Dealer Inigo Philbrick Gets Seven Years in Prison for 'One of the Most Significant Frauds' in Art-Market History | Artnet News

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Dealer Inigo Philbrick gets seven years in prison for 'one of the most significant frauds' in art-market history.

Inigo Philbrick is headed to prison. A U.S. District Court judge today sentenced the disgraced art dealer to serve seven years behind bars for crimes connected to his now-collapsed art-dealing business.

Dressed in brown prison clothes, Philbrick was escorted into the courtroom on Monday afternoon by two sheriffs. From behind his mask, his face looked thin; he showed little emotion during the roughly two-hour proceedings.Also in the room was his fiancée, reality television star Victoria Baker-Harber, with whom he shares a daughter, and Philbrick’s mother, Jane.

Midway through his statement, the judge interrupted him for a mandatory court break. When the session resumed, Philbrick said he was no longer going to read from the prepared statement he wrote in his jail cell. A Rudolf Stingel painting from 2012 is at the center of the Philbrick case. Image courtesy Christie’s.in lost funds and art, including paintings by Rudolf Stingel, Yayoi Kusama, and Christopher Wool. Tümpel and Würtenberger

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