Gallery owner amazed no charges laid

The woman was caught on CCTV.
The woman was caught on CCTV.
An art gallery owner who had a quilt stolen by an elderly English tourist says he can't believe she has left the country without being charged - or saying sorry.

Lakes District Museum director David Clarke says he is astounded Te Anau Police asked the 75-year-old woman to pay only $625 for the stolen textile then let her go to continue her sightseeing trip of the South Island.

"They basically gave her a slap on the wrist and let her go," said Clarke.

"I thought at the very least they might have got her to write a letter of apology to us."

The woman left the country yesterday.

CCTV footage shows the fashionably-attired pensioner examining the fastenings of several different hanging quilts before taking one off the wall, rolling it up and stuffing it in her bulging brocade carpetbag.

Police were told the wanted woman was at a hotel in Te Anau after a bus driver recognised her from his tour party. She told police it was a spur of the moment theft when a quilt she was touching fell to the floor. She had been overcome by guilt and dumped the quilt into an Arrowtown rubbish bin.

But Clarke has trouble believing her version of events and reckons the pilfering pensioner has got off lightly.

"It's a pity she didn't get diversion. That's what should have happened along with a $100 donation to the gallery on top of the artist getting paid for her work," said Clarke.

He said a search of the local Arrowtown rubbish bins came up empty-handed. He suspects the quilt was either posted back to England or packed in the woman's suitcase.

Te Anau police were unavailable for comment.

This was the second time in 25 years the Arrowtown museum has been hit by theft. A pistol was taken in the early 90s and never recovered.

- By Lynley Bilby of the Herald on Sunday

 

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