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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Pink Panther Gang, (Balkan Bandits) Brass Balls !!


Cyprus postpones extradition of "Pink Panther" suspect


http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=39198

A Cypriot court on Tuesday postponed the extradition of a suspected international jewel thief thought to be part of a Balkan criminal gang known as the "Pink Panthers".
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Global police agency Interpol suspects 41-year-old Rifat Hadziahmetovic, from Montenegro, is a member of the Pink Panthers, a loose association of about 200 criminals blamed for a string of heists across the world.

The crooks are thought to have staged some 120 attacks on luxury stores in about 20 countries, since their first robbery in London's exclusive Mayfair district in 2003.

Hadziahmetovic was arrested on March 18 as he attempted to leave the east Mediterranean island of Cyprus on a forged Bulgarian passport.

Spain wants him extradited on suspicion of armed robbery at a jewellery shop in Spain, a court in Cyprus heard on Tuesday.

The gang are thought to have pulled off one of their most spectacular heists last December, when they walked away with up to 85 million euros ($113 million) worth of goods after entering the Harry Winston jewellers in central Paris disguised as women.

Judicial authorities ordered Hadziahmetovic's detention until April 6.

Art Hostage comments:
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Just in, at the hearing today Rifat's friend, and partner in crime Radovan Jelusic, photo left, was watching proceedings oblivious to the fact he is also wanted by Interpol.

It is the sheer audacity and brazen nature of the Pink Panthers (Balkan Bandits) that makes investigating them a bit like
"Hitting corks in a barrel of water"

Interpol have until April 6th to try and turn Rifat, photo right, a monumental task as Rifat is described by his fellow Pink Panthers as:
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"A fucking Marine"
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Sunday, March 22, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Heist, Whispers From Boston, Defiance from Japan !!


Shadowlands

There is a lot of “chatter” that the paintings have spent some time in a storage unit in Revere.

This would be the same place that ,years ago, a Herald reporter, (Tom Mashberg) was taken , blindfolded, and later viewed The Storm on The sea”…he said that he heard and smelled the ocean, and heard gulls overhead when exiting the car.

This storgae unit , it is said, has a clue written on one of the walls by the thieves, something to the effect that “the cops are too stupid to figure this things out”.

Later, the paintings were shipped , in parcels, via an international global shipping company in E.Boston on McClennd Highway…they also have since been sent back, in parcels, and are thought to be in Revere, along the beach.

The thieves have left the USA.

They have relatives in Revere.

The mastermind of the entire operation was said to be none other than Whitey Bulger, who, it is said, laughs even today, at the incompetence of the law.

The re-opening of the investigation is going to cause some trauma to next-generation relative of the thieves.

Has anyone heard that The Club Caravan in Revere is also a secret hiding place for fenced goods, including artwork.

There are hidden cameras on the sides of the building, next door to The Wonderland T stop. And…a possible Charlestown connection, via a noted clergyman in Charlestown, a compassionate friend of both Billy and Whitey Bulger ???
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Comment by carmela - March 19, 2009 @ 6:47 pm Posted on the Boston Herald story below:

Art Hostage Comments:

So, will we see a deal whereby the Gardner art is handed back for the reward, via a proxy ??
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Did Whitey Bulger enter the United States earlier this year, via Florida with view to handing himself in as he is in a terminal state ??
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Will Whitey Bulger put in an appearance by being handed to the Feds/Justice Dept by his family, hoping they can collect the $2 million reward for the capture of Whitey Bulger.

Why on earth would Whitey Bulger hand himself in I hear you ask ???

Well, if his medical condition has worsened then he may want to give his family the chance to collect the $2 million reward, and added to that, handing in the Gardner art could increase the take by another $5 million, taking the total to $7 million for the Bulger family via a proxy.

Hail Mary, the proxy is the key !!!

Then of course there is the Whitey Bulger diaries written by Whitey over the last decade which I am sure will ruffle a few feathers to say the least.

This could be the deal of the century for the Bulger family if they can get away with it.

Perhaps the Justice dept will chosen over the feds to actually arrest Whitey Bulger.
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Jimmy B, make sure you get rid of that bloody beard, it makes you look like Radovan Karadzic.

Remember 2001/2, Brighton, England !!!
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Update:
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A Japanese Art Collector, whilst not admitting he has any of the stolen Gardner art, has said:
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"Even if I were in possession of any Gardner art, Rembrandt's Storm, I am protected by Japanese law"
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A dilemma indeed !
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Current law in Japan allows a good faith purchaser to gain title to an object even if it is stolen, in contrast to Anglo-American law under which title always remains with the original owner.
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However, Japan did sign up to a treaty in 2002 but that was only in relation to cultural property.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist, The Irish Connection !!


Collateral damage?

Published Date: 19 March 2009


By Mike Dwane

A new book alleges that a gang of city criminals are using stolen masterworks as security for dirty deals and its author was told he'd pay with his life if he came to Limerick
THE American author of a best-selling account of the biggest art heist in history has described being told a notorious gang of Limerick criminals had a share in the priceless Rembrandts and Degas, which they were using as security in drug and weapons deals.

In "The Gardner Heist: The True Story of the World's Largest Unsolved Art Theft", journalist Ulrich Boser investigates the $500 million theft of the artworks from a Boston museum in 1990 and follows the trail to Shannon Airport.

One lead in the mystery is that the paintings were shipped to Ireland by James 'Whitey' Bulger, the Boston-based Irish-American mobster on whom Jack Nicholson's character in Martin Scorcese's Hollywood blockbuster "The Departed" is partly based.

Bulger shipped arms to the IRA in the 1980s and some investigators believe that the artworks were also sent across the pond to help the Republican cause. The Gardner Heist describes how the haul may then have fallen into the hands of a nexus of Irish republicans and criminals who Mr Boser is told are "the type that would go to Baghdad on holiday" and he is warned that if he does go to Limerick in search of the art, he will pay for it with his life.

After years of researching the mystery, Mr Boser said all the evidence points to a Boston criminal as being the mastermind but the author told the Limerick Leader this week that "there are a number of well-respected art detectives who are convinced that the paintings could be held by criminals somewhere in the west of Ireland". Investigators, he said, had been probing the "Irish connection" to the theft since day one.

St Patrick's Day celebrations were in full swing in Boston in the early hours of March 18, 1990, when two men dressed as police officers blagged their way into the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and tied up the security guards. A witness heard one thief address the other as 'mate', pointing to a possible Irish connection. They made off with five Degas, three Rembrandts, including his only seascape, and a Vermeer.

"But as well as these paintings, they also took a number of low value portraits of horses, which were relatively worthless but apparently highly prized by Irish criminals," Mr Boser said.

Travelling to London in search of the art, Mr Boser is told by a reformed art crook that a vicious gang of Limerick criminals have acquired an interest in the artwork, which they are using as a black market bond or security for drug and weapons deals. The book also recounts a dinner interview between Boser and two internationally-respected art detectives, Dick Ellis and Maurice Dalrymple, who make clear their belief that the paintings could be in Ireland.

But Boser is warned he could be killed if he travels to Limerick to look for the paintings.

"Ireland is not a place to go gallivanting about. It is still a big village, and in some places, everyone is on the take. You hire a car to go to Limerick and they'll know that you've hired the car and why you're there before you've even at the foot of the driveway," Dalrymple tells Boser.

"I mean really, why don't you just go up to Ireland and see if you can find the paintings? Go to a bar in Limerick and just ask for them. The best thing that can happen is they just ignore you. Or you might get murdered," the detective says, adding that this might not be a bad idea.

"I don't think they really wanted to see me dead," Boser told the Limerick Leader this week, "it's just they may have run out of patience with the persistent questioning you get from a journalist over a two-hour meeting. But Maurice Dalrymple, who I respect an awful lot, did challenge me that if I wanted to see the paintings, I should just walk into a seedy bar down a back street in Limerick and start asking about stolen paintings in a broad American accent and see how far I got. I could see his point."

