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  • 24
    Sep
    2012
    3:57pm, EDT

    Busted: Housekeeper nabbed with $3 million sculpture of Ben Franklin

    By NBC News staff

    Lower Merion Police

    This bust of Ben Franklin was stolen on Aug. 24 from the home of an art collector in Bryn Mawr, Penn.

    Police in Maryland have arrested a housekeeper accused of stealing a rare porcelain bust of Ben Franklin worth $3 million, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported on Monday. The authorities caught up with Andrea Lawton on Friday as she was getting off a bus in Elkton, Md., carrying the artwork in a gunny sack, according to the report.


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    Lawton had been working for the owner George A. D’Angelo as a cleaner in his Bryn Mawr, Penn., home just three days before the rare 18th century bust disappeared on Aug. 24.

    The piece was cracked across the breastplate during its absence, the Inquirer said.


     It had not yet been returned to D'Angelo while the FBI kept it for fingerprinting.

    "We'll just hope that Ben can be restored," D’Angelo told the paper. "He'll go back on the pedestal and grace the room again."

    Lower Merion Police

    Andrea Lawton

    While working at the D’Angelo home, Lawton had been told not to touch the bust and that it was "extremely valuable," according to an affidavit of probable cause that supported the arrest warrant.

    The piece was one of four made by sculptor Jean-Antoine Houdon while Franklin was living in Paris as Minister to France, in the late 1770s, according to Blouin Artinfo.

    Still missing from the collection of D'Angelois an autographed picture of the composer Victor Herbert, mounted in a shadowbox with one of his batons and sheet music. That piece is valued at $80,000, the art publication said.

    Lawton, also known as Andrea Gresham, was charged with theft, fraud and interstate transportation of stolen property, according to papers filed in federal court in Philadelphia.

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    352 comments

    What an idiot. Someone's not going to notice the bust disappearing? Then, getting caught red handed packing it in a gunny sack while riding a bus. You just can't make this stuff up. Classic. So, grand theft, a felony, is what? taking $3,000 or above? What is stealing something worth three MILLION do …

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    Explore related topics: art, maryland, theft, crime, ben-franklin, kari-huus
  • 20
    Sep
    2012
    7:13am, EDT

    $10M burglary: Thieves steal paintings, wine and a Porsche from Santa Monica home

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By NbcLosAngeles.com

    A $100,000 reward is being offered after a haul of art, vehicles and jewelry worth an estimated $10 million was stolen in a burglary in Santa Monica, Calif.

    Several "high-end paintings," a red 2010 Porsche Carrera 4S, several expensive watches, wine and a "small amount" of cash were taken in the heist, police said.

    The victim returned home from a trip on Sept. 14 to find that their home had been raided, according to Santa Monica police.


    Read the full story at NBCLosAngeles.com

    "We're looking for the public's help," said Sgt. Richard Lewis of the Santa Monica Police Department. "If they know anything about the crime, anybody trying to fence art, investigators are working any leads they can get while they work the leads they currently have."


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Investigators say the alleged crime occurred in the 500 block of 12th Street sometime between 3 p.m. on Sept. 12 and 8 p.m. on Sept. 14.

    Photographs of the stolen artwork along with the victim’s vehicle and descriptions of the watches are available on the Santa Monica Police Department's website.

    The victim is offering the $100,000 reward. 

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    290 comments

    WOW. People keep that kind of stuff in their homes? Just boggles my mind. People have that much laying around inside of their home? And the burglers stopped to take the time to steal wine? How about if information leads to an arrest that person gets their home paid off, a free cruise, meal at their  …

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    Explore related topics: us, art, police, heist, theft, burglary, crime, weird, santa-monica, featured
  • 7
    Sep
    2012
    9:46am, EDT

    Two California children believed abducted by father rescued after sailboat chase

    View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.

    By NBCBayArea.com

    Updated at 12:15 a.m. ET: After a long day of tracking a sailboat believed to be involved in a Bay Area abduction case, the United States Coast Guard recovered two children from South San Francisco down the coast about 20 to 30 miles off the Monterey Peninsula.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    The children were safe and suffered no injuries, according to the Coast Guard. They were reunited with their mother around 10 p.m. Friday.

    A fishermen tipped police after seeing Christopher Maffei and his children - Devin, 2, and Brooklynn, off Pillar Point by the San Mateo County coast. He made contact overnight, but couldn't tell authorities about it until he got back into radio range just after sunrise Friday morning.


    The Coast Guard, the FBI and South San Francisco police were dispatched to retrieve the children, and that is just what happened.

    Just before 9 p.m. the Coast Guard issued a press release titled, "Coast Guard, local agencies rescued missing children aboard sailboat off Calif. coast."

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    Officials said the rescue was peaceful and the suspect, 43-year-old Christopher Maffei, was cooperative. He is now in police custody.

    South San Francisco PD

    A white sailboat named "Unleashed" is shown in a photo before it was allegedly stolen.

    "A Coast Guard cutter approached the vessel and just started talking to them," Coast Guard spokesman Thomas McKenzie said. "He put his hands up and surrendered without incident."

    South San Francisco PD

    Police believe Christopher Maffei kidnapped his two children, Brooklynn and Devin, and took them aboard a stolen yacht.

    Members of the Coast Guard said they boarded the vessel and took the children off one at a time. Investigators said they decided to make contact with the suspect while he was still out at sea instead of waiting for him to get to land because they knew he was running low on fuel.

    All of the officials involved in the rescue said it was a great example of a successful partnership.

    “This case highlights the successful partnership between the Coast Guard and local law enforcement, the South San Francisco Police Department, the Federal Bureau of the Investigation, California Department of Fish and Game, Monterey County Sherriff’s and Police Department, Seaside Police Department and the Pacific Grove Police Department,” said Cmdr. Donald Montoro, Chief of Response, Coast Guard Sector San Francisco. “We train with our local partners so that when these complex situations arise we can respond quickly.”

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    The rescue comes three days after Maffei allegedly abducted his 3-year-old daughter, Brooklynn, and 2-year-old son, Devin, from their mother's home.
     
