allied bombing of
Dresden in World War II. Some of the items were looted by Soviet troops
in 1945, but later returned.
Only part of the collection was on display during the Cold War, when Dresden was part of communist East Germany.
However,
the museum was extensively rebuilt in the 2000s and its two exhibitions
now form one of the 'best-preserved treasuries in Europe', its website
says.
Angela Merkel hosted then-US President Barack Obama there in 2009 during his early months in office.
In 2017, a 220lb gold coin the size of a manhole cover was stolen from a Berlin museum and is feared to have been melted down.
Prosecutors
allege that the burglars broke into the museum through an upstairs
window and used a ladder, wheelbarrow and rope to extract the coin. A
trial remains underway.
Art Hostage Comments:
The two Dresden Green Vault Museum raiders were called "Artful Dodger" and "Oliver Twist"
Perhaps a couple of children used to get into the small places?
Historically, Criminals from places such a Romania use children in crime because they can get into small places.
Furthermore, the current trial of the Remmo family in Berlin for the theft of the gold coin from the Bode Museum might be linked to this heist.
Will there be a deal offered by the Remmo family, whereby indictments are dropped to recover the Dresden Green Vault diamonds?
Interesting article abut the ongoing trial in Berlin:
https://coinsweekly.com/why-there-is-still-no-verdict-in-the-trial-of-the-stolen-100-kilogram-maple-leaf/
Art Hostage Comments:
The two Dresden Green Vault Museum raiders were called "Artful Dodger" and "Oliver Twist"
Perhaps a couple of children used to get into the small places?
Historically, Criminals from places such a Romania use children in crime because they can get into small places.
Furthermore, the current trial of the Remmo family in Berlin for the theft of the gold coin from the Bode Museum might be linked to this heist.
Will there be a deal offered by the Remmo family, whereby indictments are dropped to recover the Dresden Green Vault diamonds?
Interesting article abut the ongoing trial in Berlin:
https://coinsweekly.com/why-there-is-still-no-verdict-in-the-trial-of-the-stolen-100-kilogram-maple-leaf/
Thursday, November 14, 2019
Thursday, November 07, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist, "Thirty Years Since", 1990-2020, Circus Roadshow Begins Four Months Early
The Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Heist: How Two Men Stole $600 Million Worth Of Art
A saga that runs for almost thirty years that involves the FBI, the mafia, and upwards of half a billion in stolen art.
https://www.bosshunting.com.au/culture/isabella-stewart-gardner-museum-heist-story
It was almost too simple of an idea. Perhaps that was the beauty of it all... because it actually worked. What's even more incredible was how much they escaped with.
This is the story behind the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist - the largest theft of private property in American history with an estimated value of US$600 million. And (spoiler alert) it remains unsolved to this day.
This is the story behind the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist - the largest theft of private property in American history with an estimated value of US$600 million. And (spoiler alert) it remains unsolved to this day.
The night of the disappearance
In less than an hour later, two men dressed as police officers would arrive at the side entrance of the Gardner Museum in a hatchback. Any sober person would be suspicious of police officers in an unmarked hatchback, but there were no sober individuals in sight. The two men buzzed the museum's intercom system and explained they were called to investigate a disturbance. Fearing a St. Patrick's Day reveller had breached the newly bolstered security measures, the Gardener Museum's nightwatchmen let them in. This is where the real finesse began.
Once in the building, the thieves demanded that all personnel return to the security desk. While the one other guard was radioed to return, the guard that had let the thieves in was lured away from the desk where the only panic button was located. It was a matter of roughly ten minutes before both guards were handcuffed, bound and blinded with duct tape, and left tethered helplessly in the basement as the daring criminal duo began to work their way through to the multi-million dollar goods.
From there, it became more of a smash-and-grab affair. The thieves broke the glass frames and used a blade to cut the canvases out of their stretches. And they were smart about it too.
Among the most notable half-finished lifts was a large Rembrandt oil painting with wood instead of canvas, taken off the wall and left to lean against a cabinet; a detail that lends itself to the theory that their manpower was limited to the two individuals who had made it in, thereby forcing them to only take what was easiest to transport.
This detail also supports the theory that there was no definitive plan to target specific artworks prior to entering the museum (but more on this later).
The $600 million haul
13 Images
- The Concert by Vermeer
- The Storm on the Sea of Galilee by Rembrandt
- A Lady and Gentleman in Black by Rembrandt
- Self-Portrait by Rembrandt
- Landscape with Obelisk by Flinck
- Chez Tortoni by Manet
- La Sortie de Pesage by Degas
- Cortege aux Environs de Florence by Degas
- Program for an Artistic Soiree 1 by Degas
- Program for an Artistic Soiree 2 by Degas
- Three Mounted Jockeys by Degas
- An ancient Chinese gu
- And a French Imperial Eagle finial
Vermeer's The Concert alone is worth half of the total value, with an estimated value of US$250 million back in 2015. The scale and magnitude of this haul is truly in a league of its own.
