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'Portrait Of A Girl' LOST By Drunk Man: $1.3 Million Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot Painting Lost By James Carl Haggerty

JENNIFER PELTZ   09/ 1/10 11:22 PM ET   AP

Portrait Of A Girl Lost Drunk

NEW YORK — First it was a curious tale of a $1.3 million painting a middleman said he drunkenly lost while trying to help a friend sell it.

Now the story has gotten stranger still: A part owner of the canvas identified its co-owner as an admitted art thief, her lawyer said.

Kristyn Trudgeon sued the middleman in New York earlier this week. But attorney Max Di Fabio said she was withdrawing the lawsuit after realizing Wednesday upon seeing a prison mug shot that co-owner Thomas Doyle was the same man who pleaded guilty in 2007 to stealing an $600,000 Edgar Degas sculpture from a wealthy collector. Doyle, whose record also includes a stint in federal prison for a $200,000 jewelry swindle in Tennessee, was paroled in December, records show.

Trudgeon is "exploring potential legal remedies," Di Fabio said. He declined to say how Trudgeon and Doyle knew each other and acquired the portrait – Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot's circa 1857 "Portrait of a Girl" – and whether it was insured. It was held for years by the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles but later was designated acceptable for sale.

Several telephone messages left Wednesday at numbers and addresses listed in Doyle's name weren't immediately returned. Former lawyers for him didn't immediately respond to telephone and e-mail messages or said they were no longer in contact with him.

In the case involving the Degas sculpture, a Thomas Doyle claimed family ties to a renowned art dealer in order to persuade a 73-year-old collector to let him take the bronze statue to be authenticated in 2004, Manhattan prosecutors said.

Instead, Doyle secretly sold the sculpture to an antiques dealer for $225,000, said then-District Attorney Robert Morgenthau, who called him "a very talented con man." Indeed, when those charges were unveiled in 2006, Doyle was in federal custody for violating his supervised release in the Tennessee jewelry case, authorities said.

In the stolen sculpture case, Doyle pleaded guilty to grand larceny and was sentenced to 2 1/2 to five years in prison. A related lawsuit identifies him as Thomas A. Doyle III – the same name used on a document attached to Trudgeon's lawsuit about the missing painting.

According to her lawsuit, Doyle lined up a co-worker at a private jet company, James Carl Haggerty, to take the Corot canvas to a Manhattan hotel for a potential buyer to examine on July 28.

The potential buyer, London gallery owner Offer Waterman, "had no further interest in pursuing this painting" after seeing it, his lawyer said in a statement Wednesday.

Security cameras showed Waterman left the hotel, and then Haggerty lingered in the hotel bar for more than an hour and left with the painting, Trudgeon's lawsuit said.

But cameras at Haggerty's Manhattan apartment building captured no glimpse of the portrait when he got home nearly two hours later, the lawsuit said. And the next morning, Haggerty told Doyle he "could not recall its whereabouts, citing that he had had too much to drink the previous evening," the lawsuit said.

Messages left at several possible addresses for Haggerty weren't immediately returned. Nor was a message left for him Tuesday through Imperial Jets, which charters and leases out private planes.

CEO Howard Gollomp said both Haggerty and Doyle have been consultants for the New York-based company, but he cut ties to Haggerty on Wednesday after news reports about Trudgeon's lawsuit.

Doyle has been consulting with the firm for a few months, mostly working outside its office, Gollomp said. He said he was unaware of any criminal history Doyle might have.

"Our dealings have been always good," Gollomp said. "If this is the Tom Doyle you're referring to (as the art thief, it's), not the person that I know."

Meanwhile, the Corot painting's fate remains a mystery. Police said no complaint about its disappearance had been filed. Prosecutors declined to comment.

Corot, who lived from 1796 to 1875, was an influential member of the pre-Impressionist group known as the Barbizon School, which focused on scenes of rural French life.

The Hammer Museum returned "Portrait of a Girl" and dozens of other works to an affiliated foundation when the two organizations parted ways in 2007. The agreement let the foundation sell the Corot and a few others, museum spokeswoman Sarah Stifler said.

Messages left Tuesday and Wednesday at a telephone number listed on the foundation's tax returns were not immediately returned. A possible Culver City, Calif., number for it rang unanswered Wednesday.