    For much of the day a C-130 aircraft was in the air over the yacht as a U.S. Coast Guard cutter from Treasure Island followed by water. It was not immediately clear if Maffei knew he was being followed.

    Devin Maffei, 2, left, and Brooklynn Maffei, 4, were abducted by their father Christopher Maffei on Sept. 4, according to South San Francisco Police.

    The children's mother, Jennifer Hipon, was anxiously awaiting her childrens' safe return at her South San Francisco home. She said that Maffei, whom she had dated in the past, had recently returned from Thailand, and had wanted to see his children.

    She agreed, but added that he had seemed increasingly anxious to be near the kids. His zeal to see the children scared her enough to seek a restraining order against him, she told NBC Bay Area on Friday. She was at the courthouse in Redwood City on Tuesday seeking that order, when she said Maffei went to her home on James Court about 3 p.m.

    Her mother was babysitting, and Hipon said he just grabbed the kids, one under each arm.

    Police then believe Maffei took off in a rented white Ford Fusion to the Bellena Isle Marina in Alameda, where he later allegedly stole a yacht from Alameda and sailed away. Investigators say that Maffei had been at the habor two weeks before, and had asked about buying a boat.

    The rental car was discovered at the marina and towed for evidence.

    The stolen boat was recovered and would be returned to its owner, according to police.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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    120 comments

    Where is the rest of the story? Was the mother using the kids against the dad so he felt he had to take the kids? Courts are not fair one bit to fathers they prefer the mothers regardless of how bad some really are so where is the rest of the story? How much was she getting in child support and yes  …

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    Explore related topics: california, theft, kidnapping, abduction
  • 15
    Aug
    2012
    9:23am, EDT

    Cops: Man steals pot from police because 'it smelled so good'

    By Andrew Mach, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A man in Pennsylvania who was arrested Saturday for allegedly stealing a bag of marijuana from a police station says he did so because he couldn’t resist the drug’s aroma.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS
    Follow @andrewjmach

    Police arrested David Allan Thompson, 27, for stealing a bag of pot that had been seized as evidence from the Charleroi Regional police department, according to the Observer-Reporter.

    He reportedly stopped at the police station at about 8 p.m. Saturday to offer information to Officer David Kimball about an unspecified case, according to a police affidavit filed with District Judge Jay Weller.

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    Kimball noted in the police report that at one point during their conversation, Thompson followed Kimball into a patrol room where the weed was sitting on a counter. Kimball then escorted Thompson back to the original room. After Thompson left the station, Kimball went back into the patrol room and noticed the bag of pot was gone.

    Kimball searched the desk and asked other officers about the evidence but found no trace of the weed. Another officer tracked Thompson down outside the police station, asking him, “What did you do with the weed?”

    Thompson held out his left hand and placed the bag in the officer’s hand, according to the affidavit. Police arrested Thompson and said they also found a suspected marijuana pipe in his pocket.

    Watch the most-viewed videos on NBCNews.com

    Police said that back at the station, Thompson apologized repeatedly, telling police, “I just couldn’t help myself. That bud smelled so good.” He also reportedly told police he couldn’t believe he was in trouble for “taking a little bit of weed,” especially since he had stopped by to give them information.

    The police affidavit didn’t specify what help Thompson intended to provide police.

    Thompson was arraigned before Weller on charges of theft, receiving stolen property, tampering with or fabricating evidence, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia.

    He is scheduled to appear in district court on August 23. Online court records list no attorney for him.

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    218 comments

    If he just would have left a dozen doughnuts in place of the weed, nobody would have noticed the missing bag.

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    Explore related topics: pennsylvania, marijuana, theft, pot
  • 7
    Aug
    2012
    5:15pm, EDT

    Four convicted in scheme to steal $6 million from Columbia University

    By NBC News staff and The Associated Press

    Four men were convicted Tuesday in what authorities described as a computer-savvy scheme to steal almost $6 million from Columbia University by tampering with its bill-payment system, the Associated Press reported.

    George Castro, Jeremy Dieudonne, Joseph Pineras and Walter Stephens Jr. stood stolidly as jurors delivered their verdict. Each man faces at least one to three years in prison at a sentencing set for Sept. 24.

    The Manhattan district attorney's office said the scam entailed manipulating Columbia's vendor-payment system to siphon off money that was meant for a hospital. The defense, meanwhile, said the men didn't realize money was being stolen.


    According to prosecutors, the money was diverted into a bank account held by Castro's information technology business, and some cash later went into accounts held by Dieudonne and Stephens.

    Pineras worked in Columbia's finance department. Prosecutors say he got about $10,000 for aiding the scheme.

    New York police started investigating in November when a university official reported that the accounts payable system had been tampered with to change account information for New York-Presbyterian Hospital, the Eagle-Tribune reported. New York-Presbyterian is a teaching hospital affiliated with Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons and Weill Cornell Medical College. 


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Kim Han said the men teamed up to bilk Columbia to solve their own financial problems.

    Castro bought himself an $80,000 Audi and was arrested carrying $200,000 in cash, prosecutors said. He told a police officer the money "just appeared in my account," authorities said in a court document. During the trial, Castro said he thought the money was coming from investors Dieudonne had lined up.

    "He has no sense, at all, that the money is stolen," his lawyer, Michele Hauser, told jurors Friday.

    Dieudonne, who represented himself, said he was "just doing business, perfectly legal business — nothing crooked."

    The 46-year-old Haitian was living under an assumed identity of Hector Santiago when he was arrested on Friday, according to the Eagle-Tribune.

    The defense also pointed fingers at another defendant, Moise Jean-Paul, who wasn't on trial and testified against the others. Jean-Paul has pleaded not guilty. He worked with Pineras in Columbia's finance department.

    The defense said Jean-Paul lied to prosecutors to incriminate the others and help himself.

    "He is a thief, and he is a liar," said Pineras' lawyer, Robert Anesi.

    He and Castro declined to comment as Castro left court on $5,000 bond, his pregnant wife in tears. The other men are jailed; their lawyers declined to comment.

    Jean-Paul's lawyer hasn't returned calls seeking comment during the trial.

