Gang behind $55m art heist captured in FBI sting
By David Randall
Published: 18 September 2005
Rembrandt and Renoir masterpieces, stolen five years ago in a raid whose audacity and special effects police compared to a James Bond movie, have been recovered after an almost equally dramatic sting operation.
Four men - two Iraqis, a Swede and a Gambian - were arrested in a raid on a Copenhagen hotel as they offered to sell a Rembrandt self-portrait worth $42m (£23m) to an FBI agent posing as an art buyer. They were asking a mere $100,000. The painting was recovered, and police in Los Angeles then revealed that the Renoir - Young Parisian, which depicts a girl and is worth an estimated $13m - had been found by the FBI at an undisclosed location in the city six months ago.
The melodrama in this dowdy Danish hotel brings to a conclusion a story that began half a decade ago at the waterfront National Museum in Stockholm. Just before closing time one day in December 2000, an armed and masked gang entered the building. While one man brandished a sub-machine gun in the lobby, two others seized the paintings from the second floor. As they escaped, scattering spikes on the road to delay pursuers, two cars exploded nearby, creating a diversion. The men then made off in a small boat.
The third painting stolen in that heist, Renoir's Conversation, was recovered by Swedish police in 2001, but the other two remained lost. It was an investigation of an international crime ring operating in southern California that led authorities to the other Renoir, and thence, ultimately, to the Rembrandt. The FBI declined to reveal further details about how the Renoir had been recovered, saying there was an ongoing investigation into related crimes. Authorities said a criminal syndicate smuggled the painting through Los Angeles airport several years ago. The agency kept the recovery of their Renoir secret until Friday to aid the recovery of the Rembrandt.
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article313441.ece