Page 16 - Crimes of 20th century
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15.   America's Biggest Art Heist,


                          1990





               Isabella Stewart Gardner was an heiress and the wife of a rich man. And so she went
               shopping, buying an eclectic but extravagant collection of artwork on sprees through
               Europe in the early 20th century. Among her treasures were a Vermeer ("The Concert")
               and a Rembrandt ("Storm on the Sea of Galilee"), two certified masterpieces. When she
               died in 1924, Gardner stipulated that the small but exquisite museum in Boston she had
               built to house her treasures should have nothing new added to it; nor should any of the
               art be repositioned. Both rules were violated on March 18, 1990, when two men dressed as
               Boston cops waltzed into the museum after 1 a.m., tied up the guards, shut off the alarm
               system and took off with the Vermeer, the Rembrandt and several less valuable pieces. The
               police at one point estimated the value of the stolen goods at $300 million. It is still listed
               as the biggest American art robbery on the FBI's website. That's because nothing has been
               recovered. In the 17 years since the theft, there may have been one tantalizing glimpse of
               the Rembrandt when unknown men brought a Boston Herald reporter to a warehouse
               where he saw what he believed was the "Sea of Galilee." But otherwise, the fear is that the
               thieves grabbed what they could, sometimes crudely, and may now not know what to do
               with their haul. The Vermeer, one of only 32 known works by the artist in existence, may
               be worth at least $70 million, and so beautifully famous that it is unsellable on the open
               market. So the greatest art heist in American history may have been a botch, a tragedy so
               terrible that the thieves may have to destroy the very treasures they stole in order to
               conceal their guilt.






































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