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ダークサイドミステリー 2025年2月28日
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00:00:00In May 2002, a shocking article was published in the world newspaper.
00:00:10The unprecedented case of Althaus's Arsène Lupin.
00:00:16The second world war, the largest-scale art product theft case.
00:00:22The culprit appeared on TV and boasted a crime.
00:00:30There are about 250-300 in this country.
00:00:33I stole only the 16th, 17th and 18th, because I liked to live my passion.
00:00:38I know myself well in art, I know myself well in security.
00:00:41Bold and confident, Mr. Kaido is even better.
00:00:48I am the liberator of art.
00:01:00You don't know yet.
00:01:02A terrible mystery hidden in this world.
00:01:07Let's go to the dark side of the world.
00:01:17In the second half of the 1990s, there was a case of art theft in various European cities.
00:01:24There are more than 300 pieces of paintings and crafts.
00:01:28Young Kaido, Stefan Breitwieser.
00:01:32The culprit is always with his lover.
00:01:36Bold and confident, even if there are guests and security guards, he will steal.
00:01:42If he likes it, he will steal it immediately and never be caught.
00:01:46Bold and wonderful art thief.
00:01:49The stolen artwork is in the attic with his lover.
00:01:54He steals only what he likes and never sells anything.
00:01:59The small attic was an art museum for only two people.
00:02:04However, all the valuable collections were thrown away.
00:02:10The tragedy that attacked modern Lupin.
00:02:13What is the sad darkness hidden by the cruel crime?
00:02:19In the next hour, I will shine a light on the world of darkness.
00:02:23I will unravel the mystery with you.
00:02:40Lupin the Thief
00:02:59First-class music.
00:03:02First-class painting.
00:03:04It seems that there are many people who admire the life surrounded by art.
00:03:10But that's all.
00:03:14Even if it's a stolen product, do you think so?
00:03:18What I will introduce tonight is a man who decorated his room with more than 300 stolen artworks.
00:03:25A man who lived a dream surrounded by art.
00:03:29Stefan Breitwieser.
00:03:32When he steals, he is always with his lover.
00:03:35He never uses violence.
00:03:37He steals gracefully with an army knife.
00:03:40His name is the art liberator.
00:03:44It looks cool, doesn't it?
00:03:47It's more interesting to talk about such a convenient story.
00:03:53It's obvious that there is a story behind it.
00:03:58Mulhouse, a town in the northeast of France.
00:04:04It is a rich natural land along the border with Switzerland.
00:04:11A boy was born and raised here.
00:04:15Stefan Breitwieser is the main character of this story.
00:04:22His father, Roland, is a famous painter in Switzerland.
00:04:30It was a wealthy family.
00:04:35The boy was arrogant and was not good at getting into people's circles.
00:04:40He was isolated and bullied by people around him.
00:04:46His father comforted his son who came back with sadness.
00:04:53You can't do anything? Why don't you resist?
00:04:58You are too weak!
00:05:01There is no place for him at home or at school.
00:05:05The only salvation for him was a collection of artworks that his father collected.
00:05:1618th-century armchairs, dressers, antique clocks, swords,
00:05:2318th-century firearms, etc.
00:05:27There were many masterpieces on display in the royal palace.
00:05:32It was a time to look at them and forget all the pain for Breitwieser.
00:05:44Artworks don't insult me.
00:05:48Artworks don't bully me.
00:05:52And they are so beautiful!
00:05:58The arrogant boy fell into the charm of artworks.
00:06:07In the fall of 1991,
00:06:11Breitwieser entered the famous Strasbourg University.
00:06:18He met his destiny in a lonely youth.
00:06:25It was at a birthday party of his art classmate.
00:06:30Stéphane!
00:06:33Let me introduce you to my friend.
00:06:36I'm Anne-Catherine. Nice to meet you.
00:06:41Nice to meet you, too.
00:06:47They were born less than three months apart.
00:06:53Their birthplaces are close and their hobbies are similar.
00:06:59They were naturally attracted to each other.
00:07:06Soon they started dating.
00:07:11They decided to go on a date to a nearby museum.
00:07:16Later, they talked about their love.
00:07:23Art has always been with Anne-Catherine.
00:07:31Artworks and Anne-Catherine.
00:07:35Both became precious treasures for Breitwieser in his twenties.
00:07:43A few months after they met,
00:07:48Breitwieser's parents got a divorce.
00:07:56Breitwieser had a bad relationship with his father since he was a child.
00:08:04It was natural that he chose his mother.
00:08:10Breitwieser moved from a wealthy family to live in a small house.
00:08:19At the same time, Breitwieser broke up with his father's art collection.
00:08:26Breitwieser lost one of the pillars of his life.
00:08:35At that time, Anne-Catherine failed her goal of becoming a nurse.
