A Hacker Posing as a Venerable British Art Dealer Bilked a Dutch Museum Out of $3.1 Million

Hackers infiltrated a sales deal
between a Dutch museum and a London art dealer and made off
with $3.1 million.

The Rijksmuseum Twenthe in Enschede, the Netherlands, was in the midst of
a months-long email negotiation with dealer Simon C. Dickinson to
purchase a prized John Constable painting when hackers
hijacked the exchange, posing as Dickinson and convincing the
museum to funnel the money into a Hong Kong bank
account.

Now the museum is suing
Dickinson, claiming the dealer should have known about the fraud,
according to Bloomberg.

In a London commercial court
this morning, Gideon Shirazi, a lawyer representing the museum,
argued that negligence on the part of the dealer’s team allowed the
thieves to steal the museum’s money. Shirazi claimed that
Dickinson’s negotiators were aware of emails between the museum and
the hackers, but did nothing to stop the transaction.

“By saying nothing, they said
everything,” he said.

The Rijksmuseum Twenthe in Enschede, Netherlands. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The Rijksmuseum Twenthe in Enschede,
Netherlands. Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Dickinson’s lawyer, Bobby
Friedman, said the museum should have independently confirmed the
legitimacy of the bank account before wiring the money, adding that
his client, a specialist in Old Master paintings,

was never aware any fraud was
taking place. 
Each side is accusing the other of having
been hacked.

“Instead of accepting the reality of the situation, the museum
has reacted by pursuing a series of hopeless claims against
[Dickinson], in the hope of pinning the blame for the museum’s
mistake on [the dealer],” Friedman wrote in a submission to the
court.

While the case isn’t settled, a
London judge has ruled against the museum’s current claims for
damages. But he has left the door open for the museum to modify its
case and continue pursuing it.

Meanwhile, the museum is holding
onto the painting and preventing Dickinson, who is still unpaid,
from selling the work to another buyer. 

Arnoud Odding, the museum’s
director, first became interested in Constable’s 1824
painting
A View of
Hampstead Heath: Child’s Hill, Harrow in the
Distance
 upon
seeing it at Dickinson’s TEFAF booth in Maastricht in
2018.

Neither Dickinson nor the Rijksmuseum responded to Artnet News’s requests
for comment.

The post A Hacker Posing as a Venerable British Art Dealer
Bilked a Dutch Museum Out of $3.1 Million
appeared first on
artnet News.

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