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IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: Jan. 12, 2012
CONTACT: Jay Beeton
Telephone: 719-482-9841
E-mail: pr@money.org
Suspect Pleads Guilty in ANA Money Museum Theft
Former
ANA Employee Stole About $1 Million in Coins
COLORADO SPRINGS – Former ANA collections manager
Wyatt Yeager entered a guilty plea today in Federal District Court in Wilmington,
DE, to the theft of approximately 300 historically significant coins and other
numismatic objects, valued at $984,740, from the American Numismatic
Association Money Museum, ANA President Tom Hallenbeck has announced.
Yeager, 33,
was the museum’s collections manager
from January through March 2007 and is charged with Theft of Major Artwork,
violation of Title 18, United States, Section 668. Yeager faces a maximum
statutory penalty of 10 years imprisonment, a $250,000 fine and three years
supervised release following any term of imprisonment. Among the stolen items
are an Australian 1813 Holey Dollar, a 1795 Half Eagle and an 1836 Gobrecht
Dollar.
The theft was discovered by museum officials in
October 2007 and was the subject of an extensive FBI investigation after museum
staff confirmed the missing items. The museum staff worked with authorities
during the investigation and played a critical role in helping to uncover vital
evidence in the case. The theft was kept confidential so as not to compromise
the ongoing investigation, during which Yeager relocated to Ireland. Yeager
sold numerous rare coins stolen from the museum.
“This is a terrible loss for the ANA, the hobby
and for coin collectors everywhere,” Hallenbeck said. “Prosecution of this
crime has been pursued in accordance with the law. The ANA is continuing this
investigation and will diligently pursue the recovery of the stolen items.”
The ANA retained Robert Wittman, Inc., a security
and recovery consulting firm that specializes in recovering stolen art and
collectibles, to investigate and recover the stolen coins. Robert K. Wittman, the company’s
founder and chief investigator, was the founder of the FBI’s National Art Crime
Team.
A
list of stolen items can be found here. A link to
the U.S. Department of Justice press release can be found here.
As a result of the theft, the ANA has embarked on
an upgrade to its security systems and further modified its internal security
procedures. In addition, many of the ANA’s important coins are being
encapsulated by NGC to allow better inventory control through modern bar coding
technology, photography and other enhanced security procedures.
“I want to reassure our members – and hobbyists
everywhere – that the ANA is committed to improving the security of its
collection, which is a true national treasure. As new technologies are
developed, we will continually assess our security needs,” Hallenbeck said. “Unfortunately,
about 90 percent of museum thefts have some insider component.”
“Many of the stolen items were desirable and
historically significant,” Hallenbeck said. “The ANA maintains theft insurance
for its numismatic collections, but no amount of insurance can adequately
replace these coins – or the loss of trust or sense of helplessness that we all
feel following such a theft.”
The ANA’s Edward C. Rochette Money Museum, which
opened in Colorado Springs in 1967, is the nation’s largest museum dedicated
exclusively to numismatics. Its collection of 275,000 numismatic objects
includes money from its earliest uses 2,600 years ago to individual coins worth
millions of dollars and modern issues, as well as paper money, coins, tokens
and medals from throughout the world.
The American Numismatic Association is a
nonprofit congressionally chartered organization dedicated to educating and
encouraging people to study and collect money and related items. The ANA helps
its 28,000 members and the public discover and explore the world of money
through its vast array of programs including its education and outreach
programs, museum, library, publications, conventions and seminars. For more information about the ANA, visit
www.money.org.
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