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West Hollywood man sentenced in $6-million art fraud scheme - Los Angeles Times

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A West Hollywood man who authorities say tried to sell $6 million worth of phony paintings by such artists as Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat and other modern masters has been sentenced to five years in federal prison.

Philip Righter, 43, was sentenced Wednesday in a federal court in Miami after pleading guilty to wire fraud, aggravated identity theft and tax fraud, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Righter was given 60 months in prison in a case that was filed in Los Angeles.

The judge also handed down a five-year sentence in a Florida case in which Righter acknowledged trying to sell forgeries to the owner of a Miami art gallery.

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Both sentences will be served at the same time.

In a plea agreement, Righter acknowledged trying to sell counterfeit art that he claimed was genuine and using some fakes for income tax write-offs or as collateral for loans he never repaid.

Richter sold the bogus artworks from 2016 through June of 2018, creating phony authentication documents, prosecutors said.

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Some of the documents were stamped with counterfeits of the embossing stamps used by the estates of Basquiat and Keith Haring to authenticate pieces, prosecutors said.

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West Hollywood man sentenced in $6-million art fraud scheme - Los Angeles Times
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