Miami Herald

Former Miami and London art dealer pleads guilty to fraud

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A former Miami and London art dealer pleaded guilty Thursday to defrauding art buyers of over

$86 million.

Inigo Philbrick, 34, a U.S. citizen who has also lived in London, entered the plea in Manhattan federal court.

He pleaded guilty to a single count of wire fraud after prosecutor­s said he conducted a scheme from 2016-2019 to defraud individual­s and entities to finance his art business.

“Inigo Philbrick was a serial swindler who took advantage of the lack of transparen­cy in the art market to defraud art collectors, investors, and lenders of more than $86 million to finance his art business and his lifestyle,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a release.

Prosecutor­s said he carried out the scheme by misreprese­nting the ownership of certain artworks and by sometimes selling more than 100% ownership to multiple individual­s and entities without their knowledge.

Artworks used in the scheme included a 1982 painting by Jean-Michel Basquiat titled “Humidity,” a 2010 untitled painting by Christophe­r Wool, and an untitled 2012 painting by Rudolf Stingel depicting Pablo Picasso, authoritie­s said.

The scheme unraveled as jilted art buyers filed civil lawsuits, a lender notified him that he was in default of a $14 million loan and he stopped responding to legal process, prosecutor­s said.

In 2019, his art galleries in Miami and London closed and Philbrick fled the U.S. before being arrested in June 2020 in Vanuatu, the South Pacific nation where he had been living since October 2019, prosecutor­s said.

Sentencing was set for March 18.

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