Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
alert-–-man-suspected-of-being-‘banksy-bandit’-is-arrested-by-met-detectives-after-250,000-peckham-installation-was-stolen-in-broad-daylight-from-streetAlert – Man suspected of being ‘Banksy bandit’ is ARRESTED by Met detectives after £250,000 Peckham installation was stolen in broad daylight from street

A 23-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of theft and criminal damage after a £250,000 Banksy art installation was taken from south-east London, the Metropolitan Police said.

The stop sign featuring three military drones appeared at the junction of Commercial Way in Peckham on Friday. 

But it was chopped off with bolt cutters just an hour after it was officially unveiled by the underground artist. 

A spokesperson for the force said: ‘We have since received a report of theft and enquiries are ongoing. 

‘One man has been arrested on suspicion of theft and criminal damage in connection with the incident. He remains in custody.

A man was seen taking down the sign using a pair of bolt cutters - balancing on an e-bike to allow him to reach. The rider of the e-bike was an onlooker and didn't carry out the theft

A man was seen taking down the sign using a pair of bolt cutters – balancing on an e-bike to allow him to reach. The rider of the e-bike was an onlooker and didn’t carry out the theft 

The extraordinary scenes unfolded at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham at about 12.30pm

The extraordinary scenes unfolded at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham at about 12.30pm

The man, dressed in a red jacket and apparently wearing work gear, pulls the sign down before making off with it

The man, dressed in a red jacket and apparently wearing work gear, pulls the sign down before making off with it 

‘This incident is currently being investigated by officers from the Met’s Central South CID. We are aware of footage being shared which shows the sign being removed.

‘Anyone who may have information about the incident or the whereabouts of the sign is asked to call police on 101 quoting ref 5742/22dec.’ 

The deputy leader of Southwark Council yesterday said the local community want the artwork back after it was chopped down less than an hour after it was revealed to be genuine.

Earlier the force ruled out a probe into the incident while it waited for a formal report of a crime from the owner of the property.

The stop sign – alongside the graffiti depicting three military drones – was hacked down with bolt cutters by a man standing on a Lime bike, who took it away in front of a crowd of outraged onlookers.

Labour councillor Jasmine Ali said: ‘Of course Banksy picked Peckham, it’s already on the map when it comes to art and is a hotbed for creativity. 

The man in the red jacket flees with the sign in front of stunned crowds who had gathered to look at it

The man in the red jacket flees with the sign in front of stunned crowds who had gathered to look at it 

The deputy leader of Southwark Council Jasmine Ali (pictured) said the local community want the artwork back after it was chopped off with bolt cutters less than an hour after it was revealed to be genuine

The deputy leader of Southwark Council Jasmine Ali (pictured) said the local community want the artwork back after it was chopped off with bolt cutters less than an hour after it was revealed to be genuine

‘It should not have been removed and we’d like it back so everyone in the community can enjoy Banksy’s brilliant work. 

‘We have reported the removal of our sign to the police to help get it back.’ 

Pieces by the rogue artist have been sold for millions of pounds – and experts are already speculating that it could make hundreds of thousands amid speculation that it may have been taken for a quick profit.

Banksy confirmed the artwork – a traffic stop sign covered with three military drones – was his in an Instagram post shortly after midday.

That post has already attracted more than 1million likes. 

The revelation led to a stream of locals descending on the site and taking photos of the installation on their phones. 

But at around 12.30pm, the peaceful scene was shattered by the arrival of two men, one of whom balanced precariously on an Lime e-bike while hurriedly hacking the sign down with bolt cutters. 

It comes after a Peckham councilor slammed the Met for not taking action sooner against both Banksy and the alleged thief – as he says defacing and removing a stop sign could be a risk for public safety that may have ‘fatal consequences’.

The sign has since been replaced and the Met say that they are aware of the incident.

