Current:Home > MyThe British Museum says it has recovered some of the stolen 2,000 items -Keystone Capital Education
The British Museum says it has recovered some of the stolen 2,000 items
View
Date:2025-04-17 16:45:41
LONDON (AP) — The head of trustees at the British Museum said Saturday that the museum has recovered some of the 2,000 items believed to have been stolen by an insider, but admitted that the 264-year-old institution does not have records of everything in its vast collection.
Chairman of trustees George Osborne acknowledged that the museum’s reputation has been damaged by its mishandling of the thefts, which has sparked the resignation of its director and raised questions about security and leadership.
Osborne told the BBC Saturday that 2,000 stolen items was a “very provisional figure” and staff were working to identify everything missing. The items include gold jewelry, gemstones and antiquities as much as 3,500 years old. None had been on public display recently.
He said the museum was working with the antiquarian community and art recovery experts to get the items back.
“We believe we’ve been the victim of thefts over a long period of time and, frankly, more could have been done to prevent them,” he said. “But I promise you this: it is a mess that we are going to clear up.”
Museum director, Hartwig Fischer, announced his resignation on Friday, apologizing for failing to take seriously enough a warning from an art historian that artifacts from its collection were being sold on eBay. Deputy director, Jonathan Williams, also said he would step aside while a review of the incident is conducted.
In early 2021, British-Danish art historian and dealer Ittai Gradel contacted the Museum bosses with his suspicions, but they assured him nothing was amiss. However, at the start of this year, the museum called in London’s Metropolitan Police force.
The museum has fired a member of staff and launched legal action against them, but no arrests have been made.
Gradel told The Associated Press Friday he became suspicious after buying one of three objects a seller had listed on eBay. Gradel traced the two items he didn’t buy to the museum. The object he bought wasn’t listed in the museum’s catalog, but he discovered it had belonged to a man who turned over his entire collection to the museum in 1814.
The historian said he found the identity of the seller through PayPal. He turned out to be the museum staff member who has since been fired.
Gradelsaid Williams had assured him that a thorough investigation found no improprieties. “He basically told me to sod off and mind my own business.”
Fischer said in his resignation statement that “it is evident that the British Museum did not respond as comprehensively as it should have in response to the warnings in 2021.” He also apologized to Gradel.
The thefts, and the museum’s bungled response, have plunged the institution into crisis. The 18th-century museum in central London’s Bloomsbury district is one of Britain’s biggest tourist attractions, visited by 6 million people a year. They come to see a collection that ranges from Egyptian mummies and ancient Greek statues to Viking hoards, scrolls bearing 12th-century Chinese poetry and masks created by the Indigenous peoples of Canada.
The thefts have been seized on by those who want the museum to return items taken from around the world during the period of the British Empire, including friezes that once adorned the Parthenon in Athens and the Benin bronzes from west Africa.
“We want to tell the British Museum that they cannot anymore say that Greek (cultural) heritage is more protected in the British Museum,” Despina Koutsoumba, head of the Association of Greek Archaeologists, told the BBC this week.
Osborne, a former U.K. Treasury chief, said the museum has launched an independent review led by a lawyer and a senior police officer. He said it also had built a state-of-the-art off-site storage facility so the collection would no longer be housed in an “18th-century basement.”
“I don’t myself believe there was a sort of deliberate cover-up, although the review may find that to be the case,” he said.
“But was there some potential groupthink in the museum at the time, at the very top of the museum, that just couldn’t believe that an insider was stealing things, couldn’t believe that one of the members of staff were doing this? Yes, that’s very possible.”
veryGood! (3613)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Costco is switching up how it sells books. What it means for shoppers.
- Takeaways from Hunter Biden’s gun trial: His family turns out as his own words are used against him
- Living and Dying in the Shadow of Chemical Plants
- Sam Taylor
- Netflix to fight woman's claim of being inspiration behind Baby Reindeer stalker character
- Bark Air, an airline for dogs, faces lawsuit after its maiden voyage
- A Christian group teaches public school students during the school day. Their footprint is growing
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Stanley Cup Final Game 1 recap: Winners, losers as Panthers' Sergei Bobrovsky blanks Oilers
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Watch: Bryce Harper's soccer-style celebration after monster home run in MLB London Series
- In the doghouse: A member of Santa Fe’s K-9 unit is the focus of an internal affairs investigation
- Why the giant, inflatable IUD that set DC abuzz could visit your town this year
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Missing mother found dead inside 16-foot-long python after it swallowed her whole in Indonesia
- Levi Wright's Mom Shares His Moving Obituary Following His Death at Age 3
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Peak Performance
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
A last supper on death row: Should America give murderers an extravagant final meal?
If your pet eats too many cicadas, when should you see the vet?
National Weather Service forecasts more sweltering heat this week for Phoenix and Las Vegas areas
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
Biden says democracy begins with each of us in speech at Pointe du Hoc D-Day memorial
35 children among those killed in latest Sudan civil war carnage, U.N. says
Missing mother found dead inside 16-foot-long python after it swallowed her whole in Indonesia