The first lunar samples bag used during the Apollo 11
mission is at the center of a legal battle after it was stolen by a former
Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center director and accidentally sold by the
government after it got the bag back.
The white bag — which was flown to the moon on Apollo 11
in June 1969 and has lunar material embedded in its fabric — was described by
the government as an ‘a rare artifact, if not a national treasure’.
The dispute is the latest legal twist in the case of Max
Ary, the founder and longtime director of the Cosmosphere in Hutchinson who was
convicted in November 2005 for stealing and selling museum artifacts.
At issue in his prosecution were hundreds of missing
space artifacts and memorabilia. Some were on loan from NASA to the
Cosmosphere.
The lunar bag was discovered in 2003 during the execution
of a search warrant in a box located in Ary's garage.
On August 3, the U.S. Attorney’s Office asked a federal
judge to set aside the final forfeiture order and rescind the bag's sale,
saying NASA was not properly notified of its forfeiture because the bag was
misidentified.
The bag was sold at a government auction on Feb. 15, 2015
for $995 to Nancy Carlson in Inverness, Illinois.
NASA learned the Apollo 11 bag had been sold without
notice or permission when Carlson sent it to NASA at the Johnson Space Center
in Houston for authentication.
Carlson separately sued NASA in June in a federal court
in Illinois, seeking the return of the bag.
Federal prosecutors want the federal judge in Kansas who
handled Ary's criminal case and subsequent forfeiture to rescind the sale and
refund Carlson her money.
Apparently, two lunar bags were confused as one and the
same after inventory identification numbers of them were combined on
spreadsheets, the government said.
The other bag was an Apollo 17 lunar sample bag that was
flown to the lunar surface aboard the Lunar Module Challenger.
That bag was sold by Ary at a 2001 auction for $24,150,
and it was later recovered by the government during its investigation.
Ary, who was president and CEO of the Cosmosphere from
1976 to 2002, was sentenced to three years in prison and ordered to pay
$132,274 in restitution. He has since been released from prison after serving
about 70 percent of his sentence.
He has always maintained his innocence, saying he
accidentally mixed museum artifacts with ones he collected and sold privately
from his home.
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