The artist confirmed the piece - a traffic stop sign covered with three military drones - was his in an Instagram today shortly after midday

The artist confirmed the piece – a traffic stop sign covered with three military drones – was his in an Instagram today shortly after midday

Banksy has not yet commented on the drama, but had been warned by a social media user: 'The sign will be snatched pronto'

Banksy has not yet commented on the drama, but had been warned by a social media user: ‘The sign will be snatched pronto’

Southwark Council, the local authority responsible for services in the area - including street signage - did not respond to a request for comment

Southwark Council, the local authority responsible for services in the area – including street signage – did not respond to a request for comment

Commercial Street in Peckham today after the sign had disappeared

Commercial Street in Peckham today after the sign had disappeared 

Peckham councilor Barrie Hargrove (pictured) slammed the Met for not taking action sooner against both Banksy and the alleged thief - as he says defacing and removing a stop sign could be a risk for public safety that may have 'fatal consequences'

Peckham councilor Barrie Hargrove (pictured) slammed the Met for not taking action sooner against both Banksy and the alleged thief – as he says defacing and removing a stop sign could be a risk for public safety that may have ‘fatal consequences’

Labour’s Barrie Hargrove said: ‘I’m not a Philistine, but for me what really, really concerns me more is that a stop sign has been vandalised.

READ MORE – Why the art world still insist on pretending Banksy’s real identity is a huge secret

‘A stop sign, which I’m presuming is giving traffic instructions – and that concerns me that the police don’t seem to think anything of that.

‘Clearly a Banksy work of art is a very valuable thing but it seems to me more of a case of vandalism of the street side. It could have fatal consequences.

‘I don’t think it’s a good idea to vandalise the public realm and certainly not the highway, where it could have fatal consequences.’

Ian Syer co founder of MyArtBroker told : ‘Street installations by Banksy are typically hard to sell due to usually having to remove entire walls of buildings.

‘But these chaps had it away in minutes but they’d be lucky to get £250k for it, if a buyer ever came forward. 

‘However, it’s our view these installations should never be sold and should be preserved and enjoyed by the public, not stolen for a quick profit’ 

The rider of the e-bike, who asked to be referred to only as Alex, said he ‘watched in awe’ as the man ‘bashed’ the sign with his hands while balancing on the saddle. 

The man in the red jacket clambers up the pole to reach the sign - Banksy's latest work

The man in the red jacket clambers up the pole to reach the sign – Banksy’s latest work 

The sign is hacked down using bolt cutters as onlookers videoed the scene on their phones

The sign is hacked down using bolt cutters as onlookers videoed the scene on their phones 

Banksy's artworks have previously fetched millions of pounds at auction

Banksy’s artworks have previously fetched millions of pounds at auction 

The man removing the sign, who was wearing a red jacket, fled with it after just 60 seconds after onlookers shouted at him to stop. He left the bolt cutters behind.

The extraordinary scenes unfolded at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham close to a zebra crossing.

Banksy’s works have previously sold for millions of pounds at auction. The identity of the men is not known and it’s still unclear exactly who was behind the removal and whether it was a stunt. However, it has been claimed that Banksy was not involved. 

Peckham: Where is it and how many crimes take place there each month? 

Peckham sits within the London Borough of Southwark in south-east London. It famously featured in comedy series Only Fools and Horses. 

Earlier this year the area made headlines when the owner of a local store, Peckham Hair and Cosmetics, was seen appearing to place his hands around a black woman’s throat. 

Sohail Sindho has always denied he was choking her and claims he was trying to restrain her after a row over a £7.99 refund for three wigs became heated. 

The video has sparked a string of protests in the last four weeks, forcing the shop to close and sending the trader into hiding. 

In October, the Met recorded 38 violent and sexual offences in Peckham, along with 34 instances of anti-social behaviour and 7 reports of criminal damage and arson. 

Southwark as a whole saw 130 offences per 1000 people, which is around the average for inner London. 

The piece has already been valued at £250,000 by art experts – although they added that they believe the works should be left to be enjoyed by the public.

Ed Damon said he spotted Banksy erecting the art work at 7am yesterday – and was later witness to it being stolen.

The 45-year-old was out on an early morning run when he saw a man in his 40s with grey hair standing on a pair of steps at a lamppost on Commercial Way.

He told : ‘I thought it was a bit strange but the guy did not hang around. He had some steps up and once it was up, he just ran across the road. I did not see where he went. There were some cars around but not many other people

‘I took a photo to show my friends and thought nothing more. It was only today I heard it was a Banksy, and that man must have been Banksy.

