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Expert "suspected" Shakespeare folio theft accused

BBC Published Jun 21, 2010 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Raymond Scott, aged 53, denied stealing a Shakespeare first folio from Durham University in December 1998 and waiting 10 years to sell it.
53 years · Raymond Scott1998 · theft of Shakespeare folio10 years · time between theft and attempted sale
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Citation-ready fact
The Shakespeare first folio was stolen in a raid at Durham University in December 1998.
1998 · theft of Shakespeare folio
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The British Embassy, Durham Police, and the FBI were contacted by the Folger Shakespeare Library in 2008 after receiving the damaged book.
2008 · reporting of stolen folio
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Experts estimated the damaged Shakespeare first folio to be worth £1 million.
1000000 GBP · Shakespeare first folio
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The Shakespeare first folio had been 'mutilated' for 12 years since its theft.
12 years · time since theft and damage
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A librarian has told how his "heart sank" as he realised an ancient Shakespeare first edition he was authenticating was a stolen relic.

Richard Kuhta was given the damaged book by Raymond Scott in Washington DC.

Mr Scott, 53, from Wingate, County Durham, denies taking the folio from Durham University in 1998, and waiting 10 years to sell it.

Mr Kuhta of the Folger Shakespeare Library, told Newcastle Crown Court he was immediately suspicious of Mr Scott.

The library called in the British Embassy, Durham Police and the FBI after being given the badly damaged book in 2008.

The court heard Mr Scott posed as a wealthy international playboy who claimed to have discovered the Shakespeare's first folio when holidaying in Cuba.

But experts at the library soon discovered the artefact, which had pages missing and its bindings and cover removed, was a unique 1623 first printing of the bard's collected works stolen in a raid at Durham University in December 1998.

Scott, who has denied theft, handling and transporting stolen goods, intended to sell the book at auction then share the money with friends in Cuba, the trial heard.

Experts estimated the first folio to be worth £1m, even in its damaged state. They said in terms of its cultural value it was priceless.

Mr Kuhta said: "He said he'd inherited his father's construction building supplies business and had sold it and as a result he was very comfortably off.

"He said he had something to show me. He started flicking through the pages very quickly showing me it was a first edition.

"I was startled by the way in which the book was being handled and by the sudden realisation that the man seemed to know it was a first edition.

"My heart sank. It was a feeling of sadness to think we were dealing with stolen property.

"The collections are what we live for, preserving them, building them, making them accessible.

"This is one of the most important books not just in the history of literature but in the English language."

Mr Scott, had hoarded the folio at the former council home he shared with his elderly mother in Washington, Tyne and Wear, since stealing it, the court heard.

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