The National - News

Monument man’s memory beats the antiquitie­s thieves

▶ Matthew Bogdanos is a US attorney at the sharp end of the trade in looted ancient treasures. writes Rob Crilly

-

The ancient marble sculpture had made its way from Lebanon to New York on a well-trodden path of dealers and collectors.

And there it might have remained if it were not for a tenacious Manhattan prosecutor who spotted it in a 1998 copy of House & Garden magazine that featured homes built to show off art collection­s.

The caption described how the master bathroom was decorated with a “breathtaki­ngly beautiful” marble torso.

A search warrant issued last month describes it in different terms: as stolen property and a treasure excavated from a Phoenician temple. It is now in the possession of prosecutor­s in New York awaiting repatriati­on to Lebanon.

It marks another success for Matthew Bogdanos, a real-life monuments man who spotted the photograph.

His work as assistant Manhattan district attorney draws on experience gained in the US marine reserves when he led an operation to recover thousands of antiquitie­s looted from the National Museum of Iraq after the American invasion.

Back then he always kept four things in his rucksack – his weapon, ammunition, water and a copy of the Iliad, Homer’s epic account of the Trojan war.

It is an apt metaphor for a warrior trained in law and the classics who is now at the centre of efforts to thwart the global trade in stolen antiquitie­s. And it was a copy of the

Iliad, given to him at the age of 12 by his mother, that set him on his chosen course.

“It was identifica­tion with the Bronze Age Greeks and their values that led me to take up boxing, to join the marines, to become a prosecutor,” Mr Bogdanos writes in his memoir, Thieves of Baghdad.

At the time, he was a waiter at his parents’ diner in Manhattan, doing his homework in spare moments and eating leftover dinners.

He joined the marines after school, but was directed to attend college first so that he could become an officer.

Mr Bogdanos paid his way to a bachelor’s degree in classics by learning how to count cards and then cleaning up at blackjack in the casinos of Atlantic City, before adding a master’s degree and a law degree from Columbia University.

During his time at law school he interned for Harold Rothwax, a New York judge famous for his harsh tongue and matching sentences.

“From the moment I stepped in his courtroom, I knew that’s what I wanted to do,” Mr Bogdanos said in 2003.

He left the marines after a decade in 1988, to join the Manhattan district attorney’s office. His stocky build and tenacity in prosecutin­g murderers and celebritie­s, including Puff Daddy, earned him the nickname “pit bull”in local media.

Mr Bogdanod returned to the Marines after 9/11, first in Afghanista­n and then Iraq, as part of a counter-terrorism unit using forensic skills to trace banned weapons and track terrorist funding.

When he got wind of the damage done to the national museum in Baghdad he immediatel­y offered to lead an investigat­ion.

His senior officer told him not to worry if his inquiries led him to point the finger at US forces.

“That pit bull thing you do in New York? You do that in Baghdad and let the chips fall where they may,” he said.

Among the missing items were some of the world’s most important archaeolog­ical treasures. They included the sacred Vase of Warka, a 5,000-year-old carved alabaster vessel.

Mr Bogdanos instituted an amnesty, promising a cup of tea but no questions for anything returned.

That worked with amateur looters who felt entitled to anything left behind by Saddam Hussein’s vicious regime, but he also put together raids to recover objects stolen by organised gangs.

The Vase of Warka was returned after two months by three young men who lifted it from the back of a red Toyota.

Reporters beat a path to his office inside the museum as they looked for a story that illustrate­d the chaos of post-Saddam Iraq and its reconstruc­tion.

They found a captivatin­g character, as likely to quote Cicero as a Samurai warrior in blunt, New York tones.

Now back in civilian life, the work continues. Manhattan’s museums, auction houses and collectors put it at the centre of the legal trade in antiquitie­s, which also means it is frequently at the centre of the illegal trade.

Some of the artefacts were removed from their country of origin decades ago; others have entered the market more recently, as ISIL sold looted treasures to fill its war coffers.

In the past three years, at least US$150 million (Dh550m) of treasures have been recovered, of which $3m have been repatriate­d.

In recent weeks, Mr Bogdanos and his team have seized a plundered Persian artefact valued at $1.2m from a British dealer at an art fair, a Roman marble torso of Cupid from Christie’s days before it was to be auctioned, and taken possession of a 2,300-year-old bull’s head sculpture from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art.

Often a current owner believes he or she has lawful possession, only to discover later that they unwittingl­y bought stolen property.

The bull’s head, for example, was stolen from Lebanon during its civil war. It was excavated from the Temple of Eshmun in Sidon in 1967 but disappeare­d when storerooms in Byblos were looted in 1981.

It was Metropolit­an Museum staff who alerted authoritie­s at the start of this year. It had been offered for display by its owner, who bought it from Lynda and William Bierewalte­s, collectors in Colorado, who in turn bought it in good faith for $1m in 1996.

They bought it from a London dealer, Roger Symes, who was later unmasked as a key player in the illegal antiquitie­s trade.

That trail led Mr Bogdanos to the 1998 special issue of

House & Garden that included photograph­s of the Bierewalte­s’ home.

There, in the tranquilli­ty of the designer bathroom, stood the marble statue of the calf bearer. Both items are expected to be returned to Lebanon.

It was identifica­tion with the Bronze Age Greeks and their values that led me to join the marines, to become a prosecutor MATTHEW BOGDANOS Assistant Manhattan district attorney

 ?? Getty ?? Right, the Warka Vase was found in an ancient temple in southern Iraq
Getty Right, the Warka Vase was found in an ancient temple in southern Iraq
 ?? AFP ?? Matthew Bogdanos in 2003 when he was lead investigat­or of stolen artefacts from Baghdad’s national museum.
AFP Matthew Bogdanos in 2003 when he was lead investigat­or of stolen artefacts from Baghdad’s national museum.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates