Bird skins On 24 June 2009, a theft occurred from the museum involving the removal of 299 brightly coloured stuffed birds, mostly male
trogons and
quetzals from
Central and
South America, as well as
birds of paradise from the island of
New Guinea, some of which had been collected by
Alfred Russel Wallace. The police announced on 12 November 2010 that a 22-year-old US citizen,
Edwin Rist, had been arrested, in the Tring area, in connection with the theft and the majority of bird skins had been recovered. The story was featured almost a decade later on NPR's
This American Life, "The Feather Heist". Rist pleaded guilty to the theft on 24 November 2010. He was sentenced to 12 months in jail, suspended for two years, and a supervision order in April 2011. The sentence was relatively low because Rist was diagnosed with
Asperger syndrome. He was also required to repay £125,150, the estimated value of the stolen birds through the Proceeds of Crime Act. The police also advised that 191 intact bird skins had so far been recovered.
Rhinoceros horns In the early hours of 27 August 2011, a thief broke in through the museum's front doors and removed the horns from two rhinoceros exhibits, one an
Indian rhino and the other a
white rhino, using what was believed to be a large hammer. However, in the light of recent thefts from other museums, three months before the break-in curators had replaced the real rhino horns, valued at £240,000, with resin replicas that had no commercial value. On 17 January 2012, Darren Bennett from
Leicester was charged with the theft of two replica rhinoceros horns; real rhino horn can sell for £60,000 per kg in the Far East for its supposed medicinal qualities. ==Gallery==