Police astounded after discovering £50m of looted artwork objects in museum trustee's residence

Police have recovered tens of tens of millions of kilos value of looted artefacts from the house of a well known trustee of New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art, it has emerged.

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Shelby White, 84, and her late investor husband Leon Levy, who died in 2003, used their wealth to place collectively a non-public assortment of uncommon artwork objects.

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The couple bought their objects from numerous sellers, who have been later accused of dealing in stolen items.

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There isn't any suggestion that the philanthropic New Yorkers have been conscious that a number of the objects they bought had been obtained illegally by their brokers.

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Police officers praised Ms White for serving to them of their investigations and aiding in repatriating the artwork objects to their authentic nations, together with Italy and Turkey.

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Investigators initially launched a daybreak raid on Ms White's Manhattan residence in June 2021, the place they discovered rooms stuffed with beneficial artefacts.

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Over the course of two years, they've retrieved 71 objects from the flat, in addition to one other 17 from the Met itself, the place they have been on mortgage, in keeping with the New York Times.

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Another artwork object was recovered from an undisclosed location, bringing the overall worth of the objects retrieved to almost $69million (£53million).

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After the return of three of the antiquities, valued at $725,000, to Yemen, Manhattan's District Attorney Alvin Bragg stated: "Our investigation into the collector Shelby White has allowed dozens of antiquities that were ripped from their countries of origin to finally return home."

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Peter Chavkin, Ms White’s lawyer, revealed Ms White and her late husband had purchased the artefacts in "good faith" at a public public sale and from sellers they believed to be respected.

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He stated: "From the outset of their collecting, Shelby White and Leon Levy sought to share these treasures with the public, loaning objects to museums and publishing their collection extensively," he stated.

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"If an item in her collection was shown to have been wrongfully taken by others, Ms White has expeditiously and voluntarily returned it to its rightful place of origin."

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Ms White is thought for her philanthropic work and her experience on ancients.

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She is under no circumstances the one particular person to be caught up within the rising scandal.

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Professor David Gill, of the Centre for Heritage at Kent University, claimed that this was simply the "tip of the iceberg".

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He stated that looting was carried out on an "industrial scale" within the Seventies and Eighties, with a lot of the loot then offered at public public sale to unsuspecting collectors.

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Max Hollein, the Met’s director, stated final month that Ms White was a "profoundly generous supporter" of the museum.

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"She has had an enormous impact at this Museum and many other institutions," he stated.

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"Shelby’s passion for art and philanthropy – and her commitment to the Met – have enabled significant advances in art history and the ongoing expansion of the stories we can tell in the galleries for the benefit of scholars and audiences worldwide."

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