Looted antiquities worth millions recovered from black market by Italian police

looted_416081t.jpg
Archaeological Legislation, Legal Proceedings and Criminal Activities
July 30, 2010 - 4:26pm

More than 300 looted antiquities, estimated to be worth more than EUR15 million, were displayed to the press this morning in Rome, having been repatriated to Italy after they were discovered in a warehouse in Switzerland. It was a scene slightly reminiscent of a Victorian detective novel, in which the robber and his looted candlesticks is unveiled before an impressed gathering of country house guests. Only today's unveiling took place inside the Colosseum rather than on the pages of a 19th century novel and while there was no criminal present, there was plenty of loot, which consisted of objects such as Etruscan ceramic vases, bronze statues from Sardinia and frescoes from Pompeii – 337 objects in total. A investigation, code-named Andromeda, led by the carabinieri and the Swiss authorities, discovered about 20,000 artefacts in the free port of Geneva, stored in warehouses that were associated with an unnamed Japanese dealer. [...]


*This post has not been shared by anyone yet






*This article - including all rights associated to it - belongs to the independent. To view original content and full article please follow this link.

Share/Save