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In case featuring mobster and a Stradivarius violin, a priest pleads guilty

This undated photo provided by Sotheby's shows a detail of a rare 1719 Stradivarius.
This undated photo provided by Sotheby's shows a detail of a rare 1719 Stradivarius. (AP Photo/Sotheby's)

CHICAGO – A plot twist in a legal drama featuring a mobster and a violin played out Wednesday when a prison chaplain announced in court minutes before his trial was to start that he was guilty of trying to help an imprisoned mob hit man recover a hidden Stradivarius.

Eugene Klein, a Roman Catholic priest, was accused of scheming with Chicago Outfit enforcer Frank Calabrese Sr. to find a rare, 250-year-old violin Calabrese hid years earlier in his Wisconsin summer home to keep authorities from selling it. They believed it might be worth $26 million.

Klein, 66, wore a clerical collar and gripped a cane as he walked into court, where half a dozen witnesses sat on a back bench ready to testify in the long-planned trial. But the clergyman surprised the courtroom by saying he wanted to forgo the trial and plead guilty.

READ MORE: 7 years in prison for man accused of masterminding theft of $5M violin

Several minutes later, he did just that. He answered calmly when U.S. District Judge John Darrah asked him if he did what prosecutors accused him of doing. He leaned forward and responded, “I’m guilty of the offence.”

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The offence itself is the stuff of Hollywood films.

Prosecutors say the plot was hatched in 2011 when Klein was administering communion to Calabrese in prison. Calabrese had been sentenced to life in 2009 for 13 killings, including strangling some victims with a rope, then slashing their throats to ensure they were dead. He was also ordered to pay $4.4 million in restitution. He died in a federal prison in North Carolina in 2012 at age 75.

After Calabrese’s imprisonment, authorities continued to search for his assets. Prosecutors say Calabrese wanted to ensure agents could never get ahold of the violin that once belonged to entertainer Liberace, saying he’d rather the priest profited from its sale.

READ MORE: Milwaukee symphony concertmaster relieved stolen violin worth $5 million recovered in good shape

Prosecutors say Klein even called a real estate agent selling the home, posing as a potential buyer. The plan was for another unidentified conspirator to distract the agent during a tour of the house while Klein helped retrieve the violin.

A federal search in 2010 did turn up $1 million in cash, diamonds and other valuables in a wall behind a family portrait in Calabrese’s Chicago-area Oak Brook home. But despite searches in Wisconsin, no violin was ever found.

Klein pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud the United States. Klein, who is free on bond, will be sentenced June 23; he faces a maximum five years behind bars.

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In the Oak Brook search, prosecutors found a certificate indicating the violin may have been a much less valuable one made in 1764 by Giuseppe Artalli, and not by the renowned Italian Antonio Stradivari.

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