The chief investigator for a Boston museum still working to recover $500 million worth of art stolen in 1990 says he's hoping for new leads to emerge following the death of a key figure in the case
By MICHAEL MELIA Associated Press
September 23, 2021, 8:38 PM
• 3 min read
Share to FacebookShare to TwitterEmail this articleHARTFORD, Conn. -- The chief investigator for a Boston museum still working to recover $500 million worth of art stolen in 1990 said Thursday he was hoping for new leads to emerge following the death of a highly scrutinized figure in the case.
A Connecticut mobster who died last week, Robert Gentile, had long been suspected of possessing at one time some of the pieces taken from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in history's largest art heist.
But Anthony Amore, who is also the museum's security director, said investigators had not been focused entirely on Gentile.
“One interesting thing is when masterpieces like these are stolen they are often recovered and often it happens a generation or two after the heist," Amore said in an interview. "And sometimes that’s because somebody passes away or relationships become estranged. And perhaps with Mr. Gentile’s passing, someone will feel liberated to speak about what they know. That’s conjecture. That’s hopeful talk.”
A spokesperson for the FBI in Boston, Kristen Setera, said its investigation remains active and noted the museum has offered a $10 million reward for the artwork's recovery.
“We vigorously investigate every tip we receive,” Setera said.
On March 18, 1990, two men masquerading as Boston police officers got into the museum by telling a security guard they were responding to a report of a disturbance, according to authorities. The guard and a co-worker were handcuffed and locked in the basement while the thieves made off with the 13 pieces of art.
The missing pieces include Rembrandt’s only known seascape, “Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee,” and Vermeer’s “The Concert,” one of fewer than 40 known paintings by the 17th-century Dutch painter.
Federal authorities described Gentile as a person of interest, saying he talked about the stolen paintings with fellow prisoners and once told an undercover FBI agent he had access to two of the paintings and could negotiate the sale of each for $500,000. His home outside Hartford was searched several times by federal agents, and he served several years in prison after they found firearms he was prohibited from owning as a convicted felon. But he insisted he knew nothing about the theft or the paintings' location.
Robert Fisher, who worked on the investigation as a member of the U.S. attorney's office in Boston until 2016, said the investigation likely had determined all there was to know about Gentile's possible role.
“To me I thought if he really did know or have information about the paintings that he would have given that up before he passed away, particularly considering the reward was now up to $10 million,” Fisher said. “If the theory was that he had access to paintings, he had every opportunity to come forward when he was in prison and out of prison and very ill.”