Subhash Kapoor | |
---|---|
Nationality | Indian American |
Years active | 1974–2011 |
Criminal status | Convicted in India |
Criminal charge | art theft, grand larceny, [1] criminal possession of stolen property [1] |
Penalty | 7 year prison term for conspiracy, and an additional 3 years for dealing in stolen objects |
Subhash Kapoor is an Indian American art smuggler who was convicted for running a $100 million international smuggling racket. [2] [3] He was previously the owner of the Art of the Past gallery in Manhattan. His sister business, Nimbus Import/Exports, specialised in selling antiquities from across the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia to major museums around the world. [4] [1]
In early October 2011 India’s Central Bureau of Investigation issued an international alert, known as an Interpol’s Red List Notice, for Kapoor’s “non bailable” warrant for arrest in connection with a theft case at the temple in Sripuranthan village, in the Ariyalur district of Tamil Nadu. On 30 October 2011, Kapoor was arrested at Frankfurt International Airport and on 14 July 2012 extradited to Chennai, India on charges of receiving artifacts that had been stolen from disused temples in southern India. [4] Many of these objects were purchased by museums throughout the world. [5] For example, in 2008 an 11th-century Chola-period bronze statue of a Dancing Shiva was sold by Kapoor to the National Gallery of Australia for $5.6 million (see Sripuranthan Natarajan Idol). The statue was allegedly stolen from an Indian temple in Tamil Nadu. [6] [7] [8]
Kapoor was handed over to India by German authorities and extradited in July 2012 and is initially held in custody in Chennai. He was later transferred to Vellore Central Prison in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu and still later to the high security block of Tiruchirapalli Central Prison while awaiting trial for the theft of idols from Varadaraja Perumal temple in the state's Ariyalur district in Tamil Nadu. [3] He was attacked by a fellow inmate Kongu Yuvaraj, who was accused of committing an honor killing, following a heated argument between these two. [9] [10]
In 2012 the Manhattan District Attorney's Office issued an arrest warrant for Subhash Kapoor. By November 2019 that office had indicted Kapoor for a total of 86 Counts in the New York, including Grand Larceny in the First Degree (1 Count), Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the First Degree (16 Counts), Grand Larceny in the Second Degree (13 Counts), Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Second Degree (50 Counts), Grand Larceny in the Third Degree (1 Count) Criminal Possession of Stolen Property in the Third Degree (3 Counts), Conspiracy in the Fourth Degree (1 Count) and one Count of Scheme and Defraud in the First Degree. All of the charges were based upon evidence gathered by the New York public prosecutor's office investigation, assisted by the Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement – Homeland Security Investigations into the illegal importation and sale of stolen antiquities and other art objects and for having provided said items with fraudulent provenance documents of prior ownership. [11]
On 1 November 2022 Kapoor was found guilty in India under the following charges related to the case involving the theft of idols:
IPC penal code section 411 (dishonestly receiving stolen property) carrying with it a three year prison sentence plus a fine.
IPC penal code section 413 (receives or deals in property which he knows or has reason to believe to be stolen property) carrying with it a three year prison sentence plus a fine.
IPC penal code section 120 b (criminal conspiracy) carrying with it a seven year prison sentence plus a fine.
