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On 8 June 2005, the discovery of an [[X-acto|X-Acto knife]] on the floor of the reading room in the [[Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library]] at [[Yale University]] led to his arrest. Although three maps on his person matched those missing from books he had just examined in the [[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke]], he protested his innocence. It was not until his court appearance a year later (22 June 2006) that he confessed to having stolen a total of 97 maps from six institutions: [[Boston Public Library]], [[Houghton_Library|Harvard University (Houghton Library)]], [[Newberry Library]] (in Chicago), [[New York Public Library]] (the Rare Book and Map Divisions) and [[Yale University]] ([[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke Library]] and [[Sterling Memorial Library]]) in the United States, as well as the [[British Library]] in London. At the time of his arrest the British Library had already identified him as a suspect and was about to call in the police. Smiley originally said he had been stealing maps for approximately seven years but later reduced that figure to four years.
On 8 June 2005, the discovery of an [[X-acto|X-Acto knife]] on the floor of the reading room in the [[Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library]] at [[Yale University]] led to his arrest. Although three maps on his person matched those missing from books he had just examined in the [[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke]], he protested his innocence. It was not until his court appearance a year later (22 June 2006) that he confessed to having stolen a total of 97 maps from six institutions: [[Boston Public Library]], [[Houghton_Library|Harvard University (Houghton Library)]], [[Newberry Library]] (in Chicago), [[New York Public Library]] (the Rare Book and Map Divisions) and [[Yale University]] ([[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke Library]] and [[Sterling Memorial Library]]) in the United States, as well as the [[British Library]] in London. At the time of his arrest the British Library had already identified him as a suspect and was about to call in the police. Smiley originally said he had been stealing maps for approximately seven years but later reduced that figure to four years.


At his federal sentencing on 27 September 2006, Judge Janet Bond Arterton took note of his cooperation with the [[FBI]]. "If you steal human treasures, then you will go to prison, but if you help recover them, this will be taken into account and weighed in the balance". Since all but ten of the 97 maps Smiley admitted stealing had been recovered, he was sentenced to three and a half years imprisonment. Later, in May 2007, he was ordered to pay [[US$]] 2.3 million in restitution [the original valuation on the stolen maps had been over [[US$]] 3 million]. Reported losses by a handful of leading dealers who had unwittingly sold stolen maps acquired from Smiley ran to more than [[US$]]400,000 each in three cases; no details have been given about any reimbursement. A second sentencing before a state judge, Richard Damiani, on 13 October 2006, merely confirmed the earlier sentence, though the judge was critical of the trust placed in Smiley's statements by his federal counterpart.
At his federal sentencing on 27 September 2006, Judge Janet Bond Arterton took note of his cooperation with the [[FBI]]. "If you steal human treasures, then you will go to prison, but if you help recover them, this will be taken into account and weighed in the balance". Since all but ten of the 97 maps Smiley admitted stealing had been recovered, he was sentenced to three and a half years imprisonment. Later, in May 2007, he was ordered to pay [[US$]] 2.3 million in restitution<ref name="AP">{{Cite web|url=http://www.foxnews.com/wires/2007May22/0,4670,StolenMaps,00.html|title=Map Thief Ordered to Pay $2.3M|accessdate=2007-12-14|publisher=Associated Press|year=May 22, 2007|author=John Christoffersen|work=News|format=HTML}}</ref> [the original valuation on the stolen maps had been over [[US$]] 3 million]. Reported losses by a handful of leading dealers who had unwittingly sold stolen maps acquired from Smiley ran to more than [[US$]]400,000 each in three cases; no details have been given about any reimbursement. A second sentencing before a state judge, Richard Damiani, on 13 October 2006, merely confirmed the earlier sentence, though the judge was critical of the trust placed in Smiley's statements by his federal counterpart.


The case was widely covered across the United States, and elsewhere. Because Smiley pled guilty, he was never cross-examined. Apart from the details he supplied himself much of the available information came via journalists. The most incisive reporting was by Kim Martineau in the ''Hartford Courant'' and an article by William Finnegan in the ''New Yorker''. A comprehensive [http://www.maphistory.info/smileynews.html analysis of these articles] includes various claims that Smiley had taken more maps than he admitted. Each of the affected libraries issued lists of missing maps. Several of the entries matched copies of books, now without their maps, which Smiley had examined. One example can be given. Smiley had admitted stealing from [[Harvard]] an example of the map of the [[Aztec]] capital [[Tenochtitlan]], illustrating a letter from [[Hern%C3%A1n_Cort%C3%A9s|Hernán Cortés]] (1524), but a prior photograph of the example missing from Yale's [[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke Library]] proved instead that it was theirs.
The case was widely covered across the United States, and elsewhere. Because Smiley pled guilty, he was never cross-examined. Apart from the details he supplied himself much of the available information came via journalists. The most incisive reporting was by Kim Martineau in the ''Hartford Courant'' and an article by William Finnegan in the ''New Yorker''. A comprehensive [http://www.maphistory.info/smileynews.html analysis of these articles] includes various claims that Smiley had taken more maps than he admitted. Each of the affected libraries issued lists of missing maps. Several of the entries matched copies of books, now without their maps, which Smiley had examined. One example can be given. Smiley had admitted stealing from [[Harvard]] an example of the map of the [[Aztec]] capital [[Tenochtitlan]], illustrating a letter from [[Hern%C3%A1n_Cort%C3%A9s|Hernán Cortés]] (1524), but a prior photograph of the example missing from Yale's [[Beinecke_Rare_Book_and_Manuscript_Library|Beinecke Library]] proved instead that it was theirs.

