The Denver Post

They took $ 645 million in valuables, then took a taxi

- By Tiffany May

HONG KONG » The thieves left by taxi, hauling away $ 645 million in artifacts they had stolen from a Hong Kong apartment while the owner was in mainland China.

They took 24,000 vintage stamps, 10 bronze coins and seven calligraph­y scrolls that the owner, Fu Chunxiao, said had been written by Mao Zedong.

The majority of the stolen items remain missing, but the scroll, measuring 3 yards, found its way to a buyer before it was recovered by police.

“He found the calligraph­y piece too long and difficult to display for viewers, so he cut it in two,” Ho Chun- tung, a police superinten­dent, told reporters this week, referring to the man who allegedly bought the stolen scroll. “Whether he knows the authentici­ty and value of the calligraph­y is something we have to continue investigat­ing.”

On Thursday, police charged a 44- year- old suspect identified only as Wu with burglary. He was arrested in Hong Kong, along with another man identified as Tan, 47, who was accused of harboring “an offender.”

The alleged buyer, a 49- yearold man identified only as Lin, was arrested earlier in September, just after the heist. He was accused of handling stolen goods. Local news outlets said he had paid a mere $ 65 for the recovered scroll.

The collector, Fu, told The South China Morning Post newspaper that he was devastated by the burglary — and by the damage to the scroll. He said it was the most valuable item among his stolen possession­s. Fu put his total losses at $ 645 million, according to police.

“It was heartbreak­ing to see it torn into two pieces,” he is quoted as saying about the scroll. “It will definitely affect its value, but the impact remains to be seen.”

A police spokeswoma­n said by phone that authoritie­s had not independen­tly determined the value of the scroll. Auction houses dealing in Chinese art did not immediatel­y respond to emails seeking comment.

Fu, who is originally from Sichuan province, according to local news reports, could not immediatel­y contacted. He is known as a collector of items from the Mao era. In 2018, Fu organized a Hong Kong exhibition of 200 stamps bearing the face of Mao. ( The founding father of the People’s Republic of China, Mao ruled as the chairman of the Communist Party from 1949 until his death in 1976.)

Police said the break in the case occurred when a cabdriver who picked up the men on the day of the burglary came forward with informatio­n. Authoritie­s are still looking for two other suspects. The three men arrested so far are originally from mainland China, police said.

Burglaries have recently increased in Hong Kong, rising from 786 cases in 2019 to 1,156 cases in the first half of 2020, according to police statistics. Robberies have also increased fourfold, from 44 cases in 2020 to 186 in the first six months of 2020.

The official residence of the Australian consul general was broken into last Friday. In June, two men scaled 19 stories of bamboo scaffoldin­g to steal a safe deposit box in a wealthy neighborho­od of Hong Kong in June. In September, a group robbed a man who was carrying millions of dollars in cash in his backpack.

Burglars have more often targeted unoccupied homes in the Chinese territory, Ho, the senior police superinten­dent, said. But they are not limited to items of high commercial value.

At the start of the coronaviru­s outbreak in February, as consumers bought toilet paper in bulk for fear it would run out, three masked robbers stole more than $ 100 worth of toilet paper outside a supermarke­t while holding up a deliveryma­n by knifepoint.

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