Supreme Court of Canada to hear Churchill portrait thief’s sentence appeal
OTTAWA — The man who stole the “Roaring Lion” portrait of Winston Churchill from the Château Laurier in Ottawa will have a chance to appeal his sentence in the Supreme Court of Canada.
The top court, following its usual practice, gave no reasons Thursday for agreeing to hear Jeffrey Wood’s case, and no date for a hearing has been set.
The famous image of Churchill was snapped by photographer Yousuf Karsh during the British prime minister’s wartime visit to the Canadian Parliament in December 1941.
The print displayed at the Château Laurier was personally developed, framed and signed by Karsh, who gave it to the hotel — where he had long kept a studio — as a gift.