A flamboyant, unemployed antiques dealer jailed for handling a stolen first edition of Shakespeare’s plays has died, Britain’s Prison Service said Wednesday.
Raymond Scott, 55, was serving an eight-year term at Northumberland Prison for possessing the rare volume of plays.
The prison service said Scott, who passed himself off as a wealthy playboy prior to his conviction, was pronounced dead after being found unconscious in his cell Wednesday morning, and that the cause of death will be investigated.
Scott was a cigar-loving, self-described alcoholic who was jailed in 2010 after he took the 1623 volume of plays to the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C., and asked to have it authenticated.
Experts there alerted police, who said the folio had been stolen from a display case at Durham University in northern England in 1998.
Scott, who arrived for various court appearances in a horse-drawn carriage led by a piper and later in a silver limousine, claimed he had found the volume in Cuba. He denied all charges against him. His flashy persona made him prime fodder for the press.
A jury cleared him of stealing the First Folio but found Scott guilty of handling stolen goods and removing stolen property from Britain.
Judge Richard Lowden, when sentencing Scott, described him as “to some extent a fantasist,” saying the flashy book dealer had tried to use the tome to “fund an extremely ludicrous playboy lifestyle” and to impress a woman he had met in Cuba.
Prosecutors said the collector drove a yellow Ferrari and posed as an international playboy, despite living with his elderly mother on welfare benefits and amassing huge credit-card debts.
Scholars consider the Shakespeare folio one of the most important printed works in the English language.
The First Folio was published seven years after Shakespeare’s death and was the first collected edition of his plays. Fewer than 250 copies of the collection survive and most are incomplete. —