In the end, the author does decide to travel to Ireland not to probe the Limerick link but to search for Whitey Bulger, who has allegedly been spotted in Galway Bay posing as a retired doctor.

Arriving in Shannon on a low cost flight with a planeload of drunks singing "The Wild Rover", Boser's account of his 48-hour stay is unlikely to be reproduced in any Tourism Ireland or Shannon Development brochures.

He spends two days wandering around coastal resorts in Clare and Galway on the lookout for Whitey Bulger, hassling poor pensioners in Doolin trying to make out if they are the world's most wanted man after Osama bin Laden.

But looking out into the gloomy Atlantic in the "seaside hamlet" of Lahinch, Boser realises he will never find his Whitey Whale and heads back to Shannon Airport.

The Gardner Heist concludes that a Boston criminal was behind the theft. And huge rewards, such as that offered by the museum founders in this case, mean a multiplicity of theories can be brought forward, some completely off the wall. But despite this, the Gardner heist remains unsolved and the Limerick link is still a distinct possibility, Boser said.

Described by the Guardian as "a thrill", "The Gardner Heist" moves effortlessly from the underworld to the world of high art and comments on the growing black market for art worldwide. It is published by Harper Collins and is available in all good bookshops.

Art Hostage Comments:

Maurice Dalrymple, Maurice Dalrymple, please !!!!

The names Mark Dalrymple, who finds it difficult to lay straight in bed !!!

Once Art Hostage has read the Gardner Heist by Ulrich Boser a review will follow.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Heist, Art Hostage Analyzes !!


Art Hostage along with everyone else has been observing the tidal wave of theories and leads into the Gardner Heist that are being aired across the media.

I shall take a look and offer my analysis in due course.
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Could the Vermeer be in Ireland caught up in the political turmoil ?
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Could Rembrandt's Storm on the Sea of Galilee be in the United Arab Emirates held by a grieving Sheikh for the loss of his beloved eldest son who overdosed on American culture ?
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Could the rest of the Gardner art be around Massachusetts scattered amongst associates of the original thieves ?
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An antiques dealer who has the bronze vase, the Napoleon finial hidden amongst personal belongings, the drawings held by associates who don't really know what to do ???
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Family of those involved holding some residue Gardner art and too frightened to come forward for fear of prosecution, extortion by the underworld if their identity is leaked ???
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How could it be possible to reach these conclusions ???
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Art Hostage will try.
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Upon another note, do you remember early 2008 when paintings were stolen in Zurich, Switzerland ??
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Remember how authorities recovered two of the four paintings shortly afterwards ??
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Well, it occurred to Art Hostage whether the Cezanne is about to be recovered ???

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Noortman Art Theft, Truth Emerges as Julian Radcliffe wants Paying, as Usual !!!


Dutch art sting with a twist


A business executive who had been based in Dubai was being held in a Dutch jail last night after being accused of taking part in the theft of works by some of the art world’s biggest names.

The man, 45, who once headed the Dubai office of one of the world’s largest conference management companies, was arrested during a police sting in the Netherlands with his 62-year-old mother, from Plombières in Belgium, and an unidentified 66-year-old man from Walem in the Netherlands.

All three are due to appear before a court in Rotterdam today. The hearing will be in private.

The arrests come as the latest twist in a complex tale that began more than 20 years earlier with the theft of nine paintings dating from the 17th to 19th centuries.

The paintings include works by Pissarro and Renoir, and had apparently been stolen from one of the world’s top art dealers, Robert Noortman.

The Dutchman awoke one February morning in 1987 to find that thieves had broken into his gallery on the outskirts of Maastricht and escaped with paintings including La Clairière, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Bouquet de Fleurs, by Eva Gonzales, and Bords de la Seine à Bougival, by Camille Pissarro.

Despite a long police hunt, no trace of the paintings or the thieves was found for several years.

Mr Noortman and the insurance firm Lloyds of London hired a Dutch private detective called Ben Zuidema to continue the search for the stolen masterpieces, but the trail appeared to have gone cold and Lloyds wrote a cheque to Mr Noortman for five million guilders.

However, an informant came forward alleging that Mr Noortman had staged the theft in order to claim the insurance money and the paintings had been burnt after they were stolen, said Mr Zuidema.

Police investigated the claims but no charges were ever brought against Mr Noortman and he died of a heart attack in January 2007.

Then, late last year, Mr Zuidema was contacted by a man claiming to be a private investigator who said he had a client who claimed he was hired by Noortman 22 years ago to carry out the break-in. Mr Zuidema met the so-called private detective, who called himself Mr Kahn, and a woman, who said her name was Mrs Becker, in the Dutch town of Roermond on Dec 5 last year, only 20 miles from the gallery where the theft had taken place 22 years earlier.

Mr Kahn told Mr Zuidema that his client said he had been instructed to burn the paintings but in fact destroyed only one of the pieces and lied to Noortman, claiming they had all been destroyed.
“I knew there was something suspicious about this man. He told me he wanted me to help him blackmail the Noortman family,” said Mr Zuidema.

“He promised to give me one million euros if I helped arrange the deal.”

Mr Zuidema told the pair he would play along but, instead, he contacted the Dutch National Police Agency. Officers launched an inquiry and persuaded Mr Zuidema to meet Mr Kahn.

Under instructions from the police, Mr Zuidema told Mr Kahn he agreed to the deal and when Mr Kahn left to collect the paintings, undercover officers followed him before arresting him and his alleged accomplices as they loaded six artworks into a van in Valkenburg.

Police were then directed to a second property in Walem, where they recovered two more paintings.

“The suspects were arrested in the street as they were moving six of the paintings,” said Wim de Bruyn, a spokesman for the Dutch prosecution service.

“The suspects were in possession of the paintings when they were arrested.

“Some of the artworks had been folded and were seriously damaged,” he added.

Friends and colleagues in Dubai reacted with shock when they were told of the allegations against the man.

The married father of two moved to the UAE around a year and a half ago to take up his executive job, after previously working at the firm’s offices in Frankfurt.

He resigned in November, colleagues said, and remained in Dubai, despite his wife and children living in Frankfurt.

Former colleagues in Dubai were stunned to learn that he had been arrested.

One man said: “He used to be our boss until about four months ago. He was married but his wife lived in Frankfurt and she used to come over here just to visit.

“He suddenly resigned but I do not know why. He was a good boss and a nice man. I can’t believe he has been arrested.

“He was very hard working and good at his job. He was popular with the staff but kept his private life to himself.”

Another former colleague said that the man had lived in a luxury villa in the Al Barsha district of Dubai but moved recently to a new property and had not informed colleagues of its location.

“He was a very impressive person and very charming. I don’t know if he had a special interest in art,” she added.
Under Dutch law there is a statute of limitations preventing police prosecuting cases which are more than 20 years old.

However, as the paintings are still listed as stolen, the trio were charged with handling stolen goods and money laundering.

The arrests have reignited debate about the thefts amid hopes that the truth might finally emerge about who stole the paintings and where they have been hidden for the last two decades.

Art Hostage comments:

First of all notice Julian Radcliffe lurking in the photo, hoping to muscle in and collect some of the proceeds.

Questions posed are

Can the Noortman gallery pay back the original insurance payout, plus due interest, and have the stolen returned to them ???

If the insurers keep the stolen art will they sell them via auction and use the proceeds for the benefit of their shareholders ???

What is Julian Radcliffe doing in the photo, how has he wormed his way in ???

How much reward will Benny Boy Zuidema receive ???

Will the German accused be able to justify his actions and therefore the charges will not stick ???

In Dutch law any undercover police, foreign or Dutch, have to give evidence in person using their real names and not remaining anonymous.

This usually leads to cases being dropped before they get to court to protect the undercover police foreign or Dutch.

In allot of stolen art recoveries the initial arrests are to allow police to claim the glory and to stop the person claiming the reward money. When the publicity dies down the case is quietly dropped and and reward payment is refused.

