art thief, barely out of prison for a series of brazen art thefts among
some of the city’s most respected collectors, has been arrested in the
sales of stolen artwork, including a Rembrandt etching taken in a
gallery owner, wept in court in 2007 while apologizing for thefts that
had staggered the Northwest’s art community. He was ordered to pay more
than
months for thefts first detailed in a series of stories in The Seattle
Times. He was accused of selling consigned artwork without paying the
owners, and pleaded guilty to nine felony theft charges in a plea
bargain.
He was released from prison
According to charges unsealed Tuesday in U.S.
District Court, Lidtke was working with a convicted burglar to steal
artworks and then sell them. Lidtke was arrested in
Some of the art in the most recent thefts is believed to have come from a
Agents also believe Lidtke and his associates were casing several
The charges allege Lidtke was targeting houses for a
burglar who was then breaking in and stealing art that Lidtke
unknowingly was marketing to an undercover FBI employee.
During phone conversations with the undercover
employee, Lidtke is reported to have said the Department of Corrections
had offered him a business opportunity by locking him up “with a bunch
of criminals.” Lidtke, once a trusted art dealer, knew who had valuable
collections.
“I can say, ‘Hey, go get that painting for me,’ you
know, and they do,” Lidtke reportedly told the agent. “Crazy. It’s just
crazy.”
The burglar is identified in charging documents as
a former cellmate of Lidtke’s in state prison. Christy’s criminal
record includes 10 felony convictions, among them theft, possession of
stolen property and burglary, according to the charges.
Christy and his wife, Georgia, also known as
Lidtke and the Christys are each charged with a single count of conspiracy to transport stolen property across state lines.
Christy, according to the charges, was questioned by
The investigation began in 2007 when a member of the FBI’s Art Crime Team in
Carter subsequently was identified as Christy, according to documents.
In
The charges say the FBI used a confidential source to introduce
identified as an “Undercover FBI employee” who was posing as an art
buyer. A month after the Rembrandt etching was taken, Christy contacted
the undercover FBI worker and offered it for
The owner of the etching has identified the frame but believes the etching may be a fake, the charges say.
The
In
employee began receiving phone calls about the paintings on a telephone
number that had been given to the Christys, according to the charges.
The first two callers identified themselves by first name only and said
the paintings were available for cash and represented a “good
opportunity.”
The third call, according to the charges, was from
Lidtke, who left a message “stating that he had some paintings for
sale.” Based on a number of conversations, the undercover FBI employee
concluded Lidtke and at least one of the other callers were the same
person.
The charges allege that, on
The undercover FBI employee paid Lidtke
Meantime, the charges say Lidtke began negotiating
to sell other valuable works, saying an associate “worked alone, loads
up his car in the garage and drives away.” He said he had access to
paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir and
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