German Authorities Arrest Suspects in Theft of 483 Celtic Gold Coins From Museum

German Authorities Arrest Suspects in Theft of 483 Celtic Gold Coins From Museum
Coins of the Celtic Treasure are on display at the local Celtic and Roman Museum in Manching, Germany, on May 31, 2006. (Frank Maechler/dpa via AP)

BERLIN—German authorities said Wednesday that they have arrested four suspects in the theft of hundreds of ancient gold coins from a museum in Bavaria last year.

Thieves broke into the Celtic and Roman Museum in Manching and took 483 Celtic coins that were discovered during an archaeological dig nearby in 1999. The coins dated to around 100 B.C.

Officials have said that cables were cut at a telecommunications hub and knocked out local networks before the heist, and that the thieves got in and out of the museum in nine minutes early on Nov. 22 without raising the alarm.

Bavaria’s state interior ministry said raids were carried out in the Schwerin region of northeasstern Germany on Tuesday and four people were arrested. It didn’t elaborate.

The regional interior minister, Joachim Herrmann, said in a statement that the operation was an “outstanding investigative success” and that “professional thieves” were arrested.

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