Sometimes a conviction may be sought but that can get overturned on appeal as with the case of the stolen Rembrandt recovered by FBI Agent Robert Wittman, see backstory below:
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the final paragraph is telling:
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"The Kadhum brothers and Alexander Lindgren were convicted of receiving stolen goods, but their sentences were later overturned by a Swedish appeals court, which ruled they were "provoked" by American and Swedish police. They are still living in Sweden."
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The main priority is to recover the stolen art, then deal with the fallout afterwards.

Keep you posted as more comes out..............................
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Update:
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Stolen Art, a Revolving door !!
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Renaissance painting stolen from Norwegian church

OSLO - A 450-year-old painting by Renaissance artist Lucas Cranach the Elder has been stolen from a Lutheran church in the southern Norway town of Larvik, police said Sunday.

Art expert Gunnar Krogh-Hansen estimated "Suffer the Little Children to Come Unto Me" could be worth 15-20 million kroner ($2.1-$2.8 million). It was probably painted around 1540.

The theft was discovered when firefighters responded to an alarm at the church around 1:30 am (0030 GMT) Sunday, and found a broken window and a ladder outside.


Petter Aronsen, a Larvik police official, was quoted by the Norwegian news agency NTB as saying the thief or thieves probably had a car waiting nearby.

"We don't have any suspects and are very interested in talking to anyone who might have seen something," he said. He said the national crime police and the national economic crime unit were being called in, and that a worldwide alert would be issued.

The roughly three-foot- (one-meter-) wide work, painted on a wooden panel, had hung in the church about 330 years.

Cranach lived from 1472 until 1553, and is considered one of Germany's important Renaissance painters.
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Breaking news, Cranach painting recovered, see link below:
http://arthostage.blogspot.com/2009/03/stolen-art-watch-scream-just-bad-memory.html

Saturday, March 07, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Noortman Ghost Approves of Old Masters Sting !!


Stolen paintings found

The Hague - Dutch authorities said on Saturday they had recovered eight 17th and 19th century paintings by such masters as Pissarro and Renoir that had been missing for over 20 years, and arrested three people.

"Some of the art works had been folded and were seriously damaged," said a statement from the prosecuting authority.

The paintings had gone missing from an art gallery in Maastricht near the Belgian border in 1987.

Having received information that the works had been put up for sale, police found six of the paintings in Valkenburg in the south of the country on Thursday.

A subsequent house search in the small, southern town of Walem yielded another two.

Value to be determined

Police arrested a 45-year-old German man, resident in Dubai, his 62-year-old Belgian mother, and a 66-year-old man from Walem.

"The suspects were apparently trying to sell the artworks to the insurance company that had paid out 2.27 million euros (about 2.8 million dollars) after they went missing," the statement said.

The modern-day value of the paintings had yet to be determined.

The works were by 17th century painters David Teniers (Flemish), Willem van de Velde and Jan Brueghel de Jonge (both Dutch), as well as 19th century French artists Eva Gonzales, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro and Paul Desire Trouillebert.

"The investigation has yet to determine where the paintings have been for more than 20 years," said the statement.

The suspects will appear before a court on Monday.

Art Hostage comments:

The German accused represented himself to Zuidema, who was working for the insurance company, as a private detective who could recover the stolen Noortman paintings last year in a phone call from Frankfurt Germany.
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He tried to get Zuidema to conspire with him to extort money from the Noortman estate or the insurance company to the tune of five million euros.
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Zuidema went straight to Police and the sting operation began.
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Zuidema then said he could get 1 million euros and negotiations followed until the German flew in from his home in Dubai and the net result is the recovery of the stolen Noortman paintings from the German's mother's house.
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Historically, the original theft from Robert Noortman was an inside job and it will be interesting to see how close this German was to the late Robert Noortman. Being one of the elite Robert Noortman was paid out by the insurance company even though suspitions and evidence pointed to the fact Robert Noortman had organised the theft against himself for the insurance money.
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From the moment the German tried to extort money rather than help in the recovery of the stolen art there was no possibility that any reward would, or could be paid lawfully.
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Funny enough the subject of Frankfurt came recently !
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Opinions, although not specific, were requested, not given.

Anyway, this is yet another case of people trying to profit from handing back stolen art without using the right resources and following the law.

When will people learn that there is only one way to hand back stolen art and get paid, quite lawfully, a reward plus expenses incurred during the recovery process.

Art Hostage will reveal this method later.

I am sure Robert Noortman may allow himself a smile as he observes this successful recovery from on high, having got away with the crime in life.

More to follow...........................
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Benny Boy in line for a reward ???
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It seems Ben Zuidema ticked all the boxes and fully co-operated with Police, so it will be interesting to see how much reward money Benny Boy Zuidema receives ???

Monday, February 23, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Heist Some Truth Emerges, Slowly !!!


Break In 1990 Gardner Museum Heist?
$500M In Art Stolen From Boston Museum

BOSTON -- An inmate at MCI Norfolk said he knows the whereabouts of about $500 million in art stolen almost 20 years ago from a Boston museum.

The March 18, 1990, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist is the largest art theft in modern history. Inside the museum, empty spaces where the 13 missing masterpieces once hung are constant reminders that the crime remains unsolved.

Robert Beauchamp said one of the suspects in the case, George Reissfelder, told him that the pieces were stashed in the walls of a "safe house" in Maine

Beauchamp said Reissfelder and two other people stole the art with the plan of negotiating its return for a lesser sentence for an unrelated crime and stored it in a Maine home. The homeowner and Reissfelder both died before the art could be retrieved, Beauchamp said.

Beauchamp and his attorney, Alec Sohmer, have been working with the FBI and the museum to locate the safe house.

The U.S. attorney said in 2005 that they may be willing to grant immunity from prosecution to anyone returning the masterpieces. The thieves themselves can never be prosecuted because the statute of limitations on their crime ran out years ago.

As a result of the Gardner heist, the statute of limitations on museum theft was extended in this country from five years to 20 years.

Art Hostage comments:

The truth is some of the Gardner paintings did end up in a house in Maine.

That house belonged to Joe Murray and after his murder the paintings were thought to have been retrieved by proxies of Whitey Bulger and some made their way to Ireland.

The Irish connection to the actual Gardner Heist is one of the robbers was of Irish decent, "Mate" and affiliated to the Irish Republican cause. The deep idealogical friendship between Joe Murray and senior figures within the Irish Republican military wings caused Joe Murray to try and bargain the Gardner art for Irish Republican political concessions, the door was slammed shut on this and so the Gardner art began its exile.

Blimey, can you imagine, the Gardner paintings are still in the walls of Joe Murray's Maine home and the FBI have not been up there to look.

That's it, Art Hostage declares the FBI should go straight to the house in Maine that once belonged to Joe Murray and scan all the walls. If they do not find any Gardner paintings then they may find traces of the Gardner paintings ???

However, I always thought some Gardner paintings were only stored at Joe Murray's Maine home and not hidden in the walls.
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To be continued.............................

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist, Whitey Bulger, Wise Guys, Key, Anthony Amore !! Update !!!


You wait along time for a bus to come along and then three come along at once.

Now, the stolen Gardner paintings etc.

Right, please play nice and lets see some of the stolen Gardner artworks returned.

First of all, to those with control of the Gardner art. Under no circumstances do you give proof of life, why, well if you do, you demonstrate control and this can be used against you at a later date.

Second, when you are happy to return the Gardner art and feel the deal offered is the right one you do so by giving Anthony Amore a location of where he can go fetch and collect the stolen Gardner art. Art Hostage is willing to pass this location to Anthony Amore if you feel it is safer and provides you with an extra firewall.

Remember Art Hostage said a Catholic Church confession box would be ideal as it offers symbolism of absolution as well as it will protect the identity of the person handing back the stolen Gardner art.

However, if the Gardner art is still in the farm building it may be better to just give Anthony Amore the location and he will head down Worcester way and collect the stolen Gardner drawings or whatever is still there.

