TV director convicted of shoplifting antiques

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA, (AP) – Veteran TV director and English baron Raymond DeVere-Austin has been convicted of petit larceny in Virginia for taking cast-iron statues from an antique store.

The 76-year-old, who also goes by the name Ray Austin, received a suspended six-month jail sentence Wednesday and must pay a $1,000 fine, The Daily Progress reported.

He was convicted of taking statues of Humpty Dumpty, a dog and a horse head from a shop in October. Neither DeVere-Austin nor his lawyer, David Thomas, returned calls seeking comment.

Austin has been a TV director since the 1960s. His credits include episodes of shows ranging from The Avengers and Hawaii-Five-O to Magnum, P.I. and JAG.

He is a baron by marriage to Wendy Devere-Austin.

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AP-CS-02-04-10 0842EST

 

 

Prosecutors: Informant in artifacts case is clean

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) – The undercover operative in a federal bust of artifact trading collected around $7,500 a month for secretly recording transactions with collectors and sellers across the Southwest for more than two years, new court papers say.

Ted Gardiner, a Utah antiquities dealer, got an initial $10,000 payment before the sting operation began in earnest, then collected regular monthly payments throughout 2007 and 2008, according to FBI disclosures in court files.

Gardiner is still being paid for helping agents prepare for nearly two dozen court cases, and he will receive more money if he testifies, according to papers in one of the cases. Gardiner had received $162,000 in payments plus expenses, for a total of $224,000, when most of the arrests were made in June.

The operative has no felony or misdemeanor convictions or charges pending against him nor immunity, U.S. Attorney David Gaouette in Colorado said in papers filed in the case of Robert B. Knowlton, a former used-car salesman caught up in the dragnet.

Gaouette disclosed a wealth of information on Gardiner, including a copy of his FBI contract. In Utah, lawyers representing 21 of the original 26 defendants have complained that authorities here have yet to give up the information.

Gaouette wrote in court papers that Gardiner had used drugs and abused alcohol in the past, but has nothing worse than minor traffic citations on his record. The FBI and U.S. Bureau of Land Management obtained his cooperation without any inducements other than payments, and without any threats, the U.S. attorney said.

Knowlton, 66, who ran a Web site from Grand Junction, Colo., called Bob’s Flint Shop, was accused of selling three items taken from federal land to Gardiner: a pipe, a Midland knife point and a Hell Gap knife. He has pleaded not guilty, and a trial is set for March 29.

Knowlton recounted for investigators how he got involved in the business _ with a major setback. He made his first serious purchase in 1997 from a Colorado antique dealer.

“I spent probably close to $25,000 and they were all fakes, the whole bunch of them,” he said, according to an interview by Bureau of Land Management agents that was made part of his court record. He then sought an education in artifacts to avoid getting scammed again.

The federal investigation, one of the largest of its kind, peeled open the black market trade in artifacts taken from federal or tribal lands in the Four Corners region. The relics, some believed to be thousands of years old, can sell for thousands of dollars apiece. Federal authorities say they often end up in the homes of wealthy collectors in the Southwest and beyond.

Gardiner, who ran an artifacts business called Gardiner Antiquities, provided federal agents at the outset with all of his business records, access to his Web site and computers and a list of dealers and collectors, according to the court papers released last month. He spent $335,000 buying artifacts for the government, consulting the FBI before on how much to pay for each item.

Gardiner’s largest paychecks ended last summer, but the FBI has continued to pay him “small” amounts for his cooperation, the U.S. attorney in Denver said. When asked about it, the FBI in Salt Lake City refused to confirm Gardiner was still on the payroll.

Knowlton’s is the only case scheduled for a trial. Last week, lawyers in Utah told a federal magistrate that a handful of the defendants were expected to settle charges with plea bargains. Others defendants are fighting charges.

Two of the 26 defendants – one a Santa Fe, N.M., salesman, the other a prominent Blanding, Utah, physician, James Redd – committed suicide after their arrests.

Separately, Redd’s wife and daughter surrendered their own vast collections, pleaded guilty and were sentenced last summer to terms of probation. The rest of the defendants have pleaded not guilty.

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AP-WS-02-01-10 1646EST

Lawyer: Major artifacts dealer to take plea deal

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) – A major Southwest antiquities dealer who was forced to surrender five truckloads of American Indian relics to federal agents is expected to settle charges of digging up a grave and plundering artifacts from federal lands, his defense lawyer said Thursday.

Wally Bugden, a lawyer for Carl “Vern” Crites, told a federal magistrate in Salt Lake City that he was negotiating a plea deal with prosecutors.

But Crites told The Associated Press he was unaware of any negotiations and that a government raid of his home last year – the second since 1985 – was a misunderstanding that later forced him to give up his entire collection of thousands of artifacts.

“That was part of no deal,” Crites said Thursday from Durango, Colo., where he lives. “I had no choice. They came and took my things. It was either that or they’d come with a search warrant and take them.”

Authorities have said that Crites bragged in secret recordings of having sold pottery sets for $500,000.