00:08:42On the other hand, Breitwieser dropped out of college.
00:08:47Their life was unstable.
00:08:52In the meantime, they started living together in their new house.
00:09:02Breitwieser and Anne-Catherine lived in the attic of their mother's house.
00:09:12It was a small dark room.
00:09:17It was the only place for them.
00:09:27The weather suddenly changed.
00:09:32It was the time when they visited a small museum in Alsace.
00:09:42It looks like my father's gun.
00:09:47Breitwieser saw a gun in his father's collection.
00:09:55It was a firearm of the 18th century.
00:10:04Breitwieser saw a gun in his father's collection.
00:10:08What's wrong?
00:10:11This gun is much better than what my father had.
00:10:18If I can get this gun, I can make my father proud.
00:10:26The regretful memory of the gunshot in front of him.
00:10:35Breitwieser opened the acrylic case.
00:10:42There was no key in the case.
00:10:44There was no security camera without other visitors.
00:10:50When he quickly put the gun in his bag, they hurriedly jumped into the car and left the museum.
00:11:01Breitwieser is a man who has a strong desire for self-discovery and ownership.
00:11:07Breitwieser lost his beloved artwork due to the divorce of his parents.
00:11:11Breitwieser wanted to see his father back.
00:11:14Breitwieser wanted to be recognized.
00:11:18Anne-Catherine was an ordinary girl who grew up in the countryside.
00:11:23For her, the thrill of stealing for the first time was very exciting.
00:11:29It was as if she had become a character in a manga.
00:11:36When she returned home, she went straight to the attic.
00:11:41She immediately put the gun on the shelf.
00:11:46She got a better artwork than her father's.
00:11:52Her happiness filled Breitwieser's heart.
00:11:57This attic is an art museum only for Anne-Catherine and me.
00:12:04The monochrome attic began to take on a faint color.
00:12:13Breitwieser, the art thief who later invaded Europe.
00:12:19Breitwieser's first theft was to make his father a puppet.
00:12:24Breitwieser and Anne-Catherine are the only two artists in the museum.
00:12:29Breitwieser is an innocent, dangerous, and likely to be anywhere.
00:12:33Breitwieser is not likely to commit a huge crime.
00:12:37What kind of person is Breitwieser?
00:12:41Let's ask the experts.
00:12:45This time, we will talk about a dark side mystery.
00:12:49It's a story of an art thief with a slightly different color.
00:12:53The main character is Breitwieser.
00:12:56What kind of person is Breitwieser?
00:12:59Breitwieser was a very down-to-earth boy.
00:13:02He was down-to-earth until he was a teenager.
00:13:05His parents' divorce hurt him a lot.
00:13:08His father's influence was very strong.
00:13:11His father started to like what he liked.
00:13:14Breitwieser was down-to-earth and isolated.
00:13:17He started to seek salvation in art.
00:13:21Breitwieser was not able to adapt to society.
00:13:25He was in a state of general depression.
00:13:30I think that's what happened.
00:13:34Breitwieser always had a conflict with his partner.
00:13:39His parents were very close.
00:13:42Breitwieser was happy to go to the old fort with his mother's grandfather.
00:13:47Breitwieser was happy to go to the old fort with his mother's grandfather.
00:13:53Breitwieser liked his grandfather.
00:13:57Breitwieser had a deeper connection with his grandfather.
00:14:03Did he like the things that filled his heart?
00:14:07Yes, I think so.
00:14:09If his father had been collecting different things,
00:14:13I think he would have gone to the old fort.
00:14:16What was the relationship between Breitwieser and his father?
00:14:19Breitwieser was his father's DV.
00:14:21Breitwieser was his father's DV.
00:14:24Breitwieser was his father's DV.
00:14:26Breitwieser was his father's DV.
00:14:31Breitwieser was his father's DV.
00:14:35Breitwieser's pride was in his father's DV.
00:14:38Breitwieser's pride was in his father's DV.
00:14:43Breitwieser and his father fell in love.
00:14:48Breitwieser's boundaries were disturbed that virtue might affect his ability to choose a partner.
00:15:01As you said,
00:15:03It is written that it was a very low-class house, but his father was a working class man, so I think he was a very violent person in that sense.
00:15:15So, if the heart and the mind were connected, I think there was such a point.
00:15:21In the meantime, for the first time, he was involved in a crime.
00:15:25He got something better than the gun his father had, so he was able to make his father a puppet.
00:15:33I think he had a complicated feeling about his father who had abandoned him.
00:15:38His parents told him that he was a bad guy.
00:15:41In some way, he wanted to prove that he was worth something.
00:15:46I think he did it because he wanted to avenge his father's death somewhere.
00:15:59Nine months after he stole the Higuchi-style gun,
00:16:06the two visited a local factory for sightseeing.
