Pic credit : http://www.smb.museum/ Closed for repairs since 1997, the museum was reopened on October 18, 2006 after a €156 million refurbishment. It is in news for wrong reasons – one of it displays, which could not be palmed, flipped, plunked into a vending machine, is proven that can be pinched. It is the World’s largest gold coin, a 221-pound Canadian monster called the Big Maple Leaf, was stolen overnight from the Bode Museum in Berlin, the police said on Monday.
The coin is about
21 inches in diameter and over an inch thick. It has the head of Queen
Elizabeth II on one side and a maple leaf on the other. Its face value is 1
million Canadian dollars, or about $750,000, but by gold content alone, it is
worth as much as $4.5 million at current market prices. And though it weighs
about as much as a refrigerator, somehow thieves apparently managed to lug it
through the museum and up at least one floor to get it out of a window at the
back of the building. The police are still trying to figure out exactly how
they did it.
The burglars seemed
to have broken in through a window above the railway tracks during the
two-and-a-half hours when the trains pause for the night. The police were alerted
to the break-in at 4 a.m. and think that it took place between 3:20 a.m. and
3:45 a.m. The window, some three to four yards above the tracks, stood ajar and
appeared to have been “forcibly opened,” said Winfrid Wenzel, a police
spokesman. Officers searching the crime scene found a ladder on the elevated
railway’s roadbed, which is near the museum’s back wall. The police declined to
give further details, including whether security cameras monitored that window,
or whether the museum’s alarm systems had gone off.
The Big Maple Leaf
had been on display since December 2010, on a floor below the window in its own
bulletproof case. It was surrounded by other, smaller gold coins. The
bulletproof glass “appeared to have been violently shattered,” Mr. Wenzel said.
But the thieves seemed to know what they wanted; the smaller gold coins were
untouched. Given the coin’s weight, the authorities said they suspected that
more than one person was involved. Their theory for now is that the thieves
dragged the coin through the museum, out the window and then along the railway
track, possibly reaching a park on the opposite bank of the river near the
Hackescher Markt, a public square in Berlin that is home to a number of
late-night bars and cafes. The police appealed for clues from anyone who had
been in the area at that time.
With regards –
S. Sampathkumar
28th Mar 2017.