Where the trail runs cold
For law enforcement to figure out the 'who', they needed to understand the 'why'. The problem being the 'why' has become muddled with far-flung and fantastical theories involving the Boston Mafia, the IRA, maybe Whitey Bulger, and prison breaks.
To make things even more difficult, aside from witness descriptions of one thief being "... about 5'9"–5'10" in his late 30s with a medium build..." and the other as "... 6'–6'1" in his early 30s with a heavier build..." - there really are no further leads. No useful DNA evidence. No fingerprints that match any star suspects. Not even a convincing accusation that hasn't been shot down by a iron-clad alibi.
One prevailing theory is that a gangster by the name of Bobby Donati orchestrated the heist in an effort to negotiate the release of his boss from prison. The chances of verifying this have since diminished significantly, as Donati was murdered a year after the robbery due to a gang war within the Patriarca crime family.
Bulger was the most powerful criminal figure in Boston at the time of the heist, and Hill believes the haul was handed over to an IRA-affiliated gang in Ireland as part of some deal. Bulger also had a strong connection with the local police force, which would explain how the thieves acquired bona fide uniforms. Though he obviously claimed to have no knowledge of the theft and even feigned outrage as it occurred on this 'turf' without proper tribute being paid. The chances of verifying this has also diminished significantly, as Bulger was murdered in prison while serving his sentence two years ago.
If you take the time to search independently, you'll find virtually endless branches of theories and suspects. None of which have ever been proven nor further illuminated the issue at hand.
Here's where it gets even wilder...
Yet in the current year of 2019, authorities are still none the wiser. Even with the exorbitant bounty of US$10 million simply for any information that could lead to the thirteen artwork's recovery, the ongoing investigation has yielded nought. Keep in mind that those who were involved could claim this very bounty themselves beyond the cold, harsh reproach of the law.
To date, none of the thirteen stolen pieces have ever resurfaced. And given the profile of this unprecedented heist, whoever is in possession of them would be wise to never let them resurface.
What we know for sure is that they must have a high appreciation for the arts - or else they would be virtually worthless sitting in a vault somewhere. Anyone who was in on this purely for the money would have surely surrendered it at the first chance of the reward; and there have been multiple chances, each one without legal repercussions post-1995. And if they'd popped up on the black market at any point, someone would be talking about it, especially since it's not just a single artwork.
Or, we can subscribe to the theories that speculate they were used as a bargaining chip.
Either way, it begs the $600 million question that hundreds before us have had...
What the hell happened to the artworks?
Saturday, October 05, 2019
Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist, Rossetti Released, Gardner Art Spectre Looms Large !!
After 20 years in prison, Stephen Rossetti goes free — but Gardner art heist remains unsolved
Two decades ago, FBI agents began
targeting Carmello Merlino, suspecting that the Dorchester repair shop
owner with Mafia ties could lead them to masterpieces stolen from the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum during a brazen 1990 heist.
Efforts to recover the artwork were
unsuccessful, but the agents foiled a plot by Merlino and his crew to
rob an Easton armored car depot in 1999. They arrested two of Merlino’s
accomplices on their way to the depot in a car loaded with guns and a
hand grenade.
Merlino died in prison in 2005, taking any secrets he may have known about the whereabouts of the stolen paintings with him.
But on Thursday, one of Merlino’s
accomplices in the attempted armored car depot robbery was back in
federal court in Boston, before the same judge who had sentenced him to
nearly 52 years in prison for that crime.
Only this time, Stephen Rossetti, now 60, walked out of court a free man.
“Mr. Rossetti, it’s been a long time,”
US District Judge Richard Stearns said as he took the bench Thursday
for a resentencing hearing. “Twenty years later, we’re in the same
place.”
Rossetti’s initial sentence included a
mandatory 30 years in prison because he was designated an armed career
criminal. Combined with his sentence for the attempted robbery, that
made him ineligible for release until 2044.
But, after a string of Supreme Court
rulings involving federal sentencing guidelines, Stearns vacated
Rossetti’s sentence last year after concluding that he no longer
qualified as an armed career criminal.
“As far as I’m concerned, Mr.
Rossetti, you’ve served enough time,” Stearns said. He noted that
Rossetti had already served 20 years, well beyond what current
guidelines call for.
“I sincerely regret my criminal past,”
Rossetti told the judge before he was sentenced, as his son and a
handful of other relatives and friends looked on. “Allow me to be a good
citizen.”
Assistant US Attorney David Tobin had
urged Stearns to send Rossetti back to prison for 10 more years, arguing
that he had led “a life of crime” before plotting to rob the armored
car depot. He described Rossetti as “the armorer” who brought a hand
grenade and other weapons for the attack.
“We believe he continues to pose a threat to society, it’s just that simple,” Tobin said.
Rossetti, who is from East Boston, had previously been convicted of a variety of crimes, including an armored car robbery.
