Harmony restored: US cops recover stolen Stradivarius
AFP
CHICAGO- In a stirring finale after a discordant series of events, US police recovered a rare Stradivarius violin that had been snatched from the concert master of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra.
A photo of the gleaming, 300-year-old instrument resting on a velvet cloth under a massive Milwaukee Police badge was issued to celebrate its safe return more than a week after the attack.
Around 600 of the violins made by the 17th century Italian master craftsman Antonio Stradivari are still in existence and they are prized for their incredible -- and inimitable -- sound.
One fetched about 11 million euros ($13.5 million) in a 2011 charity auction for victims of the Japanese tsunami.
Named after an early owner, the Lipinski Stradivarius stolen last week was on loan from an anonymous donor whose Wisconsin-based family had owned it for more than 50 years.
Three thieves set upon concertmaster Frank Almond after an evening performance at Wisconsin Lutheran College at 10:20 pm on January 27 and knocked him out with a stun gun.
Police were able to find the discarded case within a matter of hours but initially had little luck convincing the thieves -- who were arrested on Monday -- to tell them where to find the violin itself.
But within hours of a press conference on to announce the rests and a $100,000 reward, police were able to find the violin in a suitcase in the attic of a home on the city's east side.
Police said they believe the robbery was a "theft of opportunity" and that the thieves were not part of a crime ring.
One of the thieves -- Salah Jones -- made headlines in 1999 when he stole a painting from a Milwaukee art gallery and then tried to sell it back, local media reported.
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One fetched about 11 million euros ($13.5 million) in a 2011 charity auction for victims of the Japanese tsunami.
Named after an early owner, the Lipinski Stradivarius stolen last week was on loan from an anonymous donor whose Wisconsin-based family had owned it for more than 50 years.
Three thieves set upon concertmaster Frank Almond after an evening performance at Wisconsin Lutheran College at 10:20 pm on January 27 and knocked him out with a stun gun.
Police were able to find the discarded case within a matter of hours but initially had little luck convincing the thieves -- who were arrested on Monday -- to tell them where to find the violin itself.
But within hours of a press conference on to announce the rests and a $100,000 reward, police were able to find the violin in a suitcase in the attic of a home on the city's east side.
Police said they believe the robbery was a "theft of opportunity" and that the thieves were not part of a crime ring.
One of the thieves -- Salah Jones -- made headlines in 1999 when he stole a painting from a Milwaukee art gallery and then tried to sell it back, local media reported.
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