:Two blocks from where he was apprehended a year ago with maps
that he later confessed to have stolen from Yale's Beinecke Rare
Book and Manuscript Library, Edward Forbes Smiley III, a
specialist in early maps and atlases relating to the discovery
and settlement of North America, arrived at United States
District Court in New Haven on June 22 to plead guilty to single
charge of the theft of a cultural property, a circa 1578 Flemish
map of the world valued at about $150,000.
As part of his plea agreement, the 50-year-old Martha's Vineyard
resident and former Princeton divinity student known to his
colleagues as Forbes, also admitted to removing an additional 96
maps from institutions in the United States and the United
Kingdom between 1998 and 2005. He subsequently sold many of the
maps to other dealers, who in turn sold them to collectors. The
maps are worth between $1.8 to $3 million.
Wearing a crumpled, ill-fitting tattersall jacket and black
chinos, the scholarly looking dealer told US District Judge Janet
Bond Arterton, "Your honor, on June 8, 2005, while conducting
legitimate research, I removed five maps, concealing them in my
briefcase with the intent of removing them from the library. At 3
pm I left with them. I knew it was wrong and I apologize to the
court and all the institutions harmed by my actions."
"We submit that there are several sets of victims, including
institutions and dealers," said Assistant US Attorney Christopher
W. Schmeisser, addressing the judge. "As part of the record, we
approached dealers for their help. It's the government's position
that dealers who spent money to acquire these pieces were
defrauded. They are victims."
Defense attorney Richard A. Reeve asked that his client's
willingness to cooperate with authorities be given full
consideration at his sentencing, which is scheduled for September
21 in New Haven.
Reeve noted that without Smiley's help, the government could only
prove the theft of 18 of 97 maps. "The others are known from Mr
Smiley's assistance," Reeve said.
All but six of the 97 maps have been recovered. The government
considers five missing maps "unrecoverable," either because their
whereabouts are unknown or because current owners are unwilling
to relinquish them without definitive proof that they were
stolen.
Among the "unrecoverable" maps are two taken from the Map
Division of the New York Public Library. One, a 1702-07 map of
East and West New Jersey by John Thornton, is valued at $45,000.
The other, a 1770 map of Pennsylvania by William Scull, is worth
$25,000. Also listed as unrecoverable is a 1646 map of the
Chesapeake from the book Dudley Chartsand a map of
Carolina and part of Georgia, both from the Boston Public
Library; and a Huttich/Fine Cordiform World of 1532 from
Beinecke.
Defense counsel also cited Smiley's willingness to pay
restitution in excess of $1.8 million to his victims as proof of
his client's good faith. Said Reeve, "Mr Smiley has executed two
mortgage deeds in Martha's Vineyard and Maine. He assigns his 50
percent interest in these properties to the government for
payment of the restitution."
"I think it's a decision by Mr Smiley, having done really bad
acts against people and institutions who he likes and respects
and has worked with for a number of years, to make them as whole
as he can for the damage he has done," said Reeve.
Those defrauded include antique map and book dealers Cohen &
Taliaferro LLC, of New York, for between $879,400 and $886,400;
English dealer Clive A. Burden, Ltd, owed between $390,770 and
$403,520; The Old Print Shop of New York, due $460,740; Lawrence
Fox, Esq, $19,000; The New York Public Library, $25,000 to
$70,000; Beinecke Library, $10,000; Harold Osher, $37,500; and
Boston Public Library, $39,000. The amounts are subject to change
between now and sentencing if additional maps are returned.
"My guess is that they will get 30 or 40 cents to the dollar,"
said antiquarian book dealer William Reese of New Haven, a
longtime advisor to Yale museums who has been retained by Yale's
general counsel as an expert in the case.
Edward Forbes Smiley III was once a trusted insider at the New
York Public Library with offices at 16 East 79th Street and
galleries at 175 East 57th Street in Manhattan. He helped formed
some of the largest collections in the country, including the
Norman Leventhal Collection of New England maps and the Lawrence
H. Slaughter Collection of English maps and atlases, now at the
New York Public Library.
Smiley was charged in Federal court with one count of the theft
of a cultural property, this circa 1578 map, valued at
$150,000, from Gerard de Jode's Speculum Orbis Terrarum.
The case against him began at 11 am on June 8, 2005, when an
X-Acto knife blade was found on the floor of the Beinecke's Rare
Documents Reading Room. After discovering Smiley's name in the
library's register and determining from the Internet that he was a
dealer in antique maps, a librarian notified security, which
initiated video and direct surveillance of the dealer. When Smiley
left Beinecke, Yale police followed him, apprehending him several
blocks away at the Yale Center for British Art.
Mention of the X-Acto blade provided the only comic moment of
last week's proceeding. When US Attorney Schmeisser said that its
discovery would have been presented as evidence had the case gone
to trial, Reeve interrupted.
"Can I interject that we don't disagree that the X-Acto knife was
there and that it was his but it was not used on the maps?" the
defense counsel asked.
Replied Judge Arterton, "But there was no disagreement on the
worm holes?"
"No, your honor, these are very distinctive worm holes," Reeve
said with a laugh, referring to US Attorney Schmeisser's earlier
assertion that an expert witness would testify that worm holes on
a recovered map matched those in one of Beinecke's books.
Of the 97 maps that Smiley confessed to stealing, 66 were from
the New York Public Library and the Boston Public Library. He
stole the remaining maps from Beinecke and Sterling Libraries at
Yale, Newberry Library in Chicago, Houghton Library at Harvard,
and the British Library in London. The documents ranged from the
1532 Cordiform World by Huttich/Fine to John Wilson's 1822
map of Ohio.
After agreeing to post $50,000 in bail and not leave New England
before sentencing, Smiley, who had already surrendered his
passport, walked two blocks to State court where he pleaded
guilty to the theft of three other maps from Beinecke the same
day.
Judge Arterton told Smiley that his cooperation might be taken
into consideration at sentencing but she did not guarantee it.
The dealer, who faces a maximum of ten years' jail time and a
fine of up to $1,610,400 on the federal charges alone, is
expected to serve between four and six years in prison. The state
sentence will be served concurrently.
Many experts fear that the 97 maps are just the tip of the
iceberg. As detailed in William Finnegan's extensive account of
the Smiley case in the October 17, 2005, issue of The New
Yorker, public collections of maps were vandalized by two
Byzantine priests, caught in 1973 with volumes stolen from
Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Notre Dame and the University of
Chicago; by Tulane professor Andrew Antippas, who pleaded guilty
to stealing maps from Yale's Sterling Library five years later;
and by Florida dealer Gilbert Bland, who was caught in 1995.
William Reese, who stopped doing business with Smiley in 1983
after the dealer gave him a bad check for a 1790 Matthew Clark
coastal atlas of the Eastern Seaboard that Reese agreed to sell
him for $50,000, says Smiley's motives were clear.
"The fact of the matter is that Smiley made millions of dollars
by stealing and selling. That is the bottom line," said Reese.
"It's truly an eye-opening experience. Smiley had great
knowledge. Sadly, a lot of good people were taken," said Harry
Newman of The Old Print Shop. The New York firm has known Smiley
since the 1980s when he worked in the map department at B.
Altman's. The Old Print Shop began buying from him around 2000.
"This is a wake-up call for everyone - dealers, collectors,
curators and institutions - to be more careful," said Newman.