Listen to the words. "...on loan." They weren't owned by the museum. They were displayed there and stolen from there, while all along someone else owned them and now they are at auction.
@@Oldbugssy Let's say I loan you my valuable portrait of Ruth Buzzi, and you display it, and then somebody stole it. And now it's found. Why doesn't it automatically go back to me without paying penny, if I can prove it's mine?
@@akrenwinkle You don't get it. The museum indeed did have it on display. On loan mind you. And when they were recovered, they were returned to the owner. Simple.
They should ask the current holders for 20 years of rent !!!!
I thought they were returned and back in there case?
Teŕible reporting as per norm. Why do they have to pay to get their stolen property back?
Good question. I've never heard of such a thing.
Listen to the words. "...on loan." They weren't owned by the museum. They were displayed there and stolen from there, while all along someone else owned them and now they are at auction.
@@Oldbugssy Let's say I loan you my valuable portrait of Ruth Buzzi, and you display it, and then somebody stole it. And now it's found. Why doesn't it automatically go back to me without paying penny, if I can prove it's mine?
@@akrenwinkle You don't get it. The museum indeed did have it on display. On loan mind you. And when they were recovered, they were returned to the owner. Simple.
@@Oldbugssy You're right, I didn't. I found everyone in the video so annoying, I just skipped to the end.