00:16:17Bright Beezer was caught by one of the exhibits.
00:16:24It was a stone bow.
00:16:29Then...
00:16:32There's no one here.
00:16:35All right.
00:16:37You can hide it in the bag you have.
00:16:41He quickly got the stone bow while waiting for Anne Catherine in the car.
00:16:49Oh, no!
00:16:51It's bigger than I thought!
00:16:55It wasn't big enough to fit in the bag.
00:17:02When he looked around in a hurry,
00:17:05there was a window nearby.
00:17:09Kusamura was spreading under the window.
00:17:15Then Bright Beezer...
00:17:19threw the stone bow outside.
00:17:26He hurriedly went outside to look for Kusamura.
00:17:31Kusamura was found.
00:17:34The stone bow was miraculously safe.
00:17:41He quickly picked it up and went to the car waiting for Anne Catherine.
00:17:47He quickly left the place.
00:17:52A few weeks after the dangerous theft,
00:17:56there was an article in a local newspaper.
00:18:00A stone bow was stolen from an art museum.
00:18:04The police announced that the suspect was completely unknown.
00:18:09We were proud of what we did after reading the article.
00:18:18Bright Beezer strongly wanted to be recognized by the world.
00:18:26He even thought that all the artworks in the museum were his own.
00:18:34Anne Catherine praised Bright Beezer for the continuous success of the theft.
00:18:41She must have had the illusion that she was Bonnie and Clyde.
00:18:47Through the second theft, their bond became stronger.
00:18:54And so, Bright Beezer's artistic life began.
00:19:03On Monday morning, Anne Catherine went to work.
00:19:09Unemployed Bright Beezer...
00:19:13went to the library.
00:19:17He read books about art.
00:19:20I didn't know there was something like this in this museum.
00:19:25It's wonderful!
00:19:29On the weekend when Anne Catherine was on vacation,
00:19:34they drove to a small town in the suburbs.
00:19:40Their destination was a museum where Bright Beezer displayed stolen items.
00:19:47There, Anne Catherine watched the movements of police officers and guests.
00:19:58She aimed at a gap where no one could see and approached the artworks.
00:20:05Bright Beezer took out a secret tool.
00:20:10A Swiss Army Knife worth about 15,000 yen.
00:20:14A Swiss Army Knife.
00:20:18If the case of the artwork is fixed with silicon,
00:20:23a cut is made to open the case.
00:20:28If the case is tightly screwed,
00:20:33a screw is removed.
00:20:36Even if the case is boldly removed 30 times,
00:20:42a Swiss Army Knife worth only 15,000 yen
00:20:46becomes an all-purpose secret weapon.
00:20:52Sometimes, the artwork worth 1.7 billion yen is stolen.
00:20:59For Bright Beezer, the price of the artwork is not important.
00:21:04The target was only the one whose heart was stolen.
00:21:09It didn't matter what other people decided.
00:21:15The one whose heart was stolen was decided.
00:21:20If it was an artwork, it was like a commoner of the Renaissance period.
00:21:25There was no interest in the artwork drawn by a rich patron.
00:21:30There is a free spirit in it.
00:21:34It's brighter and healthier than something exaggerated like Da Vinci.
00:21:40It's better to have a practical item or a weapon before the Industrial Revolution.
00:21:45It's a mass-produced, non-toxic, monotonous, aesthetic lump.
00:21:52It's only been two years since the first theft.
00:21:56Bright Beezer continued to rob the museum with a fierce momentum.
00:22:03He was attacked by a Swiss who was close to his hometown, Alsace.
00:22:11It took less than two hours for each of them to come from home.
00:22:17Gradually, the pace accelerated.
00:22:22It spread to Germany and other regions.
00:22:28On the other hand, it was easy to stop stealing.
00:22:34When he saw the artwork he was looking for, he looked at Anne Catherine, the watchdog.
00:22:40He withdrew without stealing anything.
00:22:45Bright Beezer trusted Anne Catherine, who had a strong sense of security in the neurosurgery room.
00:22:54The next day, he went to Germany.
00:22:59He was attacked by a Swiss who was close to his hometown, Alsace.
00:23:04He was attacked by a Swiss who was close to his hometown, Alsace.
00:23:10He had a quick-tempered boyfriend and a tall girlfriend.
00:23:14They were a perfect match as a couple.
00:23:21All the artworks worth more than a few hundred million yen were displayed in the attic.
00:23:29No matter how much money he had, he couldn't sell the artworks that stole his heart.
00:23:37In the attic, there were his favorite artworks and his beloved girlfriend.
00:23:45Me, art, and Anne Catherine.
00:23:50It's like a beautiful triangle.
00:23:55It's the best time of my life.
00:24:00The theft of Bright Beezer is very simple.