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    19 comments

    Castro bought himself an $80,000 Audi and was arrested carrying $200,000 in cash, prosecutors said. He told a police officer the money "just appeared in my account," authorities said in a court document. During the trial, Castro said he thought the money was coming from investors Dieudonne had lined …

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    Explore related topics: theft, crime, courts, columbia-university
  • 5
    Aug
    2012
    5:47pm, EDT

    Pirates on the highways: Cargo theft costing nation billions

    View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.

    By Stephen Stock, Liz Wagner and Felipe Escamilla, NBCBayArea.com

    It is the costliest crime in America, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Organized crime drives it, money fuels it, and it has gone international. It happens nearly three times a day somewhere in America, and in California it happens twice as often as anywhere else in the nation.

    We’re talking about cargo theft — the high-cost, big-time crime that you’ve likely never heard about.

    “It really is huge,” said California Highway Patrol officer Xavier Spencer. “We estimate nationwide that it’s a $35 billion loss annually just in cargo theft and obviously that only involves the cargo theft that we’re made aware of. A lot of these thefts are not reported.”

    Spencer is part of the CHP’s Cargo Theft Interdiction Program or CTIP, and is one of 10 people on the force assigned to fight cargo theft full time in the state. He and just three other men cover the entire region north of Los Angeles County up to the Oregon border.

    For the past three months the NBC Bay Area Investigative Unit went undercover with CTIP investigators to expose this major crime. Reporters and producers went behind the scenes to track down stolen shipping containers in Stanislaus County; rode along on stings to look for lifted cargo in Gilroy; watched recovery operations at the Port of Oakland and reviewed surveillance video the team used to track down suspects.

    “A lot of times these guys will go park their trucks at the truck stop and go inside and clean up or get something to eat and they come out and their trailers and tractors are gone,” Spencer said. “Somebody just stole it within 30 seconds.”

    He says often times truckers pull up to an unmanned cargo truck, attach their cabs to the containers and drive away. Other times he says thieves will simply unlock the doors of the trailers and hand-unload the cargo inside. They make off with tons of merchandise — everything from electronics to drugs, computers to military supplies and weapons to wine — that they steal, hide in warehouses and then sell for profit.

    Read original story on NBCBayArea.com

    Last year the National Insurance Crime Bureau logged 1,215 cargo theft incidents across the country. That’s up 17 percent from 2010. According to a report from Cargo Net, an offshoot of NICB, California led all states with 304 occurrences of cargo theft in 2011. That’s more than $390 million in theft in the state in just the last two years alone. Texas was second on the list with 173 instances of cargo theft, followed by Florida with 146 occurrences.

    Those three states plus New Jersey, Illinois and Georgia accounted for 75 percent of all cargo stolen off of American highways last year. According to the report, food was the most commonly stolen item, followed by electronics, metals and clothing. Data from Freight Watch International, a logistics security provider, the largest cargo heist last year happened in Fremont when drivers made off with $37 million dollars worth of microchips in one haul.

    Victims of cargo theft frequently take big hits to their businesses. Griselda Bautista, owner of the Oakland-based warehousing company PCCS Inc., lost $65,000 worth of merchandise in 2008 when a trailer carrying a load of copy paper was lifted from her parking lot. 

    “It was picked off by a trucker,” Bautista said. “He just came in and broke the pin lock and took off. I couldn’t believe it. I was very upset. Everything that we went through, we lost. I mean, we almost went out of business the year after that because it was a hit that was a mark on your name.”

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    Bautista eventually found the trailer in Oakland on International Blvd., but the cargo was gone.

    “It’s American pirates — that’s what you got.” Bautista said. “We definitely learned a lesson about leaving a load out there that was unattended.”

    In April Spencer filed a federal case that resulted in the indictment of five suspects accused of lifting more than $2 million worth of cargo over the past five years. The suspects involved in Bautista’s case are included in those charges. According to federal court papers, stolen cargo was traced to and from California and places like Alabama and Maryland, even South Korea and Israel.

    The CTIP team says cargo theft operations are often times run by organized crime, and international in scope. In June Spencer’s colleague, CHP investigator Mark Locey intercepted a stolen cargo load of plastic resin worth $154,000 that was on its way to Asia.

    “It eventually wound back up on the ship going to the Port of Hong Kong,” Locey said. “It had been sold to a company in China.”

    Locey prevented the delivery of the plastic resin once he discovered that it had been stolen. He turned it back around in the Pacific Ocean, and seized the load once it returned to the Port of Oakland.

    Over the past four months, Locey located more than $500,000 worth of cargo allegedly stolen by the same person who reportedly took the cargo load of plastic resin. That man is now facing 14 felony counts associated with stealing and selling cargo and shipping containers.

    Right now cargo theft is a low-risk, high reward proposition because the crime carries minor criminal penalties. Steal a half-million dollars-worth of cargo and a criminal might get six months in jail, according to various law enforcement agencies. Compare that to ten years in prison if a thief gets caught with a half million dollars-worth of cocaine.  
     
    “It’s very difficult to prove that everything you recovered was stolen,” Spencer said. “So, sometimes District Attorneys are not willing to take a case that’s going to take a little bit of work.”

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    Partly for that reason this crime has largely been kept a secret for years, even as it grows in California and across the country. The CTIP team says that the problem is also being kept quiet by the very industry being victimized.

    “Some smaller companies would rather not let other trucking companies know they suffered a loss due to the fact that they don’t want to lose business,” Spencer said. “So, they’ll just have the insurance company pay it off and really not report the losses, so there are a lot we don’t know about.”

    And that, says the men who fight this every day, costs each of us in the form of higher prices passed on to consumers as companies lose more and more money off of stolen cargo loads.

    “Every consumer that goes into the store to buy something,” Locey said, “chances are they are paying for the cost of this type of theft.”

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    221 comments

    Just one of the many signs that the US is hurtling towards a 3rd world statues. Expect crimes to get worse, as more and more people give up hope on making it on a normal means..

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    Explore related topics: theft, crime, cargo, highway
  • 19
    Jul
    2012
    4:12pm, EDT

    Police: Mom hacks school's computer system to change kids grades

    By Louis Casiano, NBC News

    A Pennsylvania mother went to great lengths to see her children succeed when she logged into a school district's computer system to change their grades, state police and school officials say.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Catherine Venusto, 45, admitted to using password information obtained while employed as a secretary for the Northwestern Lehigh School District to log onto the computer system on multiple occasions, according to authorities. 

