A man has been convicted of stealing a painting by Vincent van Gogh worth several million pounds from a museum in the Netherlands.
The 59-year-old was also found guilty of snatching a Frans Hals piece from another museum in the country, again worth millions of pounds, and neither of the works have been recovered.
Described as an “incorrigible and calculating criminal”, he was sentenced to a maximum of eight years in prison.
The man, whose identity has been kept anonymous under Dutch privacy laws, was found guilty of taking Van Gogh’s “The Parsonage Garden at Nuenen in Spring 1884” from the Singer Laren museum near Amsterdam.
He later stole the 17th century Frans Hals’ “Two Laughing Boys” from the Museum Hofje van Mevrouw van Aerden in Leerdam, 60km (35 miles) south of the Dutch capital.
The Central Netherlands Court said the Hans painting was valued at €16m (£13.7m), but did not give a value for Van Gogh’s painting.
Both were stolen by a man who broke into the museums at night and fled on a scooter driven by an accomplice.
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The defendant, who has a previous conviction for a similar heist, denied any involvement.
“The court doesn’t believe this,” the court said in a statement. “His DNA was found at both crime scenes, and the man can’t explain how that is possible.”
The paintings were described as “part of the national cultural heritage, they are important for present and future generations”.
“That is why and given the criminal record of the suspect who is, according to the court, an incorrigible and calculating criminal, the court considers the maximum sentence to be appropriate,” the court added.