00:24:04He went to the museum during the opening hours and stole the artworks that stole his heart.
00:24:12He hid the stolen artworks in a coat or a bag and left the museum.
00:24:18He cut through everything on the spot.
00:24:23It's unprecedented to steal without a thorough plan.
00:24:30In fact, he cut through a lot of mistakes on the spot.
00:24:36There was also a story about how he stole the artworks that stole his heart.
00:24:42This is the story of the theft in Blois-Jean, France.
00:24:51The place of the theft is Madeleine-de-France in Corneille-de-Lyon.
00:24:57The size is small, but it's an important artwork in the French art world.
00:25:06Because it's a masterpiece, there are a lot of customers and the security is tight.
00:25:12But when it's about to close, it's a mess.
00:25:17The guards were also on alert.
00:25:23Chance!
00:25:26He quickly approached the painting and took it off the frame.
00:25:32Then...
00:25:35Oh, no!
00:25:38There's nothing to hide!
00:25:42His body moved before he could think.
00:25:47He realized that there was nothing to hide, such as a bag or a coat.
00:25:54But...
00:25:57Tch!
00:25:59Then...
00:26:02He hurriedly turned his back on the guards.
00:26:07He forced the painting into his pants and hid it in his shirt.
00:26:17The guards can only see my back.
00:26:21Lucky!
00:26:24By chance, the guards were only on the back side of Bright Beezer.
00:26:30There were no customers in front of him.
00:26:33What a lucky day!
00:26:36He left his pants unbuttoned and left Blois-Jean behind.
00:26:43The story of Bright Beezer
00:26:47The story of Bright Beezer
00:26:49The story of Bright Beezer
00:26:51The story of Bright Beezer
00:26:53The story of Bright Beezer
00:26:56Bright Beezer's main target was a small art museum in the countryside.
00:27:02The budget was low, the security system was insufficient, and there were few visitors and guards.
00:27:08He took advantage of the lack of security in the art museum in the countryside.
00:27:14On the other hand, there was a reason why he couldn't issue a warning to the small art museum.
00:27:20If he issued a warning, the police would come in and the media would report it.
00:27:27As a result, the local residents and the local government might be interrupted by the lack of security system and be driven into peace.
00:27:37In other words, he was afraid of scandals and hid it.
00:27:42I don't know if Bright Beezer thought about it that much.
00:27:48In the attic, he talked to Anne Catherine.
00:27:55Art is something you can see whenever you want.
00:28:00We release art that is confined to the art museum.
00:28:07We are the art releasers.
00:28:15The self-proclaimed art releaser, Bright Beezer.
00:28:20His desire is getting bigger and bigger.
00:28:29Bright Beezer's second theft was a success.
00:28:32What made you decide to do it again?
00:28:37The sense of accomplishment for the first time was big for him.
00:28:42It is said that stealing brings pleasure at the drug level.
00:28:49I think it had such an impact.
00:28:52You didn't stop Anne Catherine here.
00:28:55When I think about how Anne Catherine thought about it,
00:28:59I think Bright Beezer is a very easy-going person.
00:29:03Hearing Bright Beezer's story brings me to a very thrilling world.
00:29:08Like Bonnie and Clyde, he is a tragic thief like Bonnie and Clyde.
00:29:16He seems to be tickled a little.
00:29:18Yes, he is tickled. He is like a hero.
00:29:20There is a word called co-dependence.
00:29:23It's good to depend on each other in terms of helping each other,
00:29:27but it's a distorted bond that isn't.
00:29:31They create their own worlds with different values from the outside world.
00:29:36If they were a little more sociable, would they have gone in a completely different direction?
00:29:42Yes, I think so.
00:29:44For example, I think it's not good to talk a little about this and steal.
00:29:49If there is such an existence that warns you that you have to stop,
00:29:54I think it would have been a very small and hard world for only the two of them.
00:29:59You said your mother lives with you, but doesn't your mother notice?
00:30:03I think she might have noticed,
00:30:06but I'm watching her carry art and climb the stairs.
00:30:11Were the two of them working?
00:30:12No, she was a nurse.
00:30:16But I don't think she made much money.
00:30:20Brightweather didn't work part-time.
00:30:24In the end, he was in a state where he was parasitized by his mother.
00:30:31At this time, Brightweather was born with a thief's taste.
00:30:35The only art he steals is the one that steals his heart.
00:30:39And he never sells art.
00:30:41When I listen to his words,
00:30:44I think it's a very posthumous statement,
00:30:47whether it's cool or self-satisfying.
00:30:51Brightweather finally says something like this.
00:30:54We are the liberators of art.
00:30:56How about this?
00:30:58I'm really a liberator, but in the end, I'm the one who captures art.
00:31:04I think I'm a captor.
