Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Low-rent crew had long spree

Pennsylvan­ia gang preyed on small US museums over two decades

- By Christophe­r Kuo

The first burglary was in 1999 at Keystone College in Factoryvil­le, Pennsylvan­ia. One in the gang, authoritie­s said, sneaked onto the campus, smashed some glass display cases and walked off with memorabili­a, including a baseball jersey once worn by legendary pitcher Christy Mathewson.

The Everhart Museum in Scranton was next, six years later. An Andy Warhol silkscreen print and a painting attributed to Jackson Pollock were taken. Then the pace picked up.

The Space Farms: Zoo & Museum. The Lackawanna Historical Society. Ringwood Manor. The Sterling Hill Mining Museum. The United States Golf Associatio­n Museum and Library.

The list goes on.

Over the course of almost two decades, the crew showed up at 12 small, low-profile museums that often lacked elaborate security systems, stripping them of cherished items, including treasured heirlooms from America’s sporting past, authoritie­s say.

A partial list includes the 1903 Belmont Stakes trophy, taken from the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. From the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame, middleweig­ht Tony Zale’s 1941 and 1948 championsh­ip belts. From the Yogi Berra Museum & Learning Center, seven of Berra’s championsh­ip rings, his 1954 and 1955 MVP plaques, and nine of his 10 World Series rings.

The only Berra World Series ring not stolen was the one he wore on his finger.

“These kinds of artifacts tell people the story of who we are, and they connect us to the past in a way that really nothing else can,” said Eve Schaenen, executive director of the Berra museum. “And now they’re gone.”

In the fall, four men charged with taking part in the burglaries are scheduled to go on trial in Pennsylvan­ia, where they live. Another five people have pleaded guilty. All nine, investigat­ors say, avoided arrest for some portion of 19 years as museum directors across five states woke up to find smashed glass and things missing.

With so many heists going unsolved for so many years, one might imagine the thieves as some sort of a world-savvy, blueprint-studying, techno-literate crew often seen in movies. But in court records and interviews, they come across as more 7-Eleven than Ocean’s Eleven. Prepared? Yes. Sophistica­ted? No.

Sometimes they just hit houses. One favorite burglary tool was an ax, according to court records. They drove cross-country to rob the Roger Maris Museum in North Dakota, rather than take a plane.

“These guys were not worldclass criminals,” said Michael Wisneski, an official with the Everhart museum. “They were operating out of the North Pocono School District.”

Most upsetting to many people is how little care was shown for the objects that were taken. A Jasper Cropsey painting from 1871 was torched. The crew did not even try to sell the sports memorabili­a. Instead, gold and silver items such as Berra’s rings, Maris’ MVP plaque and the Belmont Stakes trophy were melted down and hocked as raw metals, according to court papers.

One of those arrested is accused of using some of the stolen gems to make himself a scepter.

“They could have done a smashand-grab at a strip mall jewelry store and come away with more gold,” said Lindsay Berra, the granddaugh­ter of Yogi Berra.

When the accused were finally named in an indictment in June, federal prosecutor­s laid out the inventory of what had been taken. It included paintings, at least five 19th-century firearms, a Tiffany lamp and sports memorabili­a that included more than 30 golf and horse-racing trophies. Prosecutor­s valued the lot at $4 million. Most of the objects have not been recovered.

“This was a group of dishonest people that saw easy marks,” said William Kroth, executive director of the Sterling Hill Mining Museum. He called them “lowlife grifters.”

‘Violation of trust’

Wisneski of the Everhart Museum remembers the morning in 2005 when he woke up and turned on the local television news. To his surprise, the reporters were in the parking lot of his museum,

talking about a break-in.

When he arrived at the building, he found the back door smashed in, the Warhol and Pollock gone.

“It felt like somebody broke into your house,” he said. “It was a violation of trust or of security.”

According to authoritie­s, Thomas Trotta, 48, of Moscow, Pennsylvan­ia, had used a ladder to smash the door of the museum.

Of the nine people later arrested, Trotta had been the one relied on to venture into the museums to take things, according to court papers. But he was helped in meaningful ways, investigat­ors say, by Nicholas Dombek, 53, who has known Trotta since they were teenagers. After Trotta was arrested, he accused Dombek of being the ringleader, according to court papers. But Dombek’s lawyer, Ernest Preate, said in an interview that Trotta was the ringleader, and Preate described his client as a handyman, not a mastermind, who did not even operate a computer.

Trotta’s lawyer, Joseph D’Andrea, declined to comment.

In an interview that aired this month on “60 Minutes,” Trotta, who has pleaded guilty, said he had grown up loving baseball and that part of why he stole sports memorabili­a was to “touch history.” He wore Mathewson’s jersey and tried on Berra’s rings after stealing the objects, he said.

Dombek, who has pleaded not guilty, is from Thornhurst, a rural patch of Pennsylvan­ia, where he lives on a street that carries his family name. His father and his

brother were science teachers, but Dombek never graduated from high school, and in a 2019 court hearing, he testified that he was in financial straits and was two months behind on his mortgage.

Casing the joint

Most of the targeted museums were in Pennsylvan­ia, New York and New Jersey. Each facility was studied before a break-in to determine access, security measures and what looked good to steal, investigat­ors said in court papers. During one scouting trip, Dombek tested the thickness of a display case at the golf museum in New Jersey by scratching the glass with a coin, the papers said.