Mr Damon, a civil servant, was returning to his home in Peckham this afternoon when he saw a crowd standing by the sign.

He said: ‘This guy just cut it down and ran off. No one tried to stop him.

‘I don’t think anyone knew it was a Banksy until he posted it on his social media and made it official.

‘It’s a bit surreal to see it go up and then come down.’

Alex, 26, said he had ridden an e-bike to the sign after hearing about it on social media. 

He said: ‘I opened Instagram and I saw it was posted four minutes before and I was about to go on my lunch break. There were about two people there when I got there. We were all sort of admiring it and taking pictures.

‘This guy comes up and grabs it, we watched in awe as he bashed it. He put the Lime bike under the sign, stood on the Lime bike and tried to hit the sign, he hit it with his hands and it wasn’t going anywhere.

‘He fell off the Lime bike at one point. He disappeared and went away and about two minutes later he reappeared with bolt cutters and just sort of tried and tried and tried while everyone was watching.

‘We said ‘what are you doing?’ but no one really knew what to do, we sort of just watched it happen. We were all a bit bemused; there was some honking of car horns.

‘He ripped it off and ran across the road and ran away. He said nothing. He didn’t seem to care that much about the art itself. 

‘There was someone else there but I don’t know if they were together.

The artwork had been left at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham, south London

The artwork had been left at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham, south London

At one point the man slid down the pole after apparently losing his grip

At one point the man slid down the pole after apparently losing his grip 

People remove a piece of art work by Banksy

People remove a piece of art work by Banksy

The man runs away holding the sign.  has contacted the Met for comment

The man runs away holding the sign. has contacted the Met for comment 

He left the pair of bolt cutters behind

He left the pair of bolt cutters behind 

‘I went there thinking that people want that, I wanted to see it before something happened to it. Before it was taken, someone else said ‘shall we take it?”

Banksy has not yet commented on the drama, but had been warned by a social media user: ‘The sign will be snatched pronto.’ 

The drones on the piece resembled those on another artwork, Civilian Drone Strike, which depicted them destroying a house while a little girl and her dog watch on in horror. 

It was sold for £200,000 to raise funds in opposition to a London arms fair.

READ MORE – The time Banksy almost let the mask slip: Secretive street artist reveals his real first name in astonishing unearthed radio interview from 20 years ago 

Onlookers started shouting when a man tried to remove a Banksy installation in south London, a witness said. 

They said: ‘He arrived the first time, the bloke, and tried to climb up to the sign and then couldn’t quite knock it, the sign, of its hinges, just with his hand.

‘So then he went away and then came back with a pair of bolt cutters and climbed up on the bike.

‘He fell off the first time. Then his mate steadied the bike and then he climbed back up again and just bashed the sign off the hinges and then ran off.’

He added: ‘As soon as it (the art piece) went up online a few people cycled down to it to see it straight away and just sort of hung around.

‘When he started trying to knock it off a few people were shouting for him to stop but he just carried on and that’s when he realised he couldn’t get it off with just his hands and had to get some bolt cutters.’

A second witness who saw the removal of a Banksy artwork in south London said it ‘surprised’ him and it would have been ‘nice if it stayed there for a while’.

The man, who wished to remain anonymous, said: ‘I was crossing the road and somebody there said ‘look’ and told me what was happening. There were four or five of us taking pictures of this guy on the bike, this man wanted to get hold of the sign.

The work was installed at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham, south London, close to a zebra crossing

The work was installed at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham, south London, close to a zebra crossing

A selection of photos of the artwork were uploaded to the artist's Instagram page without a caption or explanation

A selection of photos of the artwork were uploaded to the artist’s Instagram page without a caption or explanation

The drones resemble those on another artwork, Civilian Drone Strike, which depicted them destroying a house while a little girl and her dog watch on in horror

The drones resemble those on another artwork, Civilian Drone Strike, which depicted them destroying a house while a little girl and her dog watch on in horror

‘At one point he went away and he came back with a tool and then he completed the work and went away. Apparently the tool remained there, he left it on the wall.

‘I was surprised to see it, I took a picture of the sign, but I didn’t want to take a picture of the guy.

