Originally Held January 21, 2026
OSINT Workflows for Art & Antiquities Crime
Art and antiquities crime often hides in plain sight. Theft, forgery, and illicit trade thrive because of opaque markets, fragmented records, and manipulated provenance. These activities frequently intersect with organized crime and conflict-driven trafficking, making investigations complex and time-sensitive.
The session will cover how investigators:
- Identify where relevant public data exists across the open web
- Recognize how illicit objects and related evidence surface online
- Use public information to investigate facilitators and intermediaries
- Map networks involved in organized cultural property crime
Whether you support law enforcement, compliance, security, or investigative research, this session will provide practical insight into how public data supports cultural property investigations from initial detection through intelligence development.
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