Heist to homecoming: Stolen portrait of Winston Churchill returning to Canada

It’s finally coming home.

Yousef Karsh’s famed portrait of the late British prime minister Winston Churchill — a photo known as The Roaring Lion — will officially be returned to Canadian authorities, including representatives of the federal government, the Ottawa Police Service and the Fairmont Château Laurier hotel, at a ceremony Thursday in Rome. 

The black-and-white portrait, one of the world’s most renowned and historic images, was stolen from the lobby of the Ottawa hotel during the COVID-19 pandemic, sometime between Dec. 25, 2021, and Jan. 6, 2022. The thief (or thieves) replaced it on the wall with a rudimentary fake, complete with a phony Karsh signature.

No one noticed the theft until August 2022 when a hotel employee thought something seemed amiss and took a closer look.

After a lengthy investigation spanning two continents, Ottawa police announced earlier this month that the original photo had finally been located — in Italy. 

It had unwittingly been purchased in May 2022 from the London auction house Sotheby’s by an Italian living in Genoa, Nicola Cassinelli.

Neither Cassinelli nor Sotheby’s was ever a suspect. At the time of their transaction, no one even knew the photo had been stolen.

A 43-year-old man from Powassen, Ont., Jeffrey Wood, was arrested in April and faces multiple charges including theft, forgery, and trafficking in stolen property.

Police have not said how it ended up at the auction house, or how it was snuck out of the hotel. 

Image became symbol of British resilience 

From the moment it was discovered stolen, the art heist captivated Canadians, Karsh fans, and Churchill enthusiasts around the world. It made global headlines and sparked multiple documentaries.

The photo itself was taken by Karsh in the House of Commons Speaker’s Office on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 1941, shortly after Churchill had given a wartime speech to Canadian MPs. As Karsh later recounted, he’d pulled Churchill’s cigar from his mouth just before snapping the shot, causing the British prime minister to grimace.

In so doing, Karsh created an image that came to symbolize British wartime resilience.

Churchill’s hardened, stoic expression has since been reprinted countless times around the world, including currently on the back of the British five pound banknote.

In the late 1990s, Karsh — who had lived at the Château Laurier for years — gifted an original Roaring Lion to the hotel for public display. It hung in a spacious sitting room just off the hotel’s lobby alongside a number of other Karsh portraits, including of Albert Einstein and Spanish cellist Pablo Casals. 

People walking on the sidewalk in front of a grand hotel.
Karsh, who lived in the historic Château Laurier in downtown Ottawa, gifted the Karsh photo to the hotel in the 1990s. (Brian Morris/CBC)

The Churchill portrait is considered his masterpiece.

Thursday’s ceremony is to be held at Canada’s Embassy in Rome and will include remarks by Canada’s deputy minister of Canadian Heritage, along with Genèvieve Dumas, manager of the Château Laurier, and Akira Geller, the Ottawa police detective who cracked the case.

The photo will then be shipped back to Canada and is expected to return to its place on the walls of the Château sometime in October.