‘It is strange, these pieces of art are nice, it would be nice if it had stayed there for a while.’

This is not the first time Banksy’s art work has been removed shortly after its creation.

A mural weighing 3.8 tons called Valentine’s Day Mascara appeared on the side of a house in Margate, Kent, on Valentine’s Day this year and was dismantled some hours after Banksy had shared a series of photos of it online.

The mural depicted a 1950s housewife with a swollen eye and missing tooth, wearing an apron and yellow washing-up gloves, and throwing a man into a chest freezer.

At the time the resident of the property where the painting was created, who asked not to be named, said the freezer and other items including a broken garden chair used for the artwork had been removed ‘very quickly’ and put into a truck.

In September the mural was placed in the foyer of The Art of Banksy exhibition in Regent Street, central London, where it can be viewed for free.

This is not the first time Banksy's art work has been removed shortly after its creation. A mural weighing 3.8 tons called Valentine's Day Mascara appeared on the side of a house in Margate, Kent, on Valentine's Day this year and was dismantled by the local council

This is not the first time Banksy’s art work has been removed shortly after its creation. A mural weighing 3.8 tons called Valentine’s Day Mascara appeared on the side of a house in Margate, Kent, on Valentine’s Day this year and was dismantled by the local council  

Banksy is well known for his political artwork that often examines geopolitical issues

Banksy is well known for his political artwork that often examines geopolitical issues 

A man on a bike takes a photo of the artwork at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham

A man on a bike takes a photo of the artwork at the intersection of Southampton Way and Commercial Way in Peckham

The exhibition features pieces including Girl With Balloon, Flower Thrower and Rude Copper and also focuses on Banksy’s Dismaland, The Walled Off Hotel in Bethlehem and recent works acknowledging the ongoing war in Ukraine.

READ MORE – Full list of Banksy’s most famous art work – which is worth over £88million

An exhibition also opened at Glasgow’s Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA) this year for a limited run and showcased 25 years of Banksy’s stencil graffiti.

Cut & Run included authentic artefacts, ephemera and the artist’s toilet, as well as a model that explained how the artist shredded Girl With Balloon during an auction at Sotheby’s in London in 2018.

In August, a message on cutandrun.co.uk, said that organisers now ‘want to take this show on the road but have no idea where to go to next’.

The artist often refers to contemporary issues and in 2020 included messages about the Coronavirus pandemic in his work.

Transport for London (TfL) removed spray paint in a London Underground carriage due to what they called their ‘strict anti-graffiti policy’.

Last month, it emerged a £1million Banksy mural criticising Brexit was partly destroyed after the local council demolished the building it was on to make way for a new £25million regeneration project.

The mural appeared on the side of a building in Dover, Kent, in May 2017 – a year after Britain narrowly voted in a referendum to leave the European Union. 

It remains to be seen what will be done to ensure Banksy's latest artwork is not removed

It remains to be seen what will be done to ensure Banksy’s latest artwork is not removed 

It is likely the piece will attract substantial crowd now its location has become known

It is likely the piece will attract substantial crowd now its location has become known 

A man jogs by the new artwork in Peckham today

A man jogs by the new artwork in Peckham today 

The departure was symbolised by the image of a workman on a ladder chipping away at one of the stars of the EU flag.

READ MORE – Banksy ‘buys £1million pub’ in Glastonbury Festival village where regulars claim to have spotted the elusive graffiti artist watching rugby 

Dover District Council (DDC) flattened the building for a regeneration project which included a cultural, educational and business start-up centre, sparking fears for the future of the art work.

But DDC leader Councillor Kevin Mills said that bits of the work, which was mysteriously whitewashed overnight in 2019, had been saved.

Councillor Mills said the image of the man on a ladder and the yellow stars he is working on have been rescued, but not the wider blue background.

He claimed the difficulty was that the image was on the render of the building, which was knocked down by DDS Demolition.

DDS Demolition told the building was unsafe and had to come down, but insisted it was carefully taken down rather then a demolition.

Banksy, whose career began in the 90s, is known by millions of people thanks to the appearance of dozens of iconic artworks in unexpected locations around the world, with many having gone on to sell for millions. 

