Assistant District Attorney Kent Lovern said yesterday he couldn't reveal any information beyond the arrests.
Police Chief Ed Flynn told a news conference that authorities have not recovered the violin, and the search for it continues. The violin has been appraised at USD 5 million.
Police say the nearly 300-year-old violin was on loan to concertmaster Frank Almond. Authorities say a robber used a stun gun on Almond and took the instrument from him in a parking lot.
The brazen Jan 27 crime set off a frantic search and raised questions about why someone would steal an item that would be nearly impossible to sell.
The violin is known in musical circles as the "Lipinski" Stradivarius. Its previous owners include virtuoso Giuseppe Tartini, who was known for his "Devil's Trill" Sonata, and Polish violinist Karol Lipinski.
It was passed down through generations, eventually landing with the heirs of Estonian violinist Evi Liivak, according to Stefan Hersh a Chicago-based violin curator who helped restore it to playing condition after it was removed from storage in a bank vault in 2008. The current owner's name has not been revealed publicly.
Hersh said he couldn't sleep after he heard about the theft. He was worried the violin would be damaged, but the more he thought about it the more he suspected the thieves would take pains to protect it.
"You'd have to think someone who thought this through with such meticulous planning would take good care of it," he said.
Estimates vary for the number of Stradivarius violins that still exist, said Lisbeth Butler, the secretary of the American Federation of Violin and Bow Makers. Most experts believe that 600 to 650 remain, she said.
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