Friday, May 25, 2018

Princess Christina Tiara Theft May 18, 2012: Nothing Back, One Suspect


Summary: The Princess Christina tiara theft May 18, 2012, scored a suspect who served no sentence and sequestered a bracelet, cufflinks, a tiara and two rings.


Princess Christina, Mrs. Magnuson, wears her diamond and pearl tiara, which was stolen from her apartment 17 months later, at the annual Nobel Prize Banquet, Dec. 10, 2010, Stockholm, Sweden; Henrik Montgomery/SCANPIX/AFP/Getty Images: Ella Kay @courtjeweller, via Twitter Aug. 14, 2017

The Princess Christina tiara theft May 18, 2012, in Stockholm, Sweden, appears solved with the apprehension of the lone suspect and unsolved with the absence of the diamond and pearl royal diadem.
The Princess Christina tiara theft belongs on lists of insider burglaries because of the bejeweled diadem's year-round bedding in a back-room safe with key-locking, key-unlocking access. The criminal carryout of the Princess Christina diamond and pearl tiara came as the second comparable crime committed against royal jewels at Slottsbacken 2, Stockholm, Sweden. It demanded the diversion of private party attendees to a guided tour of the Royal Palace across the street from Princess Christina's and her husband's domicile.
The excursion exposed the second extraction, after the first episode in April 2012, by an ever-present, non-family member who expected blame to extend to the housekeeper.

Royal etiquette forbids fitting the title Her Royal Highness in front of Princess Christina's forename because of her marriage June 15, 1974, to commoner Tord Magnuson.
Princess Christina got to guard a gold-braided bracelet from Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia (July 23, 1892-Aug. 27, 1975) and four royally bejeweled gifts from relatives. The couple's safe held among its historic heirlooms an emperor's bracelet, a king's pair of gold cufflinks, a princess's aquamarine ring and another princess's diamond ring. Online news sources indicated, without including the imperial bracelet, an estimated value of 855000 SEK (Swedish krona ["crowns"], $120,675) for all of the bejeweled royal quartet.
The total estimates joined individual estimates of the aquamarine ring, gold cufflinks, diamond ring and tiara at 25000 SEK, 30000 SEK, 450000 SEK and 350000 SEK.

Nobody knows why the suspect allegedly kept the Princess Christina tiara apart from the aquamarine ring, bracelet, gold cufflinks and diamond ring for two drug dealers.
The suspect allegedly left the Magnuson lodgings to party in Stureplan and lopped Princess Christina's tiara into the waters under the Riksbron ("State bridge") behind Parliament. He mentioned marijuana dealers as motivated into amassing precious metals to melt down and precious stones to make over and himself as moved by drug-purchasing money. He allegedly netted 9000 SEK from the drug-dealing duo for a bracelet of unknown value and for gold cufflinks and two rings valued at 505000 SEK.
Online sources observed that divers in Norrström River waters under the Riksbron obtained false teeth, one eel, wallets and nothing from the Princess Christina tiara theft.

The sole suspect proved to be a Somali refugee in Sweden since 2010 and 19 years old at the time of the May and June purloinings.
The Somali refugee queued up among acquaintances allowed to circulate throughout the Magnuson residence with the couple's presence and, in April and May 2012, without them. The relationship resulted from the couple's reaching out to Somali refugees in Aslingås and receiving the then 17-year-old as "child of the house" under Magnuson's mentorship. The 19-year-old stood trial, supported by lawyer Tomas Rothpfeffer, behind closed doors June 18, 2012, wen Stockholm District Court sentenced him to probation for grand larceny.
Who took the Princess Christina tiara from the Norrström River and turned a bracelet, cufflinks and rings into melted metals and recut gems without track records?

The suspect in the May 2012 theft of Princess Christina, Mrs. Magnuson's diamond and pearl tiara claimed to have tossed the tiara from the Riksbron foot bridge into the Norrström River, but divers only found false teeth, an eel and wallets; Riksbron at Riksdaghuset (Parliament House) near the Stockholm Palace, Gamla stan, central Stockholm, Sweden; Saturday, July 26, 2008, 16:24: LightPhoenix, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
Princess Christina, Mrs. Magnuson, wears her diamond and pearl tiara, which was stolen from her apartment 17 months later, at the annual Nobel Prize Banquet, Dec. 10, 2010; photo by Henrik Montgomery/SCANPIX/AFP/Getty Images: Ella Kay @courtjeweller, via Twitter Aug. 14, 2017, @ https://twitter.com/courtjeweller/status/897276733665181696
The suspect in the May 2012 theft of Princess Christina, Mrs. Magnuson's diamond and pearl tiara claimed to have tossed the tiara from the Riksbron foot bridge into the Norrström River, but divers only found false teeth, an eel and wallets; Riksbron at Riksdaghuset (Parliament House) near the Stockholm Palace, Gamla stan, central Stockholm, Sweden; Saturday, July 26, 2008, 16:24: LightPhoenix, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Near_Royal_Palace_Stockholm_Sverige.jpg

For further information:
Isaksen, Trond Norén. 15 June 2012. "Princess Christina's Tiara Stolen and Thrown into the Sea." Trond Norén Isaksen on History, Royalty, Politics, Architecture, Art and Literature.
Available @ http://trondni.blogspot.com/2012/06/princess-christinas-tiara-stolen-and.html
Lindh, Sara; and Hellberg, Magnus. 18 June 2012. "Tord Magnuson Efter Domen: 'Sorgligt.'" Expressen > Nyheter.
Available @ https://www.expressen.se/nyheter/tord-magnuson-efter-domen-sorgligt/
Marriner, Derdriu. 27 April 2018. "Grand Duchess Hilda Diamond Tiara Theft April 29, 2017, in Baden, Germany." Earth and Space News. Friday.
Available @ https://earth-and-space-news.blogspot.com/2018/04/grand-duchess-hilda-diamond-tiara-theft.html
Marriner, Derdriu. 18 May 2018. "Princess Christina Tiara Theft May 18, 2012, in Stockholm, Sweden." Earth and Space News. Friday.
Available @ http://www.thecourtjeweller.com/2018/02/princess-christinas-diamond-and-pearl.html


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