Robert Gentile

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Re: Robert Gentile

by JerryB » Thu Oct 27, 2016 7:29 am

Aging mobster stays mum on possible role in $500M Gardner art heist
By Cristina Corbin
Published October 27, 2016
Fox News

A recent brush with death didn't yield the confession investigators had hoped for from a Connecticut mobster suspected of knowing the whereabouts of $500 million worth of masterworks stolen from a Boston museum decades ago.

If Robert Gentile knows anything about the art taken in 1990 from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, he proved last month he's willing to take it to the grave.

The 80-year-old "Bobby the Cook" Gentile, who is in federal custody awaiting trial on gun charges, was "on his death bed" in September when his attorney rushed to a South Carolina hospital to ask him -- one last time -- the question no one has answered to date.

"I said, 'If you've ever had the paintings, give them up.' But he said there's no paintings," his attorney, Ryan McGuigan, told FoxNews.com Tuesday.

"I believe him, but the FBI doesn't," McGuigan said. "There are a lot of people who don't believe him and they are very intelligent people. I disagree with them, respectfully."

McGuigan flew to the South Carolina hospital, he said, because he was "open to the possibility that my client might be withholding something."

"If there was ever a chance to say it, that was it," he said. "I do certainly know the importance of this art to humanity."

NIGHT AT THE MUSEUM: THE GREATEST ART HEIST OF ALL TIME

What role, if any, Gentile played in the most infamous art heist in American history is unclear. His health has improved, and he is still not talking.

It was just after midnight on March 18, 1990, when two men dressed as police officers buzzed the side door at the Boston museum and claimed they were there to investigate a disturbance.

A little more than an hour later, the men left with what is said to be the most valuable collection of stolen artwork in history: $580 million worth of famous works, including Rembrandt's only seascape, "The Storm on the Sea of Galilee," and Vermeer's "The Concert," a masterpiece valued at more than $200 million.

The two men who broke into the museum -- hours after Boston celebrated St. Patrick's Day -- had "inside knowledge" of the museum's surveillance system, FBI Special Agent Geoff Kelly previously told FoxNews.com.

The suspects, described as white men in their 30s, convinced two inexperienced security guards that they were responding to a call, before overtaking the guards and tying them up.

They spent 81 minutes inside the museum, walking the dark hallways before making their way to the Dutch Room, where the most valuable works hung.The pair smashed glass and used box cutters to remove the masterpieces from their frames. In all, 13 priceless items were taken: three paintings by Rembrandt including, "The Storm on the Sea of Galilee," five drawings by Degas, and Vermeer's "The Concert" -- said to be the most valuable stolen painting in the world.

The thieves also snatched an ancient Chinese bronze beaker or "Ku" from the Shang Dynasty and a finial that once stood atop a flag from Napoleon's Army.

Gentile became a focus of the investigation in 2009 when the widow of Robert Guarente, another person of interest in the theft -- told the FBI that Guarente and Gentile had at least two of the stolen works before Guarente's death from cancer in 2004.

Another mobster, Robert “Bobby” Luisi Jr., told The Boston Globe in July that Guarente had said the paintings were buried under the cement slab foundation of a home in Florida.

McGuigan said Guarente may have had the paintings, but his client insists they did not come from him.

"He's denied ever having the paintings and he's denied knowing the whereabouts of the paintings," McGuigan said. "He hasn't denied knowing the people who at one point had possession of the paintings."

"This whole case [against Gentile] comes down to this woman saying her husband gave him the paintings," McGuigan added. "Anybody who had these paintings would hold onto them because the possession of them is power. You'd be giving up the keys to the kingdom. It doesn't make any sense."

The FBI said in 2013 that it knows who pulled off the biggest art heist in history, but it isn't naming names. And as for what became of the $580 million worth of masterpieces stolen exactly 26 years ago from a Boston museum, investigators say that trail went cold a decade ago.