But Judith Mizner, a veteran criminal
defense lawyer who represents Rossetti, said he had not been cited with a
single disciplinary infraction during his years in federal prison,
which she described as remarkable. Federal prisons she noted, “are not
the easiest places in the world to stay out of trouble.”
She refuted the prosecutor’s claim
that Rossetti posed a threat and said he had participated in more than
40 educational programs during his time in prison. His parents and wife
died while he was incarcerated.
It took several hours for the Bureau
of Prisons to process Rossetti’s release, but just before sunset, he
strolled out of the courthouse and into a gleaming Seaport District that
didn’t even exist when he went away.
Only one of Rossetti’s codefendants,
David Turner, remains in prison. After his arrest, Turner claimed FBI
agents told him they suspected he and Merlino were involved in the
Gardner theft and offered to let him “walk” if he helped retrieve the
stolen artwork. Turner said he told them he had no information about the
heist.
In the early morning hours of March
18, 1990, two thieves dressed as police officers talked their way into
the Gardner museum, tied up the guards, and fled with $500 million worth
of artwork.
In recent years, the government
quietly reduced Turner’s prison term by seven years, for reasons that
remain under seal, raising questions about whether he had agreed to help
authorities try to recover the artwork. He is scheduled to be released
in March 2025.
None of the stolen artwork has been recovered, despite a $10 million reward the museum is offering for its safe return.
Rossetti, a close associate of former
Mafia boss Francis “Cadillac Frank” Salemme, was in state prison when
the Gardner museum was robbed. One of his attorneys, Steven Boozang,
said Rossetti would never cooperate against anybody, but would have
readily turned over the stolen paintings if he knew where they were.
“He would have gladly given those up to their rightful owners and went on with his life,” Boozang said.
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Man suspected in Gardner museum heist set free
From this article: "Several years ago, the government secretly trimmed that sentence by seven years, making him eligible for release in 2025." Why several years ago, why not exact date? Because it never happened.
Last month when Turner's criminal associate Rossetti was released the Globe reported: “In recent years, the government quietly reduced Turner’s prison term by seven years, for reasons that remain under seal, raising questions about whether he had agreed to help authorities try to recover the artwork. He is scheduled to be released in March 2025.”
Hm. “quietly,” the Globe states, but when this story was first reported in the Globe in 2016, it was said they had “secretly” reduced his sentence. Now it is merely quietly.
Is that supposed to be an actual phenomenon, federal inmates bartering time after they have begun their sentence for information about other crimes? Judges have the power to secretly reduce sentences and keep that reduction under seal?
Why would Turner wait until after serving ten years to share what information he had?
A guy who has already been incarcerated 20 years for an attempted armed robbery had a sentence reduction?
From the Globe 2016 : "There are no details about Turner’s sentence reduction on his criminal case docket in federal court in Boston, indicating that records relating to the reduction are sealed.
Indicating to whom? And three years later the “indicated” in the Globe had evolved into an established fact, David Turner’s sentence had been reduced and the reduction had been sealed.
An alternative possibility is that Turner did not get a secret, quiet or any sentence reduction since the Boston Globe acknowledged in 2016, “the only public record of Turner’s reduced sentence is the Bureau of Prisons website.
So the records are sealed, but somebody sent the information to the people at the public Bureau of Prison website, who dutifully updated their record, we can presume "secretly" or at the very least “quietly.”
Last Seen Podcast said that in 2016 Shelley Murphy, who wrote this story “made a sharp discovery: “I was hearing some things about whether or not he might cooperate,” Murphy said, “and I looked at the Bureau of Prisons' website, which shows a release date. And when I looked at it, I knew. I said that wasn't the release date that was there before. And I noticed that the release date had changed. So that's how I saw it, that I knew that he initially was supposed to get out on one date. And suddenly, they just took off a bunch of years.”
“Suddenly,” but the Boston Globe twice in 2013 reported the, sentenced reduced, 2025 release year for Turner, including one story that had Shelley Murphy on the byline.The claim hinges on something Murphy thinks she remembered from a website over three years previously.
Furthermore the BOP.gov that serves as the sole source for the Boston Globe’s secret sentence reduction states that: “the projected release date displayed reflects the inmate's statutory release date (expiration full term minus good conduct time)” and not the full sentence the person received from the judge. https://www.bop.gov/inmateloc/about_records.jsp
The Globe which cannot even get Turner, his lawyer or anyone in government to acknowledge that he received a sentence reduction, which could also be for a variety of other things given his prolific record, reported last month that this sentence reduction “is raising questions about whether he had agreed to help authorities try to recover the artwork.”
Raising questions with whom? The authorities know if he received a sentence reduction and for what reason. Raising questions with nonexistent inquisitors, who would know anyway, over a nonexistent sentence reduction, possibly, possibly, because of his nonexistent connection to the Gardner Museum Heist. A trifecta!
Welcome to Chernobyl https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2019/10/04/after-years-prison-stephen-rossetti-goes-free-bu-gardner-art-heist-remains-unsolved/hh9zpoPvTq5b2iCLnV3ctM/story.html