[CPProt.net] Art Dealer Appears at Trial. ...questioned about the acquisition policies of American museums, Hecht switched to an Italian dia
Ton Cremers
museum-security at museum-security.org
Sat Jan 14 10:37:56 CET 2006
>From the Los Angeles Times
THE WORLD
Art Dealer Appears at Trial
The American whom Italy accuses of selling looted antiquities to the Getty tells the media
that he is a scapegoat.
By Livia Borghese
Special to The Times
++++questioned about the acquisition policies of American museums, Hecht switched to an
Italian dialect: "Non saccio niente!" - I know nothing!++++
January 14, 2006
ROME - An American antiquities dealer accused of helping to channel priceless artifacts
illegally to the J. Paul Getty Museum appeared for the first time at his trial in a Rome
courtroom Friday and said he was being made a scapegoat.
Robert E. Hecht Jr., 87, was dismissive of the court and confident of prevailing in the trial, in
which his co-defendant is Marion True, former antiquities curator at the Getty.
"They hit me in order to hit a system," Hecht told reporters after Friday's hearing.
To make his point, Hecht said that he was accused of attempting to peddle a bronze statue
that was stolen from a Rome museum, but that he had purchased it years earlier from
Sotheby's auction house. "So why don't they go after Sotheby's?"
Hecht, who did not testify Friday, sat at the defendant's table in a dapper gray suit.
Occasionally, he cocked his left ear toward the judge to listen more closely as the
proceedings dragged on.
Lead prosecutor Paolo Ferri questioned Maurizio Pellegrini, an archeological consultant to a
regional ministry who has been the prosecution's chief witness. It was the third session taken
up with Pellegrini's testimony, which has examined thousands of photographs of antiquities
and other items seized in raids at Hecht's home in Paris and at a Swiss warehouse owned by
dealer Giacomo Medici.
Medici, who is not related to the famous Renaissance dynasty of art patrons, was convicted
last year of illegal trafficking in antiquities as part of the same case. Hecht is accused of
being Medici's partner and middleman.
Ferri showed the court a document from the Getty in which "REH" described a small 5th
century BC statue as having come from Cerveteri, an area near Rome rich in Etruscan
artifacts that is known as one of the most heavily looted sites in Italy. REH is Hecht, Pellegrini
testified, and knowing that an item came from Cerveteri demonstrated complicity with grave-
robbers and smugglers.
After Friday's session, Hecht's Italian attorney, Alessandro Vannucci, said his client decided
to appear in court to dispute the "false things said of him."
In Italian trials, defendants are not required to be present. True attended one hearing last
year.
"The real trial here should be of Italy, which, in total indifference, has allowed for dozens,
hundreds of years, its territory to be preyed upon," Vannucci said.
Outside the trial, Hecht was asked his opinion of the court. "Forgive them, for they know not
what they do," he quipped to reporters.
And when questioned about the acquisition policies of American museums, Hecht switched
to an Italian dialect: "Non saccio niente!" - I know nothing!
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