Following a theft on the Oakland Museum of California‘s (OMCA) off-site storage facility earlier this month, the museum launched an announcement on Friday afternoon.
On October 15, round 3:30 a.m., a thief or group of thieves broke into the museum’s off-site storage facility, taking greater than 1,000 objects. Plenty of extra particulars surrounding the case had been initially withheld, in order to not influence the Oakland Police Division and the FBI’s Artwork Crime Group’s ongoing investigation. Now, with their approval, the museum has issued an announcement on the occasions.
“Based mostly on present findings, investigators imagine this was a criminal offense of alternative, not a focused theft,” OCMA’s assertion reads. “There isn’t any indication that the perpetrators particularly recognized the ability as museum storage or sought specific artworks or artifacts. As a substitute, it seems they gained entry and took gadgets that had been most simply accessible.”
The museum confirmed that the burglars took off with six Native American baskets, a number of Nineteenth-century scrimshaw objects, quite a few daguerreotypes, modernist metalwork jewellery items, and historic memorabilia akin to political pins, award ribbons, and memento tokens.
Of specific concern are the stolen Native American baskets. The related tribe has requested that their identify not be public and that the museum not launch any extra particulars concerning the baskets.
“This can be a loss not just for OMCA, however for the broader group,” mentioned Lori Fogarty, government director and CEO of OMCA, in an announcement. “The Museum takes its accountability to steward California’s historical past and cultural legacy with the utmost seriousness and stays dedicated to recovering the stolen gadgets and guaranteeing their continued look after future generations.”
The 100,000-square-foot warehouse holds greater than 2 million historic artifacts, a lot of which have been donated to the OMCA.
Anybody with data on the theft ought to contact the Oakland Police Division’s housebreaking part (at 510-238-3951) or the FBI Artwork Crime Group (at suggestions.fbi.gov or 1-800-CALL-FBI).

