From: Dan Chure <danchure@easilink.com>
Subject: Re: Theft of dinosaur bones from Glen Canyon National Recreation Area
To: turtlecroc@yahoo.com
Cc: "DML" <dinosaur@usc.edu>
Date: Friday, May 22, 2009, 11:12 PM
How exactly does that seem somehow
apropos of the theft of paleontological, geological, and
cultural objects from public lands? Is it a lesser crime
depending on who turns someone in or why they do it?
Dan
Paul P wrote:
dinosaur bone from Glen Canyon in Kane County.
Lindsey was
turned in by his ex-wife
Aach, women. Can't live with em, can't shoot em.
That's a line out of a movie, actually, though i can't
recall offhand which one. (True Lies?) But it seems somehow
apropos.
--- On Sat, 5/16/09, Dan Chure <danchure@easilink.com>
wrote:
From: Dan Chure <danchure@easilink.com>
Subject: Theft of dinosaur bones from Glen Canyon
National Recreation Area
To: "DML" <dinosaur@usc.edu>,
VRTPALEO@usc.edu
Date: Saturday, May 16, 2009, 8:57 AM
One Mr. Penn Lindsey is accused of stealing
petrified wood,
lava bomb, lava rock, flat red rock, garnet, five
stone
artifact pieces, river rock, pot shards and 14
pieces of
dinosaur bone from Glen Canyon in Kane County.
Lindsey was
turned in by his ex-wife, who said she was afraid
he would
teach their son how to loot as well.
More details can be read at:
http://www.sltrib.com/ci_12381775
Dan
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