    Using district superintendent Dr. Mary Anne Wright's sign-on and password, she changed a failing grade for her daughter to a medical exception in 2010 and bumped up a grade of 98 to a 99 for her son in February, authorities said. 


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    She also used Wright's information gain access to emails and personnel files, assistant superintendent Jennifer Holman told NBC News.

    Authorities said Venusto also used employee passwords to access the district's human resource system.

    Venusto told police she logged into the system out of "curiosity" and "boredom," according to court records, The Morning Call reported.  

    The investigation began in February when Holman reported that a former employee had used the Wright's password and username to gain access into the district's computer system. 

    "We had a pretty good idea (identity of employee) because of the grades that were changed," Holman told NBC News.

    A teacher at district high school told the principal she had seen Wright's name as logging into an electronic gradebook system, Holman said.

    After district officials contacted Wright to inquire about her viewing student grades, she ordered a shutdown of the district's computer system.

    Watch US News crime videos on NBCNews.com

    "At the time, I didn't quite have a grasp of the scope of what happened, but I was immediately concerned for protected information," Wright said. "We shut down the system within three hours of learning there was a potential problem."

    As a secretary, Venusto's duties included creating sign-in and passwords for Wright and several other employees, the Morning Call reported. 

    Holman said she left her secretary job of six years in 2011 in good standing for a position with another school district before going to work for QVC, an online shopping network, according to a news release by the Lehigh County District Attorney's Office. 

    The release said an investigation found Venusto logged into the district's computer system more than 100 times using Wright's password. 

    Venusto used three different Internet-provider addresses, one from her home, the East Penn School District and another associated with QVC, to log onto the system, the news release said. 

    "We deeply regret this incident and that this unauthorized access occurred, and we sincerely regret any inconvenience this may cause," Wright said in a statement posted on the district's website.

    Holman said no evidence was found suggesting employee personal information was compromised or used for illegal purposes. She told NBC News that the grades for Venusto's children were the only ones changed. 

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    She has been charged with three counts of unlawful use of a computer and three counts of computer trespass, according to court records. 

    She was released on $30,000 bail Wednesday. 

    Police said she admitted her actions were unethical but not illegal. 

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    88 comments

    This woman is dumber than her own children. What does changing a grade from a 98 to a 99 accomplish?

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    Explore related topics: theft, cheating, identity-theft, computer-hacking, commentid-cheating
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    4:31am, EDT

    $150,000 Salvador Dali painting stolen from New York City art gallery

    By NBC New York and msnbc.com staff

    A Salvador Dali painting worth an estimated $150,000 was stolen from a Manhattan gallery earlier this week, police sources told NBC 4 New York on Thursday.

    NYPD via AP

    Salvador Dali's painting, "Cartel de Don Juan Tenorio," which was stolen from a New York art gallery on June 19.

    The 1949 painting, known as "Cartel de Don Juan Tenorio," appears to have been stolen on Tuesday from The Venus Over Manhattan gallery on Madison Avenue, police sources said.


    Surveillance cameras show a man wearing a dark shirt with white polka dots enter the gallery with a black cloth bag, police sources said. He is later seen on cameras leaving the gallery with the painting.

    The New York Daily News reported that the man took an elevator from the third floor onto street level and fled down 77th Street. 

    The painting was included in a display with other paintings as part of an exhibit at the gallery, which opened in May of this year, at 980 Madison Avenue between 76th and 77th Streets.

    NYPD via AP

    This image provided by the New York Police Department shows a surveillance camera image of a man suspected of stealing a $150,000 Salvador Dali painting from a Manhattan art gallery Thursday.

    Anyone with information is asked to call police.

    NBC New York and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    87 comments

    I have better art hanging on my refrigerator. The artists? My grandchildren!

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  • 25
    Apr
    2012
    2:36pm, EDT

    Cops: 4 take police bait car for joy ride as cameras roll

    By Sevil Omer, NBC News

    Police say a group of teens swiped a vehicle for a joy ride, not knowing it was a bait car carrying a surveillance camera that caught their 20-minute trip around Albuquerque on video.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    “It was one of the cars we park randomly around the city, specifically in hot spots where we have repeated auto burglaries and auto theft,” Albuquerque Police Officer Robert Gibbs said on Wednesday.

    Bait cars, also called decoy cars, are commonly used by law enforcement agencies nationwide to catch car thieves. Vehicles are often modified with GPS tracking, audio and video surveillance and can be remotely controlled. In a Texas case, police have turned to the public’s help in locating a couple who took a "bait car" with a hidden camera for a quick spin.

    Link to the video: See the decoy car escapade


    Surveillance video from Albuquerque shows a 15-year-old boy jumping into the driver’s seat of the car, picking up three friends along the way, according to KOAT-TV, an ABC News affiliate in Albuquerque.

    The scene is joyous with smiles and high-fives, the teens calling each other “dog.”

    "I saw this car with the keys inside. I opened the door, it was unlocked. I grabbed the keys and was like, this is the car," the teen driver says in the video.

    Video: Cops catch car thieves with hidden camera

    It doesn’t take long for the teens to get worried and begin to conspire. They talk about ditching the car and torching it, blaming the whole thing on someone else, according to KOAT-TV.

    "Oh my God, dog, what if we go to jail for this?! This is grand theft auto, dog! I'm (expletive) hopping the (expletive) out and running for my life! I'm on (expletive) probation," one of teens is heard saying.

    Video: Boy, 11, steals car, goes for joyride, police say

    But their ride comes to an end when the boys see red-and-blue lights flashing in the rear-view window.

    “That’s a cop,” a teen passenger is heard saying.

    His pal confirms the obvious.

    Gibbs said the four boys, whose identities were withheld because of their age, were charged with auto burglary and unlawful taking of a motor vehicle, both felony offenses.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Dad wires up autistic son, 10, to expose 'bullying' by teaching staff
    • Marine who criticized President Obama on Facebook discharged
    • Rodney King anniversary: 20 years after LA riots, have race relations improved?
    • Supreme Court hears arguments over Arizona immigration law
    • Video: Confederate flag dress gets teen banned from prom

    Follow US News on msnbc.com on Twitter and Facebook

    36 comments

    In this context I believe it is "dawg"....not dog.......

