Stolen Lennon watch saga ends
text size

Stolen Lennon watch saga ends

Swiss court declares Yoko Ono rightful owner of rare timepiece held by Italian buyer

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
Listen to this article
Play
Pause
Yoko Ono listens to reporters’ questions in front of a portrait of John Lennon at a news conference in Tokyo in October 2005. (Reuters File Photo)
Yoko Ono listens to reporters’ questions in front of a portrait of John Lennon at a news conference in Tokyo in October 2005. (Reuters File Photo)

GENEVA - A rare watch given to John Lennon by his wife Yoko Ono and stolen after his death does not belong to an Italian man who bought it from an auction house years later, a Swiss court has ruled, paving the way for its return to Ono.

The Patek Philippe watch, with an estimated value of 4 million Swiss francs ($4.5 million), was a 40th birthday gift to the former Beatle from his Japanese artist wife in 1980, just two months before his assassination in New York.

The watch bears the inscription “(JUST LIKE) STARTING OVER LOVE YOKO 10·9·1980 N.Y.C“, on the back of its 18-carat gold face, a line from a song they composed together, the court statement said.

The appeal ruling shared with reporters by the Federal Tribunal on Thursday confirms two prior judgements by Geneva courts in 2022 and 2023. It concludes a 10-year legal battle between Yoko Ono and an Italian man living in China who claimed ownership of the watch and was the appellant in the case.

Vincent Guignet, a lawyer for Ono, told Reuters his client, now 91, was relieved at the outcome of the case. “This watch holds particular significance for her, and it is about time she got it back,” he said.

Like the names of all the parties involved, the Italian man’s name is given in code form in the Swiss legal documents, with only some of the identities possible to determine.

It was not possible for Reuters to contact his lawyer since their identity is also censored.

Court documents show the watch changed hands and countries several times after being taken by Ono’s Turkish chauffeur in 2006. He claimed he had Ono’s consent to take the watch.

Once the driver arrived in Turkey, the watch changed hands again in 2010 before being sold to a German auction house, which sold it to the Italian national living in China.

Ono only discovered the watch had been stolen in 2014 after a Geneva-based company, commissioned by the Italian to appraise its value, tipped off her lawyer.

The watch is currently being held for safekeeping in Geneva by the lawyer of the appellant, Swiss court documents show, and it was not immediately clear when or if it would be returned.

Do you like the content of this article?
COMMENT (7)