Los Angeles Times

Racing against clock to find Mormon statue

Police, fearing thieves would melt bronze, find art piece in 14 hours; 2 suspects held.

- By David Montero and Melissa Etehad david.montero @latimes.com Twitter: @davemonter­o melissa.etehad @latimes.com Twitter: @melissaete­had

It was a heist that, in retrospect, was unlikely to escape without notice.

Four thieves drove a truck with a large trailer into a parking lot in the wee hours Tuesday morning and stole a bronze statue weighing approximat­ely 700 pounds that depicts two Mormon prophets sitting on a park bench in conversati­on.

And not just any two Mormon prophets.

One is the faith’s founder, Joseph Smith. The other is Brigham Young, the man who led church members to Utah. Both were stolen in the city where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is based.

It took Salt Lake City police less than 14 hours to track down the work of art.

“After a long day of #detective work we're happy to report that the bronze statue has been recovered,” the police wrote on Twitter at 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Salt Lake City Police Det. Robert Ungricht said as many as five detectives were involved in the search for the missing Mormon leaders. Time was of the essence — not necessaril­y because of who they were, but because of what they were made of.

Ungricht said police feared the thieves would find a foundry along the Wasatch Front Range to melt the bronze — a fiery doom for a statue valued at $125,000.

He said speculatio­n that the case was given a higher priority because of the subjects depicted in the statue was incorrect. He said the church didn’t pressure the department. The pressure, he said, stemmed from a case a few years ago: Another bronze statue was stolen from a school and never recovered.

“We wanted to get to the statute before the unthinkabl­e happened and it was melted down,” Ungricht said. “I didn’t want the dirtbags to get away with it.”

Reminders of Smith and Young are ubiquitous in Utah — the latter with a large college named after him and the former revered as the faith’s founder. When word spread that the statue had been stolen, local media obtained surveillan­ce video of the theft and broadcast it.

Then people shared the video on social media.

Ungricht said tips began filtering in from the public. The custodian of the statue, Ben Rogers, said he started the day feeling crushed that Smith and Young weren’t likely to survive the ordeal, but grew optimistic as the crime’s profile continued to elevate throughout the day.

“I ran the whole gamut of emotions,” Rogers said by phone last week. “The likelihood of it being tracked down seemed to be getting slimmer. But then it snowballed. Calls from New York, Los Angeles — all over Utah — started coming in. I saw the story on my Yahoo news feed. You start off feeling alone, and then the next moment millions are keeping an eye out for it. That’s when I started to feel more optimistic.”

Ungricht said an anonymous tip led detectives to a home just outside Salt Lake City. He said they found the statue in a garage — in one piece without any damage.

By Wednesday, William Ford, 47, had been arrested and another suspect in the theft was picked up for another matter.

Larry Forness, 52, was later named as a person of interest and another suspect was still at large; police tweeted out their lastknown location.

Rogers said the 9-yearold statue — for which officials had been looking for a permanent home, most likely in Nauvoo, Ill. — was going to be stored at a secure site.

As he was hauling the statue in a trailer to the location, he said, people in cars were taking pictures of it.

“I stopped for gas and six people jumped into the trailer to have their picture taken with it,” he said.

Utah politician­s including Republican Sen. Orrin G. Hatch and Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski weighed in on Twitter, posting pictures of the recovered statue and praising detectives’ work.

It took sculptors Lena Toritch and Roger Young about a year to finish the statue, which they completed in 2007. Toritch said she was glad to see the piece recovered. She hopes that when it goes on permanent display, it will have something else to keep the prophets earthbound — anchor bolts.

 ?? Lena Toritch ?? A TIP led police to a garage, where the artwork of Brigham Young, left, and Joseph Smith was stashed.
Lena Toritch A TIP led police to a garage, where the artwork of Brigham Young, left, and Joseph Smith was stashed.

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