Search underway for missing Hunter Valley wine collections worth more than $5m
Posted: Thu Jun 30, 2016 7:25 am
Dozens of prestigious wine collections with a value of more than $5 million have gone missing from the New South Wales Hunter region.
Police said the company holding the wine, Wine Investment Services, went into receivership in 2013 and while other assets were seized, the wine was not surrendered to liquidators.
Detectives from the State Crime Command's Fraud and Cybercrime squad were investigating the disappearance of the valuable collections and believe the wine may have been stolen.
They want to speak to anyone who may have bought or been approached to buy collectable or vintage wines.
Some of those labels include Penfolds Grange, Torbreck, Henschke and Chris Ringland/Three Rivers.
The crime command investigation was launched in March 2016 after a search by owners of the collections, liquidators and local police failed to find the wines entrusted to Wine Investment Services.
A storage unit in Newcastle was raided in March and officers found electronic storage devices to various companies.
Police are appealing to the public for information.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-30/w ... sw/7555916
Somehow I don't think this stuff would be sold on a street corner.
Surely it would be easy enough to drip feed it through the auction houses over a lengthy period of time. It doesn't go off or depreciate in value like a stolen car.
Police said the company holding the wine, Wine Investment Services, went into receivership in 2013 and while other assets were seized, the wine was not surrendered to liquidators.
Detectives from the State Crime Command's Fraud and Cybercrime squad were investigating the disappearance of the valuable collections and believe the wine may have been stolen.
They want to speak to anyone who may have bought or been approached to buy collectable or vintage wines.
Some of those labels include Penfolds Grange, Torbreck, Henschke and Chris Ringland/Three Rivers.
The crime command investigation was launched in March 2016 after a search by owners of the collections, liquidators and local police failed to find the wines entrusted to Wine Investment Services.
A storage unit in Newcastle was raided in March and officers found electronic storage devices to various companies.
Police are appealing to the public for information.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-30/w ... sw/7555916
Somehow I don't think this stuff would be sold on a street corner.
Surely it would be easy enough to drip feed it through the auction houses over a lengthy period of time. It doesn't go off or depreciate in value like a stolen car.