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Art thief says robbery was too easy, threatens to sue museum

Morg

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http://news.yahoo.com/art-thief-blames-dutch-museum-negligence-133110261.html

BUCHAREST (AFP) - A Romanian man who has admitted to stealing masterpieces by Gauguin, Monet and Picasso on Tuesday threatened to sue the Dutch museum he took them from for making his robbery too easy.

Radu Dogaru is among six Romanians on trial for last year's spectacular three-minute heist from the Kunsthal museum in Rotterdam which stunned the art world.

Despite their 18-million-euro ($24 million) estimated value, none of the paintings that belonged to the Triton Foundation was equipped with an alarm, Dutch authorities said.

"I could not imagine that a museum would exhibit such valuable works with so little security", Dogaru told the court on Tuesday.

"We can clearly speak of negligence with serious consequences", defence lawyer Catalin Dancu told journalists.

"If we do not receive answers about who is guilty" for the failure of the security system at the museum, "we are considering hiring Dutch lawyers to start a legal case in The Netherlands or in Romania."

The lawyer explained that, if found guilty of negligence, the Kunsthal "would have to share the burden of compensation" with his client, who faces millions in claims from insurers.

Among the paintings carried away in burlap sacks in the pre-dawn heist on October 16, 2012 were Pablo Picasso's "Tete d'Arlequin", Claude Monet's "Waterloo Bridge" and "Femme Devant une Fenetre Ouverte, dite La Fiancee" by Paul Gauguin.

The missing paintings had been feared destroyed after Dogaru's mother said she had torched them in her stove in the sleepy Romanian village of Carcaliu in a bid to destroy evidence against her son.

Olga Dogaru later retracted her statement but experts from Romania's National History Museum said ashes retrieved from her stove included the remains of three oil paintings and nails from frames used before the end of the 19th century.

"The paintings were certainly not destroyed. I don't know where they are but I believe they have been sold", Radu Dogaru told the judge on Tuesday, in his first public statement on the matter.

Asked about the nails found in his mother's stove, he claimed his family had owned 19th icons.

Last month, the director of Romania's National History Museum said the nails could not come from icons.

Dogaru's lawyer has in recent months made contradictory statements about the fate of the masterpieces, saying his client could give back five of them, without providing evidence, later alleging that they might be in Moldova.

A separate investigation into the possible destruction of the artwork is pending.

Dogaru said that after he was detained, his mother gave the paintings "to a Ukrainian man named Vladimir Vladimirenko living in London".

She declined to comment in the court.

Dogaru faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. The next hearing is due on November 19.

Dogaru and his alleged accomplices all came from the same region in eastern Romania but lived in The Netherlands, and were under suspicion for robbery while their girlfriends allegedly were sex workers.

With little knowledge of art but eager to steal valuable old pieces, the group settled on the Kunsthal by chance.

After searching for museums on their GPS, they initially found themselves at Rotterdam's Natural History Museum, but soon realised its exhibits could not be resold.

They then chanced upon a poster advertising an exhibition of 150 masterpieces at the Kunsthal.

A Romanian art expert called to appraise two of the paintings in Bucharest helped the police identify the suspects.
 
That's quite a twisted defense logic they've whipped up there.
 
If it was so easy, how did he get caught in the first place?
 
This is either insanely brilliant or catastrophically idiotic.
 
I thought thiefs only used the old "I was just testing your security system" excuse in cheesy comedies.

and it still doesn't work in the fictional realm.

Good luck, thief.
 
This belongs on Anderson Coopers "Ridiculist"
 
It's in Romania so I'm immediately skeptical. Many of these too-outrageous-to-believe stories come out of there and they often end up being fabricated.
 
The balls on this one, they are too huge to describe
 
This reminds me of the story of the burglar who had to subsist on Pepsi and dogfood:

3. October 1998: A Terrence Dickson of Bristol, Pa., was leaving a house he had just finished robbing by way of the garage. He was not able to get the garage door to go up, because the automatic door opener was malfunctioning. He couldn't re-enter the house because the door connecting the house and garage locked when he pulled it shut. The family was on vacation. Mr. Dickson found himself locked in the garage for eight days. He subsisted on a case of Pepsi he found, and a large bag of dry dog food. Mr. Dickson sued the homeowner's insurance, claiming the situation caused him undue mental anguish. The jury agreed to the tune of half a million dollars.

http://articles.mcall.com/2002-09-28/news/3414008_1_neighbor-garage-pellet-gun
 
:o Are we sure this ain't Nic Cage trolling around overseas due to having nothing better to do?
 

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