00:31:06What should be free should be painting.
00:31:09Art.
00:31:11Art should be more free, but thanks to him,
00:31:15he was trapped there.
00:31:17This is not a crime.
00:31:19I think it's a convenient word to hide the crime.
00:31:29A beautiful art thief.
00:31:32Brightweather.
00:31:34A date with his lover at the museum every weekend.
00:31:38The only things he stole there were two artists.
00:31:42Me, art, and Katrine.
00:31:45It's like a beautiful triangle.
00:31:48What a perfect happiness.
00:31:52But don't you forget something?
00:31:56He's nearly 30 years old, and he still lives on the roof of his family's house.
00:32:01He doesn't work part-time for a long time.
00:32:03He lives a poor life, but he doesn't sell his art.
00:32:10This is tough.
00:32:13Oh, excuse me.
00:32:15What kind of fate awaits him in the future?
00:32:19To put it simply, I'm pretty worried.
00:32:26January, 1997.
00:32:29Brightweather, a thief, was planning the biggest trip of his life.
00:32:38The Royal Museum in Brussels, Belgium.
00:32:44The museum boasts the size of the European capital along with the Louvre Museum.
00:32:50He was planning to steal a silverware.
00:32:55More than a hundred times, the thief's exit was advertised.
00:33:02When he entered the museum,
00:33:07the number of security guards, security cameras,
00:33:11everything he had ever seen,
00:33:14everything he had ever seen,
00:33:17everything he had ever seen,
00:33:19everything he had ever seen,
00:33:21everything he had ever seen,
00:33:24But here,
00:33:26Brightweather's trained intuition works.
00:33:32If you look closely at the position of the security camera,
00:33:37In front of the display case, the field of vision is cut off.
00:33:40The position of the target's silverware
00:33:43is a place that is not reflected in the security camera.
00:33:48I can do it.
00:33:51To keep an eye on Anne Catherine,
00:33:54he quickly opened the case with an arm knife,
00:33:58to see when the security guards were gone.
00:34:03One of the two was in Anne Catherine's bag.
00:34:07The other was in Brightweather's coat.
00:34:12Further inside,
00:34:16the paper he had prepared in advance
00:34:19was placed in the empty case.
00:34:23He was taking it out for research.
00:34:30Even if there was no silverware,
00:34:33no one would have thought it was unnatural.
00:34:35No one would have thought it was unnatural.
00:34:39The two left the front door of the museum in a hurry.
00:34:48In this way,
00:34:49from the huge museum that represents Europe,
00:34:54silverware was added to the Yaneura Collection.
00:34:59The reason why we steal from the big museums
00:35:03is to feel the joy of perfection
00:35:07in what we do.
00:35:13Thanks to this,
00:35:16the theft of silverware spread all over Western Europe.
00:35:21From Switzerland, Belgium,
00:35:24and far away to Denmark,
00:35:26silverware was stolen from the big museums all over the world.
00:35:33At that time,
00:35:36the French National Police
00:35:39was investigating the crime of art.
00:35:43They checked the security camera footage of the damaged museum.
00:35:49The footage showed a suspicious man and woman,
00:35:53but there was no clue to identify the criminal.
00:35:58The reason why they were not caught
00:36:01was that they did not sell the stolen artwork.
00:36:04The best way to find the stolen artwork and the criminal
00:36:09was to investigate the black market,
00:36:12but there was no trace of it, and they couldn't find it.
00:36:17And as they got used to it,
00:36:19they could not leave any evidence.
00:36:24The police were helpless.
00:36:29However, the happy time of Bright Beezer
00:36:34was about to collapse
00:36:37with a single theft.
00:36:42On May 28, 1997,
00:36:47in the center of Switzerland, Lucerne,
00:36:51they came to a small gallery.
00:36:56Bright Beezer was fascinated by the artwork there.
00:37:03It was a painting of the Dutch painter Willem van Aerst.
00:37:09Anne Catherine, who was watching it, said,
00:37:13Don't do anything. I have a bad feeling about this.
00:37:17A signal from a trusted partner.
00:37:22However, Bright Beezer was relieved.
00:37:27Don't worry. I'll be fine.
00:37:33He picked up the painting and put it in his coat,
00:37:38leaving the painting behind.
00:37:41It's the same as usual. There's nothing to worry about.
00:37:46About 20 minutes after Bright Beezer left.
00:37:53Hey, what are you going to do with that painting?
00:37:56He was Bright Beezer's employee.
00:38:00No, I bought it a while ago.
00:38:05He was a member of the student council.
00:38:08I bought it a while ago.
00:38:10The usual calmness disappeared.
00:38:13All that came out were words of escape.
00:38:18Don't lie to me. I'll call the police.
00:38:23Bright Beezer and Anne Catherine were arrested in the current trial.
