Italy art cops find stolen statue in Belgian shop
The headless Roman statue wearing a draped toga recovered in Brussels, Belgium, Feb. 3, 2021. (Carabinieri via AP)


Italian police say they have recovered a first-century Roman statue that was stolen from an archaeological site in 2011 and found in a Belgian antique shop by two off-duty Italian art squad police officers.

An Italian businessperson who used a Spanish pseudonym has been referred to prosecutors for further investigation into allegations he received and then exported the statue abroad, the Carabinieri art squad said in a statement Monday.

The "Togatus" statue, featuring a headless Roman wearing a draped toga, has a value of 100,000 euros (around TL 970,340)

It was stolen in November 2011 from the Villa Marini Dettina archaeological site on the outskirts of the capital Rome, the statement said.

Two members of the art squad’s archaeological unit were on assignment in Brussels when they took a walk after work in the Sablon neighborhood that is known for its antique shops. They spotted a marble statue in a shop that they suspected was from Italy and confirmed their suspicions when they cross-referenced the work with a database of known stolen antiquities, the statement said.

Italy for decades has worked to recover looted antiquities that have ended up in private collections, famous museums and commercial antique shops around the world.

Carabinieri (Italian paramilitary police) officers of the art squad’s archaeological unit pose with the headless Roman statue wearing a draped toga in Brussels, Belgium, Feb. 3, 2021. (Carabinieri via AP)