Trotta would sometimes wear a disguise, dressing as a firefighte­r when they stole from the Roger Maris museum, and as a Hasidic Jew when they went to break in to the Harvard Mineralogi­cal & Geological Museum, the indictment said. (The theft was called off because a particular diamond they hoped to steal was no longer on display.)

The other accomplice­s are accused of playing a variety of roles: sometimes as getaway drivers, sometimes as transporte­rs of stolen materials after the burglary.

At the Berra museum, the thieves cut the glass to gain entry, and they were able to elude security cameras during one of the larger hauls, said museum staff.

“They knew exactly where to break in,” Schaenen said. “They had a method to it.”

The Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame in Goshen, New York, had a motion sensor but no cameras in place when the thieves arrived in 2012. It lost 14 trophies, and afterward, executive director Janet Terhune said she called the staff of the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, New York, to warn

them to increase their security. Both museums upgraded their protection.

It didn’t matter. The next year, Trotta smashed glass displays in the Saratoga Springs museum with a center-punch tool and grinder and took off with five trophies, according to court records.

Brien Bouyea, communicat­ions director for the Saratoga Springs museum, said the institutio­n had a solid security system.

“The smash-and-grab style of the robbery, however, narrowly beat the police response time,” he said.

A fateful traffic stop

Even with the snow blanketing Route 307 outside Scranton early on March 4, 2019, the maroon Pontiac was swerving too much.

Two Pennsylvan­ia State Police officers pulled the car over. Trotta, whose eyes were reddish pink and watery, was driving.

At the time, investigat­ors in Pennsylvan­ia had already found a DNA sample at a residentia­l burglary that matched DNA samples taken from museum burglaries in New York and New Jersey that were in a national database. In 2015, for example, blood was left behind at a splintered glass window at the Internatio­nal Boxing Hall of Fame in Canastota, New York. And surveillan­ce photos from some of the crime sites had recorded a particular vehicle: a maroon Pontiac sedan.

But until then, officers had struggled to find someone who matched the DNA.

At the police station where Trotta was arrested on charges of driving under the influence, officers gave him a cup of water to drink. They later retrieved the cup. Bingo. The DNA in his saliva was a match, according to court records.

Inside the car, police found bolt cutters, a sledgehamm­er, headlamps, ski masks, gloves and several phones.

Police at that point charged Trotta for burglarizi­ng a home and an antiques exchange in Pennsylvan­ia. Prosecutor­s also cut a deal with him: the promise of a more lenient sentence in exchange for informatio­n and cooperatio­n. During interviews with law enforcemen­t officials, Trotta detailed many of the museum thefts he had committed and identified several people as his accomplice­s.

And he agreed to wear a wire during numerous meetings with Dombek, where the two men chatted about past crimes, according to court records.

By May 2019, according to court papers, Dombek had grown suspicious that someone involved in one of the residentia­l burglaries, not Trotta, had been talking to police. He discussed his concerns with Trotta in wiretapped conversati­ons, according to a search warrant affidavit for Dombek’s house, and mentioned the possibilit­y of giving the accomplice cocaine laced with fentanyl or false hellebore, a toxic plant that had been growing in his backyard.

But the accomplice was not hurt and Dombek’s sister, Cindy Fiorani, said her brother would never do something like that.

“My brother would give you the shirt off his back, and wouldn’t even ask why,” she said. “Nick is a joker. He likes to kid around.”

In summer 2019, the crew planned a second heist at the horse-racing museum in Saratoga Springs, but the theft never happened, according to court papers. Dombek was arrested that August and charged in a Pennsylvan­ia burglary and was later charged with witness intimidati­on.

It would be four years before investigat­ors would bring federal charges in the larger museum-theft cases in an inquiry led by the FBI and Pennsylvan­ia State Police.

The U.S. attorney’s office for the Middle District of Pennsylvan­ia declined to comment on the timeline of the investigat­ion.

The four men now facing trial are accused of a range of offenses, including theft of major artwork, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years. Trotta is one of the five people to have pleaded guilty in the case, but he and the others have yet to be sentenced. He was arrested on theft charges last week in connection with a report of items taken from a house in January, but the charges were withdrawn.

In the “60 Minutes” interview, Trotta expressed remorse over his actions, particular­ly melting down the Berra memorabili­a for its metal, for which he said he and others received $12,000.

“Emotionall­y, I destroyed people,” he said. “I know this now.”

Authoritie­s have not recovered the Warhol print or some other stolen items that were not destroyed. Museum officials say they try to be optimistic that some of the items will resurface.

 ?? HARNESS RACING MUSEUM & HALL OF FAME 2012 ?? A display case is shattered at the Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame in Goshen, N.Y., one of a dozen small, lowprofile museums victimized by a gang of Pennsylvan­ia burglars.
HARNESS RACING MUSEUM & HALL OF FAME 2012 A display case is shattered at the Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame in Goshen, N.Y., one of a dozen small, lowprofile museums victimized by a gang of Pennsylvan­ia burglars.
 ?? LORI VAN BUREN/ALBANY TIMES UNION ?? A worker replaces a door Sept. 13, 2013, at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
LORI VAN BUREN/ALBANY TIMES UNION A worker replaces a door Sept. 13, 2013, at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.
 ?? ?? Dombek
Dombek
 ?? ?? Trotta
Trotta

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