By doing this there will not be any arrests at the actual recovery of the stolen Gardner art.

Subsequent to Anthony Amore recovering the Gardner art and once they have been authenticated payment can commence.

Now, when I say payment it means cash and or either reward of another nature, like time taken from and existing prison sentence, or leniency on existing indictments and further indictments.

Art Hostage can assure you Anthony Amore has the ear of the Boston DA as well as quite a bit of leverage at the FBI, not least Geoff Kelly and also Warren Banford. Bob Mueller, being a former Boston DA, I am sure will take a pragmatic view if it means some of the stolen Gardner art can be returned, but then again you know all of this already !!!

Now, I will address your concerns about exactly how much reward is available for each stolen Gardner artwork.

Art Hostage will personally speak to Anthony Amore with view to getting a price list for the return of each stolen Gardner artwork, a break down of how the $5 million reward would be paid.

The tariff will be published in due course on this blog for you consideration.

Furthermore, and this is really important, as regards getting time off current prison sentences or reducing an indictment or reduction of further indictments, Art Hostage will be honest and transparent.

Anthony Amore does have personal contact with those in power to make these kind of deals and I am certain if asked, authorities would be positive to reaching a deal. Art Hostage cannot make any kind of offers in this respect and I urge you to discuss this with your lawyers and Anthony Amore, who will in turn move mountains to reach a deal.

For any clarification on any points you know Art Hostage is here and willing to help.

Moving on to Whitey Bulger, now old Bernard Ternus, remember him, the guy caught up in the Wittman Web for trying to sell the stolen paintings taken in an armed raid in the South of France, well he is serving jail time in Florida and is trying to help recover some stolen high value jewels including the huge Topaz stolen last fall
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Back story below:
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Bernard Ternus has indicated he may be able to offer help in locating Whitey Bulger, who may be living in France, down South where it is warmer. Feelers have gone out in the French Underworld and there may be some news shortly.

Also, remember Joe Pistone, the real life Donnie Brassco, well he has been trying to get John Zip Connolly to help with the hunt for Whitey Bulger and also help in recovering the stolen Gardner art. All this time Zip has had an ace up his sleeve and has told Joe Pistone he will help once he wins his appeal, which Zip thinks is a forgone conclusion.
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Back story below:

David Turner is awaiting the publication of "The Gardner Heist" by Ulrich Boser to have his fifteen minutes of fame.

David, remember A-Rod admitted taking drugs because it was in 2003 and the statute of limitations had passed ?
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so, milk it for what it is worth !!!
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Back story below:
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Back to the Gardner Heist in a moment, time for an English tea break.

A little English tale about Lord and Lady Fairhaven, who were robbed of some historic Silver Horse Racing trophies. Apparently they may have surfaced in New York, either been recovered or are being offered for sale. Let you know more as it comes in.
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Back story below:
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Remember Elisabeth Gibson, who said she found a valuable stolen painting in a dumpster in New York, then the painting was sold for a million bucks and Elisabeth Gibson got a reward.
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Back-story below:
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Well James Wynne the FBI Agent has been doggedly working behind the scenes and may be ready to proceed with criminal charges against Elisabeth Gibson.

Tea break over back to the Gardner Heist.

Art Hostage has more to offer but it is important to post this as soon as possible.
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Update:
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Art Hostage does find this a little hard to believe but as ever, here goes.
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Apparently Whitey Bulger slipped back into the United States of America via the Caribbean recently and is now holed up on a farm in Worcester Massachusetts's.
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Whitey Bulger is willing to hand himself in but wants to make sure the $2 million reward gets paid to someone close.
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Would it be too blatant for William Bulger to claim he received a call from Whitey Bulger recently and convinced Whitey to hand himself in ???
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Would the public in Boston stand for William Bulger claiming the $2 million reward ????
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Oh, word is Whitey Bulger is dying, but this could be the same illness Whitey Bulger has been dying of for the last 20 years !!!
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Still, wouldn't it be a turn up for the books if Whitey Bulger is holed up in Worcester Massachusetts's, even better if he has some of the Gardner art.
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more to follow...............................

Saturday, February 07, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist Breaking News !!!!


Breaking News

Art Hostage has learnt that some of the stolen Gardner Art is located in a Farm building in Worcester Massachusetts.

Apparently, shortly after the 1990 Gardner Heist the stolen art was laid down in a farm building in Worcester Massachusetts.

The haul was then split with some being moved and the rest remaining in the Worcester Massachusetts farm building until recently when it has been recovered, or is about to be recovered.

Art Hostage has been told the public announcement may come around the 17th March,
19 year anniversary of the infamous Gardner Heist.

However, as usual, Art Hostage may have jumped the gun and authorities may be closing in on the Worcester Massachusetts farm building, but have yet to recover the stolen art.

By the way, I am told it is not the Vermeer or Rembrandt, just some of the drawings stolen from the Gardner Museum.

Lets hope this is not yet another False Dawn !!

In the meantime for anyone who may have inside information on the whereabouts of the stolen Gardner Art please contact


Anthony Amore, Director of Security, Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum, Boston, 617 278 5114 work,
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theft@gardnermuseum.org
or
aamore@gardnermuseum.org

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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Harry Winston Thieves Rob French President's Ex-Wife !!


Robbers nab jewels from French president's ex-wife

PARIS (AP) — It was a classic burglary in a classy Paris suburb, except that the thieves who made off with jewels and valuables worth 500,000 euros ($650,000) had robbed the ex-wife of President Nicolas Sarkozy, police said Thursday.

Cecilia Attias, the former Cecilia Sarkozy, was not home in the chic suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine when the robbers broke into her first-floor apartment this month, a police official said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the matter publicly.

Cecilia's husband, Richard Attias, a prominent public relations agent, lodged a complaint with police. Neither of them was in France when the theft occurred.

The former French first lady left Sarkozy in May 2005 for Attias, but returned to Sarkozy's side in the run-up to France's presidential elections in the spring of 2007. Their divorce was announced in October of that year, ending an 11-year marriage.
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Art Hostage comments:
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Dragon Mikic and the Balkan Bandits may have gone too far this time ?
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Art Hostage has the perfect solution for French President Nick Sarkozy, Carla could win some credit as well.
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First contact Jean Marie Messier, he has contacts within the underworld of high value stolen art and antiquities, why Jean Marie Messier bought some of the illicit smuggled antiquities from Balkan Bandits that were discovered in the Paris home of Jean Marie Messier.
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Jean Marie Messier can then track down the stolen jewellery and quietly buy them back and quietly hand them to French President Nick Sarkozy, who in turn can hand them to his ex-wife, gaining some peace and quiet, better still Nick Sarkozy can make this recovery plan look like it was organised by new wife Carla and Carla can personally hand back the stolen jewels.
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Jean Marie Messier gains some credit and any past misdeed's can be forgiven.
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However, Dragon Mikic may require a pardon for past misdeeds rather any money from Jean Marie Messier for returning the stolen Jewels taken from Cecilia Sarkozy.
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After this deliciously dishonest deal, Art Hostage would like to be rewarded by Jean Marie Messier quietly returning what stolen paintings he has from the Gardner museum in Boston, no fuss, just contact Anthony Amore and let him know where to collect the artworks.
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Anthony Amore

Anthony Amore, Director of Security, Isabella Stewart Gardner
Museum, Boston, 617 278 5114 work,
-
or
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to be continued............................................

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, French Art Dealer's Stolen Art in Play, Rodin For Sale !!!


Remember last March when a French Art Dealer was robbed of numerous high value paintings and a Rodin bronze sulpture ?

You know, the Art Dealer who was also robbed back in 2004 ?

There was not much publicity about either raid other than a few lines in the media, see below:

LE PECQ, France—About 30 paintings by such masters as Monet, Cezanne, Corot, and Sisley were stolen from a French antiques dealer's home near Paris, reports Agence France-Presse.

