Home Los Angeles Press Releases 2010 West Hollywood Antiques Dealer Faces Charges of Selling Fake Picasso Drawing for $2 Million
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West Hollywood Antiques Dealer Faces Charges of Selling Fake Picasso Drawing for $2 Million
Dealer Claimed the Art Once Belonged to Malcolm Forbes

U.S. Attorney’s Office January 08, 2010
  • Central District of California (213) 894-2434

LOS ANGELES—A West Hollywood antiques dealer has been named in a federal fraud case involving the $2 million sale of a fake Pablo Picasso that she paid an artist $1,000 to fabricate. Tatiana Khan was informed of the charges this morning by FBI agents who also seized a $700,000 de Kooning painting that prosecutors allege was purchased with proceeds derived from the sale of the bogus Picasso.

Khan, 69, who owns and resides at the Chateau Allegré gallery on La Cienega Boulevard, allegedly hired an artist to fabricate the Picasso drawing—a 1902 pastel called “La Femme Au Chapeau Bleu,” or “The Woman in the Blue Hat”—by giving the artist a photo of the drawing and telling her the real Picasso artwork had been stolen from one of Khan's clients and that Khan needed the copy to play a trick that would help catch the thief.

Khan paid the artist $1,000 for the fake Picasso in 2006, and soon after Khan sold the drawing for $2 million. A criminal complaint filed in United States District Court yesterday afternoon alleges that Khan told the purchaser that the fake Picasso was worth much more than $2 million, but that she was able to sell it for less than market value because it came from the Malcolm Forbes family estate. Khan allegedly told the purchaser that she was acting as the broker for the Forbes family, which wanted their paintings sold privately due to a dispute within the family.

The FBI began investigating the sale of the artwork in 2009 after the purchaser contacted a Picasso expert, who offered the opinion that the drawing was fake. After being contacted by the FBI, Khan allegedly contacted the artist who made the copy and told the artist not to divulge that she had created the purported Picasso. When Khan herself was interviewed by the FBI, according to the complaint, Khan claimed that she had obtained the drawing from a cosmetologist who worked near Chateau Allegré as collateral for a $40,000 loan.

The criminal complaint charges Khan with wire fraud, making false statements to the FBI and witness tampering. This morning, the FBI informed Khan of the charges by delivering a summons that directed Khan to appear in federal court for an initial appearance on January 27.

When the summons was served this morning, the FBI also seized a painting by abstract expressionist artist Willem de Kooning that Khan allegedly purchased with $720,000 of the proceeds derived from the fraudulent sale of the fake Picasso.

If she is convicted of the charges alleged in the criminal complaint, Khan faces a statutory maximum sentence of 45 years in federal prison.

A criminal complaint contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed to be innocent until proven guilty in court.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

CONTACT:

Assistant United States Attorney
Ranee Katzenstein
Major Frauds Section
(213) 894-2432

Assistant United States Attorney
Richard Robinson
Major Frauds Section
(213) 894-0713

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