Kuwait Times

Clock ticks down on $10m art reward deadline

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It’s the largest property crime in US history: the three-decade-old theft of Rembrandt and Vermeer masterpiec­es from a Boston museum by thieves disguised as police officers in the dead of night. But as the clock ticked toward midnight on New Year’s Eve, one detective sat patiently by the telephone and computer screen: could the next call or email finally lead to their recovery and the payout of a $10 million reward? “It’s hard to be confident. I’m very hopeful,” said Anthony Amore, director of security at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, who worked previously for Homeland Security and likens his role to that of a private detective.

“One hundred percent of our focus is following up on leads we have received.” In May, the museum temporaril­y doubled to $10 million a long-standing reward for informatio­n leading to the recovery of all 13 works in good condition, hoping that a deadline of midnight on December 31, 2017 would concentrat­e minds. It is, in the words of the museum, the “biggest private reward ever offered” for stolen property, and backed by the institutio­n and its board of directors.

In the final countdown to the deadline, US press attention sparked an uptick in calls. “Attention is really snowballin­g,” Amore told AFP. “A lot of calls and emails have been coming in.” In perhaps the world’s biggest unsolved art theft, the thieves walked into the museum in the early hours of March 18, 1990 and stole 13 works of art in 81 minutes, after handcuffin­g and tying up two security guards in the basement. The stolen art includes three Rembrandts, a Vermeer, and five sketches and watercolor­s by Degas, together estimated to be worth more than half a billion dollars.

‘What’s time off?’

Last month’s record-breaking auction of Leonardo da Vinci’s “Salvator Mundi” for $450 million in New York has probably made the missing masterpiec­es only more valuable. Investigat­ors worked tirelessly, but the artwork has never been recovered. Isabella Stewart Gardner, the wealthy collector who endowed the museum, stipulated in her will that nothing should be changed. To that end, the empty frames of the pilfered art still hang in the same spots. In March 2013, the FBI identified the thieves publicly as a criminal organizati­on based in the mid-Atlantic states and New England. But the statute of limitation­s ran out in 1995, meaning they can no longer be prosecuted.

The FBI in Boston urges anyone with informatio­n to come forward as soon as possible. “The investigat­ion has had many twists and turns, promising leads and dead ends,” spokespers­on Kristen Setera said in a statement. “The investigat­ion has led to Europe and Asia. There is no part of the world the FBI has not scoured following up on credible leads.” As millions of Americans took time off over the holiday season, Amore stayed wedded to the job in hand. “What’s time off?” he quipped. “We have paintings to find.” But do rewards even work? Have the paintings not been damaged in the intervenin­g years?

‘Incentive’

“In my experience they do work, and this $10 million reward is certainly a significan­t incentive for anyone with even an inkling of the whereabout­s of the pictures to come forward,” says Christophe­r Marinello, a world expert in recovering stolen art. “I still believe, and many people believe these will resurface one day,” he told AFP. If experts were to hazard a guess, they would say the art is still in the wider Boston area. Stashed in the attic, hidden in the basement or shoved under a bed. “You can’t hang it on the wall,” said Amore.

“They are the true definition of pricelessn­ess,” he added. “They can never be sold or moved.” While anyone found in possession could still be prosecuted for criminal liability, prosecutor­s have previously touted potential immunity as bait. “Our focus is not on prosecutio­n. It’s totally on recovery,” said Amore. But while the reward led to calls, he is tight-lipped on the potential significan­ce of any leads. Only “a few of them,” he said, had been “very valuable.” And while the $10 million reward officially reverts to $5 million on January 1, Amore refused to be drawn on whether it could be extended. “I’m really not thinking about postdeadli­ne,” he said.

 ??  ?? People walk past the exterior of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
People walk past the exterior of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
 ??  ?? This handout image released by Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum shows “Leaving the Paddock”, a painting by artist Edgar Degas.
This handout image released by Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum shows “Leaving the Paddock”, a painting by artist Edgar Degas.
 ??  ?? A painting is seen at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
A painting is seen at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
 ??  ?? An empty frame at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
An empty frame at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
 ??  ?? Anthony Amore, the director of security at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, stands inside of the courtyard.
Anthony Amore, the director of security at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, stands inside of the courtyard.

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