Five masked and armed thieves broke into the home in Le Pecq early on Monday and took the paintings as well as a Rodin sculpture. They then made off in an SUV that was later found burned in a nearby wooded area.

The dealer was previously robbed in 2004, but the works stolen then were recovered.

Well, whispers have it some of the stolen art, maybe the Rodin sculpture could be in play, could even be in America, although deal may be in France/Europe ???

The picture in not clear at this stage but as it unravals I will keep you posted.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Homesick Cavalier !!


Remember this painting, above, stolen from the New South Wales Gallery, Sydney, Australia ???


Back-story: http://www.smh.com.au/news/arts/a-cavalier-frame-of-mind/2007/10/12/1191696171884.html?page=fullpage

Enquires continue into this Art Loss !!
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Art Hostage made enquires as to the status of the stolen Cavalier painting back in the summer of 2008.
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My findings were the Cavalier is now owned by the New South Wales Govt insurance arm and will not be returned to the NSW Gallery in Sydney if it is recovered.
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The New South Wales Gallery was paid out in full for the loss of the Cavalier and has since replaced it with other artworks.
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The man charged with recovering the stolen Cavalier is called Michael Maher, an ex-Sydney cop who now runs his own company.
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Art Hostage enquired if there was any reward offered or if there would be monies paid if Art Hostage took on the recovery of the stolen Cavalier.
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Michael Maher replied in no uncertain terms there was no reward offered and no money for expenses.
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Seems Michael Maher wants to keep all the money for himself and expects those who help track down this stolen painting to do so for nothing.
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However, I do give Michael Maher credit for being honest, if a little greedy.
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There you have it folks, if you help recover the stolen Cavalier you will not get any money, not even a thank-you.
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If you offer help and then try to back out before recovery you will be arrested and threatened with prosecution, especially if you provide proof of life, thereby demonstrating a degree of control.
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Still, if money is not your motive contact Michael Maher below:
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MICHAEL MAHER ASSOCIATES PTY. LIMITED
PH: 9977 1544 FAX: 9977 1983
Sydney Australia

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Stolen Art Watch, Civil Unrest, Art Theft, its a War 2009




According to the Twentse Courant Tubantia, thieves broke into a villa in Almelo earlier this week and made off with six paintings estimated to be worth one million euros. Three of the stolen art works by Jan Sluijters. Police have confirmed the report in the Twentse newspaper, but have refused to identify the other three artists or how much the paintings are worth. A police spokesperson said the stolen artworks are extremely valuable but they cannot comment further as the case is being investigated. The paintings belong to a private collector who requested a media blackout on the theft.

The Twentse paper says three of the stolen paintings are works by Jan Slujters, 1881-1957, a Dutch artist famous for his portraits of women. Sluijters, frequently spelt 'Sluyters' in English, was a leading proponent of various post-impressionistic movements in the Netherlands. In 1906 he won the Prix de Rome, the most important Dutch art award. The prize include a grant that allowed him to study abroad for four years.

In Paris, he was influenced by Henri Toulouse-Lautrec and Paul Gauguin. Later influences include Vincent van Gogh and Fauvism. He experimented with many styles, including Abstract Expressionism and Cubism. The exact size of his oeuvre is not known but 1650 works in oil have been catalogued. He painted nudes, still lifes and portraits.

Search Expanded for Art Stolen from Berlin Gallery

Police widened their search Sunday for 30 works of art, including prints by Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso, that were stolen from a Berlin gallery on New Year's Eve.

A police spokeswoman said authorities in other countries had been asked to look out for the missing sculptures and etchings, worth an estimated 180,000 euros ($250,000).
They were stolen from the Fasanengalerie, a private gallery in the fashionable Charlottenburg district of western Berlin.

The missing works include Picasso's 1947 Profil au Fond Noir and Nude in a Rocking Chair (1913) by Matisse as well as a sculpture weighing around 100 kilograms.

The works were on loan to the gallery and due to be shown in an exhibition scheduled to open mid-January. Police believe the thieves will try to sell the works on the international market.

Art Hostage comments:

There is an interesting explanation to the Dutch art theft, above, I will go further when it is safe to do so.

Berlin art theft, some prints have been tubed up and are on their way to Miami for the January art fairs.

2009 will be remembered as the year of civil unrest and art theft will rise accordingly.

Sorry to my readers for not being at my toxic best but events have tempered my toxic expressions for now.

Good news is Art Hostage will be back to his usual toxic best very very soon.

For those of you wondering about the identity of Art Hostage, drop me an e-mail and I will gladly give you my CV and background.

To those who may have helpful knowledge about the whereabouts of the elusive Stolen Gardner art from Boston.
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If you want a positive outcome consult Art Hostage first and foremost, why, well if you proceed without considering the advice of Art Hostage you will not get any reward and will almost certainly be arrested and charged.

So, don't complain if you get stung by authorities concerning the Gardner art if you proceed without consulting Art Hostage, you have been warned.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Cezanne Lawyer, Seven Years !!


Former lawyer, 74, sentenced to 7 years in stolen art case

A retired Watertown lawyer was sentenced to seven years in federal prison yesterday for possessing six Impressionist paintings that he knew were stolen in 1978 from a house in the Berkshires in what is believed to be the largest private art theft in Massachusetts history.

US District Court Chief Judge Mark L. Wolf acknowledged that Robert M. Mardirosian, a 74-year-old former criminal defense lawyer, has been diagnosed as suffering from early-stage dementia and said prison will be hard on him. But Wolf said it was crucial to send a message to other lawyers to resist the temptations of crime.

"The only reason I'm sentencing a 74-year-old man in the early stages of dementia is because you were calculating enough to get away with this for 30 years," he said in a firm voice, facing the silver-haired, mustachioed defendant.

"You started as a lawyer," Wolf said. "As far I'm concerned, you became a glorified fence."

The judge did, however, reserve judgment on whether he will release Mardirosian from the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility in Rhode Island pending an appeal his lawyer plans to file. Wolf said he will rule on that shortly.

The sentence was less than the 10 years in prison recommended by Assistant US Attorney Jonathan F. Mitchell, but much harsher than the recommendation of Mardirosian's lawyer, Jeanne M. Kempthorne, of Salem. She asked Wolf to sentence Mardirosian to two years in home confinement, saying her client would probably not survive a long prison term.

A federal jury convicted Mardirosian on Aug. 18 of taking six Impressionist paintings that had allegedly been stolen by one of his clients from the Stockbridge house of Michael Bakwin and storing them in Europe. Mardirosian's client, David Colvin, of Pittsfield, also stole a seventh painting, a Cezanne piece called "Bouilloire et Fruits," that Mardirosian kept for two decades before it was returned in 1999 to Bakwin, who auctioned it off at Sotheby's for $29.3 million.

Colvin was shot to death in 1979. Mardirosian told the Globe in 2006 that he stumbled upon the paintings in 1980 in his office loft, where Colvin had once spent a night when he visited the lawyer to discuss another case.

Rather than return the paintings, authorities said, Mardirosian stored them in Switzerland. In 1999, using a shell company and lawyers, Mardirosian returned the Cezanne to Bakwin in exchange for title to the six other paintings, which were far less valuable. Bakwin testified at Mardirosian's trial that he considered the agreement extortion, but that he wanted the Cezanne back.

In 2005, Mardirosian, through an intermediary, had four of the other six stolen paintings transferred from Geneva to Sotheby's London auction house in preparation for a sale, authorities said. The estimated market value of the paintings ranged from $70,000 to $500,000 each, according to the indictment.

But in May 2005, Bakwin, with the help of the Art Loss Register, sued Sotheby's in a London court to halt the sale. The suit and the public disclosure of Mardirosian's name in connection with the paintings prompted the federal investigation that culminated with his surrender last year.

Bakwin recovered the four paintings that were scheduled to be auctioned in London. Wolf ordered yesterday that the two paintings that had remained in Switzerland and have been in the hands of US authorities be returned to Bakwin, pending the outcome of Mardirosian's appeal.

