Criminals come in the Rijksmuseum Twenthe air base for nearly 3 million euro, highlighted, says the international monetary Fund on Thursday. The criminals were from a London art dealer, who has a painting in the museum and wanted to sell it.
Arnoud Odding director Rijksmuseum Twenthe, negotiated for months via e-mail by the London-based art dealer Simon C. Dickinson, about a painting he wanted to buy it. It’s going to be a work of the painter John Constable, from 1824, entitled, A View of Hampstead Heath: a Child’s Hill: Harrow in the Distance.
now, The criminals have those e-mailuitwisseling be able to read it. At the moment it is passed, it would be to pay, they took it for the dealer. In this way, they managed to get to the museum to pick up the money from a fraudulent bank account.
At the NIS, it has Odding said that his research has to do with the security of its e-mail system. From this analysis, it would be found that there are no vulnerabilities in the system.
The museum takes the view that the dealer should have seen that as a third party in the messaging to the mix, but it has not left the museum, we warn you. In the museum, the art dealer, therefore, that the judge is a defendant.
According to the lawyer, Dickinson was not, however, aware of the criminal activity. Also, the security that the dealer is in order. The lawyer said also, that the museum is in the bank account you have to verify before actually the money was to be paid to you. The district court went along with this line of reasoning.
The painting is currently in Enschede, the netherlands, even though Dickinson had not yet been paid. The museum has a lawyer is made aware of the painting, on a provisional basis, in order to prevent an art dealer to a person else’s products.