News
Hospitals overrun as U.S. reports 1 million COVID cases in a week
Watch Live: Facebook, Twitter CEOs testify on election measures
Police arrest 3 men one year after huge jewel heist at castle
Inside Iran’s harrowing, sanctions-fueled coronavirus catastrophe
Hurricane Iota slams Central America days after Hurricane Eta
Where the Trump campaign’s election-related lawsuits stand
Congresswoman “devastated” after neighbor found dead
Taylor Swift says back catalog sold without her knowledge
New aspect of U.S. missile defense system passes “critical” test
2020 Elections
Biden warns of “very dark winter” while stressing need for COVID relief
CBS News coverage of the 2020 elections
Where the Trump campaign and Republicans’ election-related lawsuits stand
Biden advisers reject idea of nationwide lockdowns
Trump acknowledges Biden victory before saying he’s not conceding
Barack Obama speaks out on politics, the presidency, and Donald Trump
Biden begins to consider White House staff appointments
The voters who supported Biden or Trump in Georgia and North Carolina
Andy Card warns delayed transition could harm national security
Trump advisers say president has openly discussed running in 2024
When do states certify their election results?
Shows
Live
LIVE
More
Search
Search
Live
Watch CBSN Live
The Green Vault at Dresden’s Royal Palace is home to around 4,000 precious objects made of ivory, gold, silver and jewels.
SEBASTIAN KAHNERT/dpa/AFP/Getty
Berlin — German police said Tuesday that they had three suspects in custody almost a year after what may have been the biggest jewel heist in history. Berlin’s police force said two more people were still being hunted in connection with the brazen theft of an estimated $1 billion worth of treasure from a castle in the city of Dresden.
The suspects were charged with aggravated gang theft and arson, but there was still no sign of the loot, and fading hopes of getting it back.
In November 2019, police released surveillance video showing two thieves breaking into the 500-year-old Dresden Castle and making off with 18th century treasure from its famous Green Vault.
How the Dresden museum heist unfolded
01:20
They entered the castle through a window and, within a few minutes, they were gone with the historical jewelry from an exhibition display case. They fled in a car, which was later found burned out.
While initial estimates said the diamond-encrusted items were worth around $1 billion, Dresden State Art Collections director Marion Ackermann said the treasure had an “inestimable art and cultural historical value.”
The heist triggered huge international attention and regional officials established a special commission to investigate.
File photo of a woman looking at precious objects in the Jewel Room of the Green Vault State Art Collection in Dresden, Germany, in 2006.
Norbert Millauer/Getty
According to a spokesman for the Dresden police, the suspects in custody are German citizens with links to an Arab crime family, or clan, based in the German capital. Berlin’s Senator of the Interior Andreas Geisel called the searches and arrests a great success and “a further signal to the clan scene.”
The Arab clan implicated in the heist is well known to the police and has been accused of other major crimes, including the 2017 theft of a 220-pound gold coin from the Berlin Bode Museum.
Items among those stolen during a robbery from the Green Vault city palace in Dresden, Germany, November 25, 2019, are seen in an undated photo provided by the Saxony state police.
Polizeidirektion Dresden handout/Getty
More than 1,600 police officers, including special forces from the federal government and seven states, took part in the large-scale operation. According to the public prosecutor’s office, a total of 18 properties in Berlin were searched, including 10 apartments, garages and vehicles.
The focus of the operation remains “the search for the stolen art treasures and possible evidence such as storage media, clothing and tools,” Saxony state police said on Twitter.
“It is also our goal to search for the stolen jewels,” said a spokesman for the Dresden public prosecutor’s office.
But the investigators didn’t voice much hope that the objects would be returned to Dresden.
“You would have to be very lucky to find them a year after the crime,” said Thomas Geithner, spokesman for the Dresden police force, adding that “hope dies last.”
Dresden’s senior public prosecutor Jürgen Schmidt said the suspects were identified with the help of surveillance camera video from the crime scene and forensic evidence that clearly linked the men to the scene and vehicles used in the heist.
Be in the know. Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
View CBS News In
CBS News App
Safari