Mystery man: Will this never-before-seen video help solve the biggest art heist in history?
25-year-old footage, released by FBI, shows unidentified man being let into Boston museum the night before US$500m heist that included two Rembrandts
Twenty-five years after the biggest art heist in history, at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, law enforcement officials released new surveillance video showing an unauthorised visitor entering the museum the night before the robbery.
Authorities hope the release of the never-before seen video on Thursday will spark leads to help recover the 13 pieces of stolen artwork including two magnificent Rembrandts, worth at least US$500 million.
The low-resolution video — captured by museum security cameras — shows a security guard appearing to hit an intercom button, then to grant access to a man who can be seen in the museum’s reception area at about 12:49 a.m. on March 17, 1990, almost exactly 24 hours before the heist.
WATCH: FBI's footage may hold key to US$500m heist
The man is also seen getting out of a car matching the general description of one reported to be parked outside the museum minutes before the theft. He uses the same rear entrance as the thieves, according to the office of US Attorney Carmen Ortiz, which released the video.