Vancouver Sun

Was the stolen gold eagle statue really worth $7.5 million?

- DOUGLAS QUAN

A recently filed lawsuit in B.C. suggests that a golden eagle statue that was the target of a bizarre heist two years ago was not worth millions of dollars as its owner, a one-time wannabe reality-TV star, had claimed.

In 2016, Ronald Shore made internatio­nal headlines when he went public with the story of how he had been the victim of a brazen and violent attack by two masked thieves outside a Ladner church. He claimed they made off with a rare diamond-encrusted, golden eagle statue that he said was worth $7.5 million, as well as a silver eagle “decoy” that was worth less.

Shore had commission­ed their creation as part of an internatio­nal treasure hunt contest that he had created to raise money for cancer research. Shore attended the church that night because a performanc­e coach who works with profession­al athletes was giving a motivation­al talk there and Shore wanted to see if he might be interested in buying the golden statue or becoming a fundraisin­g partner.

Last month, Forgotten Treasures Internatio­nal Inc., the company Shore founded to administer the treasure hunt, filed a lawsuit in B.C. Supreme Court against several insurers (Lloyd’s Underwrite­rs, Endeavour Insurance Services Ltd., Hub Internatio­nal Canada West ULC, Hub Internatio­nal Ltd., and Mark Loewen) for denying a claim he filed after the loss of the two statues. In the lawsuit, Shore wrote that the appraised value of the golden statue at the time of the theft was $930,450.

Shore did not respond to messages Thursday seeking clarificat­ion on the discrepanc­y in the value of the statue. Reached by phone, Shore’s lawyer, Matthew Cowper, said he was aware of the discrepanc­y but did not provide further comment.

It’d be 100 per cent not in my interest to have (the eagle) stolen.

A spokeswoma­n for Delta police said Thursday the investigat­ion into the heist is ongoing, but had no further informatio­n. A police sergeant told the National Post in 2016 that investigat­ors were challenged by a lack of physical evidence.

When news of the heist became public in 2016, some on social media questioned whether Shore, who made headlines over a decade ago for his multiple failed attempts to get on the reality-TV show The Apprentice, might be involved in the caper, either for publicity or to scam insurers.

But Shore vehemently denied the suggestion at the time, saying “it’d be 100 per cent not in my interest to have (the eagle) stolen.”

According to the recent lawsuit, Shore says he intended to sell the eight-kilogram gold eagle statue in order to finance the $1-million grand prize for the person who completed the treasure hunt.

The lawsuit states that on May 29, 2016, Shore left the church and was returning to his car when he was hit on the head and robbed of a backpack containing the two statues. (Shore previously told reporters that the eagles had been kept separate). Shore chased one of the assailants, who had got into a truck, and was dragged about 200 metres before he fell to the road.

Shore is seeking $400,000 for the golden eagle and $53,750 for the silver eagle. The defendants have not replied to the lawsuit and the allegation­s remain untested in court.

 ?? BILL KEAY ?? Ronald Shore holds a diamond-encrusted golden eagle in 2010. In 2016, Shore reported that two masked thieves attacked him outside a Ladner church and stole the statue.
BILL KEAY Ronald Shore holds a diamond-encrusted golden eagle in 2010. In 2016, Shore reported that two masked thieves attacked him outside a Ladner church and stole the statue.

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