Otago Daily Times

Paintings returned to police in secret deal

- JARED SAVAGE

AUCKLAND: Two stolen paintings valued around $800,000 were returned to police in a secretive deal brokered by senior gang members.

The pair of Gottfried Lindauer portraits, Chieftaine­ss NgataiRaur­e and Chief NgataiRaur­e, were painted in 1884 but disappeare­d after a brazen ‘‘smash and grab’’ robbery in Auckland, in 2017.

A stolen van was reversed into the front window of the Internatio­nal Art Centre in Parnell, before two masked men loaded the paintings — which were due to be sold at auction in a few days’ time — into a white Holden Commodore SSV. A third man drove the getaway vehicle.

Despite the efforts of an extensive investigat­ion, Operation Bower, the police had been unable to recover the missing paintings or make any arrests in connection to the theft.

Five years later, the police made a shock announceme­nt in December that the stolen artworks, estimated to be worth a total of $800,000, had been handed back with only minor damage.

The police were deliberate­ly vague in explaining the details of how, or even why, the Lindauers had suddenly reappeared after so long, and referred only to ‘‘an intermedia­ry who sought to return the paintings on behalf of others’’.

But The New Zealand Herald has reported the safe return of the portraits was brokered by two senior criminal figures, although widerangin­g suppressio­n orders made by the Court of Appeal yesterday mean their identities will remain permanentl­y suppressed.

Details of the circumstan­ces in which the pair of Lindauers were returned safely to police also cannot be reported because of the strict nonpublica­tion orders.

The gang members are serving long periods of imprisonme­nt but their criminal offending cannot be reported without breaching the suppressio­n orders.

There is no suggestion either of the two gang members was involved in the theft of the paintings, rather that they were able to use their standing in the criminal world to obtain access to something the police wanted.

Fingerprin­t and DNA testing were carried out on the Lindauer paintings when they were returned to the police, but no charges have been laid.

‘‘Loyalties change over time and there may be people out there that know those responsibl­e for the burglary,’’ Detective Inspector Scott Beard said in December.

‘‘It is incredibly fortunate that police have been able to facilitate the return of these paintings more than five years after they were stolen.

‘‘No matter how much time passes we remain open to the fact we can hold a person, or people, to account for the burglary in 2017.’’ —

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