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Tuesday, September 16, 2025 |
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Former FBI art crime lead investigator to release debut book |
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Part true crime narrative, part procedural, The Grave Robber offers a gripping, behind-the-scenes look at the meticulous work involved in tracking down one of the most prolific art thieves in history.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Tim Carpenter, former FBI Lead Investigator on the Art Crime Team, will release his debut book, the unbelievable true story: The Grave Robber: The Biggest Stolen Artifacts Case in FBI History and the Bureaus Quest to Set Things Right, with Harper Horizon on October 14, 2025.
In The Grave Robber, Tim recounts one of the most extraordinary and unsettling cases in the history of art theft. Over the course of five decades, a lone graverobber accumulated an illicit trove of over 42,000 artifacts from cultures across the globe, including Native American, Haitian, Chinese, and others. The stolen items included nearly 500 ancestral remains, carefully looted from sacred burial sites and cultural heritage locations. Carpenters team, driven by an unwavering commitment to justice, embarks on a harrowing journey to track down this elusive criminal and uncover the full scope of the theft. What they find is nothing short of staggering: an illegal collection of immense historical and cultural significance, hidden away in a Midwestern home.
Part true crime narrative, part procedural, The Grave Robber offers a gripping, behind-the-scenes look at the meticulous work involved in tracking down one of the most prolific art thieves in history.
Carpenter takes readers inside the FBIs groundbreaking investigation, detailing the complex challenges of recovering stolen cultural artifacts and the legal and moral dilemmas of repatriating them to their rightful communities.
Along the way, the Bureaus efforts to confront these crimes evolve, as they come to terms with the deep historical wounds caused by such lootingespecially the desecration of Native American graves and ancestral sites. With rare access to both the investigation and the impacted communities, Carpenters narrative sheds light on the lengths the FBI and tribal representatives go to in their pursuit of justice.
As the case progresses, the narrative expands from a tense pursuit of a criminal to a larger reckoning with history and cultural heritage. The repatriation of these sacred objects and remains to their rightful owners becomes an act of restorationnot just of physical artifacts, but of dignity and respect for the communities whose ancestors were so violently wronged. The story of The Grave Robber is one of redemption and transformation: for the FBI, which redefined its approach to cultural crimes, and for the tribes and cultures who finally see justice done. This riveting account of a stolen past and the quest to make it right reads like a thriller, but it is ultimately a story of healing, responsibility, and the importance of preserving history for future generations.
Tim Carpenter is a retired FBI Supervisory Special Agent and the former head of the FBIs Art Crime Team. Over a 30-year career, he led some of the Bureaus most significant cultural property investigations, recovering thousands of looted and stolen objects across the globeincluding Willem de Koonings Woman-Ochre, Norman Rockwells Lazybones, and the ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz. He received the FBI Directors Award for excellence in counterterrorism and played a key role in modernizing the Bureaus approach to art crime, expanding the Art Crime Team and strengthening its global reach.
Now the Managing Director of Argus Cultural Property Consultants, he advises museums, collectors, and insurers on risk, repatriation, and security. He regularly consults for film and television on art crime storylines and has appeared in multiple documentaries, including The Thief Collector. His work has been featured by The New York Times, CBS News, NPR, Vanity Fair, and The Washington Post Magazine.
The Graverobber is his debut book.
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