Stolen Van Gogh returned after 7 years (Reuters) Updated: 2006-03-18 09:24
A Dutch bank got a bonus on Thursday when police turned up with its stolen
Van Gogh painting during an earnings news conference.
"The Pollard Willow" was one of the last works the Dutch painter made in
Nuenen in 1885 before leaving the southern region of the Netherlands where he
was born.
The still life on a wooden panel, valued at several million euros, was stolen
from a meeting room at F. van Lanschot Bankiers' Den Bosch headquarters in May
1999 in a heist police still have yet to solve.
"The most important thing was to get the painting back in a good state," Jac
Nouwens, chief investigator for the district police, told reporters.
Two men, aged 25 and 33 were arrested for attempting to sell the painting and
are being interrogated, Nouwens said. He declined to give more details of the
continuing investigation.
Van Lanschot, which owns some 3,500 works of art, is still looking for a
secure place to display the painting.
"For the time being we will definitely keep it in the safe. We need to get
used to the idea again that it's back," Van Lanschot Chief Executive Floris
Deckers told reporters.
Another piece of good news at the news conference was that F. Van Lanschot
Bankiers' 2005 profit jumped 51 percent to 152 million euros ($183
million).
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