The Telegram (St. John's)

Wealthy Nova Scotia thief dead at 57

Man filled home with pilfered artifacts and art — some from Newfoundla­nd

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A man who filled his suburban lakeside home with historic artifacts and art stolen over decades of pilfering so stealthy that many of his targets didn’t even know they’d been victimized has died. John Mark Tillmann was 57. Sheet music for a Newfoundla­nd song written 160 years ago could be among the hundreds of historical items seized from the Nova Scotia man’s home last month.

Memorial University’s Centre For Newfoundla­nd Studies had suspected the sheet music for a piece of military music composed by Henry Tillman in 1853 had been stolen.

A man named Tillman had asked to view the music in 2006, the centre reported in a 2013 Telegram story, and it hadn’t been seen since.

To see an item or document from the centre’s stacks, a person must fill out a form and show identifica­tion. In that case they had the form afterward, but not the document.

The wealthy Tillmann — he owned both a Porsche and BMW — stole from universiti­es, libraries, museums, antique dealers and private collectors across Atlantic Canada.

Among about 1,300 items seized by police from his twostorey home in Fall River, north of Halifax: early editions of Daniel Defoe’s 1719 classic ``Robinson Crusoe’’ and a 1758 letter written by Gen. James Wolfe.

There was also a spear. A gas mask. A glass lantern. A model canoe. Paintings depicting centuries-old scenes. A brass telescope. An 1819 watercolou­r from Nova Scotia’s legislativ­e library.

Many of the institutio­ns weren’t even aware the items had been stolen.

Tillmann was caught when the RCMP pulled him over in a July 2012 traffic stop and found the Wolfe letter, which the British general had written to an uncle in Dublin.

It had disappeare­d from Dalhousie University’s archives years earlier.

Dalhousie archivist Mike Moosberger said they realized the letter was missing after a 2009 inventory, but no one knew whether it had been stolen or merely misplaced. Similar Wolfe letters have fetched US$18,000 at auction, he said.

The letter was returned to Dalhousie after Tillmann’s arrest, but it had been torn and was missing some writing.

Moosberger refused to comment Thursday on Tillmann’s death, other than to note ``enhanced security protocols ... have been put in place’’ since the theft.

``Beyond that, I don’t believe there is anything else to say,’’ he said.

Tillmann died two days before Christmas in Musquodobo­it Harbour, according to a certificat­e of death obtained by CTV, which this week first reported the story of the infamous art thief’s death.

Tillmann had been charged with trying to kill his mother in 2009, and also served a two-year sentence for extorting, assaulting and threatenin­g an ex-girlfriend. Media reports have also documented a history of racism and anti-semitism.

But it was the art and artifact thefts that drew the most attention to Tillmann.

When he was arrested, police held a show and tell of the seized items. Cpl. Scott Macrae said officers found a trove of artifacts worth well over $500,000 in a home that had been turned into a veritable museum.

``When we first arrived, it was almost set up to be on display,’’ Macrae said at the time.

``Lots of the items were from antique dealers, so there’s historic value. There’s value to personal collection­s, universiti­es and just people in general in Nova Scotia and Atlantic Canada.’’

At the time, police worked with authoritie­s in the United States to determine whether some items had been sold, including a first edition of Charles Darwin’s ``Origin of Species.’’

In 2013, Tillmann pleaded guilty to 40 charges and was sentenced in Nova Scotia Supreme Court to nine years in prison.

Tillmann was also ordered to forfeit his home — valued at between $400,000 and $700,000 — and all of its contents, including the two luxury cars, as well as $300,000 in his bank account.

He was granted parole in 2016.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? John Mark Tillmann (rear), charged with possession of stolen property, is escorted by sheriffs from provincial court in Dartmouth, N.S., in February 2013.
CP FILE PHOTO John Mark Tillmann (rear), charged with possession of stolen property, is escorted by sheriffs from provincial court in Dartmouth, N.S., in February 2013.

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