    Show more
    Explore related topics: auto, car, grand, police, theft, dog, ride, joy, bait
  • 15
    Mar
    2012
    1:30am, EDT

    The $10 million Degas ballerina, heiress Huguette Clark and the tax man

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    Detail from "Dancer Making Points," the Degas painting lost by the reclusive heiress Huguette Clark.

    By Bill Dedman, Investigative Reporter, NBC News

    NEW YORK — The mystery itself is a masterpiece. A $10 million painting by Degas — a simple figure of a ballerina in a yellow and red tutu pointing her toe – vanished from the New York City apartments of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark, and wound up, innocently enough, on the living room wall of Henry Bloch, a Kansas art collector better known as the "H" in the tax company H&R Block. How it got there is a multi-layered tale involving one of the more colorful transactions in the history of high-end art.

    For readers who have been following the Clark mystery story on msnbc.com, this episode provides a new piece of evidence that could be important in the legal battle over her $400 million estate. Now we know that her longtime physician, as part of a settlement over the painting, signed a statement swearing to her competency, describing his then-102-year-old patient as "mentally and physically alert." This was in 2008, or three years after she signed a will cutting her family out of any inheritance and planning an art museum in her California home.

    The circumstances in which the Degas ballerina disappeared from Clark’s Fifth Avenue apartments in the early 1990s remain unclear, but for the first time the story can be told of how it ended up in Bloch’s living room, above the sofa, between a Seurat and a Toulouse-Lautrec. And how Bloch was allowed to keep the painting even after the FBI came calling.


    When it was discovered in 2005 that Bloch and his wife had purchased a painting with a tainted past, a quiet dispute over its ownership erupted. It had been taken from Clark's apartment, but it also had been bought in good faith by the Blochs.

    Valuing her privacy more than her possessions, Clark had told her attorney and the FBI in 1992 not to pursue the loss of the painting. She didn't list it on the international registry of stolen art. As a result, in a high-stakes legal version of the children's rhyme "finder's keepers, loser's weepers," she may have lost her claim to the painting. The Blochs' attorney argued that it now belonged to them. 

    After well-mannered wrangling, Clark and Bloch reached a deal. Clark agreed to donate the painting to an art museum in Kansas City, Mo., the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, where Bloch had been a longtime trustee, chairman and benefactor, and where he and his wife had promised to donate all their art when they died. As part of the agreement, the heiress, not America's Tax Man, got the income tax deduction for the gift.

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    "Dancer Making Points" or "Danseuse Faisant des Pointes," 1879-1880, by Edgar Degas, pastel and gouache on paper mounted on board, from the collection of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri. The painting was donated by heiress Huguette Marcelle Clark 16 years after it went missing from her New York apartments.

    The handoff
    To seal the deal, the ballerina needed to change hands. In October 2008, on a clear but crisp Monday at the Bloch home in Mission Hills, Kansas, a museum representative handed the ballerina in the gilded frame to Clark's attorney, who handed it back to the museum, and back onto the Blochs' wall it went. The museum had agreed to lend the painting back to the Blochs, and they will have it as long as they live, renewing the loan every year. Then it will go back to its owner, the Kansas City museum, with the rest of the Bloch collection of Impressionist masterpieces.

    The parties signed a confidentiality agreement, keeping the whole business secret even from the staff of the museum. Only three of its 21 trustees were told.

    When the museum announced in 2010 the promise by the Blochs to donate 30 Impressionist masterpieces at their death, the Degas dancer was featured in The Kansas City Star newspaper, although the museum at that point had already owned the painting for two years.

    Last month, when asked about the ballerina, the museum public relations staff said emphatically that it was not owned by the museum.

    'Stunning'
    "This is a remarkably beautiful work by Degas. Everything about this work is stunning," wrote Joachim Pissarro, curator of the department of painting and sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, describing the gentle figure of a dancer in bold yellow and orange, set against brown floorboards and a green backdrop of foliage on a stage.

    Edgar Degas, the reluctant Impressionist who preferred to be known as a Realist, painted the ballerina in France in 1879-1880, as his eyesight was failing. It's a seemingly simple work, 19 by 14½ inches, with pastel and gouache applied to paper. It's known as "Dancer Making Points," or in French, "Danseuse Faisant des Pointes."

    The ballerina was sold at a gallery in Paris in 1927, then passed to the French collector Georges Lévy, who brought his collection to America in 1939-1940 to escape the Nazis. Huguette Clark or her mother bought it sometime before 1955.

    The youngest daughter of the former U.S. Sen. William Andrews Clark, known as one of the Copper Kings of Montana, Huguette Marcelle Clark was born in Paris in 1906. In his day, her father could have bought up all the works of all the Impressionists with one week's income from his mines, but he mostly preferred older paintings.

    Estate of Huguette M. Clark

    An undated photograph of copper heiress Huguette Clark, 1906-2011.

    In 1991, at age 84, Huguette Clark moved from her 42-room apartments on New York's Fifth Avenue, and would live the remaining 20 years of her life in hospital rooms. She left behind a Monet, a Renoir and many other treasures.

    Documents and interviews show that it didn't take long for one treasure to go missing.

    In 1992 or early 1993, her attorney, Donald Wallace, learned that the Degas ballerina was lost. There was talk that a member of the building staff had taken it, or that doormen had seen it next to a trash bin in the building. In any case, the ballerina was gone. Wallace informed his client, whom he never met face to face in 20 years of representation. Clark discouraged him from pursuing the matter, maintaining her longstanding policy of not doing anything that would generate publicity, even if it cost her millions.

    But her attorney, or the building manager, called the FBI. Wallace explained that Clark saw no visitors, but the FBI agents barged into her hospital room anyway. She discouraged them from investigating. She didn't file an insurance claim. She didn't register the painting with the Art Loss Register, a company founded in 1991 that was becoming the de facto place to check for stolen art.