Art Hostage comments:

Now, lets not get this former Lawyer confused with a Lawyer trying to negotiate the return of stolen art for a client.

This Lawyer, fearing the mean spirited nature of the owner not paying a substantial figure for his stolen art back, thought he could scam his way to a reward for returning these stolen artworks.

This man should be treated like any criminal trying to ransom back stolen art.

However, if a Lawyer is approached by a middleman who wants to return stolen art via the Lawyer, then this is a different matter.

As long as the middleman can establish he has had nothing to do with the original theft or subsequent handling of the said stolen artwork, and he and his Lawyer negotiate with the Police and Prosecutors who are investigating the original theft, they can reach a lawful agreement which sees the art returned and reward paid in full. This will normally involve a sting wherby someone gets arrested and the middleman will always have to re-locate after it is exposed he has informed.

You notice I do not say negotiate with any Art Loss Adjuster or any former police, why, because they do not have any control over reward payments being paid.

For any lawful reward payment there needs to be permission granted by Police as well as Prosecutors.

Anyone offering to pay a reward without the express permission of investigating Police and Prosecutors is lying through their teeth, unless they are prepared to break the law and pay a reward without any Police and Prosecutors permission.


Upon another note, the final accused, Rob Meeson, above, in the Frans Hals case held in custody has been released from jail today on bail and it is now to March 2009 when the case comes to court.

Funny thing, Rob Meeson applied for bail weeks ago and was successful, but prosecutors appealed and the accused was jailed again, only to be released today on the orders of a judge.

So, March 2009 will prove to be a watershed with two important stolen art recovery cases coming to court and will provide clarity on the rules governing recovering stolen art.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Harry Hyams stolen Painting Turns up


I think it is alright to say that Harry Hyams stolen painting has turned up, could even be at a picture auction.

Wonder what else has turned up, a Chippendale Table of contents is needed !!!!

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Caravaggio Recovered, Thief Dead, in Underworld Deadly Deal, Update, Update !!


Caravaggio Painting Stolen from Museum in Odessa Recovered



ODESSA.- Police officers have found the painting Taking of Christ, or the Kiss of Judas which had been stolen from the Museum of Western and Eastern Art in the Black Sea port of Odessa last July, reported "Zérkalo nedeli".

The source also stated that it was informed of the finding of the painting by sources close to the Ministry of the Interior in Ukraine.

Back then, the thieves entered the museum through a window and bypassed the alarm system by removing a window pane instead of breaking it. After taking the work from its frame, the thieves fled through the roof.

The Taking of Christ, or the Kiss of Judas, oil on canvas, measuring 134 X 172.5 centimeters, was painted by the Italian master between 1573 and 1602, even though some sources date it at between 1598 and 1599.

The work of art narrates the arrest of Christ after a night of praying at the foot of the Mount of Olives, representing the figures of Christ and Judas, united by the kiss of betrayal, surrounded by disciples and Roman soldiers.

Caravaggio's application of the chiaroscuro technique shows through on the faces and armour notwithstanding the lack of a visible shaft of light. The figure on the extreme right is a self portrait.


Art Hostage comments:

Ten out of ten for the Art Daily reporting this before anyone else.

Art Hostage heard about a deal in the works and it proves to be correct.

A certain Underworld Godfather facilitated this recovery and the details may emerge later.

No cheap media headline announcing arrests, no undercover stings,at this stage, just the good news the Caravaggio has been recovered.

O'h how I await the news the Gardner art, Vermeer in particular has been recovered in this manner, from a Catholic Church confession box to add drama.

You see high value stolen art can be returned without arrests, reward can be offered, in many ways, each case has to be taken on an individual basis.

I strongly urge anyone contemplating returning the stolen Gardner art to make contact with Anthony Amore, Director of Security, directly at:

Boston 617-278-5114 or theft@gardnermuseum.org .
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Update:
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It appears the thief has been found dead and the circumstances of his death have not been revealed as yet.
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However, it seems powerful people declared an interest in the stolen Caravaggio and the thief paid with his life in order for others to fruit from his criminal labour.
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They don't mess around out in Ukraine and once the Underworld got in on the act the original thief''s days were numbered.
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It was feared the thief could reveal who ordered the theft and who was pulling the strings behind the scenes.
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Make no mistake big bucks and political favours have been handed out.
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More to follow................
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Update 2
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Well, old Nikolai Ponomarenko the art collector from Jarkov, thought of as the handler/negotiator of the Caravaggio, gets himself killed by a 28 year old assassin, perhaps the original thief, or an associate, thinking they were being set up, doubts are being raised about the actual recovery of the Caravaggio, all part of the Odessa File, so to speak.
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Perhaps authorities are keeping the Caravaggio under wraps until the mess is sorted out, what with old Nikolai getting murdered.
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Sting gone wrong ??????????
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more to follow............................
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Update 3
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It now appears that Police stopped one of the suspected Caravaggio art gang and recovered five stolen artworks in his car worth about 3 million, not the Caravaggio.
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After putting pressure on the arrested man they mounted an undercover operation to recover the Caravaggio.
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Poor old Nikolai Ponomarenko got involved and was exposed by the bad guys and killed. Police have however, recovered a landscape painting with Sheep and they are trying to trace its origin.
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As to the Caravaggio, it remains in the Underworld, or under wraps in Police custody ??

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Gardner Art Heist, The Nightmare Continues !!


Gardner Museum heist still unsolved

http://www.projo.com/news/content/art_theft_11-24-08_0UCCME5_v20.3226500.html
By Amanda Milkovits

Journal Staff Writer

There is someone out there in the world who knows who conducted the biggest art theft of all time. There is someone, somewhere, perhaps, enjoying the beauty of artwork valued at a half-billion dollars.

Eighteen years after two men posing as Boston police officers outwitted two security guards and stole 13 works of art from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, in Boston, the mystery remains.

Who was behind the heist? Where is the artwork now? Will the pieces ever be returned to their places within the museum, where the late Mrs. Gardner had arranged them herself a lifetime ago?

The museum’s director of security, Anthony Amore, talked about the heist on Friday as part of the University of Rhode Island’s continuing series of forensic science seminars. Amore, who graduated from URI with a degree in English, went on to a career in national security and intelligence work, including as a special agent for the Federal Aviation Administration and most recently as assistant federal security director at Boston’s Logan International Airport.

Amore, who has worked for the Gardner since 2005, said he has reorganized and improved training for the security guards and upgraded the security and surveillance equipment. But the empty frames hung on the walls where the stolen paintings used to be are a reminder of the museum’s loss. “The people who took these things [committed] the ultimate selfish act,” he said.

Amore said he often fields tips about what may have happened to the art work, even some bizarre ideas –– that the paintings are hidden in secret passageways within the Gardner, that the late Mrs. Gardner is communicating with psychics to tell them where the art work has gone. He said he has reviewed every file, every piece of evidence, and organized all he knows into a database that references and cross-references names and information, in hopes of making a connection.

But the $5-million reward offered by the Gardner for the return of the art work, or information leading to the return, still stands. The frames are still empty. And on March 18, it will have been 19 years since two men walked out with some of the most valuable artwork in the world, and disappeared.

Art theft is the third-highest-grossing criminal trade, Amore said, behind drugs and firearms. When the value of artwork spiked in 1961, when the Metropolitan Museum of Art bought a Rembrandt for $2.3 million, criminals took notice. Organized crime became involved. Fifteen years later, 118 Picassos were stolen from museums in France, he said.

Bold actions and basic human error left the Gardner Museum vulnerable. Two young guards were working that night, in March 1990, as St. Patrick’s festivities wound down, when two men dressed as Boston police officers approached the employee entrance and said they were investigating a disturbance and needed to come in.

Despite the museum’s written security policy not to admit police officers into the building unless they had been summoned by the museum, the guard let the “officers” in anyway, which Amore called “one of the biggest mistakes ever made.”

