
By Stefan J. Bos, Chief International Correspondent Worthy News
ROME (Worthy News) – Some 80 people have been arrested across various European nations in a major international police operation against illegal art trade, officials said Friday.
According to police, about 37,727 objects, including archaeological pieces, coins, and works of art, were also seized.
Sources familiar with the crackdown said this is the ninth year police services have worked together in “Operation Pandora” to combat the illegal art trade.
This time, 22 European countries and the United States participated in the police action.
The Spanish Guardia Civil coordinated the operation, with support from police organizations Europol and Interpol.
Thousands of artifacts were seized in Spain, Italy, and Greece, among other countries.
In Spain, for example, it involved 2,500 old coins, mainly from the Roman period, which had been stolen from the archaeological site of Tamusia and were offered for sale online, police said.
PASSENGER INTERCEPTED
Also in Spain, investigators announced that a passenger was intercepted while trying to fly from the Spanish island of Mallorca to Germany with 55 coins and a ring in his pocket.
Ancient coins and prehistoric objects such as spearheads were reportedly also seized in Italy.
In Greece, it involved, among other items, 5 Byzantine icons and religious paintings of “holy figures” from the Orthodox Church, authorities explained.
The arrested suspects reportedly tried to sell them for 70,000 euros ($79,000) before being caught in an undercover operation.
Finally, investigators explained that in Ukraine, 87 culturally valuable objects were intercepted by customs in attempts to smuggle them out of the country to Poland, Moldova, or Romania.
Two religious icons were found in the luggage of a bus passenger to Poland, police said.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
France is intensifying efforts to rally Western nations behind a coordinated recognition of a Palestinian state. It aims to make a joint announcement during a high-profile peace summit at the United Nations on June 17.
Some 80 people have been arrested across various European nations in a major international police operation against illegal art trade, officials said Friday.
Law enforcement agencies across the United States are ramping up security at synagogues, schools, and Israeli consulates following the fatal shooting of two Israeli embassy staffers near the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday evening. Authorities are calling the incident an antisemitic terrorist attack.
A new report from the Make America Healthy Again commission links the childhood chronic disease epidemic to pesticides, food additives and undue corporate influence on health regulations.
The USS Harry S. Truman Carrier Strike Group executed what officials are calling the “largest airstrike in the history of the world” launched from an aircraft carrier, dropping 125,000 pounds of munitions in recent operations over Somalia, according to Adm. James Kilby, the Navy’s acting chief of operations.
In a devastating escalation of violence against Christians in Nigeria’s Middle Belt, Fulani ethnic militias launched coordinated attacks on May 14 that left eight Christians dead and over 740 acres of farmland destroyed in Plateau State.
German archaeologists from Heidelberg University have made a landmark discovery in Iraq that is reshaping our understanding of the ancient Assyrian Empire. While excavating the ruins of Nineveh—once the empire’s capital and famously the setting of the biblical story of Jonah—a team uncovered a monumental relief depicting King Assurbanipal flanked by the major deities Assur and Ištar.