Michael Steinhardt surrenders $70m of stolen art
An American hedge-fund billionaire has surrendered 180
looted and illegally smuggled antiquities valued at $70m and been handed an
unprecedented lifetime ban on acquiring other relics as part of an agreement
with the Manhattan district attorney’s office.
Michael Steinhardt, one of the world’s largest collectors of
ancient art, “displayed a rapacious appetite for plundered artefacts”, the
district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr said on Monday.
The lifetime ban marks the dramatic culmination of an
international investigation that began officially in 2017.
The DA’s office said its inquiry found “compelling evidence”
that the antiquities were stolen from 11 countries, and that at least 171
passed through traffickers before being bought by Steinhardt.
The seized pieces lacked verifiable provenance prior to
appearing on the international art market, the office said, adding that it had
executed 17 judicially ordered search warrants and conducted joint
investigations with law-enforcement authorities in Bulgaria, Egypt, Greece,
Iraq, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Syria, and Turkey.
Steinhardt, who had been chairman of the board of Wisdom
Tree Investments before retiring in 2019, denied criminal wrongdoing in
resolving the matter, which ended a grand jury investigation into him.
Vance said: “For decades, Michael Steinhardt displayed a
rapacious appetite for plundered artefacts without concern for the legality of
his actions, the legitimacy of the pieces he bought and sold or the grievous
cultural damage he wrought across the globe.
“His pursuit of ‘new’ additions to showcase and sell knew no
geographic or moral boundaries, as reflected in the sprawling underworld of
antiquities traffickers, crime bosses, money launderers and tomb raiders he
relied upon to expand his collection.”
Vance noted that the antiquities would be returned to their
rightful owners rather than be held as evidence for the years necessary to
complete a grand-jury indictment and trial.
“This resolution also enables my office to shield the
identity of the many witnesses here and abroad whose names would be released at
any trial, to protect the integrity of parallel investigations in each of the
11 countries with whom we are conducting joint investigations,” he said.
Under the terms of the agreement, Steinhardt has surrendered
The Stag’s Head Rhyton, a spectacular ceremonial vessel in the form of a stag’s
head, which dates to 400BCE and appeared without provenance on the market
following looting in Milas, Turkey. It is valued at $3.5m.
Other treasures include the Ercolano Fresco, which depicts
an infant Hercules strangling a snake sent by Hera to slay him, which had been
purchased from convicted antiquities traffickers for $650,000 in 1995, the year
it had been looted from a Roman villa in the ruins of Herculaneum, near modern
Naples. Today, it has been valued at $1m.
Over 15 years, Prof Christos Tsirogiannis, a leading
archaeologist, has identified more than 1,550 looted artefacts within auction
houses, commercial galleries, private collections and museums. A former senior
field archaeologist at the University of Cambridge, he is now an associate
professor at the institute of advanced studies at the University of Aarhus in
Denmark, and helps to secure the repatriation of antiquities by alerting
Interpol and other authorities.
He told the Guardian: “Many of the dozens of antiquities
that I identified in the Steinhardt collection – using the photographic
archives confiscated from convicted dealers and traffickers – appeared first in
the ‘most reputable’ top dealers and auction houses in the world.
“I first alerted the DA’s office in New York on the
Steinhardt case in November 2014, when I identified an extremely rare
prehistoric Sardinian idol, valued at $800,000-$1.2m, put on auction by
Steinhardt at Christie’s in New York. I found an image of the same idol, broken
in pieces, in the archive confiscated from the notorious and convicted
antiquities dealer Giacomo Medici. The object was withdrawn and repatriated to
Italy … This case led gradually to the raids on Steinhardt’s office and houses
with the results we see today.”
In a statement, Steinhardt’s lawyers said: “Mr Steinhardt is
pleased that the district attorney’s years-long investigation has concluded
without any charges, and that items wrongfully taken by others will be returned
to their native countries.”
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