Current:Home > MarketsFamily of late billionaire agrees to return 33 stolen artifacts to Cambodia -ProfitPioneers Hub
Family of late billionaire agrees to return 33 stolen artifacts to Cambodia
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:35:57
Thirty-three artifacts, including statues and artwork, belonging to the Khmer people of the Kingdom of Cambodia will be returned to their native land, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York announced Tuesday.
The family of the late George Lindemann, a billionaire businessman who was CEO of natural gas pipeline company Southern Union, voluntarily agreed to return the artifacts to Cambodia on Monday, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. Lindemann died in 2018.
Cambodian officials plan to host a ceremony celebrating the return of the cultural relics.
"For decades, Cambodia suffered at the hands of unscrupulous art dealers and looters who trafficked cultural treasures to the American art market," said Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, in a statement.
Williams said the historic agreement will set the framebook for returning items of cultural significance back to Cambodia under the "U.S.-Cambodia Cultural Property Agreement," which was first signed in 2003 and renewed in late August.
“It pleases the Cambodian government that the Lindemann family, in possession of these national treasures, knowing they were wrongfully possessed, have duly and voluntarily returned them to their rightful owners," Phoeurng Sackona, Cambodia’s minister of culture and fine arts, told the New York Times.
The Lindemann family said in a statement to the Times that "having purchased these items from dealers that we assumed were reputable, we were saddened to learn how they made their way to the market in the United States."
HOW THE DE KOONING ENDED UP IN ARIZONA:This is the saga of Arizona's famous stolen Willem de Kooning painting
Expansive collection
The collection included 10th and 12th-century statues and artworks stolen from Angkor Wat and Koh Ker, which are major religious and archeological sites in Cambodia. One statue depicting Dhrishtadyumna, a hero from the Sanskrit epic Mahabharata, was stolen from the Khmer kingdom’s ancient capital Prasat Chen.
Other antiques include a 10th-century sculpture of Ardhanarishvara – a deity who is half-male and half-female – a kneeling figure taken from Banteay Srei, an ancient temple in Cambodia, and six heads of devas and asuras, or angels and demons, that aligned the gates to the city Angkor Thom.
The case is being handled by the Justice Department's Money Laundering and Transnational Criminal Enterprises Unit.
Previous cases
This is not the first such case filed in the Southern District of New York. In 2014, a sculpture of Duryodhana, the main antagonist in the Mahabharata, was recovered after it was looted from Cambodia. Last year, officials returned a sculpture depicting the god of war Skanda on a peacock.
Most of these relics were stolen from the same temple site.
Since 2012, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York and the Department of Homeland Security have identified and returned 65 stolen and trafficked Cambodian antiquities owned by various individuals and groups in the U.S.
NEWS DEVELOPING INTO THE EVENING:For an update later tonight, sign up for the Evening Briefing.
British art dealer Douglas Latchford was indicted in the Southern District of New York in 2019 for wire fraud conspiracy and other crimes related to selling stolen Cambodian antiques on the international market. The indictment was dismissed when Latchford died in 2020.
Lindemann, a known collector of artifacts, was featured in a 2008 article with luxury magazine "Architectural Digest," according to The Washington Post. Photos showed more than a dozen Khmer statues displayed in a Florida mansion.
Art experts and archeologists working with the Cambodian Ministry of Culture told the Post in 2021 that six of those artworks were "definitely looted."
Prosecutors said Latchford was a key middleman in transactions between temple looters and wealthy collectors. U.S. officials said the recent agreement with the Lindemanns does not indicate that the family violated federal laws.
veryGood! (691)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Blake Lively Makes Golden Appearance at Michael Kors' Star-Studded New York Fashion Week Show
- ‘Stop Cop City’ petition campaign in limbo as Atlanta officials refuse to process signatures
- Explosion at Archer Daniels Midland plant in Illinois injures 8 workers
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Teen arrested after a guard shot breaking up a fight outside a New York high school football game
- J.M. Smucker to buy Hostess for $5.6 billion
- Man who crashed car hours before Hurricane Idalia’s landfall is fourth Florida death
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Michigan Catholic group wins zoning fight over display of Stations of the Cross
Ranking
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Ukraine claims to recapture Black Sea oil platforms seized during Crimea’s annexation
- What do deadlifts work? Understanding this popular weight-training exercise.
- Georgia counties are declared eligible for federal disaster aid after Hurricane Idalia
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- California school district to pay $2.25 million to sex abuse victim of teacher who gave birth to student's baby
- What to know about a major rescue underway to bring a US researcher out of a deep Turkish cave
- One peril facing job-hunters? Being ghosted
Recommendation
Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
Hurricane Lee generates big swells along northern Caribbean while it churns through open waters
What does 'iykyk' mean? Get in on the joke and understand how to use this texting slang.
Wheel comes off pickup truck, bounces over Indianapolis interstate median, kills 2nd driver
Grammy nominee Teddy Swims on love, growth and embracing change
South Dakota panel denies application for CO2 pipeline; Summit to refile for permit
Writers Guild of America Slams Drew Barrymore for Talk Show Return Amid Strike
Grimes Speaks Out About Baby No. 3 With Elon Musk