Dutch won’t ask for Romanian suspects who stole paintings from Rotterdam’s Kunsthal
April 5, 2013 by All Art News
Filed under Art Crime & Legal
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THE HAGUE (AFP).- Dutch prosecutors will not ask Bucharest to extradite the suspects in a spectacular art theft from a Rotterdam museum last year, saying on Thursday it was a Romanian matter.
“The Public Prosecution is not planning to ask for the extradition of the suspects who are currently in custody,” it said in a statement issued from Rotterdam.
“The suspects are being prosecuted in Romania, it is a Romanian investigation and because they are Romanian,” the prosecutor’s office gave as reasons for its decision.
Seven Romanians have so far been charged in connection with the lightning robbery of the seven masterpieces from Rotterdam’s Kunsthal Museum in October last year.
Four are currently in custody in Romania, one has been charged but remains free and another is on the run. A Romanian woman has also been charged in the Netherlands.
The paintings included Pablo Picasso’s “Tete d’Arlequin”, Claude Monet’s “Waterloo Bridge” and Lucian Freud’s “Woman with Eyes Closed”.
Charged with conspiracy and aggravated theft, the suspects have been linked to at least two of the artworks — by Paul Gauguin and Henri Matisse — which they allegedly tried to sell in Romania.
They have repeatedly proclaimed their innocence.
Experts have estimated the paintings’ value at more than 100 million euros ($130 million).
The heist gripped the Netherlands and the art world as police apparently struggled to piece the crime together, despite putting 25 officers on the case.
Dutch prosecutors however praised the Romanian investigation saying it was “thorough and widespread.”
“We have full confidence in the investigation and work well together,” they said.