
Man accused of stealing portrait of Winston Churchill pleads guilty
OTTAWA — The Ontario man whose theft of an iconic portrait of Winston Churchill led to an international investigation pleaded guilty Friday to stealing the photograph, replacing it with a fake and selling it through a London auction house.
Jeffrey Wood submitted his plea in an Ottawa courtroom Friday morning, more than three years after the photo of the former British prime minister disappeared from Ottawa’s Chateau Laurier hotel.
Known as “The Roaring Lion,” the wartime photo of Churchill was snapped by Yousuf Karsh in 1941 in the Speaker’s office just after the former prime minister delivered an address to Canada’s Parliament.
Toward the end of his life, Karsh signed and donated the portrait to the hotel, where he had lived and worked for many years.