But when an authenticity certificate couldn’t be provided, because
experts refuted that it was an original Goya, a Girona judge ruled they
could keep the artwork without having to pay the remaining €250,000.
Seven years after the court ruling, the brothers decided they would try
their own luck at selling the painting of dubious origins.
They found a potential buyer in an Arab sheik, willing to pay €4
million for what he believed was a Goya masterpiece.
A meeting was arranged in the northern Italian city of Turin with a
representative of the sheik’s.
In return for the Goya and its certificate of authenticity (which they'd forged) they were to receive a first installment of 1.7 million francs (€1.5 million). The brothers also hired a moneylender to meet in their home city of Girona with the middleman who had arranged the deal with the Arab buyer. Once they received the money in Turin, they called the loan shark and allowed him to pay the intermediary €300,000 as promised for setting up the sale. The complicated transaction was finalized and for some time the siblings must have thought they were going to get away with it.
Then they arrived at a Geneva bank to deposit the 1.7 million francs into a Swiss bank account. It was there that they were informed their fortune was nothing more than photocopied bank notes. To make matters worse for them, customs in the French city of Avignon informed Spanish police that they’d come across two of their countrymen with a suitcase full of fake money. On arrival in Spain the brothers were arrested and are now facing fraud charges. As for the €300,000 they paid the intermediary, the money was real and borrowed from a local businessman who’s unlikely to ever see it again.
In return for the Goya and its certificate of authenticity (which they'd forged) they were to receive a first installment of 1.7 million francs (€1.5 million). The brothers also hired a moneylender to meet in their home city of Girona with the middleman who had arranged the deal with the Arab buyer. Once they received the money in Turin, they called the loan shark and allowed him to pay the intermediary €300,000 as promised for setting up the sale. The complicated transaction was finalized and for some time the siblings must have thought they were going to get away with it.
Then they arrived at a Geneva bank to deposit the 1.7 million francs into a Swiss bank account. It was there that they were informed their fortune was nothing more than photocopied bank notes. To make matters worse for them, customs in the French city of Avignon informed Spanish police that they’d come across two of their countrymen with a suitcase full of fake money. On arrival in Spain the brothers were arrested and are now facing fraud charges. As for the €300,000 they paid the intermediary, the money was real and borrowed from a local businessman who’s unlikely to ever see it again.
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