Two British brothers jailed over Swiss museum heist


Louis and Stewart Ahearne confessed in Geneva to stealing Ming dynasty artefacts worth about £3m

Stewart Ahearne, left, and his brother Louis right. The first joint investigation team of its kind
between British and Swiss law enforcement was set up to help catch them.

Two British brothers have been jailed for stealing Ming dynasty artifacts worth about £3m from a Swiss museum.

Louis and Stewart Ahearne, from Greenwich, south London, confessed to stealing two vases and a cup from the Baur Foundation, Museum of Far Eastern Arts in Geneva on the night of 1 June 2019.

On Tuesday the brothers were each sentenced to three years and six months in prison at a court in Geneva.

Swiss authorities said the men were wearing masks and gloves when they broke into the museum by smashing a pane on the front door before shattering a display case and leaving with the items, believed to be from the 15th century and valued at £2,870,000.

Det Ch Insp Matt Webb, who led the investigation, said: “The Ahearne brothers meticulously planned this burglary, carrying out careful reconnaissance to ensure they could make a clean getaway and bring the items back to the UK.

“They naively believed that having fled the country they had escaped punishment, but they did not bank on the fact we would work so closely with our Swiss counterparts to identify those involved.

Organised crime often crosses international boundaries and as this result shows, we will use all of the powers at our disposal to identify and arrest those involved in committing these types of offences.”

DNA from the scene matched Stewart Ahearne, 45, when shared by officers in Switzerland on the international database.

They also identified the registration plates on a car leaving the scene and discovered it had been hired days before the burglary.

Inquiries with the hire car company revealed Stewart collected it at the airport and it was then used to drive the stolen goods back into the UK. CCTV images implicated Louis, 35.

The first joint investigation team of its kind between British and Swiss law enforcement was set up to easily share information, the Metropolitan police said.

The Met set up an undercover sting, posing as art buyers and arranging to meet the gang at a central London hotel.

Stewart and his co-conspirator Mbaki Nkhwa handed the vase to the undercover officers in exchange for £450,000, and were promptly arrested.

The Ahearnes were extradited to Switzerland and pleaded guilty there on 15 January.

Their sentences will be served in Switzerland and once released they will be banned from entering the country for five years. They were also ordered to each pay 52k Swiss Francs (£48k).

Nkhwa, David Lamming and Kaine Wright were all previously sentenced for possession of criminal property for their role in the attempted sale of the vase in London.

A reward of up to £10,000 is on offer for information leading to the recovery of the “doucai style” Ming dynasty wine cup, which remains missing. It features chickens on its side.

Anyone with knowledge of its whereabouts is asked to call police on 101 and reference Operation Funsea, or call Crimestoppers.


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