Giant gold coin trial opens in Berlin Published duration 10 January 2019

image copyright Reuters image caption This file photo shows an identical coin from the same mintage

Four men have gone on trial in Berlin, accused of the notorious theft of a huge solid-gold coin from the German capital's Bode Museum in 2017.

The 100kg (220lb) Canadian "Big Maple Leaf" was made of pure 24-carat gold and was worth €3.75m (£3.4m; $4.3m).

The chief suspects on trial, all in their early 20s, are two brothers and a cousin from a Lebanese Berlin family accused of organised crime links.

A ladder, a wheelbarrow and a getaway car were allegedly used in the heist.

Detectives have not recovered the coin, and believe it has been either cut into pieces or melted down and sold.

It was one of just five such coins minted by Canada, and had been donated to the museum by an anonymous collector.

image copyright AFP image caption Two of the defendants - pictured here in court - concealed their faces with magazines

Prosecutors allege that the three chief suspects climbed onto adjacent railway tracks and used a ladder as a bridge to break into the museum through a third-floor window, which was not alarmed.

The men then smashed through a bullet-proof glass case to steal the coin.

They are believed to have used a wheelbarrow and skateboard to roll the coin away before abseiling from the tracks to their getaway vehicle. It was in Monbijou Park, on the other bank of the River Spree.

The suspects were named as brothers Ahmed and Wayci Remmo (20 and 24, respectively) and their cousin Wissam Remmo (21).

A fourth man - 20-year-old Denis W - worked as a security guard at the museum and is accused of having facilitated the heist by advising on locations and security.

The men are on trial in a youth court and are not in detention. If found guilty, they could face up to 10 years in jail. The verdict is expected to come on 28 March.

media caption The stolen Canadian £1m coin was stolen from behind bulletproof glass

The Big Maple Leaf coin

Minted by the Royal Canadian Mint in 2007, and certified at the time by Guinness World Records as the world's largest gold coin

Five coins were made

3cm (1.18in) thick, 53cm in diameter, and with a likeness of Queen Elizabeth II on one side, as Canada's head of state

The other side shows the Canadian national symbol, the maple leaf

Canadian Mint says: "Why did the Royal Canadian Mint make the world's purest and largest gold bullion coin? Because we can"

Was held in a coin cabinet at the Bode Museum as one of more than 540,000 objects, but German media reported only the "Big Maple Leaf" was stolen

A defence lawyer told the court that police had presented "not a single shred of evidence" to show that the Remmo men had stolen the coin. The defendants remained silent.

On the night of the break-in security cameras recorded three masked men wearing hoodies near the museum.

During the gold coin investigation the alleged getaway car was broken into and the inside was sprayed with foam from a fire extinguisher. The apparent attempt to destroy evidence was unsuccessful.