Colorado man indicted in artifacts looting case, new details emerge

The Four Corners region is in the red area on this map. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
The Four Corners region is in the red area on this map. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.
The Four Corners region is in the red area on this map. Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) – A Colorado man who sold American Indian relics on the Internet is the latest person charged in a far-reaching federal investigation into the looting of ancient Southwestern artifacts.

A federal grand jury in Denver indicted Robert B. Knowlton, 66, late Tuesday. The Grand Junction man is charged with four counts of illegally selling archaeological artifacts and one count of transporting them from Colorado to Utah.

Knowlton is the 26th person charged as part of a federal sting spanning more than two years in the Four Corners region. He’s accused of selling and mailing three items last year taken from federal land: a pipe, a Midland knife point and a Hell Gap knife.

Knowlton – who ran an Internet-based business called Bob’s Flint Shop – met at least twice in 2008 with an artifacts dealer working undercover for the FBI and the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, according to a search warrant affidavit.

On one of those visits, Knowlton said his collection included about 3,700 artifacts with a retail value of a half-million dollars or more, documents said.

He told the informant he bought the Midland knife point from a “park ranger” who said he found it after a fire on U.S. Forest Service land near Telluride, records say. He said he bought “a lot of stuff” from the ranger.

The Hell Gap knife came from an area near a southern Utah airport, Knowlton told the informant.

The two settled on $8,600 for several items, including the three mentioned in the indictment. The informant pulled out a stack of $100 bills and asked if cash was OK.

“Knowlton said ‘I like that I don’t have to tell nobody,'” according to the affidavit.

He agreed to mail the three items to Utah. Once they arrived, the informant turned them over to federal authorities, according to the affidavit.

Federal officials later determined the three items came from federal land.

Knowlton hasn’t been arrested. Federal officials say he’ll get a summons to appear in federal court on Sept. 14.

Knowlton couldn’t immediately be reached for comment Wednesday and it wasn’t immediately clear if he had an attorney.

The charges come a week after a Durango, Colo., antiquities dealer named Vern Crites surrendered his vast collection of artifacts after being named in federal charges earlier this summer.

Of the 25 people previously charged, a mother and daughter from southern Utah have pleaded guilty, two others – including a prominent Blanding, Utah doctor – committed suicide and others have pleaded not guilty and are awaiting trial.

The operation is the first to deeply penetrate the large-scale black market for Indian artifacts illegally taken from federal or tribal lands.

The sting relied heavily on the informant, who was equipped to provide federal agents with wireless video feeds from homes and shops where he ultimately spent more than $335,000 on bowls, stone pipes, sandals, jars, pendants, necklaces and other items.

While the underground market assigns monetary value to the items, federal officials have said many of the artifacts are priceless.

“The true value of cultural resources lies in their context, as well as the sacred and scientific meanings such archaeological artifacts provide us as a people,” Jeanne M. Proctor, the BLM’s top law enforcement officer in Colorado, said in a statement Wednesday.

If convicted, Knowlton faces up to two years in federal prison and a $20,000 fine for each count of selling and transporting an archaeological resource. If convicted of the charge of interstate transportation of stolen property, he could get up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine, according to federal officials.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-08-26-09 1409EDT

Former museum employee pleads guilty in theft case

Entrance to USS Midway Museum. Image courtesy of USS Midway Museum.
Entrance to USS Midway Museum. Image courtesy of USS Midway Museum.
Entrance to USS Midway Museum. Image courtesy of USS Midway Museum.

SAN DIEGO (ACNI) – A woman accused of embezzling more than $100,000 from her former place of employment, the USS Midway Museum, pleaded guilty on Aug. 26 to charges of grand theft and fraudulent appropriation by an employee.

Prosecutors said that during her three-year term of employment as accounting manager, Monay stole 21 cash deposits totaling $111,000. Monay reportedly resigned from her position two days after a fellow employee in the museum’s financial department reported finding bookkeeping irregularities.

According to a report in the San Diego Union-Tribune, Veronica Gonzalez Monay, 35, now faces a possible prison sentence of up to four years. Monay is currently in county jail in lieu of posting $100,000 bail, with sentencing set for Sept. 24.

