Moon rock reported stolen in Malta
Museum loses goodwill gift
valued at $5 million
Associated Press - May 21, 2004
VALLETTA, Malta - A tiny moon rock
believed to be worth about $5 million was stolen from a museum in Malta,
30 years after President Richard Nixon donated it to the Mediterranean
island nation.
The theft from the Museum of Natural
History in Mdina was discovered Tuesday during a routine check, officials
said. A protective cover of plastic had been forced open to take the rock,
which was the size of a raisin.
The rock was picked up in a lunar
valley named Taurus-Littrow during the Apollo 17 mission in 1972, the last
of the Apollo moon-landing missions. It was one of many moon samples given
to nations of the world by the United States.
The exact value of the rock wasnt
known, but a similarly sized moon rock in Honduras, from the same Apollo
mission, is worth about $5 million. That rock was stolen sometime between
1990 and 1994 and was recovered in 1998 after a sting operation.
A Maltese flag displayed next to the
rock which the U.S. astronauts had taken up with them was not taken.
The problem the thieves have is
what to do with it, Joseph Richard Gutheinz, a retired NASA agent who
helped recover the Honduras rock, wrote in an e-mail to The Associated
Press. They can try to sell it to private collectors, or if theyre
sufficiently dumb, at an auction house.
There are no surveillance cameras
and no custodians at the Museum of Natural History because of insufficient
funding. The only attendant is the ticket-seller.
2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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