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This Week in Art Crime

The New Inquiry, an online magazine that publishes cultural criticism and essays, has a regular feature called “This Week in Art Crime.” The feature compiles stories about art scams, forgeries, and heists, and it frequently makes for hilarious reading. Here’s a sample from this week:

Spanish Police have arrested two brothers from Girona, Spain, who attempted to sell a fake Francisco de Goya painting [see above] to a purported sheikh, EFE reports. But the “sheikh” was no victim: he paid the pair with photocopied money.

The con artists realized they had been tricked when they tried to deposit 1.7 million Swiss francs (€1.5 million) in a Geneva bank and were told that the banknotes were mere photocopies.

Spanish police officers found out about the scam in December 2014, when the Avignon customs warned them that they had intercepted two Spanish brothers trying to smuggle 1.7 million fake Swiss francs.

The sheikh had purportedly agreed to pay a total of €4 million for the Goya painting, entitled Portrait of don Antonio María Esquivel. The first batch of cash was to be collected in Turin, and was delivered by a middleman from the prince’s entourage. Apparently, the brothers verified the cash was legit with a machine, but the middleman managed to switch it before they left for Switzerland.

To add insult to injury, the brothers had also given a €300,000 premium to the middleman who had introduced them to the sheikh. In order to do so, they had asked a friend to lend them the money, promising to give it back the following day, with an extra €80,000.

Follow “This Week in Art Crime” at the New Inquiry website.

Who is the sheikh? How did the brothers find him? Who painted the forgery? How did the middleman switch the money? Much of this story isn’t being told by the article.