The 75-year-old was one of 26 people arrested in Utah, Colorado and New Mexico last year in an investigation into trafficking of artifacts plucked from federal or tribal lands. To make the case, the government hired an antiquities dealer from Utah to secretly record $335,000 in transactions over two years.

Earlier this month, Bugden filed a motion seeking a copy of the operative’s FBI contract and demanding to know if the government ever promised leniency in exchange for his help.

“I still want all that,” Bugden said after Thursday’s court hearing. “I don’t think people have a born-again revelation and become a good Boy Scout. Generally speaking, they’re in trouble. They have some motive.”

The well-connected dealer, Ted Gardiner, a former CEO of a Utah grocery chain, was paid $224,000 for his services, according to court documents. Federal authorities insist Gardiner, who also ran an artifact authentication business, was never in trouble with the law.

Other defense lawyers have filed motions demanding the government reveal any criminal activity involving Gardiner that didn’t lead to charges.

Gardiner didn’t return a phone message left Thursday by the AP.

Two of the 26 defendants – one a Santa Fe, N.M., salesman, the other a prominent Blanding, Utah, physician, James Redd – committed suicide after their arrests.

Separately, Redd’s wife and daughter surrendered their own vast collections, pleaded guilty and were sentenced last summer to terms of probation. The rest of the defendants have pleaded not guilty.

Packing a federal courtroom Thursday, defense lawyers and prosecutors told Magistrate Sam Alba that a handful of other defendants were expected to settle charges with plea agreements. Alba gave lawyers until March 8, the date of another conference, to wrap up those talks. Other defendants are fighting charges.

The sweeping investigation broke early on the morning of June 10, when more than 150 federal agents descended on the Four Corners region in flak vests to execute warrants in New Mexico, Colorado and Utah’s San Juan County.

In the small town of Blanding, agents raided the homes of 16 people, some prominent members of the community, including a math teacher and the brother of a sheriff. Most were handcuffed and shackled as agents confiscated stone pipes, woven sandals, spear and arrow heads, seed jars and decorated pottery.

“The government is trying to change the culture of collecting. That’s what people did in southern Utah,” Bugden said Thursday. “This prosecution is trying to change people’s attitudes.”

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Associated Press Writer Mike Stark in Salt Lake City contributed to this report.

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AP-WS-01-28-10 1529EST

 

Missouri town bans man for damaging military statue

Portrait of U.S. General of the Army Omar Nelson Bradley (1893-1981), painted by Clarence Lamont MacNelly (1920-1986).
Portrait of U.S. General of the Army Omar Nelson Bradley (1893-1981), painted by Clarence Lamont MacNelly (1920-1986).
Portrait of U.S. General of the Army Omar Nelson Bradley (1893-1981), painted by Clarence Lamont MacNelly (1920-1986).

CLARK, Mo. (AP) – A 57-year-old Missouri man has been kicked out of town after being convicted of paying a teenager to vandalize a monument to hometown hero Gen. Omar Bradley.

Rex Barstow Sr. was sentenced to 60 days in jail and four years of probation and must pay nearly $8,000 to cover damage to the statue in the town of Clark. A judge also ordered Barstow to stay out of the tiny community in southern Randolph County.

Barstow was convicted in December of paying a 14-year-old acquaintance between $20 and $60 to knock over a new stone monument commemorating the life of Bradley, a Clark native and famed Army general in World War II.

The memorial has since been replaced.

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Information from: Columbia Daily Tribune, http://www.columbiatribune.com

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AP-CS-01-28-10 0502EST

 

Greek police foil attempt to sell antiquities

ATHENS, Greece (AP) – Greek police say they have seized ancient statuettes and an engraved tombstone after a sting operation foiled an attempt to smuggle antiquities.

Authorities arrested three Greeks who allegedly negotiated the sale of the items to an undercover officer from the police’s antiquities smuggling division for euro1.4 million (nearly US$2 million).

Police said Thursday that archaeologists are working to determine the origins of the items – an engraved marble tombstone dating from the 4th or 5th Century B.C., a small bronze horse and a bronze statuette of an enthroned figure.

The suspects are to appear in court later Thursday.

Under Greek law, antiquities found in the country are state property, and it is illegal to possess, excavate, buy or sell them without a permit.

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AP-CS-01-28-10 0435EST

Disputed Van Gogh could be worth up to $150 million

Van Gogh's 'The Night Cafe' is said to be worth as much as $150 million. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

Van Gogh's 'The Night Cafe' is said to be worth as much as $150 million. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
Van Gogh’s ‘The Night Cafe’ is said to be worth as much as $150 million. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) – A Van Gogh painting at the center of a dispute between Yale University and a man who believes the artwork was stolen from his family during the Russian Revolution is worth $120 million to $150 million, the man’s attorney told The Associated Press on Friday.

The evaluation is the first public estimate of the painting’s value, and the lawyer, Allan Gerson, said it comes from a top auction firm.

Gerson represents Pierre Konowaloff, the purported great-grandson of industrialist and aristocrat Ivan Morozov, who bought The Night Cafe in 1908. Russia nationalized Morozov’s property during the Communist revolution, and the Soviet government later sold the painting.