They asked him to call the other guard down to meet them. They lured the first guard away from his control desk, where he could have set off the alarm button, by telling him they thought he had a warrant. The “officers” ordered him against the wall and handcuffed him. When the second guard arrived, they handcuffed him as well. And then, Amore said, the intruders told the guards: “Gentlemen, this is a robbery.”

Amore flashed pictures on a screen of the washbasin where one guard was handcuffed, and the basement pipes where the other was taken, 40 yards away. The guards had been bound with duct tape. The thieves stripped the motion-detector readouts and broke the printer, not realizing that the authorities would be able to track their moves recorded on the computer’s hard drive.

Other museum heists have been quick smash-and-grabs, thieves overpowering guards and hustling out with what they wanted. Even the famous theft in 1911 of the Mona Lisa from the Louvre happened quickly, when museum worker Vincenzo Peruggia lifted the painting off the wall and carried it out under his arm. (He wanted to return da Vinci’s painting to Italy, but gave up and gave it back two years later.)

With the only two guards under control, the thieves in the Gardner had all the time they wanted. They sliced Rembrandt’s Portrait of a Lady and Gentleman in Black out of its frame. Amore showed a rarely seen close-up photo of the stretcher and the edge of canvas where a thief had sliced to remove the image.

The thieves pulled down Vermeer’s The Concert and Manet’s Chez Tortoni and ripped several Edgar Degas sketches from their frames. They apparently tried, unsuccessfully, to take a Napoleonic flag out of its frame.

The entire episode lasted 81 minutes. Over the years, investigators from the FBI and the museum itself have pored over the details of where the thieves went, why they took the items they did, why they passed by other more valuable works.

There are a multitude of theories behind the thefts, none of which Amore would discuss publicly. It’s still an active investigation, and he takes heart that other thefts have ended with the pieces returned. The truth and the Vermeer, Rembrandts, Degas, Manet and other valuable works are still waiting to be discovered.

Amore asks that anyone with information regarding the stolen artwork to contact him: e-mail: aamore@isgm.org or theft@isgm.org. Phone: (617) 278-5114.


Art Hostage Interviews Anthony Amore

(1) What is your favourite colour

Anthony Amore: That’s easy: the Azzurro of the Italian national soccer team.

(2) What is your favourite curse word

AA: I have too large a stable to choose from to pick just one.

(3) When you reach Heaven what would you like God to say to you

AA: Anthony, you did your best.

(4) The public reward offer made by the Gardner Museum contains the line “in good condition” can you elaborate on this because some of the stolen Gardner paintings were cut from their frames, therefore their condition could not be described as good.

AA: The Museum’s Board of Trustees is aware that two of the stolen paintings were cut from their frames and were damaged in the process.

This fact was taken into account when the verbiage surrounding the reward offer was crafted and the fact that the paintings were cut from their frames will not adversely affect an individual/s eligibility to cash in on the $5 million reward if the stolen artworks are returned in otherwise good condition.

(5) Can you confirm the amount of stolen artworks from the Gardner museum as there have been indications the list is not completely true, i.e. Eagle was not stolen

AA: I can definitively confirm that thirteen works of art were stolen. The Napoleonic finial which rested atop the flag of Napoleon’s first regiment was indeed among the art objects that were stolen during the heist. Some early newspaper accounts incorrectly stated that twelve pieces were stolen and that reporting error is still perpetuated in articles now and then.

(6) It is common knowledge within the stolen art world, both the Criminal underworld and those who recover stolen art, that Mark Dalrymple and Dick Ellis both met with Gardner Museum Director Anne Hawley and subsequent to those meetings both Mark Dalrymple and Dick Ellis came to the conclusion the reward offer was not sincere, can you please put the record straight once and for all.

AA: If your readers can take away only one message from this interview, it is that Anne Hawley is a woman of the utmost integrity.
For more than 18 years, Hawley has stated publicly that the Museum is offering a reward of $5 million for information leading directly to the recovery of the all 13 pieces in good condition.

She would not make this statement if it were not absolutely true. Further, Anne’s commitment is echoed and fully supported by the Museum’s Board of Trustees.

It also bears mention that the Board of Trustees re-authorized the reward this past November – and all of us at the museum look forward to the day when the stolen artworks are returned to the museum and to an awaiting public where they belong and can make good on the $5 million offer.

(7) To prevent any stings and arrests at the actual recovery of the stolen Gardner art, do you agree a neutral place should be chosen and then authorities, or better still Anthony Amore, is directed to the location to collect the stolen Gardner art?

AA: The museum can ensure confidentiality to anyone with information leading to the recovery of the stolen artworks. My hope is that whoever is in possession of Mrs. Gardner’s art will come forward in a manner that best protects the condition of the artwork.

(8) If you agree with a neutral location to receive the stolen Gardner art, do you also agree a Catholic Church confession box would be ideal, not least because of the symbol of absolution and also because a Catholic church confession box prevents any trace as to who handed back the stolen Gardner art.

AA: In an absolute best case scenario, I believe it best that the art not be moved at all so that the museum’s conservators can handle any movement, thus protecting the art in the best possible manner. In line with this, I would remind those in possession of the art that it should be stored at 70 degrees Fahrenheit and 50% humidity.

My hope is that an individual/individuals with information that will help us locate the stolen artwork will come forward – and that he or she will come forward in a manner that best protects the condition of the artwork. Again, the museum can ensure complete confidentiality of anyone with information leading to the recovery of the stolen artworks.

(9) Geoff Kelly, lead FBI Agent in charge of the Gardner Heist investigation is clearly a thoroughly decent and honest hardworking FBI Agent, how will the FBI react if they are not included in your recovery of the stolen Gardner art, will they allow it to happen, will they stand aside.

AA: Special Agent Kelly has proven to me that his main concern is the return of all of the art in good condition. The FBI and the United States Attorney’s Office, have given me every reason to believe that they are, as is the museum, seeking a successful resolution to this tragedy, not credit.

(10) There have been many references to Ireland during the Gardner Heist investigation can you confirm your findings

AA: As an open, active investigation, I cannot speak to any specific theories or leads in the case – other than to say that the museum follows each and every lead and encourages anyone with any information about the stolen artworks and/or the investigation–no matter how seemingly small – to contact me, Anthony Amore, Director of Security, directly at 617/278-5114 or theft@gardnermuseum.org .

The museum is offering a reward of $5 million for information leading directly to the recovery of the stolen artworks in good condition, and can ensure confidentiality.

(11) Dick Ellis claims he obtained an immunity agreement from the Boston D.A. in 2002, have you obtained an immunity agreement, if so, would it be possible for Art Hostage to post it on the blog so the public, and those in control of the stolen Gardner art can review it.

AA: Because the matter is in the hands of the Federal government, your question would pertain to an immunity agreement from the United States Attorney for Massachusetts. I have no information about such an agreement, although, I can say that United States Attorney Sullivan has in the past expressed a willingness to grant immunity (depending on the circumstances, of course) in this matter.

(12) We have, and the criminal underworld have, seen the Lawyers and private detectives who handed back the Da Vinci Madonna arrested and indicted, what assurances can you offer to allay the fears of those with the stolen Gardner art they will not suffer the same fate


AA: The Museum’s sole concern is the recovery of all of the art in good condition. The Museum is offering a reward for $5 million for information leading to the recovery of the stolen artworks in good condition – and can ensure confidentiality. Anyone with information about the theft or the location of the stolen artworks can contact the museum – and me directly via theft@gardnermuseum.org or my direct line, 617 278 5114. Matters related to arrests and indictment are the responsibility of Federal law enforcement authorities.

(14) Some people have said over the years they thought the Gardner art was really insured and the $5 million reward offer is coming from the insurance payout, can you confirm whether the Gardner art was really insured, and if not, where has the $5 million reward come from and is it sitting in an account waiting to be paid.