The FBI said in March 2013 it would be "imprudent" to disclose the identities of the thieves who stole 13 works of art from the museum but said they belong to a criminal organization. Investigators said they believe the artwork has "changed hands several times" over the years.

"The FBI believes with a high degree of confidence in the years after the theft the art was transported to Connecticut and the Philadelphia region and some of the art was taken to Philadelphia where it was offered for sale by those responsible for the theft," Special Agent Richard DesLauriers told reporters in March 2013.

"With that same confidence we have identified the thieves who are members of a criminal organization with a base in the mid-Atlantic states and New England," he said.

An FBI spokesman was not immediately available when contacted Wednesday.

Gentile is currently in prison facing a federal gun charge he says the FBI contrived to force him to disclose the location of the artwork. In May, FBI agents swarmed a Connecticut home owned by Gentile, digging up the yard looking for any evidence.

According to the Boston Globe, a federal prosecutor said in court earlier this year that Gentile last year offered to sell the paintings to an undercover FBI agent for $500,000 a piece. Gentile also failed a polygraph exam when questioned about the heist and current whereabouts of the paintings, the prosecutor said.

When asked about Gentile's alleged contact with an FBI agent last year, McGuigan told FoxNews.com, "I don't know that to be true." When questioned by the Globe in an Oct. 1 article, McGuigan reportedly said Gentile was "just pretending" to have the paintings.

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2016/10/27/ta ... heist.html

Re: Robert Gentile

by willychichi » Sun Jun 12, 2016 3:15 am

Ron Barndollar Dies; Noted FBI Agent And Lie Detector Expert

More recently, defense lawyers said the Department of Justice brought Barndollar out of retirement to examine Robert "Bobby the Cook" Gentile, the 79-year old Hartford gangster who has emerged as the bureau's top person of interest in the hunt for $500 million in art stolen from Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Read more: http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut ... story.html

Re: Robert Gentile

by JerryB » Tue May 03, 2016 4:10 pm

Search Of Mobster's Home Turns Up More Guns
From the Hartford Courant
May 3, 2016, 6:36 PM
Reported by Edmund H. Mahony

Federal agents found more guns – including a machine gun – during a search earlier this week of Robert Gentile's house, giving law enforcement more pressure against an aging gangster many believe holds the key to learning the fate of a half billion dollars in missing art, sources said.

A caravan of FBI agents descended on Gentile's suburban ranch in Manchester Monday, opening walls and cutting open oil tanks in the hunt for clues to a fortune in rare art that vanished mysteriously 26-years ago after a midnight heist at Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

What the agents found was not art, but a Mac 11 machine gun, a .22 caliber handgun, a small Walther handgun, a silencer, ammunition and what was inexplicably noted on a law enforcement report as a piece of wood. The purported target of the search warrant were the 13 pieces - among them two Rembrandt's and a Vermeer - stolen by thieves disguised as police officers, one of the sources said.

The U.S. Attorney's office said it will not discuss the search. Gentile's lawyer, A. Ryan McGuigan, said it is part of the FBI's effort to pressure Gentile to provide information about the missing art – information the lawyer said Gentile does not have.

It was the third time FBI agents searched Gentile's home over the last four years, hauling away truckloads of items that included a list of the stolen Gardner pieces with corresponding black market values, cash, drugs, a rare stuffed kestrel and a pair of enormous elephant tusks. Agents found guns and ammunition during each search, causing a judge, after one of the searches, to exclaim that the tidy little home on Frances Drive contained "a veritable arsenal."

Gentile - overweight, in declining health and confined to a wheel chair – is being held in a federal jail outside Providence while awaiting trial in July on charges that he sold a gun and ammunition to a convicted three time murderer.

