Art
Michigan art dealer who faked lung transplant to rob seniors pleads guilty to $1.5M scam
|
Wendy Beard pulled a lot of stunts to make money off her elderly art customers — like claiming she was in a coma when they inquired about their artwork, or in the hospital for a double-lung transplant, the FBI says.
It worked for years, as her unsuspecting customers gave her artwork to sell on consignment — only she sold it and kept the money, including a mural-sized Ansel Adams photograph she sold for $440,000 without ever telling the owner.
Her customers, however, eventually caught on. The FBI was summoned. And the con artist eventually fessed up.
In U.S. District Court on Thursday, 58-year-old Beard — who inherited a lucrative art gallery from her millionaire father, but then started scamming customers one year after his death — pleaded guilty to wire fraud. In her plea agreement, she admitted she defrauded more than 10 customers who had entrusted her with selling more than $1.5 million worth of art.
Years-long scam from Detroit-area gallery
“She accepted responsibility for her conduct, which was the right thing to do in this situation,” her attorney, Steve Fishman, said following the plea hearing.
The Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, first reported on Beard’s yearslong crime spree following her arrest in 2022, when the FBI detailed her crimes in court documents, explained how she fell on the government’s radar, who she conned and the lengths to which she went to keep her ill-gotten gains.
Among her victims was the 82-year-old owner of the Ansel Adams photo she secretly sold for $440,000. When the owner tried to get the picture back, the FBI says Beard came up with a story: She was in the hospital getting a double lung transplant and was too sick to deal with the request.
5 Things Podcast: What actors strike means for productions, John Kerry grilled by House GOP
None of it was true, says the FBI, which discovered more victims, including: an 89-year-old man with Alzheimer’s who gave her five photographs to sell on consignment; a 69-year-old Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist and college professor who wanted her to sell some rare original photographs on consignment; a 72-year-old longtime friend; and a 70-year-old art collector who placed four items on consignment with Beard, including a signed Ansel Adams book and three photographs, one of which was “Painter’s Wife, Helen Abelen.”
Dozens of victims, fake emails
According to court documents, Beard initially ran the scheme out of a Detroit-area gallery that her father founded more than 50 years ago, though the business closed in 2020, so she ran it out of her home. The scheme started in 2017, one year after her father died, and ran until 2022, when her clients grew suspicious.
Beard wasn’t returning their artwork, so they contacted the Birmingham, Mich. police, who referred the complaints to the FBI. Dozens more victims came forward, including five individuals whose stories triggered criminal charges.
The victims were conned in many ways, the government says. For example, when her clients would ask for their work back, Beard not only lied about her health, but told some there was a lack of interest in their work, despite having already sold the photographs in question. She also created fake employees, who would correspond with the victims, pretending to work for Beard, when it was Beard herself who was writing the fake emails.
Hollywood on strike: Game shows, soaps and British actors: What TV will look like during the SAG actor’s strike
“This defendant swindled numerous families out of valuable artwork and lied to them repeatedly in order to keep her fraud scheme afloat,” said U.S. Attorney Dawn Ison stated in announcing the guilty plea. “She did this for no reason other than to line her own pockets at the expense of her victims.”
Beard, who is free on bond, will be sentenced in December. While wire fraud carries a maximum 20-year prison sentence, she will likely receive a significantly shorter sentence due to her guilty plea.
Contact Tresa Baldas: tbaldas@freepress.com





