Gallery owner sentenced in fine art photography swindle
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Gallery owner sentenced in fine art photography swindle
The home from which Wendy Halsted Beard ran a gallery, in Franklin, Mich., Jan. 30, 2023. The Detroit-area gallery owner has been sentenced to five years and three months in prison for defrauding photography collectors out of $1.6 million worth of fine art photos, in what the FBI has called a criminal scheme to swindle older collectors. (Brittany Greeson/The New York Times)

by Annie Aguiar



NEW YORK, NY.- A Detroit-area gallery owner was sentenced last week to five years and three months in prison for defrauding photography collectors out of $1.6 million worth of fine art photos, in what the FBI has called a criminal scheme to swindle older collectors.

The gallerist, Wendy Halsted Beard, 59, of Birmingham, Michigan, previously pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud for the scheme.

According to the criminal complaint filed by the FBI in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, between March 2019 and October 2022, Beard agreed to sell more than 100 fine art photographs on behalf of collectors, for which she would earn a commission. Those works were instead not returned or were sold without clients’ knowledge, with Beard keeping the profits and creating a series of excuses when her clients started asking questions.

Works from some of the most acclaimed photographers of the 20th century — Diane Arbus, Richard Avedon and Ansel Adams — were among those entrusted to Beard.

The most valuable photograph Beard sold was a mural-size print of an Adams photograph titled “The Tetons and the Snake River, Grand Teton National Park,” a dramatic black-and-white shot of the winding river below the mountain range. Beard sold that photograph for $440,000 and kept the profits instead of an agreed-upon 5% commission. Works that did not sell were kept in Beard’s Franklin, Michigan, home or left in a Florida gallery.

Beard went to great lengths to hide her deceit, according to the complaint, claiming to have been in a monthslong coma and to have received a double-lung transplant to justify delayed answers to clients; inventing fictional employees to correspond with clients; and once swapping out a signed Adams photograph print with a $405.26 version of it from the Ansel Adams Gallery gift shop.

More than three dozen collectors trusted Beard with their artwork, according to the Justice Department release, including a longtime friend, Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist J. Ross Baughman and an 89-year-old man with Alzheimer’s disease. As part of her sentence, Beard is ordered to pay more than $2 million in restitution.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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