Friday, November 25, 2016

Austrian Authorities Thwart Group Trying to Sell Fake Picassos


Photo
A fake Picasso, titled “El Greco” (1950). CreditBundeskriminalamt
LONDON — Austria’s criminal intelligence service announced this week that it had uncovered a group selling forgeries of high-profile art, including fakes that had been attributed to Chagall and Picasso.
The service said in a statement on Monday that intelligence officers had posed as art buyers and arrested six suspects at a Vienna airport hotel in an undercover operation in July. Details on the operation were kept private until this week.
The suspects were said to have been trying to sell the undercover authorities five artworks that they said were Picasso originals for about 10 million euros, or about $11 million, each.
The authorities in the Vienna suburb of Schwechat, site of the city’s international airport, received a tip in the middle of the year that a small criminal group was planning to sell fake artworks there and alerted the intelligence service, which then organized the undercover purchase.
Further investigations into the suspects, who include five Austrians and one Slovenian citizen, revealed that members of the group had over a dozen forgeries of works by artists including Picasso and Emil Nolde in their possession in Austria, and that there was a trove of more than 60 others by artists like Klimt, Monet and Picasso at one of the suspects’ properties in Slovenia.
The Slovenian member of the group tried to sell some of these fakes in 2014 but was unable to find buyers, said Vincenz Kriegs-Au, a spokesman for the criminal intelligence service. After the first failed attempt, the suspect teamed up with those who were arrested in July. He told investigators that he bought the works from an art collector. It is not clear who painted the forgeries.
The suspects, whose names have not been released, told investigators that they believed the works were real. The suspects have been released pending trial, Mr. Kriegs-Au said. All of the works are in police possession, and representatives of the artists’ estates are in the process of evaluating some of them for authenticity.

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Hilda Amiel, was a 70 year old grandmother from New York


Hilda Amiel, was a 70 year old grandmother from New York who was accused of masterminding the world’s largest fine art print counterfeiting operation. An operation which is conservatively estimated to have generated massive public losses at the retail level & was associated with four principal artists; Salvador Dali, Marc Chagall, Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso.
The figure was believed to be up to $1 billion dollars worldwide.
 It was claimed that she, assisted by 'others', flooded the art market with prints purportedly by or attributed to Picasso and Dali and other great modernists in the eight years before she was arrested. But as public record has it, this tuned out to be a family affair.
Before her death, she was seen to be cooperating with lawyers having been arrested after 'Operation Bogart,' lead by U.S. Postal Inspector Jack Ellis, by making a lengthy videotape confession explaining how her late husband, Leon Amiel, who had started his career as a highly respectable dealer, was extremely close to some of the world's greatest artists such as Salvador Dali and Pablo Picasso.
Hilda Amiel had told defence lawyers that the younger Amiel girls that were charged along with her with mail fraud for selling the fake Salvador Dali prints etc. couldn't possibly have known that the family business was illegitimate.

 It was discovered in 1993 that Amiel had warehoused over 83,000 fake prints which themselves could have netted £325 million on the art market!. However, Hilda Amiel, died before her trial began, at the age of 71.

 Police had charged Hilda Amiel, her daughters, Kathryn and Joanne and her granddaughter, Sarina, with conspiracy and mail fraud in connection with the sale of the fake prints through their company 'Original Artworks.' This was believed to be part of Leon Amiel Publishers Inc. and Amiel Book Distribution Corp. Both were founded by Hilda Amiel's late husband, Leon Amiel, who had died in 1988. (He was also implicated in a separate illicit art affair over Dali which is covered elsewhere on the Internet.)

 The New York state jury found Kathryn Amiel guilty of some 23 counts of mail fraud, Joanne guilty of 15 counts of mail fraud and Sarina guilty of 18 counts of mail fraud
The Amiel women were sentenced on May 12, 1995 - Kathryn to six-and-a-half years, Joanne to three years and 10 months and Sarina to two years and nine months.
They began serving their federal prison terms in November 2000 after the rejection of their appeals.has it, this tuned out to be a family affair.

taken from :
http://www.freemanart.ca/Fakes_paintings_info_page.htm
Before her death, she was seen to be cooperating with lawyers having been arrested after 'Operation Bogart,' lead by U.S. Postal Inspector Jack Ellis, by making a lengthy videotape confession explaining how her late husband, Leon Amiel, who had started his career as a highly respectable dealer, was extremely close to some of the world's greatest artists such as Salvador Dali and Pablo Picasso.
Hilda Amiel had told defence lawyers that the younger Amiel girls that were charged along with her with mail fraud for selling the fake Salvador Dali prints etc. couldn't possibly have known that the family business was illegitimate.

 It was discovered in 1993 that Amiel had warehoused over 83,000 fake prints which themselves could have netted £325 million on the art market!. However, Hilda Amiel, died before her trial began, at the age of 71.

 Police had charged Hilda Amiel, her daughters, Kathryn and Joanne and her granddaughter, Sarina, with conspiracy and mail fraud in connection with the sale of the fake prints through their company 'Original Artworks.' This was believed to be part of Leon Amiel Publishers Inc. and Amiel Book Distribution Corp. Both were founded by Hilda Amiel's late husband, Leon Amiel, who had died in 1988. (He was also implicated in a separate illicit art affair over Dali which is covered elsewhere on the Internet.)

 The New York state jury found Kathryn Amiel guilty of some 23 counts of mail fraud, Joanne guilty of 15 counts of mail fraud and Sarina guilty of 18 counts of mail fraud
The Amiel women were sentenced on May 12, 1995 - Kathryn to six-and-a-half years, Joanne to three years and 10 months and Sarina to two years and nine months.
They began serving their federal prison terms in November 2000 after the rejection of their appeals.