    'Seemingly from a good family'
    Later in 1993, a well-dressed man walked into the Peter Findlay Gallery, about a 15-minute stroll down Fifth Avenue from Clark's apartment.

    "Many years ago," Findlay told msnbc.com in an email, "I had a gallery on Madison Avenue and sold good things of a European taste, particularly Impressionist works such as Degas, etc. Naturally people would stop in to look and to chat. Among them was a European gentleman, seemingly from a good family, who visited New York from time to time and would occasionally visit the gallery.

    "At some point he told me that he had inherited a work by Degas that had been in his family for many years and asked if I would help him sell it. Eventually the work was brought to the gallery. It had the aura of a work that had been in a family for a long time."

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    Henry and Marion Bloch, benefactors of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City. Henry Bloch and his brother founded H&R Block in Kansas City in 1955. The Henry Bloch biography, by their son, is entitled, "Many Happy Returns: The Story of Henry Bloch, America's Tax Man."

    At this time, Henry and Marion Bloch were shopping in New York for paintings. Henry and his brother, Richard, had founded a tax accounting firm in Kansas City in 1955, calling it H&R Block, changing the spelling slightly from their last name. They built a nationwide business after the Internal Revenue Service stopped helping people fill out their tax returns. Henry Bloch, 89 today, had been a navigator on American B-17 bombers during World War II, and by all accounts is a hard-working, humble man. He and Marion, who have been married for 60 years, built a collection of Impressionists, eventually acquiring works by Renoir, Monet, van Gogh.

    To buy one of Degas' famous series of dance paintings, for an undisclosed price, the Blochs sold a lesser Degas, of three dancers. Bloch later told The Kansas City Times, "This was so much finer."

    Findlay said he did everything he could to confirm the provenance of the painting, checking with the Art Loss Register. "I was shocked when I heard from the FBI that the Degas was stolen."

    Christopher A. Marinello, executive director and general counsel for the Art Loss Register in London, said in an interview that buyers should do their own checks on the authenticity and good title of art. "It costs less than $100 to check the ownership of a $5 million painting. People will buy a used car and they'll take it around the corner and put it up on a lift and check it out, and they'll get a Carfax report. They'll spend millions on art, and do nothing."

    The Blochs mostly kept their collection at home, but in the summer of 2007, the Degas held center stage at the Nelson-Atkins when the Marion and Henry Bloch Collection highlighted the opening of the Bloch Building, named for its benefactors. The exhibition was sponsored by the H&R Block Foundation. The museum displayed a close-up of the Degas ballerina as a signature image of the collection, and notecards with the image are still for sale today in the museum gift shop.

    Two years earlier, the museum and the Blochs had learned from the FBI that the Degas ballerina might belong to someone else.

    In 2005 an auction house in New York had noticed that a Degas owned by Clark (known then as "La Faisant des Pointes" or "Making Points") was apparently the same one sold to Henry Bloch.

    "I believe I may have been first contacted in late 2005," Henry Bloch said in a written answer to questions from msnbc.com, "by the FBI, who indicated that they were conducting an art investigation and wanted to confirm their information that we had purchased the Degas." The FBI, Bloch said, "did not give any indication that it had been stolen and gave us assurances there was nothing to worry about. I nevertheless shared the inquiry with my attorney at the time who discussed it with the Director of the Nelson-Atkins. I do not believe I was contacted again by them until late 2007."

    In late 2007, the Blochs received a subpoena from the U.S. Attorney's Office, asking them to turn the painting over to the federal court during the investigation. A round of meetings began with the FBI, the U.S. Attorney, and the attorney for Clark.

    Nobody wanted a lawsuit
    The attorney for the Blochs took the position that the painting was theirs, fair and square.

    Attorney John R. Phillips represented both the Blochs and the Nelson-Atkins. "The law is clear that the Blochs were – and the Nelson-Atkins Museum now is – the rightful owner of the work," he said in written answers to msnbc.com.

    The two sides couldn't agree whether the painting had actually been stolen. Clark's attorney argued that the FBI file clearly showed that the painting had been reported as stolen. The attorney for the Blochs argued that the FBI never concluded for sure whether the painting had been given away, lost or stolen.

    Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City

    The living room in the home of Henry and Marion Bloch in Mission Hills, Kansas, showing some of their collection of Impressionists. The Degas pastel of a ballerina is to the left of the sofa.

    Even if it had been stolen, the Bloch claim cited legal cases requiring diligence by the loser of property to try to recover it. The idea is that unreasonable and inexcusable delay puts an unfair burden on the later possessor of the property. The doctrine is called laches (from the Old French word for "slack"). Failing to exercise your rights can cause you to forfeit them. One of the well-known cases involved the artist Georgia O'Keefe, who never reported to police the loss of a painting. Moreover, a Kansas law (and the Degas ballerina was then in Kansas), called a statute of repose, sets a 10-year limit on a lawsuit to recover an item.

    Most people in Clark's position would have fought for their property, and Clark, a painter herself, did want her Degas to be returned. Documents show that her attorney, Wallace "Wally" Bock, advised her that she had the option to sue for the painting or its value. But she abhorred lawsuits, and a 102-year-old recluse was never going to sit for a deposition.

    The main goals for the Blochs were to keep possession of the painting during their lifetimes, and to make sure it then went to the Kansas City museum. Their attorney made a proposal: If Clark were to donate the painting to the Nelson-Atkins, the Blochs would give up ownership immediately, and cede possession after they died.

    Before the handoff, Sotheby's appraised the painting at $10 million. Clark would be able to claim that amount as a charitable deduction on her income tax return.

    On Oct. 7, 2008, in her recognizable handwriting, now a bit shaky, 102-year-old Huguette Clark signed a deed giving her ballerina to the Nelson-Atkins Museum. (Read the document in PDF form.)

    'Mentally and physically alert'
    There was one more hitch, which could play a large role in the court fight now beginning over Huguette Clark's $400 million estate. The museum would not accept the gift from the centenarian, particularly one whom they couldn't meet, unless Clark provided a doctor's statement affirming she was competent to make the gift.

