Georgians used a cunning exchange trick to steal 2.5 million euros worth of antique books

Georgians used a cunning exchange trick to steal 2.5 million euros worth of antique books
Georgians used a cunning exchange trick to steal 2.5 million euros worth of antique books
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The European police service Europol announced this. In 2022 and 2023, libraries in the Czech Republic, Estonia, Finland, France, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Switzerland were robbed. The loot, worth around 2.5 million euros, included first editions of Alexander Pushkin and Nikolai Gogol. The book thieves probably auctioned some books in St. Petersburg and Moscow, causing them to be “effectively lost forever,” according to Europol.

The thieves posed in libraries as academics who wanted to view the books for scientific research. They used forged identification cards and pseudonyms. When they gained access to the valuable edition, they carefully measured the book and made copies. Armed with this information, they crafted highly accurate replicas.

On a subsequent visit to the library, they asked to study the work again. This time they did not return the book itself, but the copy. According to experts, the counterfeits were of excellent quality. The exchange trick was not used in all cases, ‘ordinary’ burglary was also used to steal the books.

One of the targets was the University of Warsaw. In November last year, the university announced that around eighty Russian 19th-century books, worth half a million euros, had been stolen. The case came to light when a reader found empty covers and blank pages instead of eight books. The theft cost library director Anna Wolodka her job, and she was accused of negligence.

6 to 10 years in prison

Europol took action after a message from the French authorities. When it became apparent that similar thefts were occurring in many European countries, a joint investigation was launched.

This week, four suspects were arrested in Georgia and Latvia during an operation by cooperating police forces. Previously, five other people involved were arrested in Estonia, France and Lithuania. All suspects have Georgian nationality.

If found guilty, they face six to 10 years in prison, the Georgia Public Prosecutor’s Office reported. 150 antique books were seized during 27 house searches. The provenance of these books is now being established, but at least one copy of the loot from the National Library of France has already been recovered.

The article is in Dutch

Tags: Georgians cunning exchange trick steal million euros worth antique books

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