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Nick Sopchak, right, looks at broken glass from a rear door of the Everhart Museum in Scranton, Pa., in 2005. Charges have been filed against several Pennsylvanians for a string of thefts from museums, jewelers and antique stores over a span of 20 years.
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Arrests made in thefts of Yogi Berra's World Series rings, Warhol and Pollock art

Mike Mullen/The Times-Tribune via AP

Arrests made in thefts of Yogi Berra's World Series rings, Warhol and Pollock art

Federal authorities announced charges against a ring of nine people for thefts of millions of dollars worth of paintings, sports memorabilia and other valuables including an Andy Warhol silkscreen, a Jackson Pollock painting and nine World Series rings belonging to the late Yankees catcher Yogi Berra.

The thefts took place over more than two decades at 20 museums, institutions and stores across Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Washington, D.C., and North Dakota, the U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania said Thursday.

Investigators believe some of the sports memorabilia had been melted down, including nine of Berra’s 10 World Series rings, U.S. Attorney Gerard M. Karam said at a news conference.

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It was unclear which items would be returned to their owners or to the museums, but authorities said some of those valuables had been recovered.

Eight of the nine people named as part of the theft ring Thursday have turned themselves in, Mr. Karam said. At least five had already entered into preliminary plea agreements on charges including theft of major artwork and conspiracy to dispose of major objects of cultural heritage, according to court records. The suspects are in their late 40s to early 50s and are Pennsylvania residents.

Phone messages were left Thursday for attorneys listed in court documents as representing those eight suspects. Two of those attorneys said they could not comment at this stage of the case.

Mr. Karam said the ninth suspect, 53-year-old Nicholas Dombek, is considered a fugitive.

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The indictments allege the thieves transported the memorabilia and valuables and would melt the gold items down into transportable discs that were sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars — but for way less than many of the items were worth.

Court documents also allege that Mr. Dombek destroyed a painting by Jasper Cropsey by burning it, to avoid the stolen artwork titled “Upper Hudson” from being used as evidence against him.

Some of the thefts happened nearly 20 years ago including the 2005 theft from the Everhart Museum in Scranton, where the thieves shattered a glass door in the back of the building. They stole a 1949 oil-on-canvas painting by Pollock, “Springs Winter," then worth an estimated $11.6 million and a silkscreen by Pittsburgh native Warhol titled “Le Grande Passion” then worth an estimated $15,000.

Mr. Karam provided few details of how investigators from the FBI to local police departments cracked the case, saying only that evidence uncovered recently unraveled the ring’s activities.

“About three years ago, a forensic link at one of the theft sites discovered by a local police agency led us to forensic evidence that linked several of these thefts,” he said.

Details of the stolen items included:

• A baseball jersey from New York Giants pitcher and Hall of Famer Christy Mathewson, as well as two contracts he had signed that were on display at Keystone College.

• Nine World Series rings, seven other rings and two MVP plaques belonging to Berra, including the rings believed to be melted down and destroyed.

• A Hickok Belt — solid gold and encrusted in jewels — and MVP plaque from the Roger Maris Museum in Fargo, North Dakota. Maris won two MVP awards, including when he passed Babe Ruth’s single-season record with 61 home runs in 1961 for the Yankees.

• A Hickok Belt and U.S. Amateur Trophy awarded to Ben Hogan, from the USGA Golf Museum and Library. Hogan, a nine-time major champion, is one of the greatest and most influential golfers in the sport’s history.

• Twelve trophies awarded to golfing great Art Wall Jr. that had been on display at the Country Club of Scranton, Pa., believed to have been melted down and destroyed.

• $300,000 worth of trophies from the National Harness Racing Museum in Goshen, N.Y.

• An 1836 Colt Paterson revolver and two other guns from the Space Farms Zoo and Museum in Wantage, N.J.

Other thefts prosecutors connect to the charges released Thursday occurred at the Boxing Hall of Fame, the Sterling Hills Mining Museum, Ringwood Manor and other facilities. Other stolen items included gold nuggets, gems, paintings, firearms, historical objects and sports prizes.

First Published: June 15, 2023, 8:07 p.m.

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Nick Sopchak, right, looks at broken glass from a rear door of the Everhart Museum in Scranton, Pa., in 2005. Charges have been filed against several Pennsylvanians for a string of thefts from museums, jewelers and antique stores over a span of 20 years.  (Mike Mullen/The Times-Tribune via AP)
FILE - The Everhart Museum in Scranton, Pa., is shown Nov. 18, 2005. Federal authorities announced charges against a ring of nine people for thefts of millions of dollars worth of paintings, sports memorabilia and other valuables. The thefts took place over more than two decades at 20 different museums and institutions across Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York and North Dakota, the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania said Thursday, June 15, 2023. (Michael J. Mullen/The Times-Tribune via AP, File)  (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Mike Mullen/The Times-Tribune via AP
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