00:38:32But bad luck was still left.
00:38:36Bright Beezer was treated as an impulsive criminal without a Swiss arrest record.
00:38:45He was fined about 240,000 yen and banned from entering Switzerland for three years.
00:38:52He was arrested in less than a week.
00:38:59The two returned to the attic again.
00:39:02However, there was a gap in the relationship.
00:39:08Even after the arrest, Bright Beezer did not show any sign of change.
00:39:15This time, I was caught by chance, but the next time I'm caught, it's over.
00:39:23The reality was suddenly realized.
00:39:27Six years later
00:39:30Six years have passed since they lived in the attic in the attic room.
00:39:35Moreover, the two were 26 years old.
00:39:42Anne Catherine is a normal child.
00:39:46She has not been able to get a steady job, and she has begun to show affection to Bright Beezer, who has never grown up.
00:39:53Because of the arrest, she began to think more realistically about her life.
00:40:02Anne Catherine began to walk from dream to reality.
00:40:09She rented an apartment nearby and settled down.
00:40:15And finally
00:40:18If you continue to steal in the future, at least wear gloves so as not to leave fingerprints.
00:40:28Anne Catherine left the attic room, leaving behind words from her worries.
00:40:39She lost one of her precious assets, Anne Catherine.
00:40:48The art thief of Bright Beezer, who returned to loneliness, changed this day.
00:40:57February 2001, Swiss Gruyère Castle
00:41:03Bright Beezer stole a lot of things from his eyes.
00:41:09Tea pot, silver cup, spoon, painting, fireplace tools, etc.
00:41:19In addition
00:41:22Not only the museum, but also the church steals the statues of Christ and Mary.
00:41:31The handling is also rough.
00:41:35The paintings, which had been rolled up, were pushed under the bed.
00:41:43The thief is no longer the one whose heart has been stolen.
00:41:50Even so, the number of artworks continues to increase.
00:41:55However, if there is no love for art, there is no one to love.
00:42:02The art thief of Bright Beezer has become a thief to steal.
00:42:15Bright Beezer has been working at a small-scale museum and art museum so far.
00:42:22But he succeeded in stealing from one of the European museums, the Belgian Royal Museum.
00:42:28He has raised the level.
00:42:31I feel that his way of thinking and way of life has changed a little.
00:42:35In the meantime, they were finally arrested in Switzerland.
00:42:38Thanks to this arrest, Catherine broke up with him.
00:42:43It's a normal behavior for her.
00:42:48As a feature of these two people, they create their own world.
00:42:52I realized that I had a different point of view from others.
00:43:01I'm glad this happened to her.
00:43:04If it hadn't happened, she would have gone back and forth again.
00:43:08When he was arrested, he was very warm-hearted.
00:43:12He's been doing well so far.
00:43:15But when he was arrested, he was caught quite lazily.
00:43:21So I thought, is he okay?
00:43:24I thought it was hard to be in love with a thief.
00:43:29I don't know what the trigger will be.
00:43:32I think he had a strong feeling of being abandoned.
00:43:37He was abandoned by his father.
00:43:40This time, he was abandoned by Anne Catherine.
00:43:43In the case of the threat zone, he asks her for something like a replacement for his stepfather.
00:43:47I think it was a heavy burden for him to be abandoned by his stepfather.
00:43:56After becoming a soloist, he steals everything he sees.
00:44:00At this stage, he has no dependence on theft.
00:44:04He's not a craftsman, and he's a thief.
00:44:08In the early days, he was interested in art.
00:44:14He had a lot of problems with his family.
00:44:18That's why he started stealing.
00:44:21At this stage, stealing is his goal.
00:44:26He can't control his impulses.
00:44:29I think it was a big trigger for him to leave Anne Catherine.
00:44:35After that, he steals everything he sees.
00:44:38Originally, he treated his precious art as his existence.
00:44:44For him, art is no longer necessary.
00:44:48Stealing is his goal.
00:44:50He doesn't have a place to take it home.
00:44:52He just has a lot of things in his room.
00:45:00November 18, 2001
00:45:05Bright Beezer was looking at a metal horn that he recently stole.
00:45:14It was an easy theft.
00:45:18What he stole was a 19th-century composer, Wagner Yukari, in Switzerland.
00:45:28The guard stole it easily.
00:45:31He was in a trance.
00:45:37Bright Beezer realized his fatal mistake.
00:45:43If you're going to keep stealing, at least wear gloves so you don't leave fingerprints.
00:45:51Oh, no!
00:45:53I didn't wear gloves!
00:45:56I'm in Switzerland!
00:46:01Switzerland is a country once arrested.
00:46:04Fingerprints are recorded.
00:46:08If you are arrested, your identity will be exposed.
00:46:15I have to erase the fingerprints.
