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Mother of accused French
art thief says she smashed stolen objects
at 18:55 on January 6, 2005, EST.
STRASBOURG, France (AP) - The mother of an accused French art
thief told a court Thursday how she used a hammer to destroy works
of art and force them into trashbags upon learning of her son's
arrest.
Mireille Breitwieser testified on the opening day of the trial
of her son, Stephane Breitwieser, 33, who is charged with stealing
art from museums across Europe during a seven-year rampage that
stunned the art world.
His most valuable haul was Lucas Cranach the Elder's Sybille,
Princess of Cleves, valued at the equivalent of about $10 million
Cdn and taken from a museum in Baden-Baden, Germany, in 1995,
experts said.
The Art Loss Register in Britain said the masterpiece is among
those believed destroyed.
Prosecutors said upon learning of her son's arrest, she rushed
into his bedroom and chopped up paintings. She allegedly forced
treasures down the waste-disposal and threw others into the
Rhine-Rhone canal near the Swiss border. She also hid some
religious works in a chapel, officials said.
"I blew a fuse," Mireille Breitwieser, who also faces
charges, told the court Thursday.
"I put everything into trash bags, the metalwork, the
ancient porcelains, the ivories, paintings...I hit them with a
hammer to push them down."
She said she believed her son had bought the works at flea
markets.
"She is naive and knows nothing of the value of
things," Breitwieser said of his mother.
She faces charges of concealment and destruction of stolen
goods, and risks five years in prison if convicted by the court in
Strasbourg. Anne-Catherine Kleinklauss, the son's ex-girlfriend
who acted as a lookout, is accused of receiving stolen items.
Breitwieser, a former waiter who once told a Swiss court his
desire to acquire art "became a compulsion," said he had
been visiting museums alone since he was 10 and had a passion for
works from the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.
Of his mother, he said: "She threw my life into the trash
can."
Defence lawyer Joseph Moser said Stephane Breitwieser was
motivated solely by a love of art.
"This is truly passion in its purest form," he said.
"There was no desire for cupidity, no desire for
lucre," Moser said outside the courtroom.
"He never resold, or sought to resell, a work of
art."
Prosecutors in France have estimated the value of the haul at
up to the equivalent of $1.6 billion. But others have offered
significantly lower estimates and Swiss authorities have also said
it is unclear how much the stolen art was worth.
Bernard Dastries, an official from a French government office
for combatting trafficking in cultural relics, said Thursday the
haul was worth an estimated $20 million.
Breitwieser, from a well-to-do family in the eastern French
region Alsace, could face up to three years in jail for allegedly
stealing 23 works in France, plus two in Denmark and one in
Austria.
Officials said he stole paintings, tapestries, silver and ivory
pieces, and books from 140 museums in Europe starting in 1995.
Swiss police arrested him in November 2001 when he returned to a
museum to wipe away his fingerprints after stealing a hunting
horn.
In the Swiss court, Breitwieser confessed to stealing 239
paintings and museum works, including thefts in Austria, Belgium,
Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland. His
hauls included works by Flemish artist Peter Bruegel and French
painters Francois Boucher and Antoine Watteau.
Swiss authorities sentenced him to four years in prison and
banned him from the country for 15 years. They extradited him to
France in July 2004.
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