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Gang convicted of £57m plot to steal rhino horn and Chinese artefacts Rathkeale Rovers gang leaders convicted of £57m plot to steal rhino horn and Chinese artefacts
(about 3 hours later)
Fourteen men linked to an organised crime gang have been convicted of plotting to steal rhino horn and Chinese artefacts worth up to £57 million in a series of museum and auction house raids. Senior leaders of a prolific international gang of rhino-horn thieves known as the Rathkeale Rovers have been convicted of museum raids that netted £57m. The convictions represent a major police success against a brutal criminal organisation.
A jury today convicted four of the gang's "generals" who helped to plan and oversee a string of offences, including break-ins at Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum and Durham's Oriental Museum in 2012. Key planners from the gang blamed for dozens of burglaries across Europe dating back to 2009  were convicted of two smash-and-grab raids in Britain within eight days. These targeted Chinese antiquities and each landed bigger hauls than the £14m Hatton Garden safety deposit heist.
John "Kerry" O'Brien Junior, Richard "Kerry" O'Brien, Michael Hegarty and Daniel "Turkey" O'Brien were found guilty after a trial which could not be reported because of similar offences committed by travelling criminals dubbed the "Rathkeale Rovers". The convictions of six members of one family deal a significant blow to the Irish Traveller gang whose criminality led to a pan-European police operation and sparked demands for action from the top of the UK Government. 
The two-month trial at Birmingham Crown Court heard that ten other men had previously been convicted for their parts in the conspiracy, which included a bungled attempt to steal a rhino head from Norwich Castle Museum in February 2012. It can now be reported for the first time that senior planners from the Rathkeale Rovers were among 14 people convicted over roles in nine attempted or planned raids in Britain. The raids included two at Durham’s Oriental Museum and the Fitzwilliam in Cambridge: Chinese antiquities worth up to £57m were stolen. Two-thirds of the haul has never been recovered and is believed to have been shipped out of the country to Far Eastern buyers.
Although jurors heard that exhibits stolen in Durham and Cambridge were valued at around £17 million, detectives believe they may have fetched up to £57 million on the "booming" Chinese auction market. “If you think the Hatton Garden break-in was big, this will blow that out of the water,” said Detective Superintendent Adrian Green, who led the investigation. “Because of the variations which can be given by auction houses the total value of the items targeted comes to anywhere between £18m and £57m. This illustrates just how massively profitable this trade was.”
At least eight of the men convicted after a four-year international police inquiry have family or business links to the village of Rathkeale in the Republic of Ireland. The gang, with strong links to the Irish town in Co Limerick from which it takes its name, has been linked to museum or auction house raids in at least 16 nations across Europe, rhino poaching in Southern Africa, and attempts to smuggle horn from the United States. At least eight of those convicted had links to the town.
The trial was told that a computer used to make incriminating internet searches was found at a house in the County Limerick village. Rhino horn can bring a higher profit than gold or cocaine, fuelled by strong demand from countries such as Vietnam and China, where it is prized for its supposed medicinal qualities. It has been known to command prices of around £45,000 a kilo. Investigators estimate nearly 100 rhino horns were stolen in just a few years to 2013.
Their trial was due to be heard with a ban on reporters making reference to the "Rathkeale Rovers" or another criminal grouping known as the "Dead Zoo Gang". The gang’s senior members said to be from a small group of families from the nomadic community escaped detection by remaining in the shadows while paying career criminals and the vulnerable to carry out the raids, and ensuring their silence with at times brutal violence.
But a judge opted to ban reporting until the end of the trial - after accepting that previous media coverage of rhino horn thefts across Europe could prejudice jurors. Members of the extended Irish “Kerry” O’Brien family were identified through telephone data during a series of panicked calls after their hired hands “lost” a £16m haul from the Durham Oriental Museum in April 2012. After failing to find the antiquities that they stashed on waste ground on the outskirts of Durham, the gang stole 18 precious items from the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge just over a week later to fulfil an order for a jade bowl for a Far Eastern buyer. Those items, worth up to £40m, have never been recovered.
Press Association Dr Noah Charney, the founder of the Association of Research into Crimes against Art, said: “Theft on commission is largely a fictional concept but it’s an exception when dealing with the Far East and China in particular.”
Along with the senior leadership, a Hong Kong middle-man, Chi Chong Donald Wong, who garnered orders for Far Eastern customers, and a raft of low-level criminals have also been found guilty after three trials that could not be reported until now for legal reasons. The convictions represent a rare series of victories against the gang, also believed to have been involved in fraud, fake goods, drug smuggling and violence.
With the world’s rhino population cut by 90 per cent since the 1970s, the gang focused on dead creatures in museums, which for years had failed to understand the value of their stocks before beefing up security in response to the raids. “They are a bit like banks where people can come in and touch the money,” said Supt Green.
The Rathkeale Rovers have been linked to major rhino horn and antiquities hauls of the last six years. The following cases are a snapshot of the dozens of raids on auction houses, museums and private collections in more than 16 countries across the continent, and in South  Africa, some of which have been directly linked to the Rovers.
• April 2009, Cape Town, South Africa Two 19th century white rhino horns stolen from Iziko  Museum in Cape Town.• December 2010, Munster, Germany Rhino horn stolen from zoo.• April 2011, Coimbra, Portugal Two rhino horns stolen from Museum of Science, days after group of Irishman were given tour. Calls made at the time of the raid were linked to a phone belonging to the wife of a Rathkeale Rover. • June 2011, Hamburg, Bamberg and Gifhorn, Germany Horns and a rhino jaw are taken from several targeted German museums. • June 2011, Florence, Italy Thieves locked themselves in museum of natural history overnight before escaping with three horns.• July 2011, Brussels, Belgium Rhino head stolen from natural history museum. • July 2011, Czech Republic Hunting trophies are taken from a Czech castle during a nightly tour.• July 2011, Blois, France  Rhino head stolen from the Museum of Natural History in Blois.• July 2011, Gothenburg, Sweden Horn stolen from Gothenburg’s Museum of Natural History, with thieves sawing it off an exhibit during opening hours.• December 2011, Paris, France Raiders use stun gun against guards before escaping with horn from the Museum of Hunting and Nature.• January 2012, Durham The Durham Oriental Museum is targeted by an  Irishman who uses decorators’ tools in an apparent  attempt to prise open a  cabinet and steal a Ming Dynasty ceramic sculpture. The glass shatters and he is caught as he tries to  escape.• February 2012, Norwich Four men walk into Castle Museum and try to carry off a rhino head. It’s too heavy, they drop it and they flee empty-handed. The criminal team hired by members of  the Rovers are convicted.• March, 2012, Lewes The Rathkeale Rovers target Gorringes auction house in Lewes to steal a £60,000 rhino libation cup. Hired criminals from the Custom House gang leap over the counter of a showroom, grab the wrong item, and are  wrestled to the ground outside.• April 2012, Durham and Cambridge Two raids net the gang up to £31m in Chinese antiquities. In the first raid against the Durham Oriental Museum, the gang escaped with a haul estimated at £2m-£16m but lose it after hiding it on  waste ground at the edge of the city. They hit the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge within eight days to find direct replacement items for Far Eastern buyers.