00:46:19The next morning,
00:46:22Bright Beezer visited the Wagner Memorial Hall again.
00:46:28Then...
00:46:32Suddenly, he was arrested.
00:46:36What's going on?
00:46:39Actually, the stolen horn had already been found.
00:46:46On the day of the theft,
00:46:50the guard was looking at a suspicious man in the Memorial Hall.
00:46:56Bright Beezer came there again.
00:47:02It's that man!
00:47:05The guard immediately reported it to the police.
00:47:10He stole without a plan.
00:47:13All the factors that had not been discovered until now were revealed.
00:47:18The investigation began immediately.
00:47:22You're the one who stole the horn, right?
00:47:26Yes.
00:47:28He admitted it easily.
00:47:32I was going to give it to my mother as a gift.
00:47:35But I was too impulsive.
00:47:42You stole the horn.
00:47:45If you admit that you stole the horn and return it,
00:47:49you should be finished with a light sentence.
00:47:57Then, the investigation showed an unexpected development.
00:48:04Do you remember this?
00:48:06Do you remember this?
00:48:11What was reflected was a gold-plated medal stolen a few months ago.
00:48:18There was no way he didn't remember it.
00:48:22Then, what's this?
00:48:26What was shown next was Anne Catherine's favorite cigarette case.
00:48:33After that, the detective took dozens of photos.
00:48:40Everything is in the attic.
00:48:45What does that mean?
00:48:49In fact,
00:48:52a week after Bright Beezer was arrested,
00:48:55in December 2001,
00:48:58an old man who was walking in Lonely Hill,
00:49:01which was close to his home,
00:49:05found something glittering in the river.
00:49:12What's that?
00:49:15He got curious and approached it.
00:49:21There were a lot of abandoned goods in shallow water.
00:49:26There were silver goblets,
00:49:30hunting knives, antique trumpets,
00:49:34and fancy decorations.
00:49:40The police started a search.
00:49:45They found 107 pieces of art.
00:49:51The police introduced them to Osebese.
00:49:54It turned out that all of them were stolen goods.
00:50:01But why were they in such a place?
00:50:07What was thrown into the river
00:50:11was the mother of Bright Beezer.
00:50:17Bright Beezer collected the collection for 8 years.
00:50:24All of them were thrown away by his mother.
00:50:30It can't be true!
00:50:37After the Second World War,
00:50:40the biggest theft of art was discovered.
00:50:47At that time, Stengel's mother had a job as a nurse
00:50:52and had a new lover.
00:50:55In the meantime, she was always independent
00:50:59and reliant on her son who ruined her life.
00:51:03She was afraid of being an accomplice
00:51:07and wanted to destroy the evidence.
00:51:11At the court, she called the art
00:51:14a pile of metal.
00:51:17The media reported this big incident.
00:51:24The specialized organization of art crime
00:51:27estimated that the value of the stolen art
00:51:31was between 1.8 billion and 2.4 billion yen.
00:51:35The expert said he had never heard of such a story.
00:51:42January 6, 2005
00:51:47After 3 years of communication between Switzerland and France,
00:51:52the trial of Bright Beezer began.
00:51:57The witness was
00:52:02Anne Catherine.
00:52:06After she was arrested,
00:52:10Bright Beezer sent a letter to Anne Catherine.
00:52:16It was a love letter.
00:52:19He wanted to live happily with her after the trial.
00:52:23He sent more than 20 letters.
00:52:30But
00:52:33there was no reply.
00:52:38Why didn't you reply?
00:52:41Anne Catherine opened her mouth.
00:52:46I have a one-and-a-half-year-old son.
00:52:52It was a cruel reality.
00:52:56After Bright Beezer was arrested,
00:52:59Anne Catherine was already living a new life
00:53:03with another man.
00:53:07In addition,
00:53:10He controls me.
00:53:13If he gets out of prison,
00:53:15my life may be in danger.
00:53:19He completely denied the threat of continuous theft.
00:53:24He said he had just received the stolen goods.
00:53:31In the trial,
00:53:33Bright Beezer said
00:53:35he did not say anything bad to Anne Catherine.
00:53:39He said it was all his own doing.
00:53:44It is clear that he is responsible.
00:53:47If he protects Anne Catherine,
00:53:50she will come back again.
00:53:54Well, he must have been cool.
00:53:58He is a man with a strong desire to protect himself.
00:54:02The two were sentenced the next day.
00:54:06Stephane Bright Beezer
00:54:08was sentenced to three years in prison for theft.
00:54:13Anne Catherine Klein-Klaus
00:54:16was sentenced to 18 months in prison
00:54:19for the theft of stolen goods.
00:54:26Two years after the weekly trial,
00:54:29Bright Beezer was released from prison.
00:54:36What happened to him after that?
