The Guardian (USA)

Stradivari­us violin link suspected in killing of Germans in Paraguay

- Staff and agencies in Asunción

Two Germans and a Chilean have been detained over the murder in Paraguay of a German man and his daughter in a crime police believe was related to the theft of rare Stradivari­us violins.

Bernard Raymond von Bredow, 62, a museum owner and luthier, was slain along with his 14-year-old daughter Lydia last month at their home in Aregua, east of the Paraguayan capital. Police said Von Bredow’s body showed signs of torture.

Commission­er Hugo Grance, the chief investigat­or of the local police, said four violins believed to have been made by the revered Italian luthier Antonio Stradivari were found in the possession of Volker Grannas, a 58-yearold German who lived near the Von Bredow residence.

Also arrested were Yves Asriel Spartacus Steinmetz, 60, and Chilean Stephen Jorg Messing Darchinger, 51. None had been formally charged yet, however, said prosecutor Lorena Ledesma.

Grance said that Von Bredow apparently had left the violins with Grannas during a trip to Germany, and was told when he returned that they had been destroyed in a fire.

“Our principal hypothesis is that the motive for the double crime was to find the internatio­nal certificat­ion of authentici­ty of the violins so they could be sold,” he said.

Ledesma said officials were seeking further evidence because they suspect more people were involved.

“To commit the crime and such a brutal murder it must be because they knew the victims. We’ve found a lot of evidence,” said Ledesma.

Violins crafted by Stradivari in the 17th and 18th centuries can sell for millions of dollars.

Von Bredow gained notice as a teenager when he discovered the complete skeleton of a mammoth near his home town of Siegsdorf in Bavaria. He later founded a museum on mammoths and also pursued work in biology, geology and other fields, according to the biography on his museum’s website.

Neighbors in Aregua said Von Bredow had settled in the town two years ago and dedicated himself to making violins.

Grance said last week that Von Bredow’s house “was found in complete disarray and blood stains indicated that the Germans were probably killed elsewhere on the property. The man had traces of having been tortured,” Grance added.

The officer said the evidence at the scene indicates “that two or more individual­s sought something” inside the house.

 ?? Paraguay. Photograph: Jorge Sáenz/AP ?? An aerial view of the residence of the German archeologi­st, musician and violin luthier, Bernard Raymond von Bredow, in Aregua,
Paraguay. Photograph: Jorge Sáenz/AP An aerial view of the residence of the German archeologi­st, musician and violin luthier, Bernard Raymond von Bredow, in Aregua,

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