On September 13, 1995, Swiss and Italian law enforcement (
Carabinieri) raided
Giacomo Medici’s large storage room in a warehouse in Geneva Freeport. It was rented to Edition Services, a company owned by Medici. Agents found over 3,800 antiquities, worth an estimated $35 million, many with dirt still attached to them, and documents relating to art dealers and museums in Europe and North America. The antiquities had been illegally excavated in Italy and smuggled to the Swiss border. To circumvent
Swiss customs authorities, Medici attached provenances to the objects, often attributing them to an anonymous Swiss private collection, claiming they were removed from Italy decades earlier. He then secured legal Swiss export papers for them, sent them to the United States for sale, and arranged for them to be returned to Switzerland, effectively creating a tight provenance. The incident led to a major breakthrough in global awareness of looted antiquities and the arrests of other major players in the trade. It also implicated a variety of museums in the purchasing of looted antiquities, including the
Getty Center in Los Angeles and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. When they shipped the antiquities, the smugglers claimed that they were exporting souvenirs from a tourist bazaar in Cairo. They were stored at the Geneva Freeport until they could be sold to European and North American museums. In 2010, Swiss customs officers discovered a
Roman sarcophagus in the Geneva Freeport that had been looted from a site in Southern Turkey. This opened a debate on the Freeport's role in funding the terrorist activities of groups such as
ISIS, which is suspected of depositing looted objects of ancient art in the facility via middlemen. In November 2015 the director of the Louvre,
Jean-Luc Martinez, submitted a report on the protection of cultural heritage to
UNESCO that denounced the role of the Geneva, Luxembourg and Singapore Freeports in the trafficking of stolen cultural goods. However, the European Commission's response to the report, in a meeting chaired by Luxembourg, "took great care not to mention the case of the freeports". In January 2016, officers from the Art Crimes squad of the Italian
Carabinieri, in collaboration with Swiss authorities, raided a storage unit that British antiquities dealer
Robin Symes rented at the Geneva Freeport. It was found to contain a huge quantity of stolen antiquities, nearly all of which were believed to have been looted by the Medici gang from Etruscan- and Roman-era archaeological sites in Italy and other locations over at least 40 years. Packed inside 45 crates, investigators discovered some 17,000 Greek, Roman and Etruscan artefacts, including two stunning Etruscan terracotta sarcophagi, topped by painted, life-sized reclining figures; hundreds of whole or fragmentary pieces of rare Greek and Roman pottery, statuary and bas-reliefs: fragments of a fresco from
Pompeii; and a marble head of
Apollo thought to have been looted from the Baths of Claudius near Rome. The artifacts were estimated to be worth hundreds of millions of pounds, with the head of Apollo alone valued at £30 million (US$44 million). Symes is alleged to have hidden the objects at the Geneva Freeport soon after his partner's death, to conceal them from the executors of his estate and keep their huge value out of any settlement. In April 2016, Geneva prosecutors opened a criminal probe into the ownership of
Modigliani’s “
Seated Man with a Cane” in storage at the Freeport, and seized the painting to determine its origins. It was allegedly looted by the
Nazis from its original owner, Parisian art dealer Oscar Stettiner, who died before he could retrieve it, and its whereabouts were unknown until it appeared at an auction in 2008 but didn't sell. Its current owner, art collector
David Nahmad, stated that he had obtained it in 1996 and that no evidence linking it to Stettiner existed. In a 2018 report, the
European Commission observed that increases in demand for freeports was positively correlated to stricter banking regulations, where freeports continue to offer the most secrecy, making them hotspots for crime. It cited the
Bouvier Affair and the Geneva Freeport as examples. On 26 March 2019, the
European Parliament adopted the final report of the Special Committee on Financial Crimes, Tax Evasion and Tax Avoidance (TAX3), which the committee had adopted on 27 February 2019. The report stressed that freeports provided "a safe and widely disregarded storage space, where trade can be conducted untaxed and ownership be concealed", leading the EP to call for freeports to be closed across the EU to fight tax evasion and money laundering. == Laws governing the Geneva Freeport ==