British police say they have recovered two Chinese artifacts valued together at more than 2 million pounds ($3.2 million) that were stolen from a university museum earlier this month.
Raiders chiseled through a wall to snatch the Qing Dynasty items from the Oriental Museum at Durham University in northern England on April 5.
Police soon arrested several suspects, but the items – a large jade bowl with a Chinese poem written inside that dates back to 1769, and a Dehua porcelain sculpture – were not immediately recovered.
Durham Police said Saturday that both artifacts had been retrieved, though it did not say how.
Police have named two men they are searching for over the raid – Lee Wildman and Adrian Stanton, both from the West Midlands area of central England.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
These Five Technologies Increase The Risk of Cyber Claims
Berkshire Utility Presses Wildfire Appeal With Billions at Stake
Charges Dropped Against ‘Poster Boy’ Contractor Accused of Insurance Fraud
Why 2026 Is The Tipping Point for The Evolving Role of AI in Law and Claims