00:54:41One day,
00:54:45What is this?
00:54:48The police noticed that
00:54:50there were a lot of stolen goods
00:54:52on the auction site.
00:54:55When they looked into it,
00:54:59they found out that
00:55:01the seller was Bright Beezer.
00:55:04He was trying to sell stolen goods
00:55:06to a certain place in the past.
00:55:10In fact, after he was released from prison,
00:55:12he was repeatedly robbed.
00:55:16His wife made him look for stolen goods again.
00:55:19His wife made him look for stolen goods again.
00:55:24Stephane Bright Beezer,
00:55:26a serial art thief,
00:55:28was arrested again.
00:55:30The police found coins
00:55:32from the Roman era
00:55:34stolen from the auction site
00:55:36at his home.
00:55:39This crime shows
00:55:41that he hasn't grown up at all.
00:55:49It was a sad ending
00:55:51because he hadn't grown up at all
00:55:53in the newspaper.
00:55:55Bright Beezer was finally arrested.
00:55:57But his mother,
00:55:59who was living in Tokyo,
00:56:01had thrown away
00:56:03the collection he had collected.
00:56:05I wonder if she had thrown it away.
00:56:07It's a precious thing.
00:56:09I think she was aware
00:56:11that her husband had ruined
00:56:13her life by divorcing.
00:56:15I think she was aware
00:56:18that she couldn't stand
00:56:20to see her husband
00:56:22being ruined by the crime.
00:56:24And as Mr. Nosu said,
00:56:26he had a new girlfriend
00:56:28at that time.
00:56:30He was a painter.
00:56:32He was a painter.
00:56:34He was a painter.
00:56:36He was a painter.
00:56:38He was a painter.
00:56:40He was a painter.
00:56:42He was a painter.
00:56:44He was a painter.
00:56:46He was a painter.
00:56:48He was a painter.
00:56:50He was a painter.
00:56:52He was a painter.
00:56:54He was a painter.
00:56:56He was a painter.
00:56:58He was a painter.
00:57:00He was a painter.
00:57:02He was a painter.
00:57:04He was a painter.
00:57:06He was a painter.
00:57:08He was a painter.
00:57:10He was a painter.
00:57:12He was a painter.
00:57:15He was a painter.
00:57:17He was a painter.
00:57:19He was a painter.
00:57:21He was a painter.
00:57:23He was a painter.
00:57:25He was a painter.
00:57:27He was a painter.
00:57:29He was a painter.
00:57:31He was a painter.
00:57:33He was a painter.
00:57:35He was a painter.
00:57:37He was a painter.
00:57:39He was a painter.
00:57:41He was a painter.
00:57:43He was a painter.
00:57:45He was a painter.
00:57:47He was a painter.
00:57:49He was a painter.
00:57:51He was a painter.
00:57:53He was a painter.
00:57:55He was a painter.
00:57:57He was a painter.
00:57:59He was a painter.
00:58:01He was a painter.
00:58:03He was a painter.
00:58:05He was a painter.
00:58:07He was a painter.
00:58:09He was a painter.
00:58:11He was a painter.
00:58:13He was a painter.
00:58:15He was a painter.
00:58:17He was a painter.
00:58:19He was a painter.
00:58:21He was a painter.
00:58:23He was a painter.
00:58:25He was a painter.
00:58:27He was a painter.
00:58:29He was a painter.
00:58:31He was a painter.
00:58:33He was a painter.
00:58:35He was a painter.
00:58:37He was a painter.
00:58:39He was a painter.
00:58:41He was a painter.
00:58:43He was a painter.
00:58:45He was a painter.
00:58:47He was a painter.
00:58:49He was a painter.
00:58:51He was a painter.
00:58:53He was a painter.
00:58:55He was a painter.
00:58:57He was a painter.
00:58:59He was a painter.
00:59:01He was a painter.
00:59:03He was a painter.
00:59:05He was a painter.
00:59:07He was a painter.
00:59:09He was a painter.
00:59:11He was a painter.
00:59:13He was a painter.
00:59:15He was a painter.
00:59:17He was a painter.
00:59:19He was a painter.
00:59:21He was a painter.
00:59:23He was a painter.
00:59:25He was a painter.
00:59:27He was a painter.
00:59:29He was a painter.
00:59:31He was a painter.
00:59:33He was a painter.
00:59:35He was a painter.
00:59:37He was a painter.
00:59:39He was a painter.
00:59:41He was a painter.
00:59:43He was a painter.
00:59:45He was a painter.
00:59:47He was a painter.
00:59:49He was a painter.
00:59:51He was a painter.
00:59:53He was a painter.
00:59:55He was a painter.
00:59:57He was a painter.
00:59:59He was a painter.
01:00:01He was a painter.
01:00:03He was a painter.

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