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Gangland Wire

Van Gogh and the Camorra

Gangland Wire

Gary Jenkins: Mafia Detective

True Crime, Documentary, Society & Culture, History

4.6 • 623 Ratings

🗓️ 5 June 2017

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Octave “Okkie” Durham, the thief behind one of the biggest art heists in history went on various Dutch talk shows to discuss how he stole two Van Gogh paintings worth millions from the Van Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in 2002. He claims he sold them to a Camorra drug boss. He also claims to have stayed at the home of then-FC Barcelona striker Patrick Kluivert while on the run from police. Durham is the subject of a documentary titled The Man Who Stole Two Van Goghs by Dutch news show Brandpunt. The 2002 Van Gogh heist in Amsterdam was a simple, grab a ladder, break into a second floor window and go out the back door to a waiting car while the police knocked on the front door. Durham and a friend, had been casing the famous Van Gogh museum for some time before they finally decided to go ahead and execute their plan. Using a stolen ladder, some rope, and a hammer the two men entered the museum filled with hundreds of millions worth’ of exclusive art. They grabbed Vincent van Gogh’s View of the Sea at Scheveningen and Congregation Leaving the Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church at Nuenen Reformed Church at Nuenen. As professional as “Okkie” may claim to be, he left behind a baseball cap with his DNA in it, putting authorities on his tail almost immediately. A lack of evidence and urgency, however, kept police from searching the burglar’s residence or other locations, giving him enough time to move the paintings to a safe location. He was unable to sell these priceless paintings to his regular contacts. One man, a Dutch drug boss Cor van Hout was eager to buy the paintings to use them as a bargaining chip for a court case, but he was shot to death before he and Durham could reach a deal. Durham then received a call from a man known as “Pinocchio,” who quickly closed the deal and purchased the two Van Gogh paintings. “Pinocchio” was an important player in the Amsterdam underworld. He lived there for twelve years and owned Coffeeshop Rockland, where tourists enjoyed smoking some weed. Pinocchio is Raffaele Imperiale, an Italian drug boss with close links to the Neapolitan Camorra. Durham has never told how much Imperiale paid for the paintings. In September of 2016 when Imperiale offers the paintings to Italian authorities in exchange for lowering his prison sentence. He has been sentenced to 12 years in prison for drug trafficking. He has yet to serve a day of his sentence as he remains a fugitive, living a life of luxury in Dubai. Life wasn’t so sweet for Durham, though. When police are on his tail he manages to flee to Spain where he eventually runs into Patrick Kluivert, star player of FC Barcelona. The two men knew each other from the old neighborhood back in Amsterdam. Durham tells Kluivert he is staying at a hotel and Kluivert asks him to stay with him at his mansion. The fugitive art thief is hesitant and tells Kluivert he is on the run from police and his presence might cause Kluivert some unwanted media attention. The Barcelona striker is dismissive however, telling “Okkie” he is in the media every day anyway. Thanks to David Amoruso the True Crime Blog, Gangstersinc.com  In 2013, Italian police recovered the paintings during a raid. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYLvypoCToo Don’t forget to listen to Aaron on the Big Dumb Fun Show, live on Monday nights. To go to the store click here To rent Gangland Wire, the documentary, click here To subscribe on iTunes click here, give me a review and I will send you a link to see the film for free.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Former Kansas City Police Department Intelligence Detective and now attorney Gary Jenkins produced four documentary films, most recently Gangland Wire,

0:18.0

creator of smartphone app entitled Kansasansas city mob tours download it now

0:23.7

if you like what you hear go to ganglandwire dot com navigate to the shop page we need you

0:31.7

to put a hit out on our donate button gangland wire true crime stories is produced at the Big Dumb Fun Show Studio 4.

0:43.3

And now here's Gary Jenkins.

0:49.0

Well, good evening, all you wiretappers.

0:51.5

It's good to be here back here in the ice house, the classic old Ice House, in Midtown, Kansas City, and just up the street from several different mob hits.

1:01.6

We like being in the middle of the action.

1:03.4

We like hearing stories from the mouths of the men who did it, where they be policemen or crooks like our good friend Craig Glazier, the King of Sting.

1:12.3

I'll never forget that night.

1:13.7

That was that good story.

1:15.3

I'm here with my good friend Aaron.

1:16.7

Say hello, Aaron.

1:17.5

Hello, Aaron.

1:18.7

Who else have we had on that was out of the men, mouths of the men who did it?

1:22.8

Red Wemette.

1:23.5

I'm going to do another show with him.

1:25.1

I've been Facebooking with him recently.

1:36.3

Speaking of mouths of men that did it, we of course have great interviews with Tommy Robinson and Joe Langer talking about...

1:47.9

Richard Gresham, Jr. or the four-part series where we spoke with Troy Cole, the chief investigating officer,

1:55.0

Sergeant of the Homicide Squad from the Kansas City Police Department for the Bob Berdela case.

2:03.9

Right. And Gunner Alan Lindblum, who was a Detroit mobster, did 13 years of penitentiary and only less than six months after he got out.

...

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