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Chilean authorities hand over $194,000 in watches stolen from Keanu Reeves to the FBI

Chilean authorities hand over $194,000 in watches stolen from Keanu Reeves to the FBI

Sky News AU2 days ago
Chilean authorities announced Tuesday they had handed over $125,000 ($194,000 AUD) in watches stolen from Keanu Reeves to the FBI.
The FBI will return the six watches — which include a Rolex worth a minimum of $9,500 (14,700 AUD) — to the Canadian actor best known for his performances in "John Wick" and "The Matrix," according to The Associated Press.
The timepieces, recovered months ago during police raids, were stolen from Reeves' home in the Hollywood Hills neighborhood of Los Angeles in December 2023 amid a string of high-profile break-ins.
Reeves identified the recovered watches as those stolen, the AP reported, citing Chilean prosecutors.
Reeves' burglarized watches were found during police raids of homes in Chile's capital of Santiago. Law enforcement found a range of stolen items at the time, including iPhones, cars, designer purses and luxury watches, according to AP.
The raids also coincided with a separate investigation into a string of robberies by South American crime groups targeting American luxury homes, including the home of pro football player Travis Kelce, the AP reported.
Police in Chile announced in April that 23 citizens linked to the string of burglaries had been arrested, according to the AP.
Whether there is a link between Reeves' watches and the other burglaries remains under investigation, the AP reported, citing a Chilean police officer.
The announcement comes as Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem visits the South American country for meetings with officials about issues like transnational crime.
In April, Noem experienced a similar incident, when her purse was stolen at a Washington restaurant by a Chilean national who was in the U.S. illegally, according to the AP.
A spokesperson for Keanu Reeves did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
Originally published as Chilean authorities hand over $194,000 in watches stolen from Keanu Reeves to the FBI
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"We are making every effort to try to rescue these five miners," said Andrés Music, general manager of El Teniente, detailing rescue operations involving 100 experts, including some of whom participated in the dramatic 2010 rescue of 33 trapped miners in northern Chile — who, after 69 days underground, emerged alive and into the spotlight of international celebrity. "The next 48 hours are crucial," Music said. Codelco halted operations at the affected section of the copper mine and evacuated 3000 people from the wider site to safe areas. The company cancelled a presentation of its first-half financial results, set for Friday morning, due to the rescue efforts. Chile, the world's largest copper producer, also lies in the seismically active "Ring of Fire" that surrounds the shores of the Pacific Ocean. A collapse at a copper mine in Chile has killed one worker and left five trapped underground, forcing the country's state mining company to suspend operations in affected areas of the world's largest underground copper deposit. Nine other mine workers suffered injuries, said Chile's National Copper Corp., known as Codelco, describing the incident as the result of "a seismic event." The US Geological Survey reported a magnitude 5.0 earthquake in an area of central Chile where Codelco's El Teniente mine is located, at 5.34pm local time on Thursday. Codelco reported the tremor had a magnitude of 4.2. Authorities were still investigating whether it was a naturally occurring earthquake or whether mining activity at Codelco's flagship El Teniente mine caused the quake. Chilean prosecutors also launched a criminal investigation to determine whether any safety standards were violated. Chile's national disaster response service, Senapred, said that the tremor struck the Machalí commune in the O'Higgins region, about 100km from the capital, Santiago. Codelco identified the deceased as Paulo Marín Tapia and said he had been working on the Andesita project, a new 25-km tunnel complex extending from the El Teniente mine on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains. That expanded section had only recently started to produce copper. The company said that search-and-rescue teams had determined the exact location of the partial collapse but could not communicate with the five trapped workers. As the mountain shook, mounds of rocks and dirt caved in, falling into the tunnel where the five miners were working and blocking all access routes to the sites 900 metres underground. It was not clear whether the workers were alive or dead, but Codelco emphasised it was treating its efforts as a rescue operation. The names of the trapped miners were not released. "We are making every effort to try to rescue these five miners," said Andrés Music, general manager of El Teniente, detailing rescue operations involving 100 experts, including some of whom participated in the dramatic 2010 rescue of 33 trapped miners in northern Chile — who, after 69 days underground, emerged alive and into the spotlight of international celebrity. "The next 48 hours are crucial," Music said. Codelco halted operations at the affected section of the copper mine and evacuated 3000 people from the wider site to safe areas. The company cancelled a presentation of its first-half financial results, set for Friday morning, due to the rescue efforts. Chile, the world's largest copper producer, also lies in the seismically active "Ring of Fire" that surrounds the shores of the Pacific Ocean. A collapse at a copper mine in Chile has killed one worker and left five trapped underground, forcing the country's state mining company to suspend operations in affected areas of the world's largest underground copper deposit. Nine other mine workers suffered injuries, said Chile's National Copper Corp., known as Codelco, describing the incident as the result of "a seismic event." The US Geological Survey reported a magnitude 5.0 earthquake in an area of central Chile where Codelco's El Teniente mine is located, at 5.34pm local time on Thursday. Codelco reported the tremor had a magnitude of 4.2. Authorities were still investigating whether it was a naturally occurring earthquake or whether mining activity at Codelco's flagship El Teniente mine caused the quake. Chilean prosecutors also launched a criminal investigation to determine whether any safety standards were violated. Chile's national disaster response service, Senapred, said that the tremor struck the Machalí commune in the O'Higgins region, about 100km from the capital, Santiago. Codelco identified the deceased as Paulo Marín Tapia and said he had been working on the Andesita project, a new 25-km tunnel complex extending from the El Teniente mine on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains. That expanded section had only recently started to produce copper. The company said that search-and-rescue teams had determined the exact location of the partial collapse but could not communicate with the five trapped workers. As the mountain shook, mounds of rocks and dirt caved in, falling into the tunnel where the five miners were working and blocking all access routes to the sites 900 metres underground. It was not clear whether the workers were alive or dead, but Codelco emphasised it was treating its efforts as a rescue operation. The names of the trapped miners were not released. "We are making every effort to try to rescue these five miners," said Andrés Music, general manager of El Teniente, detailing rescue operations involving 100 experts, including some of whom participated in the dramatic 2010 rescue of 33 trapped miners in northern Chile — who, after 69 days underground, emerged alive and into the spotlight of international celebrity. "The next 48 hours are crucial," Music said. Codelco halted operations at the affected section of the copper mine and evacuated 3000 people from the wider site to safe areas. The company cancelled a presentation of its first-half financial results, set for Friday morning, due to the rescue efforts. Chile, the world's largest copper producer, also lies in the seismically active "Ring of Fire" that surrounds the shores of the Pacific Ocean.

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