logo
French art expert on trial over forged furniture at Versailles

French art expert on trial over forged furniture at Versailles

Yahoo25-03-2025

A top French art expert went on trial on Tuesday accused of falsely claiming furniture he built to be from the 18th century that was then sold at high prices to buyers including the Palace of Versailles.
After one of the biggest forgery scandals to rock the art world in recent years, 61-year-old expert Bill Pallot along with five other people as well as a prominent gallery are in the dock in Pontoise, a town north of Paris.
Pallot and woodcarver Bruno Desnoues are accused of producing and selling chairs that were falsely claimed to be historic pieces that once adorned the rooms of the likes of Madame du Barry, the mistress of Louis XV, or Queen Marie-Antoinette.
Customers duped by the pieces included the Palace of Versailles along with wealthy collectors including a Qatari prince.
Continuing unnoticed for years, the scam caused an estimated 4.5 million euros ($4.9 million) in damage.
When the scandal erupted in 2016, the ministry of culture swiftly ordered an audit of Versailles's acquisitions policy.
Known for his distinctive long hair and three-piece suits, Pallot has been described by magazine Vanity Fair as "the world's leading expert on the works of 18th-century France", while Paris Match branded him "the Bernard Madoff of art".
"Indeed, Versailles's decision to purchase the chairs hinged on Pallot's blessing," Vanity Fair said in 2018.
"And based on Pallot's imprimatur, the government classified two of his fake lots as national treasures."
During an investigation, Desnoues's wife described the antiques world her husband worked in as "a detestable environment, where antique dealers want to make money at any cost".
More than 200,000 euros in cash were discovered during a search of Desnoues's home.
"I'm into work and sculpture," he said. "I've never been passionate about money."
The trial's opening day zeroed in on the case of a Portuguese couple whose lavish lifestyle had caught the attention of French authorities and led to the scam's unravelling.
Investigators found the couple, who declared a monthly income of no more than 2,500 euros, possessed assets worth 1.2 million euros. In addition to their home in France, they owned several apartments in Portugal.
The man turned out to be a handyman for Parisian art galleries and collaborated with Desnoues.
amd-as/sbk

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Motorcyclist dies after Portsmouth crash
Motorcyclist dies after Portsmouth crash

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Motorcyclist dies after Portsmouth crash

PORTSMOUTH, R.I. (WPRI) —A 36-year-old Middletown man has died several days after a motorcycle crash in Portsmouth. The man, identified Tuesday as Juan Pablo Garcia Castro, was involved in the crash around 4 p.m. on Thursday, June 5. ALSO READ: Bryant graduate killed in Johnston motorcycle crash According to police, Garcia Castro was riding north on West Main Road and turned onto Route 24 using the left lane. At the curve of the on-ramp, police said he changed lanes and hit the guardrail, causing him to be thrown from the motorcycle. Police said Garcia Castro was wearing a helmet, but he was unresponsive when first responders arrived. He was first taken to St. Anne's Hospital before being flown to Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, where he died Monday. The crash remains under investigation. NEXT: Portsmouth community mourns teen killed in Portuguese club collapse Download the and apps to get breaking news and weather alerts. Watch or with the new . Follow us on social media: Close Thanks for signing up! Watch for us in your inbox. Subscribe Now Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Pablo the French bulldog found safe after abduction from Rockingham County gas station, sheriff's office says
Pablo the French bulldog found safe after abduction from Rockingham County gas station, sheriff's office says

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pablo the French bulldog found safe after abduction from Rockingham County gas station, sheriff's office says

ROCKINGHAM COUNTY, N.C. (WGHP) — A pup that was missing for over two weeks has been found safe, according to Piedmont Triad law enforcement. A French bulldog named Pablo was taken from a car at the Refuel on US 220 on the afternoon of May 23. Footage shared by the Rockingham County Sheriff's Office on their Facebook page showed the moment of the crime. The video shows a newer red sedan at the gas station. On Tuesday, the sheriff's office said that Pablo had been found safe. The investigation is ongoing. 'Sheriff Sam Page and The Rockingham County Sheriff's Office would like to extend our gratitude to the public for their assistance in this matter,' they wrote in their update. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