AA: The Gardner art was most definitely not insured. These stolen artworks are invaluable and irreplaceable. The $5 million reward is indeed real, and the Museum is eager to disburse the full $5 million the reward for information that leads directly to the return of the stolen artwork in good condition.

(15) How do you intend to pay the reward, have you obtained permission from the FBI and the Boston D.A. to pay the reward without informing them.

AA: The reward is being offered by the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, not the FBI or the D.A. and will be paid by the Museum at its discretion on the receipt of information that leads to the return of all of the stolen artworks in good condition. The reward will be awarded at our discretion.

(16) Do you intend to keep FBI Agent Geoff Kelly informed as to your negotiations, or will you work without a net, so to speak.

AA: Special Agent Kelly has expressed his willingness to support me and the museum’s efforts to recover our art. He respects our working relationship and the museum’s needs to pursue its interests directly

(17) Would you be prepared to recover the stolen Gardner art covertly and face the wrath of law enforcement post-recovery.

AA: I don’t foresee facing “the wrath of law enforcement.” I see law enforcement as an understanding partner in my efforts to recover the Gardner’s stolen artworks – and to return them to the museum, and an awaiting public, where they belong.

(18) Would you be prepared to break the law, even go to jail, in recovering the stolen Gardner art.

AA: Absolutely not.

(19) If you were able to only choose one stolen Gardner painting to recover, which one would that be, Art Hostage would choose the Vermeer.

AA: I am well aware of Art Hostage’s love for the Vermeer, and it speaks to your good taste in art! We at the Museum see all 13 pieces as parts separated from the entirety of Mrs. Gardner’s collective work. She placed each of the thousands of pieces of work in the Museum in an exact location in order to create a larger work of art. With even one piece gone, her work is incomplete.
- (20) How do you react to those (Mark Dalrymple) who accuses you of being nothing more than a civil servant pen pusher who has no authority and experience in recovering stolen art.

AA: Mr. Dalrymple and I do not know each other. I’ll assume that this accusation—if truly made—was taken out of context.

(21) Rocky has been working for the Gardner Museum for a few years now and has received payment for his work, how do you react to those (Mark Dalrymple) who say Rocky is just scamming the Gardner Museum without any realistic prospect of recovering any of the stolen artworks.

AA: I cannot confirm that your depiction of Mr. Rokoszynski’s relationship with the Museum is accurate. I can say that I know Mr. Rokoszynski very well. He is an investigator with a record of remarkable success in his distinguished career with Scotland Yard. I trust him and consider him a close friend and valued mentor. In my years of dealing with him, he has acted with honor and integrity. I seek his counsel regularly, and the Museum welcomes his guidance and assistance in our recovery efforts

(22) Finally Anthony, imagine Art Hostage could convince those with the Gardner art to hand the Vermeer back via a Catholic Church confession box, how would they get paid the reward.

AA: I don’t know that it serves the Museum or those in possession of the art well to disclose publicly how the reward would be handled, other than to say that it would be handled legitimately and discreetly. Further, there are myriad ways in which the reward could be paid out, so it is difficult to speak to this with any useful specificity.

(23) Alternatively, lets take it step by step, Anthony could you take us through each step of your proposed recovery of the stolen Gardner art, avoiding arrests and ending with the reward payments made.

AA: Art Hostage, I welcome you to ask me that question again after the recovery!

Thank you for the opportunity to address these important matters – and for the work you do.

Art Hostage comments:

I am sure those who read Stolen Vermeer realise Art Hostage speaks from a unique perspective.

With that in mind I am also sure those with control of the stolen Gardner art, be it some in Ireland and some still in the U.S. will take note when I say there are only two people who can recover the stolen Gardner art in a fashion that protects whoever steps forward with the vital information that allows these priceless icons to surface.

First, of course is the now retired FBI Art Crime icon Robert Wittman, who, now free from the burdens of office can offer a much more pragmatic approach to those with inside information. Also, Bob Wittman can firmly put recovery at the top of the list and can even work to a goal that only see's the artworks recovered without arrests.

Second, is Anthony Amore, a true gentleman and someone who will walk through fire, over broken glass to recover the stolen Gardner art.

If Art Hostage had inside information that would allow the stolen Gardner art to surface, without arrests he would certainly contact either Robert Wittman or Anthony Amore.

Better still, Robert Wittman and Anthony Amore would be the ideal partnership to recover the stolen Gardner art and I am sure they both share the same desire to recover the Gardner art first and foremost, with arresting anyone coming far down their list of things to achieve.

I hope the right people read this post and use it for future reference when they decide to make a play to return the stolen Gardner art.

Remember, amongst all the people trying to recover the stolen Gardner art, Anthony Amore and Robert Wittman are the only two honest people in a position to facilitate this.

How would Anthony Amore and Robert Wittman actually proceed ??

I will leave that to them to explain if the right person contacts them.

Anthony Amore can be reached at: e-mail: aamore@isgm.org or theft@isgm.org.
Phone: (617) 278-5114.

If you want to include Robert Wittman just tell Anthony Amore and he will oblige.

Saturday, November 22, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Brits Bulldoze Dutch Law in Art Heist Entrapment !!

Entrapment with Lipstick is still Entrapment
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Remember back in September when law enforcement from Britain, with an Art Loss Adjuster in tow, recovered the paintings stolen from the Frans Hals Museum in 2002 ??

Here is the back story:


Well, it now transpires the amount of money that went walkabout was 1 million Euros, £850,000, $1.2 million.

Furthermore, the charges against the Lawyer have been dropped due to a blatant entrapment carried out by Brit Police and their Art Loss Adjuster cohort.

It now transpires the Dutch Lawyers Society have condemned this entrapment and their may be legal action for damages. The Dutch Lawyers Society also described arresting the Lawyer on his birthday as "indecent" especially as those charges have now been dropped.

Going forward, a Dutch Member of the European Parliament is going to table a motion to clarify the laws of entrapment and incorporate it into the Human Rights Act. This would give a universal law across Europe covering the law with regards Police and others entrapping people into breaking the Law.

Currently the laws covering entrapment differ from country to country and the criteria for breaches is set to a different standard in each country.

Now, we are not only talking about entrapment with regards stolen art recovery, but also with regards terrorism.

Although entrapment laws differ in each country, the intention to entrap is universal and an Agent Provocateur with Lipstick is still an Agent Provocateur.
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If a dog barks, what about a dog with a Harelip/Cleft Lip ??
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it goes Mark, Mark !!!

Monday, November 17, 2008

Stolen Art Watch, Da Vinci Madonna Trial, Date Set, Well Maybe !!




Five men accused of demanding £4.25m for the return of a Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece will face trial next year.

The Madonna with the Yarnwinder was taken from Drumlanrig Castle near Dumfries in August 2003.

The five men - three from Lancashire and two from near Glasgow - have been charged with conspiracy to extort or attempting to extort the money.

Four of them deny the charges while the fifth has made no plea. A trial date has been set for 30 March next year.

The five men have been charged with conspiracy to extort or attempting to extort the money from the late Duke of Buccleuch, his son and insurers.

They are also accused of attempting to defeat the ends of justice.

Robert Graham, 56, and John Doyle, 59, both of Ormskirk; Calum Jones, 43, of Kilmacolm; and David Boyce, 61, of Airdrie, deny the offences.

Marshall Ronald, 52, of Skelmersdale, has made no plea.

The offences are alleged to have taken place between 18 July and 4 October last year.

Serious problems

At the High Court in Glasgow, Advocate Duncan McPhie, representing Mr Ronald, said a defence of entrapment was currently being investigated.

He asked for a further preliminary hearing to be held next month.

Judge Lord Brailsford set a trial date for 30 March next year, but said if any serious problems arose a new date would have to be found.

The trial is expected to last four weeks.

The masterpiece, which was painted between 1500 and 1530, has an estimated value of £30m.

It belongs to the Duke of Buccleuch and has been in his family for 200 years.

Vermeer's The Concert

Vermeer's The Concert