Inigo Philbrick, an artwork supplier who went to jail for defrauding different sellers and traders out of tens of millions of {dollars}, spoke to the BBC for a forthcoming documentary.
In 2022, Philbrick was sentenced to seven years in US jail, with two years of supervised launch and a forfeiture of $86 million and two work, for wire fraud and id theft. He was launched early in 2024, having not served lower than half his sentence.
Subsequent week, the BBC will launched a two-part documentary referred to as The Great Art Fraud, through which Philbrick himself seems on digicam. The Guardian bought an early take a look at the movie, reporting that in it, Philbrick says, “I’m clearly in no place to do something apart from say how sorry I’m. However there’s a small a part of me that thinks: what about all the nice offers?”
When requested concerning the $86 million he gained, Philbrick reportedly claims not solely that he doesn’t have it, however that he doesn’t know the place the cash is.
The documentary delves into Philbrick’s biography. He grew up in Connecticut because the son of a former museum director and a Harvard-educated author and artist, and later interned with White Dice gallery in London.
The BBC can be highlighting his life along with his spouse, the Made in Chelsea socialite Victoria Baker-Harber. Earlier than his conviction, Philbrick had fled Britain and hid out with Baker-Harber on the Pacific island Vanuatu. He was later arrested there by the FBI. They now have two kids collectively.
Within the documentary, Philbrick says he nonetheless has “the ambition is to get again to doing what I used to be doing. I used to be an ideal artwork supplier.”















