Posted on 07/14/2020 7:00:41 PM PDT by ransomnote
Earlier today, the United States filed a civil complaint to forfeit a rare cuneiform tablet bearing a portion of the epic of Gilgamesh, a Sumerian epic poem considered one the world’s oldest works of literature. Known as the Gilgamesh Dream Tablet, it originated in the area of modern-day Iraq and entered the United States contrary to federal law. The tablet was later sold by an international auction house (the “Auction House”) to Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (“Hobby Lobby”), a prominent arts-and-crafts retailer based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma for display at the Museum of the Bible (the “Museum”). Despite inquiries from the Museum and Hobby Lobby, the Auction House withheld information about the tablet’s provenance. The tablet was seized from the Museum by law enforcement agents in September 2019.
Richard P. Donoghue, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, and Peter C. Fitzhugh, Special Agent-in-Charge, Homeland Security Investigations, New York (HSI), announced the civil action and stipulation.
“Whenever looted cultural property is found in this country, the United States government will do all it can to preserve heritage by returning such artifacts where they belong,” stated United States Attorney Donoghue. “In this case, a major auction house failed to meet its obligations by minimizing its concerns that the provenance of an important Iraqi artifact was fabricated, and withheld from the buyer information that undermined the provenance’s reliability.” Mr. Donoghue thanked the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and the Justice Department’s Money Laundering and Asset Forfeiture Section (MLARS) for their assistance.
“We are proud of our investigation that led to this reclaiming of a piece of Iraq’s cultural history. This rare tablet was pillaged from Iraq and years later sold at a major auction house, with a questionable and unsupported provenance,” stated HSI Special Agent-in-Charge Fitzhugh. “HSI New York’s Cultural Property, Arts and Antiquity Investigations program will continue to work with prosecutors to combat the looting of antiquities and ensure those who would attempt to profit from this crime are held accountable.”
The government’s investigation revealed that in 2003, a U.S. antiquities dealer (the “Antiquities Dealer”) purchased an encrusted cuneiform tablet from a Middle Eastern antiquities dealer in London. After the tablet was imported and cleaned, experts in cuneiform recognized it as a portion of the Gilgamesh epic in which the protagonist describes his dreams to his mother (hence, the “Gilgamesh Dream Tablet”). The protagonist’s mother interprets the dreams as foretelling the arrival of a new friend. She tells her son, “You will see him and your heart will laugh.”
As alleged in the complaint, in 2007, the Antiquities Dealer sold the Gilgamesh Dream Tablet with a false provenance letter that stated the tablet had been inside a box of miscellaneous bronze fragments purchased in a 1981 auction. This false provenance letter traveled with the tablet and was provided to the Auction House by a later owner. As part of its due diligence, the Auction House’s antiquities director spoke with the Antiquities Dealer. The Antiquities Dealer advised the Auction House that the provenance would not withstand scrutiny and should not be used in connection with a public sale. The Auction House nevertheless represented to Hobby Lobby that the tablet was purchased in the 1981 auction. Hobby Lobby purchased the tablet in a private sale in 2014. In response to Hobby Lobby’s request for more details in connection with the purchase and the Museum’s expression of discomfort with the provenance in 2017, the Auction House advised both that the Antiquities Dealer had confirmed the details of the provenance. However, the Auction House withheld the false provenance letter and the Antiquities Dealer’s name from Hobby Lobby and the Museum.
The Museum cooperated with the government’s investigation.
The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney and Cultural Property Coordinator Karin Orenstein of the Office’s Civil Division, with assistance from Trial Attorney Ann Brickley of MLARS and Assistant U.S. Attorney Zia Faruqui of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia.
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 20-CV-2222 (AMD)
Given the fact that most museum quality artifacts have been stolen or destroyed in IRAQ during or since the war, I don’t quite understand why you would send it back there. Leave it here for a decade or two, until they get straightened out. Then we can give it back to them.
Saye do whaat?
Good point. Especially since it was purchased for a museum.
Hobby Lobby got smeared up and down over this.
I hope they got their money back, at least.
Soon to be in Warehouse 13?
Whenever I want to buy an ancient artifact, I go to Hobby Lobby.
Let us hope this is not returned to Iraq only to be destroyed by Muslim iconoclastic zealots who, like American statue and history burners, destroy anything they dont agree is part of their religious dogma.
Have we hit 27 trillion yet?
Thanks martin_fierro.
Speaking of which:
I’m looking for a brick maker here on FR.
I have a novel idea that might be worth exploring, I need someone skilled in that art to help evaluate the technical feasibility, any contributions of techniques or implementation will earn a place on the inventors line of the patent.
Because it is a novel idea, and is probably patentable, you will need to sign a standard boilerplate NDA before we can talk.
At this point I need someone to invest a little time, materials and effort, not much. I expect the concept to drop seamlessly into normal brick making processes.
I need someone skilled in the art to offer their unbiased opinion.
Any contributions to the IP (Intellectual Property) you make earn you a place on the patent, you will also get some shares of founders stock (in my experience usually worthless, but the times its not? Oh mamma!)
Money? I don’t anticipate any extraordinary out of pocket expenses, if its as viable as I think it, is there will be no shortage of investors and customers.
If you are a person of faith I think you will find the idea interesting and worthy. Even if you know nothing about brick making, I’d like your input on one facet of the concept. You’ll still need to sign an NDA as above, and of course contributions to the idea earn a bit of founders stock and patent inclusion as above.
LOL! Great!
You might want to peruse this ... this guy might be able to help you.
https://bricksculpturecarvings.wordpress.com/
You might want to peruse this ... this guy might be able to help you.
https://bricksculpturecarvings.wordpress.com/
Or contact Endicott Clay Products
I hope Hobby Lobby made a copy before the Feds seized it.
Yes, it should be a crime.
AND, modern day Iraqis are NOT Sumerians, they’re not Assyrians, or even Babylonians.
They are Muslim Arabs who has their Prophet, Mad Mo, telling them to destroy all idols where ever they find them, including antiquities.
The FBI might as well take the tablets out back and beat them with sledge hammers. Sending them back to Iraq means they’d be as lost.
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