[meteorite-list] Lorton Meteorite

Meteorites USA eric at meteoritesusa.com
Fri Mar 18 15:04:36 EDT 2011


So basically, IF this Washington Post article is accurate in it's 
reporting, the landowners dropped the case after getting portrayed as 
the bad guys in the media by the Doctors who had a free lawyer, no legal 
fees, and they played the media game. I have to say the Doctors played 
the game well, it got turned into a PR war, and they won. So this case 
NEVER went anywhere legally? The actual issue of legal ownership is 
still not resolved.

Regards,
Eric



On 3/18/2011 11:22 AM, JoshuaTreeMuseum wrote:
>
> The landlords got outlawyered:
>
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/magazine/whatever-happened-to-the-lorton-meteorite-/2011/03/04/AB14tMq_story.html 
>
>
>
> By Neely Tucker, Sunday, March 20, 11:42 AM
> When last we heard, Everybody's Favorite Meteorite was locked up in 
> legal limbo.
>
> The oblong little rock from outer space lighted up the late afternoon 
> sky across Washington on Jan. 18, 2010, and rocketed into a doctors' 
> office in Lorton. Moving at a leisurely 200 mph, it crashed into 
> examination room No. 2 in the Williamsburg Square Family Practice, 
> even though it did not have an appointment.
>
> The startled (but unhurt) doctors, Marc Gallini and Frank Ciampi, 
> donated it to the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, 
> which houses the world's largest collection of meteorites.
>
> But then their landlords said not so fast: The 2-by-3-inch visitor 
> from the asteroid belt was estimated to be worth at least $50,000 on 
> the earth-bound meteorite market, in part because of its dramatic and 
> well-documented entrance. Thousands of people saw its fireball descent 
> (the museum has a photograph of the vapor trail), and radar sweeps 
> documented its path across the region.
>
> The landlords demanded its return. Gallini said of their behavior: "It 
> isn't nice." Legal wrangling ensued.
>
> We are delighted, a year later, that there is a happy ending.
>
> The landlords eventually dropped their claims, the Smithsonian gave 
> the doctors $10,000 for the Lorton meteorite (its formal name) in 
> early February, and the physicians donated the check to the charity 
> Doctors Without Borders last week. Linda Welzenbach, the meteorite 
> collection manager at the Smithsonian, says it will soon be on public 
> display, though no date has been set.
>
> "We are very happy that it's staying at the Smithsonian," Gallini 
> says. "We felt that where it's belonged since the beginning."
>
> Deniz Mutlu, a member of the family that owns the building, said his 
> only issue with events was that "we got portrayed as the bad guys."
>
> "All we wanted to do was donate it to a different institution 
> (Phillips Exeter Academy, in New Hampshire), where my wife attended 
> school," he said. "The doctors wanted to litigate. They had pro bono 
> counsel. We just let it go."
>
> The meteorite, which existed for about 4.5 billion years floating 
> around between Mars and Jupiter, now spends its time in a little 
> plastic box deep in the Mason-Clarke Meteorite Vault in the 
> Smithsonian. It has thousands of other little asteroid friends, 
> including three from Mars, to keep it company.
>
> Holding the Lorton meteorite with blue latex gloves, Welzenbach smiled.
>
> "It's going to stay here where everyone can see it."
>
> CURIOUS? Tell us what past Washington Post story or person in the news 
> you want us to update. E-mail trents at washpost.com or call 202.334.4208.
>
>
>
> ------------
>
> Phil Whitmer
>
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