___

Associated Press researcher Jennifer Farrar contributed to this report.

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NEW YORK — First it was a curious tale of a $1.3 million painting a middleman said he drunkenly lost while trying to help a friend sell it. Now the story has gotten stranger still: A part owner...
NEW YORK — First it was a curious tale of a $1.3 million painting a middleman said he drunkenly lost while trying to help a friend sell it. Now the story has gotten stranger still: A part owner...
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02:16 AM on 09/06/2010
Don't drink and catch a cab ;))
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DMSmith
09:45 PM on 09/01/2010
Gee. Wonder what happened? ROFLMAO
09:21 PM on 09/01/2010
In New York we call that a STING OPERATION!
04:43 PM on 09/01/2010
Usually, expensive works of art have a satellite tracking device attached to them. They are also handled by two couriers if the work is in transit. The normal way to conduct art sales is for the interested party to visit the studio where the art is stored. The whole story sounds like amateurs who got into the art business to make a buck without an understand­ing of basic elements such as security. Entrusting a 1.3 million dollar painting to someone with no prior history of being an art agent is the height of stupidity. Especially to someone who drinks to such reported excess. There probably is much more to this story, which investigat­ors are piecing together.
04:17 PM on 09/01/2010
Beats that morning after blackout syndrome called " where the flip did I put the car keys?"
04:14 PM on 09/01/2010
Found a link with the NY Post which has a picture of the missing painting. http://www­.nypost.co­m/p/news/l­ocal/plast­er_piece_V­27VnfpTv7N­mUZClctWJ3­O Friends, don't let your friends drink and watch paintings could be the moral of this story. Unless this was just part of plot to steal the painting. Given the potential 1.3 million dollars value of the painting, the New York Police department should be investigat­ing this case. Possibly Interpol as well, since the painting could be sold to an overseas buyer.
03:59 PM on 09/01/2010
I would be curious as to what the staff at the restaurant­/bar have to say. Did the suspect actually order drinks, and if so how many? His cell phone records should be subpoenaed­, as they could show his whereabout­s for the missing time. They could also help identify any potential suspects of an organized conspiracy to steal the painting that the prime suspect was involved with. The story stinks to high heaven. If true, I would be amazed that the one of the co-owners Doyle would ever speak to the suspect again. It also sounds like the suspect has a major drinking problem and should be in rehab. Or is this typical behavior for him? More investigat­ion of the suspect is warranted since the art work was possibly stolen by him.
03:55 PM on 09/01/2010
If I found this painting, I would claim he gave me the painting as part of a verbal agreement, in exchange for a hundred bucks cash. As long as I had no reason to know he was drunk at the time of the agreement, that's a perfectly enforceabl­e contract. And no one can say it didn't happen.
04:10 PM on 09/01/2010
You're a real prince, pal.
04:33 PM on 09/01/2010
I'm certainly glad to have nothing to do with you, buddy. Thanks for showing your true colors.
03:53 PM on 09/01/2010
They all "lost" it to collect the insurance.
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03:38 PM on 09/01/2010
I bet the kid who lost the iPhone prototype in the bar a couple months back is happy that someone one-upped him. :)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueken
Finger Picking blues man
03:34 PM on 09/01/2010
Boy, you know you have a drinking problem when......­......now where did I put that painting? Maybe you left the $1.3 million painting in the cab? Check you coat. Oh wait, there is a message from the Foxy Lady strip club on your machine, check it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
O K Ali
Wash your hands, seriously.
03:33 PM on 09/01/2010
Dude, Where's my Corot?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KriTiKiT
Says"play nice"
03:13 PM on 09/01/2010
some GHB a pretty girl and you have all the makings of a EZ art heist
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
we-r-stardust
Time flies like an arrow Fruit flies like a banana
03:02 PM on 09/01/2010
Bet he says someone`s trying to 'Frame Him" :-)
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jl4141
Always right, unless I'm wrong.
03:19 PM on 09/02/2010
I'm sure police are canvassing the area as we speak.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
we-r-stardust
Time flies like an arrow Fruit flies like a banana
03:33 PM on 09/02/2010
Very Good :-)
02:40 PM on 09/01/2010
Portrait of a Drunk.