Posted on 01/29/2014 8:30:45 AM PST by afraidfortherepublic
Read to the end of the article at the link. I don't like the sound of that last sentence.
Well, they need to quit fiddlin’ around and string up the players that stole it. (Sorry, couldn’t help myself)
Update on the theft of the Lipinski violin.
FReep Mail me if you want on, or off, this Wisconsin interest ping list.
Well, it’s not a laughing matter, but your post has me LOL!
Link doesn’t work.
I’d be looking closely at Frank Almond. Just how would any thief know where the violin would be at that time without inside knowledge?
I tried to go to the link but that didn’t work. I was just wondering what price they put on the priceless violin. And what’s all this talk about gun violins anyway? :>}
Try the above. Sorry.
I’m sure this theft was orchestrated by more than one individual. I hope the police conduct a thorough investigation.
Sean Michaels stole it to play sweet chin music.
See #9. Sorry about the bad link.
The violin is estimated to be worth $3.5 million.
Everybody in town would know where that violin would be. He’d just played a public concert!
Maybe they and the local sheriff will work on concert with each other to come to a harmonious crescendo. Okay. I gotta stop now.
:: just completed a performance at Wisconsin Lutheran College ::
ELKer?
I'd say more "irreplaceable" than "priceless".
I recall seeing something about the wood that Stradivarius used. It grew during one of the colder spells of the last "little ice age" (LIA), among other traits.
While worth potentially millions, selling a stolen Strad would I think be rather hard. There are only a few dozen known Strads in the world so any open sale would be impossible. That would leave selling it to a private collector who didn’t care about the source. I would guess this theft was well planned with a buyer already identified.
You have a $3.5 million intrument and you park “behind the school”?
That, all by itself, is suspicious. And just who described the getaway vehicle? If it was Frank Almond, that might make one suspicious.
Still think it might be an inside job; and I bet the FBI and cops are looking into that possibility.
Wouldn’t someone walking in a ghetto parking lot with something valued a $3.5 million have a guard? Does that even make sense?
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