Revision as of 15:45, 16 December 2007

File:Forbes Smiley.jpg
Mugshot of E. Forbes Smiley III.

Edward Forbes Smiley III (born April 13, 1956) was sentenced in 2006 for stealing 97 rare maps originally valued at more than US$ 3 million. Smiley, from Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, was a respected dealer in early, rare, and hence expensive maps of the world and North America. He was instrumental in building up two major collections that were subsequently donated to research libraries: the Lawrence H. Slaughter collection now in the New York Public Library and the Norman B. Leventhal Collection at the Boston Public Library. His knowledge, charm and charitable activities gained him the trust of several librarians and, in some cases, unsupervised access to their collections.

On 8 June 2005, the discovery of an X-Acto knife on the floor of the reading room in the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University led to his arrest. Although three maps on his person matched those missing from books he had just examined in the Beinecke, he protested his innocence. It was not until his court appearance a year later (22 June 2006) that he confessed to having stolen a total of 97 maps from six institutions: Boston Public Library, Harvard University (Houghton Library), Newberry Library (in Chicago), New York Public Library (the Rare Book and Map Divisions) and Yale University (Beinecke Library and Sterling Memorial Library) in the United States, as well as the British Library in London. At the time of his arrest the British Library had already identified him as a suspect and was about to call in the police. Smiley originally said he had been stealing maps for approximately seven years but later reduced that figure to four years.

At his federal sentencing on 27 September 2006, Judge Janet Bond Arterton took note of his cooperation with the FBI. "If you steal human treasures, then you will go to prison, but if you help recover them, this will be taken into account and weighed in the balance". Since all but ten of the 97 maps Smiley admitted stealing had been recovered, he was sentenced to three and a half years imprisonment. Later, in May 2007, he was ordered to pay US$ 2.3 million in restitution[1] [the original valuation on the stolen maps had been over US$ 3 million]. Reported losses by a handful of leading dealers who had unwittingly sold stolen maps acquired from Smiley ran to more than US$400,000 each in three cases; no details have been given about any reimbursement. A second sentencing before a state judge, Richard Damiani, on 13 October 2006, merely confirmed the earlier sentence, though the judge was critical of the trust placed in Smiley's statements by his federal counterpart.

The case was widely covered across the United States, and elsewhere. Because Smiley pled guilty, he was never cross-examined. Apart from the details he supplied himself much of the available information came via journalists. The most incisive reporting was by Kim Martineau in the Hartford Courant and an article by William Finnegan in the New Yorker. A comprehensive analysis of these articles includes various claims that Smiley had taken more maps than he admitted. Each of the affected libraries issued lists of missing maps. Several of the entries matched copies of books, now without their maps, which Smiley had examined. One example can be given. Smiley had admitted stealing from Harvard an example of the map of the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan, illustrating a letter from Hernán Cortés (1524), but a prior photograph of the example missing from Yale's Beinecke Library proved instead that it was theirs.

Several questions remain unanswered, in particular about the origin and purpose of high quality facsimiles of early maps, some found on Smiley's person when he was arrested, others in books he examined.

As a result of Smiley's thefts, research libraries are now more aware of the vulnerability of maps illustrating volumes in their rare book collections and are tightening up their documentation and security procedures. At the same time they appreciate the importance to scholars of continued access to such works. The changes are most noticeable at Yale's Sterling Memorial Library where a comprehensive program of cataloguing and digitizing the early map collection is under way, funded largely by a donation of US$ 100,000 from William Reese, who had acted as Yale's advisor throughout the Smiley affair.

Smiley was not the first major map thief. Miles Harvey's study - notionally about Gilbert Bland - describes a number of still earlier thieves, and the 'Map History' Theft pages document the activities of two European thieves in or before 2001. However, Smiley was almost certainly responsible for more financial and cultural loss than any of his predecessors.

See also

External links

References

  • William Finnegan (17 October 2005). "A Theft in the Library: The Case of the Missing Maps". The New Yorker: 64-78.
  • Miles Harvey (2000). The Island of Lost Maps. Random House.
  1. ^ John Christoffersen (May 22, 2007). "Map Thief Ordered to Pay $2.3M" (HTML). News. Associated Press. Retrieved 2007-12-14.

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