In 2015, the Manhattan District Attorney's Office brought a civil forfeiture action against antiquities dealer Subhash Kapoor over an enormous collection of allegedly looted antiquities and in July 2020 filed their own extradition paperwork for former New York dealer, while he was in prison in India pending the completion of his ongoing trial in Tamil Nadu. [12]
In November 2022, Kapoor was sentenced by Chief Judicial Magistrate D Shanmuga Priya, to a seven-year prison term for conspiracy with an additional three years for buying and dealing in stolen goods. Despite having already served the entirety of that sentence while his case progressed through the court in India. Kapoor remains in custody due to an extradition hold related to a request by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office. [13]
In July 2023, Kapoor was required to serve an additional three months in prison for non-payment of a Rs 7,000 court-imposed fine of Rs 7,000. [14] Sources in the Tamil Nadu Police speculated to the ThePrint, an Indian news website, that the non-payment of the fine may have been a deliberate ploy to delay his extradition to the US. [14] As of July 2023, Kapoor remains in prison in Tamil Nadu, awaiting trial in three additional idol theft cases. [14] According to Advocate Senthil Vadivelu, the Tamil Nadu government has requested the continuation of these cases, but progress is stalled due to the New York City government's reluctance to proceed, as Kapoor is also wanted in the US. [14]
On November 10, 2022 the Manhattan District Attorney, Alvin L. Bragg, Jr., announced the return of 187 antiquities collectively valued at nearly $3.4 million to the people of Pakistan all of which had been seized pursuant to the Office’s investigation into Subhas Kapoor's smuggling operation. [15]
In 2022, the US returned 307 recovered antiquities to India, worth more $4 million, three quarters of which were linked to Kapoor. [16]
In April 2022, the Yale University Art Gallery surrendered items valued at more than $1 million as part of art looting investigation. The 13 South Asian artifacts returned by the museum were smuggled by Kapoor. [17]
On 30 March 2023 the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, announced that it had relinquished 15 antique sculptures to the Government of India after being informed that they were “illegally removed” from India. All the sculptures had been sold at one point by Subhash Kapoor. [18]
In April 2024, the US returned stolen antiquities linked to Kapoor to Cambodia and Indonesia. [19] The stolen antiquities that were returned, including a bronze Shiva triad, were valued at $3 million. [19]
Colonel Matthew Bogdanos is an Assistant District Attorney in Manhattan, author, boxer, and a retired colonel in the United States Marine Corps. Following the September 11, 2001 attacks, Bogdanos deployed to Afghanistan where he was awarded a Bronze Star for actions against Al-Qaeda and the Taliban. In 2003, while on active duty in the Marine Corps, he led an investigation into the looting of Iraq's National Museum, and was subsequently awarded the National Humanities Medal for his efforts. Returning to the District Attorney’s Office in 2010, he created and still heads the Antiquities Trafficking Unit, “the only one of its kind in the world.” He had previously gained national attention for the prosecution of Sean Combs, who was acquitted of weapons and bribery charges in a 2001 trial stemming from a 1999 nightclub shootout.
The Ministry of Culture is the Indian government ministry charged with preservation and promotion of art and culture of India.
Tiruchirapalli Central Prison is located in Tiruchirapalli, India. The prison was built during 1865. The prison complex occupies an area comprising 289.10 acres (1.1699 km2). It is authorised to accommodate 2517 prisoners.
Udayarpalayam taluk is a taluk of Ariyalur district of the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. The headquarters of the taluk is the town of Jayankondam.
Sripurandan (North) is a village in the Udayarpalayam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.
Suthamalli is a village in the Udayarpalayam taluk of Ariyalur district, Tamil Nadu, India.
Deepambalpuram is a village in the Papanasam taluk of Thanjavur district, Tamil Nadu, India.
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The Sayavaneswarar Temple or Chaayaavaneswarar is a Hindu temple situated in the village of Thirusaikkadu [or Thiruchaykkadu or Chaayavanam] near Kaveripoompattinam or Puhar, Mayiladuthurai in Mayiladuthurai district of Tamil Nadu, India. The presiding deity is the Hindu god Shiva. The temple dates from the time of the Medieval Cholas. The Saivite Nayanmars have sung of the temple in their songs.
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The Sripuranthan Natarajan Idol, is a 900-year-old statue of Natarajan — the dancing Shiva — that was stolen from the ancient Brihadeeswarar temple of Sripuranthan, smuggled to the United States, and then sold to the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra with a false provenance, for US$5.1 million. The statue was consequently returned by Australia to the Indian government on ethical grounds, once questions were raised on due diligence not being followed during the acquisition.
India Pride Project (IPP) is a grassroots group of art enthusiasts who use open source intelligence to identify stolen religious artefacts from temples in India in order to facilitate their return. Co-founded in 2014 by two Singapore-based art enthusiasts, S. Vijay Kumar and Anuraag Saxena, it now has activist volunteers from all over the world.
Arpakkam is a village in the Kanchipuram district of Tamil Nadu, India. According to the 2011 census of India, it has a population of 2937.
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Operation Antiquity is one of a series of operations by U.S. federal law enforcement agencies to investigate the smuggling of ancient artifacts from Thailand to the United States since 2002. After several years of secrecy, the case was uncovered on January 24, 2008 by federal law enforcement officers who raided multiple museums, shops, warehouses, and the homes of private art collectors and made headlines in several international media at the time. news.
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Apsara Iyer is an American art crime investigator and the 137th president of the Harvard Law Review. She is the first Indian American woman to be elected to that position.
Nancy Wiener is an antiquities dealer who pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and possession of stolen property.