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'Self-Portrait' by Meijer de Haan (circa 1889-’91). Rotterdam Police image.

Dutch investigators heading to Romania over art heist

'Self-Portrait' by Meijer de Haan (circa 1889-’91). Rotterdam Police image.
‘Self-Portrait’ by Meijer de Haan (circa 1889-’91). Rotterdam Police image.

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) – Dutch detectives and a prosecutor will travel to Romania to investigate the possible involvement of three men in a multimillion-dollar art heist in the Netherlands, a police spokesman said Wednesday.

The Dutch team will travel to Bucharest in coming days to share with Romanian authorities details of their investigation into the Oct. 16 theft from Rotterdam’s Kunsthal gallery of seven extremely valuable paintings by artists including Picasso, Monet and Matisse, said Roland Ekkers of Rotterdam Police.

Romanian police arrested the suspects Monday night “in another art-related investigation in Romania, but there are indications they also have something to do with the art heist in Rotterdam,” Ekkers told The Associated Press.

The arrests marked the first breakthrough for police since the late-night raid at the Kunsthal, the biggest art theft in more than a decade in the Netherlands.

Ekkers said reports that some of the paintings were recovered were wrong.

Romanian police “checked, double checked and checked again and it is not true,” he said.

Romanian police declined to comment on the case Wednesday.

The stolen paintings came from the private Triton Foundation, a collection of avant-garde art put together by multimillionaire Willem Cordia, an investor and businessman, and his wife, Marijke Cordia-Van der Laan. Willem Cordia died in 2011.

The stolen paintings were: Pablo Picasso’s 1971 Harlequin Head; Claude Monet’s 1901 Waterloo Bridge, London and Charing Cross Bridge, London; Henri Matisse’s 1919 Reading Girl in White and Yellow; Paul Gauguin’s 1898 Girl in Front of Open Window; Meyer de Haan’s Self-Portrait, around 1890; and Lucian Freud’s 2002 work Woman with Eyes Closed.

The apparent ease with which a pair of thieves managed to grab such a valuable haul of art was stunning.

The thieves broke in through an emergency exit at the rear of the Rem Koolhaas-designed building, grabbed the paintings off the wall and fled, all within two minutes.

Police who arrived less than five minutes after the break-in triggered an alarm found nothing but empty spaces on the walls, broken hanging wires and tire tracks in grass behind the gallery.

The gallery said after the theft that it had a “state of the art” alarm system. Willem van Hassel, the museum’s chairman, said its security systems are automated and do not use guards on site.

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

AP-WF-01-23-13 1512GMT


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


'Self-Portrait' by Meijer de Haan (circa 1889-’91). Rotterdam Police image.
‘Self-Portrait’ by Meijer de Haan (circa 1889-’91). Rotterdam Police image.