I didn't think we were heading for civil war. Now I'm not so sure
I didn't think we were heading for civil war. Now I'm not so sure

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

I didn't think we were heading for civil war. Now I'm not so sure

I used to dismiss fears Britain was headed for open sectarian conflict, possibly even civil war, as overblown. Those expressing such unease were, I suspected, succumbing to their own subconscious cognitive bias and exaggerating the scale of the problem. After all, does the UK really have the ingredients for such internal strife? We live in an inefficient and messed up society, but not a 'failed' one. Taxes are paid, people who want to be are employed, we have abundant food, clothing and energy – at least until Ed Miliband's climate fanaticism catches up with us. We don't have America's gun problem, even if gang violence has become a feature of British life. We have, relative to other developed nations, successfully integrated migrants in large numbers. Now, however, I'm not so sure. The rule-abiding majority are nearing the end of their tether with illegal migration. They cannot tolerate the sheer lawlessness of it, how toddlers can be trampled to death in filthy dinghies only for the French authorities to wave the boats on their way. They are appalled when, on the rare occasion those piloting these boats are arrested, the jail time is just a few months. They are horrified that our shadow economy allows illegal migrants to work here, whilst their own taxes fund 'asylum' hotels at a cost of £5 million every day. And they are tired of being gaslit by our political class, who keenly downplay many of the problems associated with what they deceitfully term 'irregular' migration. Of being labelled as 'bigoted' for wondering if the scale and pace of change is compatible with assimilation and social cohesion. As the state loses control of our borders, with both legal and illegal in-flows reaching objectively unsustainable levels, it is going to ever more desperate lengths to keep the peace. So our officers throw a retired special constable into a police cell over a social media post, though not before sneering at his 'Brexity' bookshelves. Our authorities seem to think that rape gangs need to be covered up to protect 'community cohesion'. I write just days after The Telegraph revealed that concern over mass migration could be deemed a 'terrorist ideology' by the Prevent programme. Wish me luck. But all this just paints over the mould. If the white working-class feel they are constantly being expected to sacrifice their culture, identity, their freedom of speech in order to celebrate and preserve those of immigrants, it may not be long before they revolt. As Prof David Betz of King's College London warns, when 'a formerly dominant social majority fears it is losing that dominance' it doesn't surrender its position quietly. If you want to know how this plays out, glance at events unfolding in Northern Ireland and Los Angeles. Violence has erupted on the streets of Ballymena following the alleged sexual assault of a teenage girl by two 14-year old boys of Romanian descent. Riots have broken out across the city of angels in response to immigration enforcement operations. Some in the Donald Trump-hating media have dismissed the lawlessness as simply 'a bunch of people having fun watching cars burn'. California governor Gavin Newsom somehow blames not the mobs running amok, but rather 'deranged' and 'dictatorial' Trump for what is happening in LA. What we are witnessing in these conflagrations 5,000 miles apart are worrying signs of what could become much more serious confrontations in the future. On the one hand, 'natives' could turn increasingly hostile to migrants. On the other, large migrant communities, now established for two or three generations, could defend newcomers to whom they may be related or with whom they have more in common than with white Brits. To avoid the worst of this, white Brits and affluent migrants could leave cities to become dominated by poorer, more welfare-dependent migrant communities – deepening the rural and urban splits recent election results already tell us are emerging. In London, the White British population declined from 71 per cent in 1991 to 37 per cent in 2021. Birmingham has experienced similar ethnic change. Nigel Farage wants to empower enforcement officers to detain and deport on a regular schedule, using charter flights to get the job done. Yet when Police Scotland attempted to remove two Indian illegal migrants in 2021, protestors surrounded their van, with the men eventually released following a stand-off lasting several hours. If the Government tried something similar in Tower Hamlets, there would be large-scale rioting with the authorities again, eventually, backing down. Reform will need a clear view about who exactly they would try to deport, the size of the problem and the means to do it. Even then, they may not be able to deport more than a few thousand. The situation may seem almost intractable. But the solution cannot be to deny the problem exists. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store