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CLAMPARU: Rare books stolen in Hatton Garden-style London raid 3 years ago found buried in Romania


ABOUT 200 culturally significant books stolen in a sophisticated Hatton garden-style burglary more then three years ago have been found buried in Romania. Officers from the Met Police Specialist Crime South in partnership with the Romanian National Police have recovered the books (pictured above) worth around £2.5 million from a rural location in Romania.

The books were recovered on Wednesday, September 16, following the search of a house in Neamț by Romanian officers who discovered them buried underground.

The books had been stolen in January 2017, during a highly sophisticated burglary in Feltham, west London, in which the burglars cut holes in the roof and abseiled into the warehouse, avoiding sensors.

The books, which include works from the seventeenth century by Italian astronomer Galileo, Sir Isaac Newton, and the eighteenth century Spanish painter Francisco Goya, have a combined value in excess of £2.5 million, but are deemed to be of international importance and are considered irreplaceable.

Over the past three years the Met has been working in conjunction with officers from the Romanian National Police and Italian Carabinieri, supported by Europol and Eurojust, on the international operation to recover the books and bring the offenders to justice.

In January 2017 the books were being stored in a postal transit warehouse in Feltham waiting to be sent to Las Vegas for a specialist book auction.

A Met Police spokesman said: "The suspects broke in by cutting holes in the roof and then abseiling down, avoiding the many sensors. The books were located and stolen in 16 large bags, with the suspects leaving the same way they entered."

Detective Inspector Andy Durham, from Specialist Crime South, said: “This recovery is a perfect end to this operation and is a demonstration of successful joint working between the Met and our European law enforcement partners in Romania and Italy - and at Europol and Eurojust. 

"These books are extremely valuable, but more importantly they are irreplaceable and are of great importance to international cultural heritage.

"If it wasn’t for the hard work of Detective Constable David Ward and others in this Joint Investigation Team these books would have been sadly lost to the world forever.”

The Met investigation identified the suspects involved were part of a Romanian Organised Crime Group (OCG), known as the Clamparu crime gang, that were responsible for high-value warehouse burglaries across the UK.


RECOVERED: The books laid out after being found on Wednesday (Met Police)

The OCG flies members into the UK to commit specific offences and then fly them out of the country shortly afterwards, with the stolen property taken out of the country by other OCG members using different transport methods.

The OCG is linked to a number of prominent Romanian crime families who form part of the Clamparu crime group.

This group is based in the Lași region in Eastern Romania and have a history of complex and large-scale high value thefts, yet have mainly avoided prosecution by offending outside Romania.

A joint operation with the Romanian National Police and Italian Carabinieri, supported by Europol and Eurojust, has since evidenced another 11 offences in London and across the UK where a further £2 million worth of property has been stolen, generally using the same method of entering through the roof.

This culminated in coordinated arrests and searches of 45 addresses across the UK, Romania and Italy in June 2019.

Thirteen individuals were charged in the UK with conspiring to commit burglaries between December 2016 and April 2019, and to acquire criminal property.

Court proceedings continue at this time, with 12 individuals having already pleaded guilty and sentencing is due to take place over four days, beginning on Monday, 28 September.

The thirteenth defendant will tried in March 2021.

Investigations have continued since the coordinated action in June 2019 and this has resulted in the further searches today that have led to the recovery of these books.

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