A fabled U.S. Navy aircraft carrier, the USS Midway was commissioned a week after the end of World War II and embarked on an unprecedented 47-year odyssey that set new standards in naval aviation. More than 225,000 Americans took part in the craft’s long tour of service that ended after the Midway served as the Persian Gulf flagship in Desert Storm. The USS Midway is the longest-serving U.S. Navy carrier of the 20th century and for a decade between 1945 and 1955, was the largest ship in the world. Its flight deck measures 4 acres.

Now a hands-on museum, the USS Midway provides an opportunity for visitors to enter a floating city at sea and walk in the footsteps of 225,000 Midway sailors who served aboard the ship. Guests can spend the day exploring more than 60 exhibits with a collection of 25 restored aircraft or try their hand at piloting one of three flight simulators.

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ADDITIONAL IMAGES OF NOTE


USS Midway with San Diego skyline in background. Image courtesy of USS Midway Museum.
USS Midway with San Diego skyline in background. Image courtesy of USS Midway Museum.

German police confiscate fake Giacomettis

A genuine Alberto Giacometti sculpture, Three Men Walking II, 1949, courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
A genuine Alberto Giacometti sculpture, Three Men Walking II, 1949, courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
A genuine Alberto Giacometti sculpture, Three Men Walking II, 1949, courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

BERLIN (AP) – German police have confiscated hundreds of bronze and plaster statues alleged to be the works of Alberto Giacometti (Italian, 1901-1966) and arrested an art dealer and two others on suspicion of selling the fakes across the globe.
Prosecutors in Stuttgart said Wednesday a 59-year-old man in Frankfurt, as well as a 61-year-old art dealer and his wife, have been held in detention since their arrest a week ago.

The trio face charges of collaborating since 2004 to offer and sell the forged artworks, complete with certificates of authentication, to buyers worldwide for tens of millions of dollars. None of the suspects were identified.

Prosecutors said the 61-year-old posed as a count who worked as a salesman offering the statues to potential buyers. His 59-year-old colleague then posed as a friend of the artist’s brother, saying he had found the statues in a secret cache, found after his death in 1966.

Earlier this year, a Giacometti sculpture sold at a New York auction for $7.7 million, above its pre-sale estimate. The bronze, titled Bust of Diego, which features the artist’s brother, had not been exhibited for more than 35 years.

Giacometti is probably best known for his skeletal and elongated standing women and striding men, depicted on the current 100-Swiss franc bank note along with a portrait of the artist.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-08-19-09 1353EDT

Thief swipes gold miner’s dredge bucket from Alaska museum

FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) – University of Alaska Fairbanks police are looking for a thief with a strong back.

Someone made off with a dredge bucket, a 200-pound outdoor exhibit at the University of Alaska Museum of the North.

Fairbanks is known as Alaska’s Golden Heart city in part because of its gold mining history. Ore at some mines was excavated with dredges, which scooped out gold-bearing sediment with buckets attached to a chain.

The stolen bucket measures about 19-by-20-by 23 inches. It’s considered a small dredge bucket.

Police say it was taken from museum grounds between Aug. 7 and Tuesday morning.

The border patrol and antiques dealers have been notified of the theft.

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On the Net:

Bucket photo: http://www.uaf.edu/news.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-08-16-09 1528EDT

Burglars hit Santa Fe home, $750K in art and other property taken

Burglars hit Santa Fe home for $750K in art, other property

SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) – Santa Fe police are asking for help in recovering expensive art work and other property taken in a $750,000 heist.

The property, including a charcoal drawing by Vincent Van Gogh, was stolen from a home on the city’s northeast side nearly three months ago.

An investigator trying to track down the items wants to know if anyone in the community knows about the theft or has seen any of the stolen items.

Santa Fe police Detective Randy Pecorelli said he’s not yet sure if the home was targeted by people who knew about the art collection or if burglars hit the home and then cleaned it out.

The 54-year-old homeowner said Wednesday he thinks someone with inside knowledge was likely responsible for the theft.

