Estimated price: CHF 30'000.-Umayyads. Solidus imitating Byzantine solidi, early 660s AD.NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1
Estimated price: CHF 750'000.-Roman Republic. Brutus. Aureus, 43-42 BC.
From the Mazzini Collection.
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1032
Estimated price: CHF 50'000.-Roman Empire. Theodosius II, 402-450.
Solidus 416 or 418, Constantinople.
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1054
Estimated price: CHF 200'000.-Holy Roman Empire. Leopold I, 1657-1705.
10 Ducats 1671 IGW, Graz. NGC MS64 (Top pop).
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1112
Estimated price: CHF 2'000.-China. Anhwei Province. 50 Cents year 24 (1898).
NGC MS63+
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1225
Estimated price: CHF 200'000.-Nuremberg. 10 Ducats 1694. NGC MS65 PL (Top pop).NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1479
Estimated price: CHF 5'000.-Hong Kong. Victoria, 1837-1901. PROOF 1/2 Dollar 1866.
NGC PF64.
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1638
Estimated price: CHF 400'000.-Pamplona. Felipe IV, 1621-1665. 8 Escudos 1652.
From the Huntington Collection. Unique.
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
1679
Estimated price: CHF 150'000.-Great Britain. Anne, 1702-1714. 5 Guineas 1703 VIGO.NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
2035
Estimated price: CHF 300'000.-Great Britain. George III, 1760-1820. PATTERN PROOF
5 Guineas 1777. NGC PF64 CAMEO (Top pop).
NUMISMATICA GENEVENSIS SA - AUCTIONS 19, 20 & 21
(GENEVA 9-10 December 2024)
2058
all News

Coin Dealer Italo Vecchi Charged with Grand Larceny

by Björn Schöpe, translated by Maike Meßmann

In March 2023, British coin dealer Richard Beale was charged in New York with forging the provenance of an EID MAR aureus. What was the world’s most expensive ancient coin at the time, was allegedly procured for him by the Italian coin dealer Italo Vecchi, who was initially only under investigation. On 21 June 2023, the Manhattan District Attorney also charged Vecchi with various felonies.

Content

Following the indictment of Richard Beale, Italo Vecchi has now also been charged by the Manhattan District Attorney in a case relating to the forged provenance of what used to be the world’s most expensive ancient coin, an EID MAR aureus.

Following the indictment of Richard Beale, Italo Vecchi has now also been charged by the Manhattan District Attorney in a case relating to the forged provenance of what used to be the world’s most expensive ancient coin, an EID MAR aureus.

The Case Against Italo Vecchi

As the Daily Mail reports, Italo Vecchi has been charged with first-degree grand larceny, two counts of fourth-degree conspiracy, second-degree criminal possession of stolen property amon other charges. First-degree grand larceny alone (which refers to objects worth more than 1 million dollars) can lead to a prison sentence of up to 25 years.

The charges are related to the trial against Richard Beale of Roma Numismatics. According to media reports, Vecchi sold two particularly valuable coins to Beale between 2013 and 2014, the EID MAR aureus – which was considered the most expensive ancient coin after it sold for more than 4 million dollars – and a Naxos decadrachm, which has been returned to Italy by now. He allegedly sold both coins without pedigree.

On 22 June 2023 at 3 p.m., Italo Vecchi was arraigned in court – handcuffed and with a cane, as has been reported. He was accompanied by his two lawyers, Georges Gilbert Lederman and Wendy Dickieson of Withers, an international law firm. After half an hour, he was allowed to leave court on his own recognizance.

Dealer, Consultant, Accused

75-year-old Italo Vecchi has long retired from his life as an active coin dealer – however, he has been providing Roma Numismatics with his services as a consultant for years. The Italian numismatist lives in Great Britain and has mainly published works on early Roman and Etruscan coinage.

Throughout his long career, Italo Vecchi worked for various coin dealers, including members of the International Association of Professional Numismatists. (Even the British Museum acquired pieces from Vecchi, according to their online catalogue.) So he became a corresponding member of the association. Due to his long-term service, the IAPN later made him an honorary member. However, this honorary membership was suspended when he became the subject of criminal investigations.

But there is another side to Vecchi’s career. In 1992, US customs officials caught him importing undeclared ancient Greek coins in a briefcase. In 2012, according to the Daily Mail, Vecchi forged the provenance of a decadrachm from Akragas, which was subsequently sold for more than a million dollars in New York.

The Daily Mail refers to court documents that are said to prove that Vecchi had been illegally dealing in coins for decades. The court has to decide whether these allegations are true. According to media reports, Vecchi is to appear in court again on 7 September 2023 at 9 a.m.

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