Templeton, Mass. resident Harold Gordon pleaded guilty in New Haven this week to one count of wire fraud after he attempted to scam his victim out of nearly $65,000.
In October 2012, Gordon began a transaction with a Connecticut art dealer in an attempt to induce him to purchase a secretary desk, U.S. Attorney John Durham announced. While speaking with his victim, Gordon falsely represented hat the desk was decorated and dedicated as a Civil War memorial for a Connecticut soldier who died at the Battle of Antietam while fighting for the Union Army.
While speaking with the art dealer, Gordon claimed that the surviving soldiers in the fallen soldier’s Connecticut regiment had crafted the desk to serve as a war memorial for the deceased soldier’s family. Gordon further stated that other than cleaning the vintage clock, Gordon had done nothing else to refurbish or decorate the desk; and that Gordon had purchased the desk from a descendant of the dead Connecticut soldier.
In March 2014, Gordon’s victim examined the secretary desk at Gordon’s Massachusetts home, and then took subsequent steps to confirm the desk’s authenticity. The victim then purchased the desk from Gordon for $64,500. At Gordon’s request, his victim provided the payment in three separate checks.
The following year, in February, the victim sold the desk to a museum and non-profit organization in Connecticut. After completing this transaction, the victim sent Gordon an additional payment of $25,000 because he had made a “significant profit from the sale,” Gordon said.
Various third parties made inquiries to the victim about the authenticity of the secretary desk in February last year. The victim contacted Gordon, who admitted that he had refurbished and decorated the desk himself, created the false narrative about the desk’s history, and targeted the victim to purchase it due to the victim’s respected stature in the American folk art community. The victim then made full restitution to the institution that had purchased the desk from him.
Gordon is scheduled to appear in court on April 23 for sentencing, when he will face up to 20 years in prison.
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