When you think you've got the right idea, pick a painting and submit your evidence.
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q1: Which Part of Mrs Browning's painting is the most suspicious?
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q2: What's suspicious about it?
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q3:Enter the evidence number that confirms the artist was in a poor condition?
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q1: Which Part of Mr Richard's painting is the most suspicious?
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q2: What's suspicious about it?
Find evidence that confirms all three painting are fakes - and not originals.
Q3: What's the earliest year this painting could have been created?
There's no doubt that there's something shady going on at Good Plains Gallery.Now, we just need to prove that the Gallery were in on it from the beginning. We've called in a favour from the New Jersey Police department. They've sent two undercover detectives into the gallery to see if they could find anything interesting. Here's a short recording of their visit. Who knows - maybe you'll find something useful.

Find further evidence that the Good Plains Gallery, were intentionally misleading their customers.
Find further evidence that the Good Plains Gallerywere intentionally misleading their customers.
Which piece of evidence, when combined with the undercover recording, proves that Good Plains Gallery were intentionally lying to their customers?
Excellent work, Detective. Thanks to you,we`ve managed to pull the plug on the whole Good Plains operation. Mr Lee, Mr Baker and Mrs Browning all send their thanks - as do hundreds of other hoodwinked customers
In 1991, Postal Inspector Jack Ellis lead a team of postal workers and undercover detectives to crack a billion dollar art forgery ring, lead by Leon Amiel. Over the years, Amiel had forged paintings and sent them through the US Postal System,passing them off as the real thing. The case required the purchase of 22 different counterfeit works, which were then analysed by detectives and renowned art experts. It all culminated in the seizure of over 100,000 supposed originals from artists like Salvador Dali, Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso. In the end, every piece was determined to be "bogus art". Thus, the name - Operation Bogart.