Art
The heart of a sculptor: Retrospective showcases art of John Miecznikowski – Hamilton Spectator
We use cookies and data to
- Deliver and maintain Google services
- Track outages and protect against spam, fraud, and abuse
- Measure audience engagement and site statistics to understand how our services are used and enhance the quality of those services
If you choose to “Accept all,” we will also use cookies and data to
- Develop and improve new services
- Deliver and measure the effectiveness of ads
- Show personalized content, depending on your settings
- Show personalized ads, depending on your settings
If you choose to “Reject all,” we will not use cookies for these additional purposes.
Non-personalized content is influenced by things like the content you’re currently viewing, activity in your active Search session, and your location. Non-personalized ads are influenced by the content you’re currently viewing and your general location. Personalized content and ads can also include more relevant results, recommendations, and tailored ads based on past activity from this browser, like previous Google searches. We also use cookies and data to tailor the experience to be age-appropriate, if relevant.
Select “More options” to see additional information, including details about managing your privacy settings. You can also visit g.co/privacytools at any time.
Art
What Is Appropriation in Art? – The Collector
We use cookies and data to
- Deliver and maintain Google services
- Track outages and protect against spam, fraud, and abuse
- Measure audience engagement and site statistics to understand how our services are used and enhance the quality of those services
If you choose to “Accept all,” we will also use cookies and data to
- Develop and improve new services
- Deliver and measure the effectiveness of ads
- Show personalized content, depending on your settings
- Show personalized ads, depending on your settings
If you choose to “Reject all,” we will not use cookies for these additional purposes.
Non-personalized content is influenced by things like the content you’re currently viewing, activity in your active Search session, and your location. Non-personalized ads are influenced by the content you’re currently viewing and your general location. Personalized content and ads can also include more relevant results, recommendations, and tailored ads based on past activity from this browser, like previous Google searches. We also use cookies and data to tailor the experience to be age-appropriate, if relevant.
Select “More options” to see additional information, including details about managing your privacy settings. You can also visit g.co/privacytools at any time.
Art
In apparent first, Croatia restores looted art to grandson of Holocaust victim
|
In the first reported case of its kind in Croatia, three museums have restored several pieces of art stolen from a Jewish businessman during the Holocaust to his grandson, according to a report Friday.
The move marks the end of a 70-year struggle by the descendants of Dane Reichsmann, who was a wealthy owner of a department store in the country’s capital Zagreb before the Nazi-led genocide and was deported and murdered at Auschwitz along with his wife.
“This seems almost beyond belief,” Andy Reichsman, Dane’s grandson, and inheritor of the looted works told The New York Times. “I thought that our chances would be one in a million. They never had any interest in giving anything back to Jews.”
The artworks returned include paintings by André Derain, “Still Life With a Bottle,” and Maurice de Vlaminick’s “Landscape by the Water,” which were held by the National Museum of Modern Art, and lithographs from the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts by Pablo Picasso, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne and Pierre Bonnard.
A bronze plaque, copper tray, and bowl from the Zagreb Museum of Arts and Crafts was also restored. However, 19 additional pieces from the institution are still being pursued by Reichsman’s lawyer.
The pieces were looted by the ruling Croatian fascist group, the Ustaše.


Reichsman’s aunt Danica Scodoba and father Franz Reichsman fled Europe before the outbreak of World War II to London and the United States, respectively (Franz dropped the extra N from his family name “Reichsmann” when he immigrated).
Reichsman took up the struggle of his aunt, who tried for half a century to reclaim the property. He recalled that “she traveled to Zagreb every summer and met with gallery directors, government officials and anyone she felt could help her in her attempts to retrieve the art.”
Scodoba died more than two decades ago and was unable to witness a Zagreb Municipal Court ruling in December 2020 that determined the pieces legally belonged to her.
A subsequent decision in 2021 affirmed her nephew as her heir.
Reichsman’s Croatian laywer, Monja Matic, said she valued her client’s patience after she had worked on the case for some 20 years.
“This is a positive step in dealing with outstanding Holocaust Era restitution issues in Croatia,” said Gideon Taylor, President of the World Jewish Restitution Organization.
The National Museum of Modern Art said in a Facebook statement it was “working intensively on researching provenance” of artworks suspected of being looted during the war.
The institution regretted that the resolution took as long as it did.
Croatia rebuffed restitution claims by descendants of Holocaust victims until last year when its government and the World Jewish Restitution Organization published a joint report detailing the looting of art by the fascist regime. Stolen property was subsequently seized and nationalized by the country’s communist government.
The Nazi-allied Ustaše regime, which ran the Independent State of Croatia from 1941 to 1945, persecuted and killed hundreds of thousands of ethnic Serbs, Jews, Roma and anti-fascist Croatians.





-
News19 hours ago
India-Canada news: How the visa office suspension affects travellers
-
News20 hours ago
Why is rent going up faster in Brampton than everywhere else in Canada?
-
Business22 hours ago
Vote “No” to Unifor’s sellout Ford Canada contract! Build rank-and-File committees to fight for a North America-wide strike against the Detroit Three!
-
News18 hours ago
India-Canada news LIVE updates: Justin Trudeau says evidence was shared ‘many weeks ago’
-
News17 hours ago
Canada is still processing visas for Indian nationals
-
Economy21 hours ago
Weak Euro-Area PMI Data Suggest Economy Facing Contraction
-
Business17 hours ago
Unifor contract: Ford offers up to 25% wage increase
-
Media13 hours ago
Who is Lachlan Murdoch, heir apparent of Rupert Murdoch’s media empire?