New York, Jan 12 : A Florida fossils dealer pleaded guilty to smuggling charges and
agreed to give up a celebrated $1 million dinosaur skeleton seized by the U.S.
government earlier this year for its eventual return to Mongolia.
Eric
Prokopi, 38, said he would surrender the 70 million-year-old Tyrannosaurus
bataar skeleton known as "Ty" and give up any claims to six other dinosaurs and
various other bones in a cooperation deal that might win him leniency from
charges that carry a potential prison sentence of up to 17
years.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Martin S. Bell read a list of the
dinosaurs to Magistrate Judge Ronald L. Ellis, saying a second substantially
complete Tyrannosaurus skeleton was found at Prokopi's Gainesville, Fla., home,
while a third was believed to be in Great Britain.
Bell said the
government will also get to keep a Chinese flying dinosaur that Prokopi
illegally imported; a skeleton of a Saurolophus, a duckbilled, plant eating
dinosaur from the late Cretaceous period; and two Oviraptor skeletons, one found
at Prokopi's home and the other at another residential dwelling in Florida. The
Oviraptors have parrot-like skulls.
"It's among the larger dinosaur
shopping lists you'll see today," Bell told the magistrate judge.
In a
release, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: "Fossils and ancient skeletal remains
are part of the fabric of a country's natural history and cultural heritage, and
black marketers like Prokopi who illegally export and sell these wonders, steal
a slice of that history. We are pleased that we can now begin the process of
returning these prehistoric fossils to their countries of origin."
The
government accused Prokopi of smuggling bones into the country illegally from
Mongolia before assembling them into a skeleton that was sold by Dallas-based
Heritage Auctions for $1.05 million, a deal that was suspended pending the
outcome of litigation. The government said the dinosaur skeleton was mislabeled
as reptile bones from Great Britain.
Prokopi remains free on bail pending
a sentencing scheduled for April 25. After his plea, he immediately went with
prosecutors to their offices without commenting.
In a statement last
spring, Prokopi defended his handling of the dinosaur, saying the value of the
bones was labeled much lower than the eventual auction price because "it was
loose, mostly broken bones and rocks with embedded bones. It was not what you
see today, a virtually complete, mounted skeleton."
Prokopi pleaded
guilty to conspiracy for importing the Chinese flying dinosaur, entry by goods
by means of false statements for importing Mongolian dinosaurs and one count of
interstate and foreign transportation of goods converted and taken by
fraud.
In describing his crimes, Prokopi said he wrote an email to a
fossils dealer in China in 2010, instructing him to mislabel customs documents
to make it appear that the bones of a Chinese flying dinosaur were worth less
than they were.
He said that from 2010 to 2012, he arranged for shipments
of fossils from Mongolia to be described in customs documents as if their
country of origin were Great Britain.
The magistrate judge asked Prokopi
if the country of origin on the documents was an important fact.
"Well,
apparently," Prokopi said, prompting a brief discussion between the prosecutor
and Prokopi's defense lawyer.
Afterward, Prokopi said the labeling of the
relics was purposefully "vague and misleading so that they didn't bring
attention to the shipment."
The magistrate judge asked him what would
have happened if he had labeled them accurately.
"Probably nothing,"
Prokopi said, pausing and then adding, "or it may not have been allowed to be
imported."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Fla. man pleads guilty in NY in dinosaur dispute
Fla. man pleads guilty in NY in dinosaur dispute
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