A popular bronze statue at Fifth Third Field was reported stolen  Sunday night. Turns out the culprits were the Toledo police. Kind of.
The bronze sculpture,  called "Who's Up?," situated behind the Mud Hens  scoreboard and  incorp- orated into the fence surrounding the stadium on  St. Clair  Street, features four life-size statues of children peeking through a  knothole in a fence.
Mud Hens staff noticed Sunday evening that one of those children -- a cute little girl in pigtails and overalls -- had vanished.
They assumed the worst.
Mud Hens employee Ken Westenkirchner called the police and filed a   theft report. The Arts Commission of Greater Toledo, which manages the   city's public art,  prepared for a media blitz to publicize the heist and  bring the  perpetrators to justice. Dan Hernandez, art in public places   coordinator for the arts commission, feared thieves might be planning to   sell it for scrap.
"When they told me, I was a little bit crushed," he said. "This is  probably one of the most popular bronze art pieces in the city's collection." 
What Mud Hens officials and the arts commission did not know,   however, was that the little girl in pigtails was safely stowed in a   police property room. In the early morning hours of Saturday, two Toledo   police officers discovered the large bronze statue about 20 yards from its original  location and booked the custom bronze statue into a property room for safekeeping.
However no one told the Mud Hens or the art commission until later.  Jason Griffin, director of public relations for the Mud  Hens, said he  believed the ball club found out police had the custom bronze sculpture  at  about lunchtime Monday. The art commission was notified by the Mud  Hens  shortly after that, Mr. Hernandez said.
He was relieved.
"To have it re-sculpted would have been a nightmare," he said. "We're excited to have it back."
The large bronze sculpture, informally known as "The Knothole Gang," was created  by local bronze statues  artist Emanuel Enriquez and was installed in 2002. It cost  $89,000,  Mr. Hernandez said. About $50,000 of that was donated by George   Chapman, who is chairman, chief executive officer, and president of   Health Care REIT. The rest was from the city of Toledo's One Percent for   Art program.
What remains unresolved is how the heavy bronze statue got moved 20  yards down the sidewalk. Toledo Police Detective Tonya Rider said the  bolts that anchored the life size bronze statue  to the sidewalk had been damaged. "I  don't know if it was a prank, if  it got too heavy to carry," she said.  "I don't know what the  circumstances were. Maybe it was a case of  buyer's remorse."
Mr. Hernandez called the whole incident hilarious and bizarre. "They   probably thought they could carry it away, but that's a big piece of  bronze," he said. "It's pretty heavy. That's got to be what happened."
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
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