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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Lifestyle
Kevin Rawlinson and agency

Three convicted after Met police sting operation recovers £2m Ming vase

Composite picture of Kaine White, Mbaki Nkhwa and  David Lamming, who were all convicted of conspiring to convert criminal property
Left to right: Kaine White, Mbaki Nkhwa and David Lamming were all convicted of conspiring to convert criminal property. Composite: Metropolitan police/PA

Three men have been convicted after a £2m vase stolen from a museum was recovered in a police sting operation.

The Chinese Ming dynasty vase was stolen from the Museum of Far Eastern Art in Geneva, in Switzerland in June 2019. Three men plotted to sell it on for hundreds of thousands of pounds, but were caught in a Scotland Yard operation.

Undercover police tricked the would-be seller into handing it over in October 2021 after officers posed as buyers. Mbaki Nkhwa, Kaine Wright and David Lamming, all from south-east London, have been convicted for their roles in the plot.

Nkhwa and Wright were found guilty of one count of conspiracy to convert criminal property at Southwark crown court in London on Friday. Lamming pleaded guilty to the same offence at a hearing in March.

An off-white Ming dynasty vase
The £2m Ming dynasty vase recovered by police. Photograph: Metropolitan Police/PA

Det Ch Insp Matt Webb, from the Met’s specialist crime unit, said the convictions were the result of four years’ work across international borders involving collaboration with a number of foreign bodies.

“The organised crime group involved in this offending believed they could commit significant offences internationally and that there would be no comeback,” he said. “They were mistaken – highlighting the strength of our relations with international law enforcement partners and our ability to work across international boundaries.

“The white porcelain ‘vase’, which is actually a bottle of the Yongle period of the Ming dynasty, has an interesting tale over its hundreds of years and this is another chapter. I’m glad we were able to return it to its rightful owners.”

An auction house tipped off police in July 2020 that someone had emailed them to get a valuation for the stolen vase. Detectives traced the IP address for the email account to Lamming’s home.

When the vase was offered for sale police posed as buyers, agreeing a price of £450,000. Nkhwa later gave the vase to undercover officers at a meeting in a central London hotel and was arrested, the Met police said. Telephone data showed he and Lamming had been in regular contact with Wright, who had driven them to the hotel for the exchange.

Scotland Yard said its officers worked closely with Swiss authorities on the four-year investigation.

Three items from the Ming dynasty estimated to be worth £3.5m were stolen during the 2019 break-in. A bowl valued at £80,000 was sold at an auction house in Hong Kong in 2019, but was later returned to the museum.

Officers are now appealing for help to locate the third stolen item. A reward of up to £10,000 is being offered for information leading to the recovery of the Ming dynasty cup. Police have released an image of the stolen “doucai style” wine cup that features chicken decoration.

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