Theft is nothing new to the Santa Fe’s art community. In 2005, police investigated a rash of burglaries in which Native-American artworks were taken. After the burglaries, the city’s art gallery owners implemented additional security measures, which may have thwarted further break-ins. 
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Information from: The Santa Fe New Mexican, http://www.sfnewmexican.com. Auction Central News contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-08-13-09 1033EDT

 

Thieves take antique light fixtures from historic Montana hotel

 

BOULDER, Mont. (AP) – A historic bathhouse and hotel in southwestern Montana is lamenting thieves who broke in recently and made off with three antique light fixtures believed to have been installed by a millionaire miner and banker nearly a century ago.

Boulder Hot Springs says it will pay a $1,500 reward for information leading to the return of the fixtures, which disappeared in late July.

General manager Kerri Kumasaka says she believes they were added during a 1910 renovation project by former owner and Butte millionaire, miner and banker James Murray.

She says, “We’re just heartbroken they’re gone.”

Two of the fixtures were taken from the building’s old dining room and a third from the historic lobby.

Buildings at the hot springs date back to 1863.

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Information from: The Montana Standard,
http://www.mtstandard.com

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-WS-08-12-09 0926EDT

Former Rhode Island art dealer to stand trial in September

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) – A former art dealer accused of defrauding investors out of millions of dollars stands trial next month in federal court in Rhode Island.

Jury selection starts Sept. 2 for Rocco DeSimone, who allegedly duped an inventor and investors by claiming he had access to deep-pocketed business connections.

DeSimone was convicted in 2005 of evading taxes after he sold a painting by the impressionist Claude Monet.

He then escaped from a minimum security federal prison in New Jersey and traveled to Boston and New York before surrendering.

His lawyer has said he is innocent of the new charges.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-08-10-09 1130EDT

Louisiana judge delays sentencing in Chinese art fraud case

NEW ORLEANS (AP) – A federal judge has agreed to postpone a sentencing hearing for a mother and son from Covington who pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud customers at an art gallery they owned.

Sixty-one-year-old Constance Breithoff and her son, Christopher Breithoff, were scheduled to be sentenced on Aug. 12, but U.S. District Judge Eldon Fallon agreed to postpone the hearing until Nov. 18. Prosecutors and the Breithoffs’ attorney had asked for more time to resolve restitution issues related to their sentencing.

The Breithoffs were accused of purchasing Chinese paintings in bulk and reselling them as original works of art by phony local artists. They operated Barlow Art Gallery and Transitions in Mandeville and also had a location in New Orleans’ French Quarter.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-08-04-09 0523EDT

Artist sues Random House in NYC over book cover

NEW YORK (AP) _ The creator of a “Charging Bull” sculpture near Wall Street has sued Random House for putting a picture of his statue on the cover of a book about the fall of Lehman Brothers.

The lawsuit by artist Arturo Di Modica Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan sought unspecified damages and to have the picture removed from the book, A Colossal Failure of Common Sense.

Random House spokesman David Drake said the publisher does not comment on pending litigation.

The lawsuit said Random House never sought permission to use a picture of the lower Manhattan statue that is popular with tourists.

The lawsuit included a copy of the copyright for the sculpture, which was created in 1989 and was registered with the copyright office in 1998.

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-ES-07-29-09 1841EDT

Sports memorabilia valued at $50K stolen from Wichita bar

WICHITA, Kan.(AP) – Wichita police say about $50,000 in sports memorabilia – including Babe Ruth autographed baseballs and a World Series championship ring from the 1985 Kansas City Royals – have been stolen from a sports bar.

Police responding to an alarm early Monday found a broken window in the back of Players sports bar in west Wichita. The burglars apparently smashed a glass display case that housed the stolen memorabilia.

Police say the stolen items also include a Mickey Mantle autographed baseball card, two Super Bowl rings, a 1985 Oklahoma football championship ring and a 1981 Nebraska Big 8 championship ring.

Investigators say it’s likely the memorabilia will end up for sale on the Internet or at other sports collectibles shows.

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Information from: KFDI-AM

Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

AP-CS-07-29-09 1326EDT