Court to Decide If Man Can Keep His Moon Rock
Joe Gutheinz, a former senior investigator for NASA's Office of Inspector General, has made it his goal to collect all 230 moon rocks presented by the US to governments around the world, and put them in a museum. Deadliest Catch Captain Coleman Anderson wants to keep his little piece of the moon. Anderson says he found the rock in the trash mixed with debris following a fire at an Anchorage museum in 1973. He's kept it as a good luck charm ever since. "Our astronauts and their descendants are not permitted to have an Apollo 11-era moon rock to sell for their own enrichment and neither should a private citizen who acquired one in a less-noble manner," Gutheinz said. An Alaskan judge will now decide who legally owns the rock.
Maybe he should have let the thing go on in the trash, then where would your precious little moon rock be? But that's what you get for trying, sued
"Our astronauts and their descendants are not permitted to have an Apollo 11-era moon rock to sell for their own enrichment and neither should a private citizen who acquired one in a less-noble manner,"
The way I see it, the guy saved it from being buried in some landfill somewhere. I'm sure none of that matters to the courts, but I can't see trying to slander the guy for wanting to keep what he found. Also, it doesn't sound like he's trying to cash in on it (at least not yet), but is rather fond of his "good luck charm".
we should just go get a bunch more rocks so that they are not valuable. it's a damned rock. but since we're apparently stuck on this one forever, they are worth more than gold.
did you people know the top of the washington monument is made of aluminium? cause that used to be precious too.
let the dude keep his pebble. lets be noble and go back to the moon. we used to be good at it.
slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
Coleman -
Give it back - sure you saved it and restored the plaque, but its a moon rock it belongs to the public.
State of Alaska -
Thank him for safe keeping a state treasure,
Display the Rock in a museum, and include the message of thanks to Coleman for keeping what you thought was junk, but was also historically valuable.
make sure you never loose this thing again.
All sides drop all lawsuits.
Everyone move on.
It is better to be the hammer than the anvil.
Buzz Aldrin should fly to Alaska, punch this guy in the nose, and recover the moon rock for the benefit of Mankind. And let a camera crew from the History channel tag along for the lulz.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
It's a chain-of-ownership issue here. If NASA loaned the rock to the museum for display, and they accidentally tossed it out, NASA still owns it, all the way to the dump and beyond. Just because you lose track of something doesn't mean you don't own it anymore. You have to give it away, sell it, transfer it, abandon it, or have it confiscated, to lose ownership over it. Valuable things are rarely donated to museums, they are more often put on exhibit on a temporary or permanent basis.
Right now that's looking like the case. But further details could emerge. Maybe NASA gave them 11 rocks along with other stuff, and asked for "all 10 rocks back and you can dispose of the rest of the exhibit", which would transfer ownership of rock #11 to the museum, which threw it out (abandoned it) and then in the trash pile it does become finders-keepers.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
According to the TFA, the item was "presented to the state of Alaska in 1969 by President Nixon".
If the museum was run by the state, then they tossed it, and he owns it...
As it is, they're being petty bullies.
Well that's what you get when you let Republicans take office.
Yes, because the current Administration is Republican. Wait a second....
You do realize that it's the Executive branch who would be doing the suing, right? You are also informed that the current Chief Executive is not a Republican, nor is the current Administrator of NASA a Republican Appointee?
"Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys" P. J. O'Rourke
I have no sympathy for this dude.
"He was a 17-year-old, and the curator of the museum was close, like a father to him," said Seattle attorney Daniel Harris, who is representing Anderson.
After the museum fire and cleanup, garbage trucks were sent in to haul off the remaining debris, and Anderson claims he was combing through it when he discovered the plaque, which was coated with a thick layer of melted materials.
The lawsuit said Anderson left with the plaque in full view of the garbage-removal workers.
Gutheinz also pointed out that the wooden plaque shows no sign of fire damage.
He knew exactly what he was looking at, but decided to be all coy, even if we are to believe his story. I am sure that curators would have taken the rocks if notified, but somehow this never occurred to him. <gollum, gollum> He decided that the state gave up on a moon rock because garbage removal workers missed it in a pile of rabble. He should consider himself lucky for keeping it for so long, but IMHO, he should have returned it to a museum back then, and it's definitely not too late to return it now. On the other hand, it's just a rock, so it really is not a big deal one way or the other.
Anyway, here is your moment of Zen:
Three state governors accidentally took their state's rocks home after leaving office.
How? Did they confuse them with office supplies?
NASA gave away the rocks. Then complains when they end up in the hands of people they don't want to have them. They should have done what museums do and put things on permanent loan so that they would retain ownership but let others have use of them. But no, they give them away then demand them back on whims. Like you say, when a EULA does that, people here generally go nuts, but when it's done with a rock (something likely even less appropriate for such treatment) people support a completely unwritten EULA. I can't understand it.
Learn to love Alaska