The newest search is certain to lead to new charges and additional prison time if he is convicted. As a previously convicted felon, Gentile faces enhanced sentencing if convicted of a weapons possession charge.
http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut ... story.html

Re: Robert Gentile

by JerryB » Mon May 02, 2016 11:24 am

Take a look at the photo gallery of the G's operation at the house. It appears to be a major investigation with more than just an OC unit... lots of forensic technicians out there. Left click the photo icon on the top left corner of the first picture (at the following URL). It will open up a photo gallery of thirty (30) pictures.

http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut ... story.html

Re: Robert Gentile

by JerryB » Mon May 02, 2016 11:18 am

FBI Searching Mobster Robert Gentile's Manchester Home
Hartford Courant
Monday Mayc2, 2016
Reported by Edmund H. MahonyEdmund H. Mahony

MANCHESTER – FBI agents Monday were at the home of gangster Robert "Bobby the Cook" Gentile, the top person of interest in the quarter-century effort to recover masterpieces stolen from Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Agents set up a tent in the front yard of the Frances Drive home, where they have previous spent time digging. Local police blocked off the street, where Gentile owns a small brown ranch.

Agents arrived in about 15 cars, with two search dogs and three trucks with heavy equipment. The U.S. Attorney's office in Connecticut had no comment on the search.

Gentile's lawyer, Ryan McGuigan, said FBI has not showed him a warrant or give him a reason for the search.

Gentile is currently facing a federal gun charge that he claims the FBI contrived to force him to reveal the location of $500 million in masterworks.

In January, federal prosecutor John H. Durham recited in court some of the evidence collected by the FBI team working the baffling robbery at the Gardner Museum.

Durham said Gentile, 79, and mob partner Robert Guarente tried, but failed, to use the return of two stolen Gardner pieces to obtain a reduction in a prison sentence imposed on a Guarente associate. Durham revealed no additional detail, but knowledgeable sources said the beneficiary of the effort was to have been David Turner, who is serving 38 years for conspiring to rob an armored car.

While he was confined in a federal prison in Rhode Island on drug and gun charges in 2013 and 2014, Durham said, Gentile told at least three people that he had knowledge of the stolen Gardner art.

Durham confirmed a Courant report that Guarente's wife told Gardner investigators early in 2015 that her husband once had possession of stolen Gardner art and transferred two paintings to Gentile before Guarente died from cancer in 2004.

Also, Durham said Gardner investigators had reason to suspect Gentile since 2015, when he submitted to a polygraph examination and denied having advance knowledge of the Gardner heist, ever possessing a Gardner painting or knowing the location of any of the stolen paintings. The result showed a likelihood of less than 0.1 percent that he was truthful. Gentile claims the examination was conducted improperly.

On the night of March 18, 1990, two thieves disguised as Boston police officers entered the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and stole 13 works of art valued at about $500 million. The FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office continue to investigate, and the museum offers a $5 million reward for information leading to the artworks' recovery.
http://www.courant.com/news/connecticut ... story.html

Robert Gentile

by frankiep » Mon May 02, 2016 10:34 am

The FBI is at the Manchester home of Robert Gentile, a reputed mobster who the FBI has accused of being linked to long-sought paintings stolen from Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990.
Officials from the FBI said only that there is “court-authorized activity in connection with an ongoing federal investigation,” but they had no further comment.
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The FBI believes Gentile, who has a criminal record dating to the 1950s, knows something about the 1990 theft of $500 million in art from Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
Prosecutors previously said that Gentile told an undercover FBI agent he had access to two paintings and could negotiate their sale for $500,000 each.
'Terrible Tragedy': 13 Killed in Norway Helicopter Crash
Gentile was arrested in April 2015 on federal weapons charges and is being held without bail.
Gentile's lawyer previously said the FBI believes his client has not been forthcoming with everything he knows about the heist and has set him up for arrests twice in the last three years, but his client is not withholding any information.
Man Behind Mister Softee Jingle Dies at 94
The 13 pieces of art stolen from the Boston museum have never been found and nobody has been charged in the robbery.
The gas company has marked locations in the from yard. No additional information was immediately available.

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