Skip to content
Advertisement
When Appliance Fail?

Pub thief jailed for stealing handbag with £2m Fabergé egg inside

An "opportunistic" thief is jailed for stealing a handbag from a pub that happened to contain a £2.2m Fabergé egg.

schedule 13:27 visibility 14 views
Pub thief jailed for stealing handbag with £2m Fabergé egg inside
BBC News Source: BBC News

An "opportunistic" thief who stole a handbag containing an emerald-encrusted Fabergé egg and watch set worth up to £2.2m from a central London pub has been jailed for more than two years.

Enzo Conticello, 29, took Rosie Dawson's handbag which she had placed between her legs on the ground as she stood outside the Dog and Duck in Soho on 7 November 2024.

The Fabergé items were in her handbag after she had taken them for display at a work event earlier that evening. They have not been recovered.

Conticello - also known as Hakin Boudjenoune - was sentenced at Southwark Crown Court after he pleaded guilty to three charges of fraud by false representation and one count of theft at an earlier hearing.

CCTV footage captured Conticello inside the pub, attempting to steal another customer's bag, before he moved outside. He was then filmed removing the victim's bag.

The court heard Conticello was after "easy money" and that he had handed over the bag, which also contained a laptop and credit cards, to buy drugs.

He was linked to the handbag theft after trying to use Dawson's bank cards in a nearby shop within minutes of committing the crime.

Fabergé is a world-renowned luxury jeweller founded in Russia in 1842, famous for its eggs made of gems and precious metals.

Insurers paid out £106,700 for the loss to Dawson's employers at the Craft Irish Whiskey Company, but Prosecutor Julian Winship said there were only seven Fabergé sets - containing a jewelled egg, watch, whisky bottle, cigars and humidor - in existence.

The egg is made from 18‑carat yellow gold and took more than 100 hours to create.

It is set with 104 diamonds and contains an uncut emerald from Zambia. The accompanying watch, inspired by one of the "Seven Wonders of Ireland", weighs 22 carats and is encased in rose gold.

Conticello's barrister, Katie Porter-Windley, said he previously worked as a chef but lost his job in the Covid pandemic and slipped into cocaine addiction.

"On the night in question, it was a moment of opportunity which he took, and he is genuinely remorseful for his behaviour," she said.

Conticello was arrested for separate theft offences in Belfast in November 2025, more than a year after the handbag theft, and was then linked to the 2024 crime.

Porter-Windley told the court Conticello did not realise how valuable the items were that he had stolen.

When Recorder Kate Livesey said the egg was "quite extraordinary looking", Porter-Windley said it was "so extraordinary that he wouldn't know on the face of it whether that was high value or not".

Sentencing him to two years and three months in prison, Livesey said the "opportunistic" theft caused "inconvenience and stress" to Dawson and her company.

"Ms Dawson described the particular shock and panic upon realising a bag containing items of such particular value owned by the company had been stolen, and the incredible stress this incident has caused her," she said.

Police are continuing to hunt for the egg and watch.

Det Con Arben Morina, who is leading the investigation, said: "Conticello thought nothing of helping himself to someone else's possessions, and he now faces a prison sentence as a result of his greed."

"Our investigation to find the egg and the watch is ongoing and we'd urge anyone with information to contact us."

Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk

Man admits stealing Fabergé egg and watch worth £2m

Rare Fabergé egg fetches record £22.9m at London auction

BBC News

Originally published at

BBC News

open_in_new Read Full Article

Related Articles

GOG apologizes for emailing people Nazi symbols
Technology

GOG apologizes for emailing people Nazi symbols

GOG sent a newsletter about the game The End of the Sun on June 5th that included symbols associated with the Nazi SS. The Steam competitor issued a statement attributing the inclusion to a "series of mistakes," including miscommunication with the...

The Verge
Meta made its own AI-generated clickbait news feed
Technology

Meta made its own AI-generated clickbait news feed

Facebook has long been filled with feeds of clickbait articles. Now, Meta is making its own clickbait articles with AI. The standalone Meta AI app now has a "For You" section that populates a list of clickbait-style stories for you to read. But the...

The Verge

Read More

Here comes new Siri again
Technology

Here comes new Siri again

Apple has been on its back foot, AI-wise, for the past few years. But in a strange way, playing from behind might not be such a bad move. At WWDC on Monday, Apple appears to be getting ready to reintroduce us to the new Siri. Again. As a reminder...

The Verge
The next YouTube phenomenon hitting the big screen
Technology

The next YouTube phenomenon hitting the big screen

Hi, friends! Welcome to Installer No. 131, your guide to the best and Verge-iest stuff in the world. (If you're new here, welcome, happy last week of productivity before the World Cup starts, and also you can read all the old editions at the...

The Verge
Your Appliance Broke?
Reliable Repair for