Members of notorious Berlin crime family arrested over Green Vault jewel heist
Three men were arrested in Germany on Tuesday in connection with last year’s €1bn (£896m) jewel robbery from Dresden’s famous Green Vault.
The arrests come almost a year after the spectacular theft and are the first major breakthrough in the investigation.
The three arrested men have not been named, but they are understood to be members of the Remmo Clan, one of Berlin’s most powerful organised crime groups.
Police named two further members of the extended family as wanted in connection with the robbery.
More than 1,600 police officers took part in early morning raids in Berlin’s Neukölln neighbourhood, an area widely regarded as Remmo Clan territory.
“A total of 18 properties are currently being searched in Berlin, including ten apartments, garages and vehicles,” Dresden prosecutors said in a statement.
“The focus of today's measures is the search for the stolen art treasures and possible evidence, such as storage media, items of clothing and tools.”
The theft at the Green Vault has been described as the “biggest art heist in modern history”.
Irreplaceable historic jewellery stolen from the vault remains missing, including the world famous Dresden White diamond.
There are fears baroque treasures including a sword with a diamond-studded hilt and a diamond breast star of the Polish Order of the White Eagles may have been broken up to be sold on the black market.
One of the arrested men was identified by the German press as a prominent member of the Remmo Clan convicted earlier this year over the 2017 theft of a giant gold Canadian commemorative coin from a Berlin museum.
The crime family is regarded as so dangerous that some of the arrests were carried out by police special forces.
Police named Abdul Majed Remmo and Mohamed Remmo, two junior members of the extended family, as wanted in connection with the Green Vault robbery.
The Remmo Clan is one of a number of “Arab gangs” that have come to dominate organised crime in Berlin in recent years.
Although they are routinely described as Arab, the Remmos actually trace their roots to an Arabic-speaking Kurdish minority.
They have been in Germany since the Seventies and have nothing to do with the influx of mostly Syrian asylum-seekers during the 2015 migrant crisis.
The “Arab gangs” flaunt the wealth and luxury in which they live and lurid stories about their activities have become a staple of the German popular press.
Tourist shops sell maps of the German capital showing the rival groups’ territories, and there are urban legends about the supposed impunity with which they operate.
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