For years his identity has been a hot topic, with names such as Massive Attack’s Robert Del Naja and Gorillaz founder Jamie Hewlett being floated around.

Also suggested is public schoolboy Robin Gunningham, who was ‘unmasked’ as Banksy by the Mail On Sunday in 2008 after an investigation into his past.

Regardless of who he his, Banksy’s works are hot property on the art market.

In 2021, his ‘Love is in the Bin’ work was bought for more than £18million, with its value having been boosted after a shredder hidden in its frame cut it to pieces moments after it was sold for the first time in 2018.

Last month, it emerged a £1million Banksy mural criticising Brexit was partly destroyed after the local council demolished the building it was on to make way for a new £25million regeneration project

Last month, it emerged a £1million Banksy mural criticising Brexit was partly destroyed after the local council demolished the building it was on to make way for a new £25million regeneration project 

The site of the building where Banksy's Brexit mural was painted

The site of the building where Banksy’s Brexit mural was painted

The identity of Banksy is one of the most closely guarded secrets in the world, but that hasn't stopped people from speculating. In 2007, the Mail on Sunday published an investigation which suggested Banksy was former public schoolboy Robin Gunningham (above)

The identity of Banksy is one of the most closely guarded secrets in the world, but that hasn’t stopped people from speculating. In 2007, the Mail on Sunday published an investigation which suggested Banksy was former public schoolboy Robin Gunningham (above)

The work, previously known as ‘Girl with Balloon’, was just one of more than a dozen of Banksy’s creations that have sold for more than £2million.

Banksy uses art as a form of activism, regularly making societal and political statements with their works. 

READ MORE – Homeowners spend £200,000 removing Banksy’s seagull mural after house became target for thieves, vandals and council officials 

The artist was born just outside of Bristol in 1973 and he was a talented illustrator who drew cartoons.

Having also sprayed his tag across Bristol, Banksy then evolved with the times and began creating more sophisticated pieces, whilst always keeping his identity hidden.

One of Banksy’s earliest works is the The Mild Mild West.

The large mural was painted in 1999 in Bristol’s Stokes Croft and shows a teddy bear throwing a Molotov cocktail at three riot police.

It was painted by the artist over three days in broad daylight and is still in the city today, among some of Banksy’s other works.

The exhaustive MoS investigation into Banksy’s identity heard from dozens of friends, former colleagues, enemies, flatmates and even family members. 

The search began with an image of a man in Jamaica at work with his stencils and cans of spray paint.

Although Banksy denied the image showed him, the Mail’s investigation was later backed by researchers at Queen Mary University.

'Love is in the Bin', a Banksy artwork that half-shredded itself during a 2018 auction, sold for £18.6 million - four times its estimate - in 2021

‘Love is in the Bin’, a Banksy artwork that half-shredded itself during a 2018 auction, sold for £18.6 million – four times its estimate – in 2021

Prints of three of Banksy's works are seen above at Sotheby's in February last year. Centre is  Kissing Coppers, next to Girl with Balloon and 'Vandalised Oils (Choppers)'

Prints of three of Banksy’s works are seen above at Sotheby’s in February last year. Centre is  Kissing Coppers, next to Girl with Balloon and ‘Vandalised Oils (Choppers)’

They used ‘geographic profiling’ – a technique more often used to catch criminals or track outbreaks of disease – to plot the locations of 192 of Banksy’s presumed artworks. 

The sites indicated ‘hot spots’ which were narrowed down to pinpoint an individual. Peaks within these clusters were found to correlate to a pub, playing fields and residential addresses closely linked to Mr Gunningham and his friends and family.

Mr Gunningham attended Bristol Cathedral School and was born in July 1973. A school photo of him bore a striking resemblance to the man in the Jamaica photograph.

A former school friend described him as being ‘extremely talented’ at art and admitted he would ‘not be at all surprised’ if he was Banksy.

In anonymous interviews he has done, Banksy has said he first became interested in graffiti at school.

And a fellow artist he was living with in Bristol in 1998, Luke Egan, went on to exhibit with Banksy at Santa’s Ghetto, an art store in London’s West End. 

However, Mr Gunningham’s family denied that he was Banksy and the link was never explicitly confirmed.

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