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MUSEUM

French museum worker sold stolen fossils on eBay

A French employee at the Orleans museum of natural history was found guilty and handed a three-month suspended sentence for stealing hundreds of stones and fossils dating back to the Neolithic era and selling them on eBay.

French museum worker sold stolen fossils on eBay
The Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle in Orleans. Photo: MNHN/Facebook
The man was sacked on November 14, after being detained for the theft of 666 archaeological treasures from the museum in the city of Orleans, which is located to the south of Paris.
   
The 56-year-old museum employee had been a civil servant working for the city of Orleans for 28 years.
   
The stolen stones and fossils were all part of a collection donated to the museum in 1983. Most of the items came from Mauritania.
   
Investigators found 364 items at the employee's home. Another 100 were returned by their buyers — after they purchased them on eBay for €10 to €20 each.
   
The elaborate scheme was discovered thanks to one of the buyers, who was keen to find out whether the pieces were authentic.
   
Museum staff had noticed that parts of the collection had gone missing, and were able to identify the thief after the buyer contacted them.
   
The museum has been shut for renovation since August 2015.
   
The man admitted his guilt, and told the judges that his “financial situation had become catastrophic” ever since his divorce in 2013.
   
“I couldn't pay off my debts to the bank. I panicked at the thought of finding myself living on the streets, and of never seeing my children again. I lost my head,” he said.
   
While the museum had asked for €10,000 ($10,400) damages, the court ordered the employee to pay a symbolic sum of just one euro.
 

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MUSEUM

German police arrest fugitive twin over Dresden museum heist

German police said Tuesday they have arrested one of two fugitive twin brothers from the so-called Remmo clan wanted over their suspected role in snatching priceless jewels from a museum in the city of Dresden.

German police arrest fugitive twin over Dresden museum heist
Archive photo from April 2019 shows the Jewellery Room of the Green Vault. Photo: DPA

The 21-year-old suspect was detained in Berlin on Monday evening over what local media have dubbed one of the biggest museum heists in modern history, a spokesman for the police in the eastern city of Dresden said.

The twins had eluded German authorities when they carried out raids last month and arrested three members of the Remmo clan, a family of Arab origin notorious for its ties to organised crime.

Police then named them as 21-year-old Abdul Majed Remmo and Mohammed Remmo.

All five suspects are accused of “serious gang robbery and two counts of arson,” Dresden prosecutors said.

Police did not immediately name the arrested twin. His brother remains on the run.

The robbers launched their brazen raid lasting eight minutes on the Green Vault museum in Dresden's Royal Palace on November 25th, 2019.

READ ALSO: Everything you need to know about the Dresden museum heist

Having caused a partial power cut and broken in through a window, they snatched priceless 18th-century jewellery and other valuables from the collection of the Saxon ruler August the Strong.

Items stolen included a sword whose hilt is encrusted with nine large and 770 smaller diamonds, and a shoulderpiece which contains the famous 49-carat Dresden white diamond, Dresden's Royal Palace said.

The Remmos were previously implicated in another stunning museum robbery in the heart of Berlin in which a 100-kilogramme gold coin was stolen.

Investigators last year targeted the family with the seizure of 77 properties worth a total of €9.3 million, charging that they were purchased with the proceeds of various crimes, including a 2014 bank robbery.

READ ALSO: €1 million gold coin stolen from iconic Berlin museum

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