BSS
  07 Sep 2022, 10:20

New York returns $19 mn of stolen art to Italy

NEW YORK, Sept 7, 2022 (BSS/AFP) - Prosecutors in New York on Tuesday
returned dozens of antiquities stolen from Italy and valued at around $19
million, some of which were found in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

"These 58 pieces represent thousands of years of rich history, yet
traffickers throughout Italy utilized looters to steal these items and to
line their own pockets," said Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, noting
that it was the third such repatriation in nine months.

"For far too long, they have sat in museums, homes, and galleries that had no
rightful claim to their ownership," he said at a ceremony attended by Italian
diplomats and law enforcement officials.

The stolen items had been sold to Michael Steinhardt, one of the world's
leading collectors of ancient art, the DA's office said, adding that he had
been slapped with a "first-of-its-kind lifetime ban on acquiring
antiquities."

Among the recovered treasures, which in some cases were sold to "unwitting
collectors and museums," were a marble head of the Greek goddess Athena from
200 B.C.E. and a drinking cup dating back to 470 B.C.E, officials said.

The pieces were stolen at the behest of four men who "all led highly
lucrative criminal enterprises - often in competition with one another -
where they would use local looters to raid archaeological sites throughout
Italy, many of which were insufficiently guarded," the DA's office said.

One of them, Pasquale Camera, was "a regional crime boss who organized thefts
from museums and churches as early as the 1960s. He then began purchasing
stolen artifacts from local looters and sold them to antiquities dealers," it
added.

It said that this year alone, the DA's office has "returned nearly 300
antiquities valued at over $66 million to 12 countries."