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After the heavier works of art were removed from the walls, the thief in charge
-- possibly the older of the two -- might have let the younger thief take what he wanted. Amore believes the second thief found his way to a nearby gallery, lifting smaller Degas drawings of horses while passing up more valuable works of art including one by the Italian painter Botticelli. The thieves also tried to remove a flag of Napoleon's First Regiment from its frame before giving up and making off with a bronze finial in the shape of an eagle from atop the flag
-- ignoring more valuable letters with Napoleon's signature. Then came a final puzzle. At some point the thieves found their way to a gallery on the first floor, again passing more valuable works of arts, to seize a "Chez Tortoni," a Manet painting of a man in a top hat and a departure from the Dutch paintings
-- all without triggering a motion detector. "If we ever speak to the thieves, which is secondary, I would like to say,
'Why did you take that? Why did you pass by the Raphael?'" Amore said. On their way out, the two thieves smashed their way into the security office and snatched the only visual record of their crime
-- a VHS type. In all, 13 works disappeared. FBI agent Geoffrey Kelly, who has led the investigation for eight years, said it's unlikely the thieves destroyed the art. "If it were any other kind of commodity, I might feel pessimistic about recovery, but with art it's not uncommon to stay missing for long periods of time," he said. "It's one of the most interesting novels you could write, except it's missing that last chapter." For those drawn to what happened that March night, the lure of the theft won't fade. Ulrich Boser, author of "The Gardner Heist" and a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said he's convinced the paintings were taken by burglars involved in Boston's organized crime rackets in the 1980s. He said the thieves might have subsequently lost possession of the works. "For the most part, thieves steal these works because it's easy to do and they're worth a lot of money, and then they become too hot," he said. "You can't sell them on eBay. You can't bring them into an auction house." Amore said he won't stop until the paintings again fill the empty frames still hanging in the museum's galleries. "I don't have any doubt we are going to recover them," he said. "There's nothing we're not doing." ___ On the Net: Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum: http://www.gardnermuseum.org/
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