fake Goya oil Painting Con
Last Post 28 Feb 2015 08:19 PM by enamels1000. 3 Replies.
Printer Friendly
Sort:
PrevPrev NextNext
You are not authorized to post a reply.
Author Messages
Advertising Antiques LtdUser is Offline
Guru Tat
Guru Tat
Send Private Message
Posts:4949
Advertising Antiques Ltd

--
23 Feb 2015 03:11 PM  

 The painting and the ‘loot’: 1.7m counterfeit Swiss Francs© Provided by The Independent The painting and the ‘loot’: 1.7m counterfeit Swiss Francs

Two Spanish con-men’s attempted sale of a forged Goya painting backfired spectacularly after their client, supposedly a rich Arab sheik, paid them in counterfeit bank-notes worth 1.7 million Swiss Francs. The middleman who had brokered the deal then vanished with the only genuine money in the affair -  300,000 borrowed euros -  and, finally, the two con-men themselves were arrested.

The opening chapter of a bizarre real life cautionary tale for would-be fraudsters began when the con-men, two brothers from Girona in Catalonia bought the Goya painting - a 80cmx60cm portrait of Spanish artist Antonio Maria Esquivel - in 2003. They believed both the painting and the authenticity certificate for the artwork to be genuine.

However after experts declared it a 19th century fake, a Girona court in 2006 said the pair could keep the painting for the 20,000 euro deposit they had already paid, rather than the 270,000 euro full price they had originally agreed.

In December 2014, the two brothers then arranged to sell the fake Goya themselves to an alleged Arab sheik for 4 million euros, using the same authenticity certificate with which they had been conned a decade before. A mysterious Italian middleman then charged the Spaniards 300,000 euros of their own money as a commission for brokering the deal.

The two conmen duly travelled to Turin to receive 1.7 million Swiss Francs as a down payment as the 300,000 euros - borrowed by the brothers from a friend -  were simultaneously handed over to the middleman in Girona.

However, when the conmen attempted to pay the Swiss francs into a bank in Geneva, it emerged that what the Spaniards had actually received were nothing more than photocopies.

To make matters even worse, on leaving Switzerland the two were then detained by French customs, who discovered the fake Swiss Francs in their suitcase, and informed the Spanish authorities.

Whilst the alleged sheik and the Turin middleman have both disappeared, along with the 300,000 euros, the two have now been charged for attempted fraud. As for  the fake painting by Goya, it has  been confiscated -  although the real Goya himself,  known for his dark sense of humour as well as being a father of modern-day surrealism, might well have seen the grimly funny side of the con-men’s singular failure to make a fortune with his name.

hilbertUser is Offline
Guru Tat
Guru Tat
Send Private Message
Posts:1226
hilbert

--
23 Feb 2015 03:26 PM  

Fascinating story. Thanks for posting Al.

LummoxUser is Offline
The Tatfather
The Tatfather
Send Private Message
Posts:5223
Lummox

--
24 Feb 2015 04:59 AM  
It now on ebay ......................no 453678976545 etc !
enamels1000User is Offline
Guru Tat
Guru Tat
Send Private Message
Posts:2382
enamels1000

--
28 Feb 2015 08:19 PM  

 Ha Ha Ha.Well we can't win em all.,,,We win some We loose some.

You are not authorized to post a reply.

Active Forums 4.2
NOT LICENSED FOR PRODUCTION USE
www.activemodules.com