Dutch diamond dealer found guilty over staged €4.1m armed robbery
One of the most renowned diamond dealers in the Netherlands
has been convicted of fraud and money laundering after staging an armed robbery
of €4.1m (£3.4m) diamonds from one of his stores as part of an insurance scam.
Mischa van Gelder, 55, told a court in Amsterdam that he now
found his plot “incomprehensible” but that he had been motivated by financial
difficulties when he hatched it with three other men in 2016.
“I wasn’t like that, I’m not like that. I did something
terrible,” he told the court. “I was in a panic.”
Van Gelder, whose family company, Van Gelder Diamonds, has
sold to private individuals and traded in wholesale diamonds since 1904,
pretended to police that he had been forced at gunpoint to open his vault
during a raid.
But in reality Van Gelder had organised the whole thing. He
had let the men into his vault, where he was voluntarily tied up and locked in.
He was released after calling his daughter.
Van Gelder had agreed that his three accomplices could keep
the diamonds from the vault while he would seek to claim back their value
through his insurers.
Before Van Gelder was arrested, his insurer paid out €3.5m
(£2.9m). After his arrest, one of the three men he had hired to stage the raid,
named in court as Danny S, sought to blackmail him with recordings of their
arrangement.
Van Gelder, who has already served 76 days in prison, was
given a partially suspended prison sentence of six months and a maximum
community service order of 240 hours.
“The suspect went very far and scared a lot of people,” the
judge said. “He made the people around him believe that an armed robbery had
taken place. As a result, the police had to conduct an unnecessary large-scale
investigation.”
Danny S was sentenced to a 90-day suspended prison term and
200 hours of community service for fraud. The two other men involved are yet to
be caught. Van Gelder has paid back the money scammed from his insurer. The
diamonds are still missing.
At the time of Van Gelder’s arrest, his father, Jack, then
76, issued an apology and said he would take over the business.
He said: “We are all shocked and deeply moved by these
developments. I have personally taken charge of our family business again and
have taken the necessary measures to ensure continuity. On behalf of the
company I would like to apologise to the police, the public prosecution
service, the insurer, customers, suppliers – everyone who has been misled by
Mischa’s actions.”
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