WE HAVE MOVED - CHECK OUT OUR NEW HOME!

Please hold the line........the caller knows you are waiting and we are trying to connect you........

Saturday 22 May 2010

£430m loss, let's blame the Security Guards!


Five master pieces valued at up to £430m have been stolen from the Museum of Art in Paris. Museum officials discovered the theft early on Thursday, when they found a smashed window and a broken padlock which had been cut to gain access to the five paintings.


A number of news headlines highlighted the that the guard/s (some reports state that 3 were on duty) were sleeping and the Evening Standards headline said 'Guards dozed as thief stole Paris paintings'! Why is it that the security guards sleeping hits the headlines and not the other catalogue of errors and issues that took place at the Museum :

  • CCTV cameras pointing only at the roof
  • Managements decision to switch off the alarm system because it kept going wrong (parts were on order).
  • The paintings may not have been insured
  • £15 million was spent upgrading security during a two-year refit which ended in 2006.
  • Theft not discovered for up to 3 hours
  • The intruder slipped into the Museum after simply removing a window.
  • Insiders working for low pay in galleries are often suspected of helping criminals.

I think this really goes to prove a point that I made in this blog after my recent visit to IFSEC. You can spend an awful lot of money on technology (£15m in this case) but you still have the human element 'who leave cameras pointing at the ceiling' or the senior member of management that 'turns of the alarm systems due to false activations' or the member of staff who 'leaves the door unlocked in return for €50's'.
There is and always will be a requirement to have a robust security management regime (including Physical Security and Personnel Security) in place along with regular security audits to provide assurance that these measures are proportionate and effective. Although the night guard failing asleep is a serious issue (and one which is a common in the industry) it hardly deserves to be the headline for what is a heist of the century and a £430m loss of some of the rarest art pieces in the World.



One of the pieces stolen a £15m: Fernand Leger's 'Still Life with a Chandelier'

SOME OF THE BIGGEST ART THEFTS IN HISTORY
  • May 2010: A lone thief stole five paintings possibly worth hundreds of millions of euros, including works by Picasso and Matisse, in a brazen overnight heist at a Paris modern art museum.
  • February 2008: Armed robbers stole four paintings by Cezanne, Degas, van Gogh and Monet worth $163.2 million from the E.G. Buehrle Collection, a private museum in Zurich, Switzerland. The van Gogh and Monet paintings were recovered.
  • December 2007: A painting by Pablo Picasso valued at about $50 million, along with one by Brazilian artist Candido Portinari valued at $5 million to $6 million, were stolen from the Sao Paulo Museum of Art in Brazil, by three burglars using a crowbar and a car jack. The paintings were later found.
  • February 2007: Two Picasso paintings, worth nearly $66 million, and a drawing were stolen from the Paris, France home of the artist's granddaughter in an overnight robbery. Police later recovered the art when the thieves tried to sell it.
  • February 2006: Around 300 museum-grade artifacts worth an estimated $142 million, including paintings, clocks and silver, were stolen from a 17th-century manor house at Ramsbury in southern England, the largest property theft in British history, according to reports.
  • February 2006: Four works of art and other objects, including paintings by Matisse, Picasso, Monet and Salvador Dali, were stolen from the Museu Chacara do Ceu, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by four armed men during a Carnival parade. Local media estimated the paintings' worth at around $50 million.
  • August 2004: Two paintings by Edvard Munch, The Scream and Madonna, insured for $141 million, were stolen from the Munch Museum in Oslo, Norway by three men in a daylight raid. The paintings were recovered nearly two years later.
  • August 2003: A $65 million Leonardo da Vinci painting was stolen from Drumlanrig Castle in southern Scotland after two men joined a public tour and overpowered a guide. It was recovered four years later.
  • May 2003: A 16th-century gold-plated Saliera, or salt cellar, by Florentine master Benvenuto Cellini, valued at $69.3 million, was stolen from Vienna's Art History Museum by a single thief when guards discounted a burglar alarm. The figurine was later recovered.
  • December 2002: Two thieves broke in through the roof of the Vincent Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam and stole two paintings by Van Gogh valued at $30 million. Dutch police convicted two men in December 2003, but did not recover the paintings.
  • December 2000: Hooded thieves stole a self-portrait by Rembrandt and two Renoir paintings worth an estimated $36 million from Stockholm's waterfront National Museum, using a motorboat in their escape. All paintings were recovered.
  • October 1994: Seven Picasso paintings worth an estimated $44 million were stolen from a gallery in Zurich, Switzerland. They were recovered in 2000.
  • April 1991: Two masked armed men took 20 paintings - worth at least $10 million each at the time - from Amsterdam's Van Gogh Museum. The paintings were found in the getaway car less than an hour later.
  • March 1990: In the biggest art theft in U.S. history, $300 million in art, including works by Vermeer, Rembrandt and Manet, was stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, Massachusetts, by two men in police uniforms.
  • December 1988: Thieves stole three paintings by van Gogh, with an estimated value of $72 million to $90 million, from the Kroeller-Mueller Museum in a remote section of the Netherlands. Police later recovered all three paintings.
  • May 1986: A Vermeer painting, Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid, is among 18 paintings worth $40 million stolen from Russborough House in Blessington, Ireland. Some of the paintings are later recovered.
  • August 1911: Perhaps the most famous case of art theft occurred when the Leonardo Da Vinci's Mona Lisa was stolen from the Louvre by employee Vinczo Peruggia, who was caught two years later.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your comments.

Team Chatback