The artwork, which shows the inside of a nearly empty cafe with a few customers seated at tables along the walls, has been hanging in the Yale University Art Gallery for almost 50 years.

A Yale spokesman said the university could not offer a value of the 1888 painting, saying the goal is to have it on public display for perpetuity.

Yale filed a lawsuit in federal court in March to assert its ownership rights over The Night Cafe and to block Konowaloff from claiming it.

Yale claims the ownership of tens of billions of dollars of art and other goods could be thrown into doubt if Konowaloff is allowed to take the painting. Any federal court invalidation of Russian nationalization decrees from the early 20th century also would create tensions between the United States and Russia, Yale argues.

The university says former owners have challenged titles to other property seized from them in Russia, but their claims were rejected by the U.S. Supreme Court and state, federal and foreign courts.

“Yale is confident that the court will see through Konowaloff’s latest rhetoric and recognize that he is asking a U.S. court to turn back the clock 90 years and undo the Russian Revolution,” Yale said Friday.

Gerson said in court papers Thursday that Yale was engaging in “scare tactics.” He said neither Russia nor the United States expressed any concerns about the case and that any ruling would not affect Russian paintings.

Gerson says the trend by U.S. courts has been to invalidate confiscations of art. He said in court papers that Yale’s argument amounted to compelling U.S. courts to “rubber-stamp good title on any dictator’s plunder.”

Yale received the painting through a bequest from Yale alumnus Stephen Carlton Clark. The school says Clark bought the painting from a gallery in New York City in 1933 or 1934.

Konowaloff has filed court papers calling Yale’s acquisition “art laundering.” He argues that Russian authorities unlawfully confiscated the painting and that the United States deemed the theft a violation of international law.

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AP-CS-01-22-10 1707EST

Man sentenced, fined in Illinois stolen artifacts case

BENTON, Ill. (AP) – A southern Illinois man accused of removing thousands of artifacts from a national wildlife refuge has been sentenced to 30 days in jail and five years of probation.

A federal judge in Benton also ordered Leslie Jones to perform 500 hours of community service and pay the Cypress Creek National Wildlife Refuge more than $150,000.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service says the case involves a prehistoric archaeological site. The agency says Jones removed more than 13,000 artifacts including pottery, clay figures, tools and more than 200 pieces of human skeletal remains in January 2007.

Later that month, police and wildlife and natural resource officials seized the artifacts from Jones’ home.

In pleading guilty in October, Jones admitted selling some artifacts to collectors.

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AP-CS-01-20-10 1021EST

 

 

Interior designer sent to prison for theft

NORWALK, Conn. (AP) – An interior designer has been sentenced to two years in prison for stealing nearly $140,000 from a Connecticut homeowner during a home makeover.

Forty-nine-year-old Shawn Mazzuca of Stamford and Saugerties, N.Y., was sentenced Thursday in Norwalk Superior Court.

Authorities say they arrested Mazzuca in August 2008 for stealing the money during a $209,000 renovation to a home in Westport. Prosecutors say he bilked the homeowner out of $139,500 that was intended for the purchase of antiques, designer rugs and furniture.

Police say Mazzuca admitted to his client, Jane Henderson, that he had charged her for items he hadn’t even ordered. Mazzuca’s lawyer said his client used the money for medical expenses.

Mazzuca was ordered to repay Henderson the money he stole.

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AP-ES-01-15-10 0649EST

Florida man gets nearly 2 years in art theft, fraud

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) – A Florida man has been sentenced to just under two years in federal prison for trying to sell stolen artworks by Picasso and Chagall.

Marcus Patmon of Miami was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Delaware on Wednesday to 23 months behind bars and ordered to pay restitution. He pleaded guilty in October to mail fraud, attempted wire fraud and the interstate transport of stolen goods.

According to court papers and attorneys, Patmon was inspired by an episode of Antiques Roadshow to steal and resell art to regain the lifestyle he lost after a 2001 assault conviction.

Patmon admitted selling a Chagall lithograph and Picasso etching he stole from a Washington gallery in 2007. When he tried to sell Picasso etchings from a Palm Beach, Fla., gallery, a dealer notified police and a Delaware-based federal agent posed as the dealer’s employee.

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Information from: The (Wilmington, Del.) News Journal, http://www.delawareonline.com

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AP-ES-01-14-10 0635EST

Stolen Monet found in Poland after 10 years

WARSAW, Poland (AP) – Polish police say they have found a painting by French impressionist Claude Monet that was stolen from a museum in western Poland in 2000.

Poznan police spokesman Romuald Piecuch said Wednesday that officers detained a 41-year-old man in the southern city of Olkusz after the painting, Beach in Pourville, was found in his possession.

Piecuch says the suspect and the painting were being transported to Poznan.

The picture was stolen in September 2000 from the National Museum in Poznan. It was valued at $1 million at the time.

The thief cut the painting from its frame and replaced it with a copy painted on cardboard.

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AP-ES-01-13-10 0556EST