Jewel In The Palace On Netflix

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Baba Flores

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Aug 5, 2024, 6:57:48 AM8/5/24
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Blanchards felonious past is narrated in Hulu's "The Jewel Thief," an true-crime documentary that features Blanchard himself. Alongside Blanchard are his family members, close friends and accomplices along with the police officers and detectives who worked tirelessly to catch him. By the end of the documentary, viewers are left to decide whether they believe Blanchard, who claims he's left behind his criminal antics for good, or his most ardent opposers, who all beg to differ.

"It's tempting, but my feeling is the police know my MO, so if I were to do anything, I would have to change it up," Blanchard recently told Rolling Stone about his heisting past. "I still have five or six different MOs I could easily do to off throw the banks. But I live this comfortable life now, and don't need to worry about committing crimes. . . . [But] you can never say never. It's a spur of the moment decision, [and] things are always there."


Blanchard was adopted when he was six years old and lived with his mother Carol Phegly and stepfather in "a nice house" in Canada. His living situation, however, quickly grew rough when his mother and stepfather broke up, forcing Phegly and Blanchard to move to Omaha, Nebraska.


"Omaha, Nebraska, is not the nicest place to live. It's actually one of the worst, and only the strongest survive," said Blanchard in the documentary. He recalled hearing his mother cry while on the phone with the bank, desperately asking them to not foreclose the house she lived in with Blanchard and his sister.


"We literally took so much stuff from the store, millions of dollars every year. And what ended up happening was Easter Sunday, we actually cleared out the whole entire store," said Blanchard. "We disconnected the alarm. We took everything out with a moving truck. I just became too confident."


"I mean I didn't know what to do," said Phegly. "I was totally dumbfounded. I could not even fathom that my son was this person they were talking about. He ended up living a double life. So he kept that life away from his family, the people he cared about."


As for the execution of his "sophisticated" robbery, Blanchard said it all happened when he flew to Winnipeg to visit family. His grandmother had told him that her bank, the soon-to-be Winnipeg CIBC branch, was slated to close soon.


Members of Project Kite explained that outside of the closed bank was a large sign that read, "Future Home of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce." At that time, the bank had no security or alarm systems.


To enter the bank, Blanchard posed as a construction worker. He said he went to Home Depot to buy a construction vest and a hard hat. He also bought a $50 baby monitor from ToysRUs, which he hid inside the bank and used to secretly monitor when the ATMs would be brought inside. Blanchard also found a way to bypass the safes in the bank.


"Gerald found a way to manipulate a very sophisticated, well-engineered lock by just manipulating some of the screws that held that lock in position," said Larry Levasseur, a police officer with the Winnipeg Police Service. "It was ingenious. It was absolutely ingenious."


Blanchard said his crimes quickly became an addiction, so much so that he felt compelled to rob every single ATM he came across in Canada. At the time, Blanchard became a person of interest. But he was also able to get away with his crimes due to his various aliases.


A few names that Blanchard went by included Evan C. Howland, James A. Gehman, Danny Anderson and Daniel Wall. It was revealed that Blanchard had at least 22 aliases. Blanchard and the Winnipeg Police soon fell into this cycle, where Blanchard would be caught and then released because the police department didn't have records for his many false identities.


Also known as the Koechert Diamond Pearl, the famed Sisi Star was one of many jewel pins that Empress Elisabeth "Sisi" of Austria wore in her hair. At the time of the theft, the jewel was on display for a special exhibit at Vienna's Schnbrunn Palace. Although Blanchard initially planned on stealing a crown from the palace, he eventually settled on stealing the jewel, saying he "just thought it was pretty" and inconspicuous enough to easily snatch.


Blanchard claimed he had parachuted onto the roof of the palace, climbed down its side, entered through a window he unlocked while visiting the palace during the day, stole the jewel and replaced it with a gift shop replica. It took officials two to three weeks to realize that the diamond left behind was a fake.


Blanchard eventually pleaded guilty at the Court of Queen's Bench of Manitoba on Nov. 7, 2007 to 16 charges of robbery and fraud in Canada and additional countries. He had been sentenced in the U.S. and faced a maximum of 164 years in prison for the 16 charges. Ultimately, he was sentenced to just eight years in a Canadian prison.


Blanchard never disclosed who his accomplices were, so only Blanchard was the one to serve prison time. About five months after Blanchard's arrest, Winnipeg police discovered the Sisi Star in Blanchard's grandmother's basement amid a raid of her house.


"In my experience, it's my belief that reform has no place in Gerald Blanchard's life," said Sheilla Leinburd, a prosecuting attorney. "I don't think he's reformed. I don't think he ever will be. I think he is the king of man who revels in this type of behavior. And I don't think, frankly, he could live without this kind of behavior."


On March 22, 2017, Blanchard and an accomplice were arrested for stealing Playstations from a Best Buy in Burlington, Ontario. Investigators were able to identify Blanchard as a suspect because a car at the scene was rented under his name.


Copyright 2024 Salon.com, LLC. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited. SALON is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon.com, LLC. Associated Press articles: Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


The real heavy lifting in creating these identical costume jewels has been done for two seasons by Juliette Designs, a London based company that specializes in recreating, down to the finest detail, the British Crown Jewels out of base metals, Swarovski crystals, and cubic zirconia, the most widely used diamond substitute.


In order to get each crystal gemstone set in just the right way, Juliette Designs is lucky to be in possession of a very rare book (number 227 out of 500) on The Crown Jewels, published by The Stationary Office. This book closely details the construction and materials of each piece as if they were technical schematics.


In season two, we see how jewelry symbolically asserts itself into situations that toe the line of politics. Queen Elizabeth II famously defied advisors and traveled to Ghana in 1961 and danced with Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah, which The Crown depicts as the act that eased tensions in the region. The heavily documented moment included an important suite of emerald jewels worn as the Queen swept across the dance floor that were dutifully reproduced by Juliette Designs, of course.


The jewels Queen Elizabeth II chose for this political act in Ghana come with heavy familial associations handed down from one powerful woman to the next. The backstory of this tiara could be a mini series in itself. Made and gifted in 1874 to the Grand Duchess Vladimir, also known as the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia, and later hidden away in a Russian palace to avoid the violence and looting of the Revolution, it was smuggled out of the country in the 1920s by a British spy. It was sold in 1921 to support the lives of her children living in exile. This tiara has been through trying times, which is inherently a ridiculous thought. Naturally, this particularly resilient tiara is a favorite of Queen Elizabeth II, and is often still worn to this day.

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