    On Oct. 10, 2008, Clark's longtime physician signed a sworn statement. The affidavit by internist Dr. Henry S. Singman began by explaining that he was semi-retired, and had only the one patient.

    "I am and have been personal physician to Madame Clark, who resides at 907 Fifth Avenue, New York, New York, since 1991. As such, and because of her advanced age, I visit her on an almost daily basis."

    He said he had seen her just the day before. "At that time, and on all previous visits, I found her, although slightly hard of hearing, to be mentally and physically alert, able to read and comprehend written and printed material as well as verbal communications, competent to understand and execute documents and to sign her name thereto without assistance." (Read the document in PDF form.)

    Huguette Clark died at age 104 in May 2011, having signed two wills in 2005, when she was 98. The first will left nearly everything to her family, the great-grandchildren from her father's first marriage. The second will, signed just six weeks later, was more detailed, excluding her family entirely, making plans for an art museum in her Santa Barbara oceanfront home, and leaving about $36 million to her nurse ($27 million after taxes), a $40 million Monet to the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., with substantial gifts to a godchild, her doctor, her attorney, her accountant and others.

    If Clark was mentally competent in 2008 to make a stunning act of generosity, ceding any claim to a $10 million painting that had been taken from her, then it may be harder for her family to prove that she was incompetent in 2005 to sign that second will.

    The attorney for the family, John R. Morken, said he would first question Dr. Singman's independence. The doctor is not only a beneficiary in that second will, named to receive $100,000, but also received gifts from Clark of $60,000 to $115,000 a year in her last years, over and above his payment for medical services, similar to the large gifts she gave others in her tight circle. "Obviously he wouldn't say that she lacked capacity, or else these gifts would be invalid," Morken said yesterday. "All I can say is, I look forward to his deposition."

    Singman also signed a similar statement of her competency in 1995, as required by one of her banks for a financial transaction, long before she signed a will. He declined to comment this week.

    The family has made a second argument, contending that Clark was unduly influenced by the nurse, attorney and accountant to sign the second will. The attorney and accountant have said that it was drafted according to her explicit instructions.

    "In this transaction," said Morken, the family attorney, "I would question what was told to her, whether she knew what she was giving up."

    The temporary executor of her estate, the public administrator of the city of New York, has challenged certain gifts paid from Clark's accounts, including a $5 million gift to her nurse, but has not challenged the gift of the Degas. That silence could indicate that the executor found the gift to be well documented. The attorney for the public administrator, Peter Schram, declined to comment.

    'Strict confidentiality'
    On Oct. 27, 2008, the painting changed hands outside the Bloch home in Mission Hills, a suburb of Kansas City. The museum's director, Marc F. Wilson, now retired, was present for the round-robin hand-off, as was Phillips, the attorney for the Blochs and the museum. Clark was represented by her attorney, Bock, and accountant, Irving Kamsler. The 128-year-old painting was walked out to the car, handed around gently like a newborn baby, and back inside it went.

    The U.S. Attorney's Office withdrew its subpoena. No one was charged with taking the painting. The FBI said this month that the case remains open.

    W.A. Clark Memorial Library

    A childhood photograph of copper heiress Huguette Clark, 1906-2011.

    The exchange was kept secret. The Blochs and Clark signed a confidentiality agreement. The museum told only three of its 21 trustees, the three who serve as an executive committee. Even the museum's curators of European paintings were not told. No entry for the painting was created in the museum's records.

    "We have consistently worked to honor our donors’ wishes for privacy and to respect the strict confidentiality requested by Ms. Clark at the time of the gift to the museum," explained the new director of the Nelson-Atkins, Julián Zugazagoitia, who joined the museum in 2010, in written answers to msnbc.com.

    Was the museum's decision to lend the painting back to the Blochs, secretly, the ethical choice? The Nelson-Atkins is open free to the public, which would be able to enjoy the Degas today, if the museum staff knew that it owned the painting.

    If the Blochs had fought for ownership and won, the painting wouldn't have come to the museum any sooner, staying at the Bloch home as part of their collection until their deaths. If they had fought and lost, the painting would probably have remained hidden away in the Clark apartment until after she died in May 2011, and would be headed for her proposed art museum in California if her last will is upheld.

    "Despite a highly unusual course of events," museum direcdtor Zugazagoitia wrote, "and thanks to Ms. Clark's role as an additional benefactor to the museum, Mr. Bloch has been steadfast in ensuring that the work ends up in the museum's collection for the benefit of the public. We are extremely grateful for the generosity of both the Blochs and Ms. Clark."

    A memento
    Before the transaction was concluded, Huguette Clark made two requests.

    Though Clark gave the painting without restriction to the Nelson-Atkins, in a side letter she asked that her beloved Corcoran Gallery, where most of her father's art is on display, should be allowed to borrow the painting up to three times in 25 years. If it were shown there, she would receive credit by name. But in Kansas City, the painting is listed as an anonymous gift.

    After the Degas was deeded to the museum, the heiress also asked for, and received, a full-size color photograph of her ballerina.

    ---

    Reporter Bill Dedman is writing a nonfiction book about the Clark family. If you have information, you can reach him at bill.dedman@msnbc.com.

    Here's a video companion piece from KSHB in Kansas City:

    Degas masterpiece has its secret story of ownership revealed with ties to heiress Huguette Clark and Henry Bloch of H&R Bloch. KSHB's Christa Dubill reports.

     

    Previous stories in the Huguette Clark mystery series on msnbc.com:

    Archive of all stories, photos and videos.

    Photo narrative, "The Clarks: An American story of wealth, scandal and mystery," Feb. 26, 2010.

    Printable version of the photo narrative, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Clark family notes and sources, Feb. 26, 2010.

    Investigative report, part one, "At 104, the mysterious heiress Huguette Clark is alone now: Relatives are kept away. Only her accountant and attorney visit. Who protects HuguetteClark, with 3 empty homes and no heirs?" Aug. 19, 2010.

    Investigative report, part two, "Who is watching Huguette Clark's millions? Reclusive heiress's assets are sold by two advisers, one an accountant with a felony conviction. Another elderly client signed over his property to the same accountant and attorney," Aug. 20, 2010.

