Manhattan Returns 657 Stolen Antiquities Worth $14 Million to India in Major Cultural Repatriation Drive

Manhattan Returns 657 Stolen Antiquities Worth $14 Million to India in Major Cultural Repatriation Drive

The Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has returned 657 stolen antiquities worth nearly 14 million US dollars to India, recovered from trafficking networks linked to Subhash Kapoor and Nancy Wiener. The repatriation includes major artefacts such as Avalokiteshvara, Buddha, and Ganesha idols, marking a major breakthrough in global cultural heritage restoration efforts.

In a landmark operation underscoring the scale of international cultural trafficking networks, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office has returned 657 stolen antiquities to India, collectively valued at nearly 14 million US dollars. The artefacts were recovered as part of ongoing investigations into global smuggling rings linked to alleged antiquities trafficker Subhash Kapoor and convicted trafficker Nancy Wiener.

The formal handover took place during a ceremony held in New York on Tuesday. In an official statement, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg Jr. described the restitution as evidence of the “massive” scale of trafficking networks that have systematically targeted India’s cultural heritage. He affirmed that recovery and repatriation efforts would continue.

Among the most significant returned objects is a bronze statue of Avalokiteshvara, valued at 2 million US dollars. The sculpture, seated on a double-lotus base above a lion-flanked throne, bears an inscription attributing its craftsmanship to Dronaditya of Sipur, near present-day Raipur in Chhattisgarh. The artefact was originally part of a hoard discovered near the Lakshamana Temple in 1939 and later housed in the Mahant Ghasidas Memorial Museum in Raipur by 1952. It was subsequently stolen and smuggled into the United States by 1982 before entering a private New York collection by 2014.

Another major restitution is a red sandstone Buddha statue valued at 7.5 million US dollars. Depicting the Buddha in the abhaya mudra, or gesture of protection, the sculpture was damaged, likely during its looting from northern India. Investigators determined it was smuggled into New York by Subhash Kapoor and later seized from one of his storage facilities by the Antiquities Trafficking Unit.

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Also returned is a sandstone idol of a dancing Ganesha, looted in 2000 from a temple in Madhya Pradesh by Kapoor associate Ranjeet “Shantoo” Kanwar. The artefact was later sold and shipped to New York gallery owner Doris Wiener by convicted trafficker Vaman Ghiya. Following Doris Wiener’s death, her daughter Nancy Wiener allegedly fabricated false ownership documentation in 2012 and sold the idol through Christie’s auction house in New York. The private collector who purchased it later surrendered the piece earlier this year.

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S. Vijay Kumar, Co-Founder of the India Pride Project, described the development as the outcome of over 15 years of sustained investigative work. He credited Homeland Security Investigations for its continued efforts in tracking and dismantling smuggling networks. He stated that artefacts were systematically stolen and exported to the West through dealers such as Subhash Kapoor and the Wiener family.

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For over a decade, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Antiquities Trafficking Unit and Homeland Security Investigations have pursued Kapoor and his associates for alleged large-scale looting across South and Southeast Asia. Kapoor was issued an arrest warrant in 2012 and later indicted in New York in 2019 along with seven co-defendants. He was convicted in India in 2022 on trafficking charges and is currently awaiting extradition to the United States. The cases in Tamil Nadu involve five separate cases concerning 32 idols, with five associates already convicted.

The Antiquities Trafficking Unit has now recovered more than 6,200 cultural objects worth over 485 million US dollars and returned more than 5,900 items to 36 countries. It has secured convictions against 18 individuals, while extradition proceedings against seven others remain ongoing. Officials indicated that over 1,000 additional artefacts are still under investigation and expected to be repatriated.

India’s Consul General Binaya Pradhan expressed gratitude to the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, the United States Department of Homeland Security, and other law enforcement agencies for their sustained cooperation in recovering culturally significant heritage objects.

The repatriation marks one of the most extensive recoveries of stolen Indian antiquities, reinforcing global efforts to dismantle transnational trafficking networks and restore cultural heritage to its country of origin.

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