    "Criminal probe begins into the finances of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark: Manhattan DA's Elder Abuse Unit is on the case. The same unit prosecuted the Brooke Astor case; Clark has about four times the wealth," Aug. 24, 2010.

    "Report sparks welfare check on heiress Huguette Clark," Aug. 25, 2010.

    "Generosity of an heiress: four homes for a nurse, gifts for attorney's family," Sept. 1, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive heiress, has signed a will, attorney says," Sept. 2, 2010.

    "Family of copper heiress asks court to protect her from attorney, accountant," Sept. 3, 2010.

    "Attorney for 104-year-old heiress defends his handling of her finances," Sept. 7, 2010.

    "Judge leaves pair under investigation in control of heiress Huguette Clark's fortune," Sept. 9, 2010.

    "Huguette Clark, the reclusive copper heiress, dies at 104," May 24, 2011.

    "Family excluded from Huguette Clark burial," May 26, 2011.

    "Heiress Huguette Clark's will leaves $1 million to advisers," June 22, 2011.

    "The 1 percent of the 1 percent: How Huguette Clark's millions were spent," Nov. 19, 2011.

    "A $400 miillion twist: Huguette Clark signed two wills, one to her family," Nov. 28, 2011.

    "Tax fraud alleged in estate of heiress Huguette Clark; accountant resigns," Dec. 21, 2011.

    "Nurse, in line to inherit millions, battles family of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 22, 2011.

    "Judge bounces attorney and accountant from estate of heiress Huguette Clark," Dec. 23, 2011.

    "Book coming on reclusive heiress Huguette Clark and her family," Feb. 3, 2012.

    "You can move into heiress Huguette Clark's building, for $25 million," Feb. 6, 2012.

     "Family of heiress Huguette Clark claims fraud by nurse, attorney, accountant," Feb. 15, 2012.

     

     "Heiress Huguette Clark's apartments hit the market, listed at $55 million," March 9, 2012.

     

     "The jewels of reclusive heiress Huguette Clark go on auction," March 13, 2012.

     

    142 comments

    Somebody stole the darn thing and made some money from it.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: art, theft, featured, degas, huguette-clark, henry-bloch
  • 24
    Feb
    2012
    11:24am, EST

    Pain at the pump: Deputy interrupts elaborate gasoline theft

    video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player
    By msnbc.com staff

    As gasoline prices rise at the pump, so apparently does the brazenness of some thieves trying to steal it.

    In Tampa, Fla., authorities say criminals used a minivan with a cutout floorboard, a pump and a big plastic container in an elaborate scheme to siphon gas directly from a gas station’s underground storage tank.

    "When the price of the commodities goes up, we're not surprised to see that enterprising thieves will find ways to get that commodity and make a profit," St. Petersburg police spokesman Mike Puetz told the Tampa Bay Times.


    Hillsborough County sheriff’s officials say the gasoline caper happened Tuesday morning at a Citrus Park gas station. The suspects had cut a hole through the bottom of a Chevrolet minivan and parked the vehicle over the station's underground storage tank. They then used a portable pump to siphon gas into a plastic tank inside the minivan.

    A deputy working a midnight shift spotted the minivan parked at an odd angle at the closed gas station and went to check. As he pulled into the lot, the thieves took off in another vehicle, leaving the minivan and their liquid loot behind, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

    Investigators found several hundred gallons of gas in containers inside the van with another 25 gallons spilled in the parking lot.

    Marco Ishak, the gas station manager, told ABC News he was surprised by the attempted theft. “People are getting desperate,” he said. 

    "We had this problem pretty widespread a couple years ago," sheriff's Capt. Andy Ross said, according to the Tampa Bay Times. "It kind of ebbed. It seems like this is on the uptick again."
     
    The national average for a gallon of regular gas rose this week to $3.59, up more than 40 cents from a year ago, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Experts say prices at the pump could reach a record $4.25 a gallon by Memorial Day.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News

    • Which GOP candidate boasts most online buzz?
    • Gay Dallas judge won't perform straight marriages
    • Edwards' ex-mistress gets ownership of sex tap in settling lawsuit against aide
    • Girl shot: 9-year-old boy in orange jail jumpsuit cries in court

    102 comments

    Is this the "Hope & Change" I was promised. More like "Hoax and Chains"

    Show more
    Explore related topics: gas, theft, crime
  • 11
    Jan
    2012
    11:14am, EST

    Lockdown on Army base lifted; equipment still missing

    By NBC News and news services

    JOINT BASE LEWIS-MCCHORD, Wash. – A company of soldiers has been released from lockdown at Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington as criminal investigators probe the theft of $600,000 worth of weapons accessories.

    About 100 soldiers from the 4th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division were allowed to return home Tuesday evening after being restricted to their battalion headquarters since Jan. 4.

    Sources told KING5 the equipment went missing sometime between Christmas and New Year's. Someone realized a lock had been changed in the weapons room, and no one had a key to it.

    Read original story on KING5.com

    After breaking through the lock, JBLM officials tallied about $600,000 worth of missing weapon sights, night vision devices, optics, rifle scopes and other items.

    NBC sources said they do not believe the equipment was stolen for espionage, but rather to sell for profit.

    Brigade commander Col. Michael Getchell told The Associated Press the restrictions "have been an integral part of the investigation."

    An Associated Press phone message to the investigating office was not immediately returned.

    Lockdowns are a common military practice in cases like these, JBLM spokesman Major Chris Ophardt told NWCN.com.

    In March 2001, about 150 soldiers faced a similar situation over a one pair of missing night vision goggles, he said.

    KING5 and The AP contributed to this report.

    More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Number of Chinese students in US colleges soars
    • S. Carolina: Last chance for non-Romneys
    • The smart way to dig yourself out of debt
    • Ford looks to revitalize a musty old brand

    48 comments

    Who cares. The military is no longer an honorable profession. Sexual deviancy and moral depravity is now condoned, promoted, and defended by the United States. God help us all.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, base, soldiers, theft, weapons, lockdown, wash, lew-mcchord
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Investigative reporter Bill Dedman of NBC News is always looking for good investigative story ideas and documents. Bill received the 1989 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting, and has written full time for NBCNews.com since 2006.

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